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COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL 2013
FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
A PUBLICATION OF THE COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
Learning through Discovery
R
What an amazing time to be a Bulldog! The excitement over the success of our football team this past fall has been contagious. The amount of positive exposure and publicity surrounding our team and our institution has been overwhelming. As a result, our University and its programs have been introduced to an even wider, national audience. For those of us fortunate to work on campus, this time has only reinforced our pride in Mississippi State.The College of Arts & Sciences continues to flourish and
grow. Our college remains the largest on campus in student enrollment with over 5,000 majors and graduate students. We also have a very large and diverse faculty, which I am pleased to report is growing in order to keep up with student and research demand. This academic year we welcomed 33 outstanding faculty to the College. These faculty members represent nearly every academic field of study within our College and are already off to an amazing start. For example, Dr. Heather Jordan, a new assistant professor of biological sciences, just received a major grant from the National Institute of Justice to better understand biological processes for forensic investigations in criminal justice. And, Dr. Adam Skarke, a new assistant professor of geosciences (featured in this issue of Vision), has identified new methane gas reserves on the seafloor of the Atlantic Ocean. Skarke’s discovery may suggest new and additional energy sources.The theme of this issue of Vision is discovery. Discovery is
a fundamental part of learning and producing knowledge. We are very proud that our students benefit from the scientific, humanistic, and creative discoveries of our own faculty, but we are even more proud that we can provide an educational environment where our students can participate in making their own discoveries. I sincerely hope you will enjoy reading about some of the incredible work that is being done by our students and faculty. I know you will be impressed.As always, thank you for your continued support of the
College of Arts & Sciences at Mississippi State University. I wish you the very best in the new year.
Hail State!
R. Gregory DunawayDean
DEAR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS:
R
Direct comments or questions to: KARYN BROWN | 662.325.7952
[email protected]. Box AS | Mississippi State, MS 39762
IS PUBLISHED BY THE COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
ARTS & SCIENCES STAFF
DR. R. GREGORY DUNAWAY - Dean
DR. GISELLE THIBAUDEAU MUNN - Associate Dean for Research & Graduate Studies
DR. RICK TRAVIS - Associate Dean for Academic Affairs & Student Services
KARYN BROWN - Director of Communication
ALEX MCINTOSH - Director of Development
SHERYL KINARD - Business Manager
DR. CARLY CUMMINGS - Assistant to the Dean - Research
LAURA DUNN - Admissions Coordinator
TRACY BRITT - Academic Coordinator
BARBARA STEWART - Academic Coordinator
ALISA WHITTLE - Administrative Assistant to the Dean
SIMONE COTTRELL - Administrative Assistant
WHITNEY PETERSON - Administrative Assistant
JOY SMITH - Administrative Assistant
Student Workers:
DAMARIUS HARRIS - Student Worker
ADAM SIMONTON - Student Worker
MARCY SLOWIK - Student Worker
FEI FEI ZENG - Student Worker
Editors:
KARYN BROWN
LAURA DUNN
HANNAH RINEHART
Writers:
Audra Gines
Erin Patterson
Hannah Rinehart
Designer:
Eric Abbott
Searching Beyond to Discover
LEGACY AWARDS
SOCIETY OF SCHOLARS
EXECUTIVE ADVISORY BOARD
RETIRESS/NEW FACULTY
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26
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Writing a State History 8Robots vs. Humans 7
10
13
11
16
12
21
Philosophy/Religion Department
Student Feature:Lisa Boney
Explore the Nightat the Observatory
Food for Thought
Lee Hall Renovation
Dr. Henry Memorial
4 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
The College of Arts & Sciences is dedicated to research
and discovery. Both faculty and students are encouraged
to breach the realm of the unknown in order to make
enlightening discoveries that can change entire fields of research.
Whether it is undergraduate students, graduate students, or faculty,
the College of Arts & Sciences supports its researchers in their
incredible endeavors.
MUD PUDDLE DISCOVERIES:FINDING NEW LIFE IN UNUSUAL PLACES
Just outside Harned Hall, the home of the College of Arts &
Sciences’ Department of Biological Sciences, a never-before
identified unicellular microscopic protist was scooped from a
courtyard mud puddle. In September 2013, three undergraduates
found Ptolemeba bulliensis and a second, closely related protist,
Ptolemeba noxubium, collected from the Sam D. Hamilton
Noxubee National Wildlife Refuge, located approximately 15 miles
south of campus.
Both of these organisms were collected, isolated and classified by
the small team of undergraduates in the Department of Biological
Sciences. Dr. Matthew Brown, an MSU biological sciences assistant
professor at and head of the Evolutionary Protistology Laboratory
in Harned Hall, was the advising faculty member.
Pamela Watson of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, a junior
microbiology major, became lead author of the scientific paper
about the protist discovery, which was recently published in the
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. Watson is also responsible for the
name of the new protist that honors MSU’s first bulldog mascot.
“I learned that the first ‘Bully’ was named Ptolemy, and I thought
that would be fitting for us to name the genus for something about
SearchingBeyond
to Discoverby Leah Barbour
By: Kayleigh Swisher
5COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
the campus…it highlights the history of Mississippi State,” Watson
said.
She, along with senior medical technology major Stephanie C.
Sorrel of Warner Robins, Georgia, and junior chemistry major
Nicholas R. Lee of Brandon, Mississippi, were working in Brown’s
laboratory when the samples were collected. They participated in
documenting and classifying the protists, though Lee was unable to
continue the project through the completion of the scientific paper.
Since the students collected the organisms, Brown said they
deserved the opportunity to experience the entire scientific process
of organism discovery, from isolating samples to isolating the
protists’ DNA, to drafting the highly technical journal submission.
Watson said Brown’s interest in unicellular creatures and their
position on the evolutionary tree inspires her own passion for
science and research. Not only did she switch her academic major
from biochemistry to microbiology, she also changed her intended
career track.
“While the paper process was one of the most stressful
experiences of my adult life, it changed what I wanted to do,” she
said. “I was pre-med, but now I’ve found my niche. I want to go to
grad school, get my Ph.D. and do research. I want to be a professor.”
Brown said the students’ report of their discovery constitutes
the first independently published manuscript produced by his MSU
lab. Brown was recently awarded a Henry Family Research Fund
in the College of Arts & Sciences initiation grant to increase his
laboratory’s efforts in clarifying the relationships among amoeboid
microbes.
“I was showing the students the morphological and molecular
techniques to identify the organisms and place them on the
phylogenic tree,” the University of Arkansas doctoral graduate
explained. “The ‘aha moment’ came in early November (2013) when
all three of the students were working in concert. Each isolated an
organism, and each did the gene sequencing analysis, and all the
organisms were so closely related.”
Brown said he hopes the students’ groundbreaking achievement
will alert the larger scientific community to the commitment of
MSU Biological Science research and the future discoveries of MSU
biological sciences students and researchers.
DISCOVERING DINOSAURS:VIRTUALLY DISSECTING FOSSILIZED EGGS
How do you examine the inside of a fossilized egg without
opening it?
This research question drives John Paul Jones, a doctoral graduate
of earth and atmospheric sciences at MSU. After he discovered a
fully-intact clutch of fossilized dinosaur eggs in Montana in 2002,
he’s worked to answer that question using Mississippi State resources.
To avoid destroying the precious discovery, Jones, with the support
of grants from the MSU graduate school and the Department of
Geosciences, traveled to the United Kingdom where there is a high-
resolution 3D x-ray scanner in Oxfordshire. He collaborated with
the Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum Wales to dissect the eggs
virtually to discover the genus and species of the dinosaurs.
The dinosaurs contained in the eggs may be a type of hadrosaur, a
duck-billed dinosaur with a hollow crest on its head. However, Jones
needs more information before coming to any definite conclusions.
The virtual images, particularly of the dinosaur’s skull and pelvis,
will help him make the final identification.
“I’m reluctant to say exactly what type of hadrosaur, but it looks
like, from the lower resolution scans we already have, that there
is a crest on the skull, which narrows it down to just a couple of
species,” said Jones. “If the imaging in the U.K. is good enough, we
may even be able to tell what sex it was.”
Dr. Rinat Gabitov, assistant professor of geosciences at MSU,
explained that the synchrotron-imaging technique is made for
examining structures as small as one-tenth of the diameter of
human hair. This high-power technology in Oxfordshire did not,
however, provide Jones with his first glimpse inside the eggs.
“In 2012, Jones’ MSU research team generated more than 10,000
scans when the dinosaur eggs were X-rayed by the LightSpeed VCT
6 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
64-Slice CT Scanner,” Gabitov explained.
These initial viewings were made possible by MSU’s Institute
for Imaging and Analytical Technologies and Premier Imaging in
Starkville.
“One of the CT scans we did shows a definite and complete
articulated embryo. I also found one egg was partially hollow…
but in the other two eggs, the resolution just wasn’t high enough,”
Jones said.
Along with the eggs he found in 2002, Jones also examined another
clutch of similar eggs he found in 2013 near the same site in Montana.
“It’ll be the first time anyone’s ever identified an embryo using the
synchrotron method,” he said.
After the eggs were scanned, the Amgueddfa Cymru-National
Museum Wales displayed the eggs in accordance with their
collaborative agreement with Jones. When the eggs return to the
U.S. , they will be displayed by the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington, D.C.
Jones said, “If I can, in fact, document that I’ve found a nesting
site where dinosaurs came back and nested en masse, then that tells us
more about the behavior of these animals.”
WAVES OF CHANGE: DISCOVERING METHANE LEAKAGE ON THE SEAFLOOR
Dr. Adam Skarke, an assistant professor in the Department of
Geosciences in the College of Arts & Sciences, is lead author of a
study that’s raising new questions about geology, oceanography and
seafloor ecosystems. Skarke’s scientific team discovered methane
seeps in unlikely places along the seafloor on the northern part of
the U.S. Atlantic margin. The group’s scientific paper, “Widespread
methane leakage from the sea floor on the northern U.S. Atlantic
margin,” was published online on Aug. 24 by the peer-reviewed
journal Nature Geoscience.
Before he joined the faculty in the Department of Geosciences,
Skarke worked as a physical scientist at the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Office of Ocean Exploration
and Research (OER). As part of a large team of scientists and
technicians, Skarke participated in many cruises on the NOAA ship
Okeanos Explorer as it mapped the Atlantic Ocean floor between
North Carolina and Cape Cod.
“The discovery of gas plumes in the water column over the
seafloor, detailed in the new publication, used data the ship collected
starting in 2011,” Skarke said.
He and his colleagues found 570 methane seeps in this area,
compared to only three formerly known sites.
To analyze the NOAA OER data and locate the positions of the
plumes, which correspond to places where methane gas is seeping
out of the seafloor, Skarke worked closely with Brown University
undergraduate and NOAA Hollings Scholar Mali’o Kodis during the
summer of 2013.
“Methane often naturally leaks from the seafloor, particularly in
petroleum basins like the Gulf of Mexico or on tectonically active
continental margins like the U.S. Pacific Coast,” Skarke said.
However, the geologic characteristics of the U.S. Atlantic margin
suggest the seepage was not necessarily expected there because the
tectonically passive area lacks an underlying petroleum basin.
“Although methane, or natural gas, is used as an energy source
worldwide, the type of methane leaking at most of the seep sites is
probably produced by micro-organisms digesting organic matter in
the shallow sediments,” he said.
None of the evidence compiled by the scientists suggests the seeps
tap into deep natural gas reservoirs that can be used for energy.
“Methane is a strong greenhouse gas, but nearly all of the seeps
described in the new study leak at such deep ocean depths that
methane does not reach the atmosphere directly,” Skarke emphasized.
Instead, micro-organisms in the water column transform most of
the methane into carbon dioxide, making ocean waters more acidic,
which can harm some types of marine life.
“The NOAA OER program used its remotely operated vehicle
to visit about one percent of the seeps in 2013, and it found well-
developed communities of chemosynthetic mussels thriving near
the methane plumes. Two years ago, no human had ever seen these
seafloor communities that have now been found at the seep sites,”
Skarke said
He said additional research questions for deep sea ecologists include
determining how separate seeps are colonized with new life, as well as
understanding the structure of the communities and the relationships
among bacteria, small fauna and larger organisms, like mussels.
“A cornerstone of the NOAA OER program is the collection of
data that can lead to new discoveries for the scientific community,”
he said. “One unique aspect of the program that made it so
enjoyable to work there was the fact that we collected many types of
data about U.S. oceans and made the data immediately available to
the scientific community for studies that could not otherwise have
been completed.”
Skarke said he appreciates the support of MSU administrators,
especially those in the Department of Geosciences of the College of
Arts & Sciences, as he and his collaborators readied the research for
publication in a top-tier, peer-reviewed journal.
By encouraging research at every level of education and
supporting those researchers every step of the way, the College of
Arts & Sciences helps its faculty and students make their mark on
modern academia.
7COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
Could robot interviewers help communicate with
children who have been bullied or abused?
This question drives a project titled “Use of Robots
as Intermediaries to Gather Sensitive Information from Children” being
funded by the National Science Foundation. It is a collaboration between
researchers in Mississippi State’s College of Arts & Sciences and Bagley
College of Engineering.
“The idea for this project originally happened when I was in graduate
school, but it became more fully developed during my postdoctoral
position as an NSF Computing Innovation Fellow at Yale University,”
explained Dr. Cindy Bethel of the Department of Computer Science and
Engineering. “While there, I began this research with a published study
titled ‘Secret-Sharing: Interactions between a Child, Robot, and Adult.’”
Bethel directs the Social, Therapeutic and Robotic Systems Laboratory
and is a Research Fellow with the Human Factors Group of the university’s
Center for Advanced Vehicular Systems. Since joining the MSU faculty, she
has worked with Dr. Deborah Eakin of the Department of Psychology.
“She and I started looking at the differences between a human versus a
robot interviewer on eyewitness memory in college-aged students,” Bethel
said. “We published a paper together titled ‘Eyewitnesses are Misled by
Human but Not Robot Interviewers.’”
In time, the two researchers decided to combine their collaboration
with a student-led project headed by sociology graduate student Megan
Stubbs Richardson of Starkville titled “Developing a Robot Application
for Bullying Intervention.” It was this faculty-student effort that was
chosen for full NSF funding in July.
Bethel is the principal investigator, while Eakin is a co-principal
investigator. Also working on the project as co-principal investigators
are Dr. David May, associate professor of criminology, and Dr. Melinda
Pilkinton, associate professor of social work.
The project’s research, which is divided into four stages spanning four
years, will be conducted at the Institute for Imaging and Analytical
Technologies (I2AT) in the Premier Medical center in Starkville.
Bethel said the project will also include her STaRS Lab and Eakin’s
Memory and Metamemory Laboratory.
“Dr. Eakin’s lab is currently developing and hosting a database of
children in the area between the ages of eight and twelve that would be
interested in participating research studies that our labs are conducting,”
Bethel said.
“We are in the early development stages and plan to begin the first
data collection involving eyewitness memory in children beginning in
January 2015,” she continued. “We are currently ordering robots, setting
up and building the interview space at I2AT, designing the interfaces and
programming the robots.”
May said future phases of the project “will compare robot interviewers
with human interviewers to determine whether robots elicit higher levels
of comfort, understandability and likeability than human interviewers
when interviewing children about bullying victimization and other
scenarios designed to examine their ability to recall factual information.”
May said he, Eakin and Pilkinton will then compare the robots
and human interviewers in the first two years of the project. “We will
compare robot interviewers with human interviewers to determine if
robot interviewers develop better rapport with children who have been
victimized by traumatic events.”
In the final part of the project, the team will explore whether “socially
intelligent” robots and humans—those who have been programmed or
trained in techniques, mannerisms and strategies designed to build rapport
and enhance communication in interview settings—are able to gain
more factual information and build better rapport with interviewees than
robots and humans who have not been programmed or trained in those
techniques.
Bethel, trained as a forensic interviewer for children by the Huntsville,
Alabama-based National Child Advocacy Center, will use forensic
interviewing skills to examine these questions in the third and fourth years
of the project.
“By the end of the project, we hope to know whether robot interviewers
are better than human interviewers in obtaining factual information from
children that have been bullied or abused and whether these children
feel more comfortable disclosing that information to robot or human
interviewers,” May said.
ROBOTS vs. HUMANSA Collaborative ProjectBy Hannah Rinehart
8 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
Dr. Rafferty
Dennis Mitchell, a professor of history and chair of the Division of Arts & Sciences at Mississippi State University-Meridian, is playing
a major role in the rediscovery and updating of the Magnolia State’s travel from pre-history to the 21st century. Released earlier this year by University Press of Mississippi,
his book entitled “A New History of Mississippi” includes more than 600 pages of photos and narratives. Containing both familiar and untold stories that have marked Mississippi’s past, it is the first of its type compiled since the 1976 bicentennial history over four decades ago. Mitchell, who grew up just across the state line in Florence,
Alabama, said he developed a love of history and biography early in life. “From elementary school, I loved reading history and
biography,” he said. “The history that I was taught back then was approved by the (United) Daughters of the Confederacy.”
He said it did not take long for him to realize he was only getting part of the story. As an avid reader who frequently used the town library, he came to realize discrepancies between the UDC-approved texts and other books available beyond the school grounds. That realization ultimately led to a personal distrust of what
teachers were telling him and, he added, helped launch his path toward discovering history on his own. After completing a bachelor’s degree at Florence State
University (now University of North Alabama), Mitchell began advance studies in history at the University of Mississippi, where he would receive a master’s degree in 1973 and a doctorate in 1976. As he was finishing graduate school, the Magnolia State found
itself in the midst of controversy about the content of public school textbooks. As it turned out, Mitchell would serve in 1980 on a state committee that was helping set the history curriculum for schools.
Meridian-basedHistorian and Teacher
Writes NewState History
By Audra Gines
9COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
He is proud to say that the committee was successful in getting a new history adopted, adding, “We co-authored a textbook, which was the most widely used,” and “is just now being phased out.” For Mitchell, undertaking the writing of a 21st century edition of the
state’s history was the culmination of 30-plus years of teaching the subject, as well as an appreciation of the need for an updated view of the past. Also, feeling there are many lessons still to be learned, a fresh look back
should give all who love Mississippi an opportunity to reflect anew upon the past and hopefully learn from it, he said.“Mississippi can’t make all the changes it needs to until Mississippians
understand the past,” he said. “People still believe in the myths about Mississippi’s history.” He continued: “One of the points I make in the book is that for a
hundred years, Mississippi had a black majority. Most Mississippian’s are shocked to hear that. That simple fact explains a lot.”Mitchell said his “big hope” is that by appreciating this “simple fact,”
some residents “would behave differently.”In his new history, Mitchell purposefully included stories about Native
Americans, women and minorities that traditional histories either marginalized or left out. Mitchell uses the new book as his classroom text and at least one indicator of his success in making it as well-rounded as possible came during the fall semester. As he tells it, a young African American man told him he “was pleased by that part of the story.”After having spent more than three years of hard work and dedication,
Mitchell said it can be difficult to pinpoint exactly which part of the book can be regarded as his favorite. “It’s hard to choose; it is like choosing a favorite child,” he said, with a
laugh. “If I had to choose, it might be the period of the 1970’s.”He admitted that covering this period caused him to resort to a novel
titled “The Rock Cried Out.” Set in 1970s Mississippi, the book was written by Mississippi native Josephine Haxton (1921-2012), known to most by the pen name Ellen Douglas.“I struggled a bit, and then I went to her novel and used the characters
out of her novel to illustrate that period,” he said. “That was a challenging piece.” If he has any advice for budding historians or writers in general, Mitchell
said the key is learning to love what you do. For a lover of teaching and history, this marriage of the two couldn’t have been a better fit for him. “I enjoy it; it’s fun! I can’t imagine retiring and not doing it anymore,”
Mitchell said. As he looks back to the three-year labor of love, Mitchell said his
accomplishment would not have been possible without the help of others. “I did this book in Meridian, and the library (staff there) was incredibly
supportive,” he said. “They found everything I needed: obscure articles, dissertations, theses, inter-library loans and electronics.“I did it all from Meridian, so I appreciate all their help.”
“MISSISSIPPI CAN’T MAKE ALLTHE CHANGES IT NEEDS TO UNTIL MISSISSIPPIANS UNDERSTAND THE PAST”
10 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
To incorporate new and innovative directions involving some unlikely partners in the field of social science, the Department of Philosophy and Religion has
updated its fields of study. “Philosophy and religion have undergone major changes
in the past 50 years to become more contemporary and interdisciplinary fields of study,” explained Dr. John Bickle, department head. “They no longer are studies of ancient philosophers and their way of thinking, but they have now grown into fields of research, teaching and application.” As a result, Bickle said the department is revolutionizing the
way students will be taught to apply the skills of these subjects. One way is research in applied ethics, where Bickle said
a partnership has begun with the Office of Research and Economic Development to work on external grants for exploring questions that arise in the field. In particular, this involves the attitudes of students from different cultural backgrounds toward research ethics, especially in terms of legitimate authorship and mentorship.Through collaborations with the Department of Sociology,
College of Business and the Social Science Research Center, he said the department seeks to employ its findings. The goal is to better develop educational programs in authorship and mentorship and research into the way students think about ethical research and what it means to them, he added. Another partnership with other departments in the social
sciences seek to research and discover new ideas and
techniques of asking philosophical questions through the lens of science. Dr. Robert Thompson, an associate professor, has been investigating the development of children’s minds. Seeking to learn at what age children become aware that other humans have minds, he has utilized a series of different tests that psychologists and cognitive scientists use to explore this question even further. Bickle said Thompson’s research shows a direct
intersection between traditional questions in the philosophy of language and work in developmental psychology with a regard to language learning and mind attribution. Bickle said the department also has launched curriculum
changes and revisions to incorporate the new trends, ideas and techniques. Classes now will focus on how philosophy applies to everyday life instead of focusing just on the wise words of ancient philosophers. Students will continue to work closely with advisers
to tailor their education in areas of interest and receive attention needed to be well-rounded within their discipline. In addition to traditional strengths of reading and writing, students will graduate from the program with a background in sciences and other disciplines. Bickle said the goal is to produce graduates with a
philosophy background to tackle abstract questions, as well as a background in related disciplines to ground that abstract knowledge.
The Department of
Philosophy and ReligionBREAKING THE MOLD OF TRADITIONAL TEACHING AND THINKING
By Erin Patterson
11COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
Explore the Night Skyat Howell ObservatoryBy Audra Gines
Mississippi State’s Howell Observatory has long been a place for observing and studying the solar system, constellations
and other planets—and, if the timing is right, spotting the International Space Station and other spacecraft passing high overhead. Operated by the university’s Department of Astronomy
and Physics and open to the public 12 times a year, the facility currently is located south of main campus on grounds of the H. H. Leveck Animal Research Center, known to most as the South Farm. Dr. Angelle Tanner, assistant professor of astrophysics,
said visitors may view some spectacular sights through the lens of the observatory’s highly light-sensitive telescopes, including an eight-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain, 10-inch Newtonian reflector and 14-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain. “It is the size of the telescope that decides the faintness
you can observe and the amount of detail you can observe,”
she explained. “They are good for observing planets, the Andromeda Galaxy and the constellations” and “there are lasers to show off the constellations.” Tanner added: “Viewing Saturn should be on everyone’s
bucket list.”In addition to Saturn, she said “the moon and Jupiter are
the most beautiful” to observe, noting that “you can even see the bands on Jupiter in the early morning” while “Mars looks like a tiny red dot.”Tanner and Dr. Donna M. Pierce, a departmental
colleague and astrophysics associate professor, coordinate public events held at the observatory.One major activity takes place around the end of
October when “Halloween at the Howell” often attracts long lines of visitors waiting to view the solar system on clear fall nights.Tanner said increasing visits by members of the campus
and Golden Triangle communities is a major observatory goal. Typical patrons include parents who enjoy astronomy and bring their children to, hopefully, continue that interest. Also, MSU’s Astronomy Club sponsors programs so students may learn how to use the viewing equipment and possibly peak their interest. “It’s a nice way to show people some of what astronomers
do, in regards to viewing the solar system,” Tanner said.Because of a new public-access road being built through
the South Farm that will link Poorhouse Road to the MSU campus, Tanner said the observatory is seeking a new location. While the roadway will be convenient for many, the
light pollution caused by required roadway illumination potentially will make night viewings difficult. “It needs to be moved to a location that is dark, but close,” she observed.To keep up with upcoming observatory events, visit the
department’s website at www.physics.msstate.edu.
12 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
The historic anchor on the north
end of the equally historic Drill
field, Lee Hall has reopened after
undergoing a multi-million dollar renovation
over the past two years.
The four-story brick Beaux Arts building
and designated Mississippi Landmark is
among campus memorials to Stephen D. Lee,
the 136-year-old land-grant institution’s first
president. Built in 1909, it initially served as an
academic building and campus chapel.
The recent renovation was not the first
remodeling project. Probably the most extensive
followed a 1948 fire that destroyed most of the
third and fourth floors with damages estimated
around a million dollars.
For decades, the venerable structure has been
home to the College of Arts & Sciences’
Departments of English and Classical and
Modern Languages and Literature (formerly
Foreign Languages). Classical and modern
languages is on the first floor; English is on the
second.
Dr. Lynn Holt, interim department head,
said he and others in classical and modern
languages “have been energized by the move
back to a renovated Lee.
“The space is wonderful; high ceilings, period
colors and modern systems,” he added. “Our
faculty, of course, are overjoyed about their
offices and teaching spaces, both in terms of
their central location on the Drill Field and just
the clean, bright, open internal spaces.”
Dr. Rich Raymond, department head of English,
said he and his colleagues are especially excited
about new seating options that will better enable
students to participate in small-group work, as
well as major technological upgrades available
in new “smart” classrooms now located in the
basement.
Both agreed the improvements enable
teachers to enjoy a more interactive
learning environment in more comfortable
surroundings where students may better
express their thoughts and ideas.
Another major change for Lee Hall is found
on the third and fourth floors that were
damaged so heavily in the 1948 conflagration.
The entire fourth floor now is home to offices
of President Mark E. Keenum, while the third
has the offices of Dr. Jerry Gilbert, provost
and executive vice president, and David Shaw,
vice president for research and economic
development.
COMING BACK HOMEBy: Erin Patterson
“THE SPACE IS WONDERFUL; HIGH CEILINGS, PERIOD COLORS AND MODERN SYSTEMS”
13COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
Many students are able to choose a major that
is specific to their future career goals, but it
is not always so easy for others.
“ I am just forging my own path,” said Lisa T. Boney of Brandon,
Mississippi. Boney is a senior microbiology major pursuing a
chemistry and economics double minor while planning a career in
public health, a path she decided on as a sophmore.
“There aren’t many schools that offer an undergraduate degree in
public health; it’s a field that many people do not know much about,”
the daughter of Jeb and Linda Boney explained.
Even at her young age, Boney has gained considerable
experience in leadership and research, two areas critical in the
public health field. Last spring, she interned with MSU’s nationally
recognized Social Science Research Center, studying early infant
feeding behaviors among teen mothers.
“I traveled around the state compiling data and wrote the report
over the summer,” she said.
Additionally, Boney also has completed an internship at a
Baltimore, Maryland, HIV clinic operated by the Johns Hopkins
School of Medicine. Part of a program sponsored by the national
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, her work there involved
helping adolescents and other patients cope with recent HIV
diagnoses.
“It was more about the emotional needs than the medical ones,”
said Boney, alluding to the leadership aspect of the public health
field. The program did not focus so much on the medical treatment
as enabling those effected to better deal with their health issues, she
noted.
Boney also was a part of—and continues to work with—the
Baltimore-based Kennedy Krieger Institute’s Project Picnic. A
program designed to combat food insecurity, it operates on the basic
premise that doctors will prescribe certain healthy foods for patients
who then purchase those foods through stores participating in the
project.
After graduation, Boney plans to seek a master’s degree. Because
so few schools offer graduate degrees in public health, she will have
to leave Mississippi, but not indefinitely.
While she would consider a position with the CDC, her plans
currently lie closer to home. Through her graduate work and future
career, Boney wants to continue focusing on nutrition-based health
disparities.
“I grew up in Jackson, Mississippi,” Boney said. “I have a lot of
respect for the state, and I plan to return here.
“Yes, Mississippi has problems related to public health, but we can
solve them,” she emphasized.
Student Feature:LISA BONEYBy Hannah Rinehart
14 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
The Legacy Award Recipients By Audra Gines
ROBERT WOLVERTON
Wolverton is one of MSU’s most senior
faculty members and a John Grisham
Master Teacher. In 1977, he came to
campus as vice president academic affairs
in the administration of President James D.
McComas. He later left administration to
teach classics in the Department of Foreign
Language, now the Department of Classical
and Modern Languages and Literatures. An
earlier selection for Starkville’s Education
Hall of Fame, he has held many campus positions over the years, including head
of his department and president of the Robert Holland Faculty Senate.
“I came to MSU as vice president of academic affairs with a new university
president,” Wolverton said. “I moved into the Department of Foreign Languages
as the only classicist, then served six years as department head and went into full-
time teaching in 1987.”
At 89, Wolverton constantly amazes colleagues and students with his
unprecedented commitment to the classroom. In addition to being named
a Grisham Master Teacher, he has been honored with, among others, the
MSU Alumni Association Award for Undergraduate Teaching, Outstanding
Humanities Faculty Member Award and Mississippi Blue Cross/Blue Shield
Ageless Hero Award for Creativity. During the 2006-07 school year, he was
MSU’s selection for an outstanding faculty member honor given annually by the
Mississippi Legislature. He also is the author of In Other Words: A Lexicon of
Sports for Winners and Losers (2005).
Wolverton said he is most appreciative of having the Legacy Award carry his
name. “It was quite an honor really,” he said.
Over the years, Wolverton has positively affected many community lives
through his love and appreciation for the arts through involvement in art
activities and participation in local theatrical performances.
As he continues to make a difference in the lives of the students he teaches,
Wolverton remains humble and appreciative of what they give back to him.
“Unless you’ve been teaching, you don’t know what an inspiration the students
are,” Wolverton said. “Happiness is having students like this.”
WALTER DIEHL
Before retiring in June, Diehl had a 28-
year career at the university. He is a 1976
College of William and Mary graduate
who went on to receive master’s degree
and doctoral degrees in biology from the
University of South Florida in 1978 and
1983, respectively. He joined the MSU
faculty in 1986.
“I was hired in biological sciences and
came up through the faculty ranks as
assistant professor to associate professor, then full professor,” Diehl said. Of his
time in the dean’s office, “I served one year as interim associate dean, and then I
became associate dean in 2008.”
While teaching in biological sciences, Diehl served as the department’s
undergraduate coordinator. He also was president of the Robert Holland Faculty
Senate for two years and served as interim department head of the Department
of Anthropology and Middle Eastern cultures for one year.
“I’ve enjoyed being a faculty member of biological sciences; it is a good
department and faculty,” he said. “I also enjoyed my time on the faculty senate,
and I’ve enjoyed my time at the dean’s office”.
He said the key to having positive multi-role work experiences “is recognizing
they have been three different jobs and not trying to make one of those jobs fit
the other. They inform each other, but they don’t fit each other.”
Diehl said he greatly appreciated opportunities he had to work with students.
As a young faculty member, he led a freshman biology course that many students,
no matter their majors, were required to take.
“I enjoyed teaching that class; it was an opportunity to interact with students,
often the first semester that they are on campus,” he said. He described the
experience as “a unique situation,” explaining that, “In fact, it is a very difficult
During the 2014 spring semester faculty meeting, Dean R. Gregory Dunaway unveiled a new College of Arts & Sciences recognition of top faculty members in Mississippi State’s largest academic unit.
Dunaway said the Legacy Award was created with one particular individual in mind, Dr. Robert E. Wolverton Sr., longtime professor of languages.
Wolverton was the first to receive the honor that now carries his name. The three others receiving the inaugural university award include:
• Dr. Walter Diehl, emeritus associate dean and a professor of
biological sciences.
• The late Dr. William P. “Bill” Henry, associate professorof
Chemistry
• Dr. John F. Marszalek, giles distinguished professor emeritus,
director and mentor of Distinguished Scholars and executive
director and managing editor of the Ulysses S. Grant
Association.
15COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
course for some of the students.”
Considering challenges students in the class faced, Diehl said he chose to
deliver the course content with the philosophy that “I can’t make you a good
biologist or a good biology student, but if you work with me, I can make you a
better biology student.”
He is proud to say that more than a few thanked him for what they learned in
the entry-level course. For a young faculty member who could only have minimal
interaction with students due to the large class size, the comments meant a great
deal, he added.
As he gained seniority, Diehl began teaching graduate-level courses, which he
describes as a completely different experience.
“You know those students; you get involved in subject matter in a very
different way with those students than you do in an entry level class,” he said.
“I had a very satisfying experience seeing graduate students doing their own
research and getting their own work published.”
Throughout his tenure, Diehl said he was continually impressed with the
quality of MSU students with whom he interacted. He also openly challenges
any other institution of higher learning to compare their students with peers at
MSU.
As both a teacher and administrator, Diehl said he has witnessed MSU’s
continuing attraction of promising students that recognize the land-grant
university as a top-tier school.
“The students that are coming to MSU are very good students, and I put our
best students up against the best in any other university” .
BILL HENRY
Henry, who died in February 2014, was
a 1979 University of Notre Dame graduate
who went on to earn a doctorate in 1986
from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
He then began post-doctoral research at
Nebraska in organometallic chemistry
under the direction of Dr. Reuben Rieke.
He also earned a postdoctoral fellowship in
the laboratories of Dr. Russell Hughes at
Dartmouth College and Dr. John Oliver at
Wayne State University before coming to MSU in 1988 as an assistant professor.
Henry’s Legacy Award was accepted by his widow, music professor Jackie
Edwards-Henry. She told those attending the presentation ceremony that
“research was a critical aspect of his professional career, and ultimately what
drew him to MSU.” While he also had an opportunity to accept a faculty position
in New Orleans, “he came here because he knew he could get his research done,”
she added.
Edwards-Henry described her husband as “a real people person” that “loved
his students and was excited about chemistry.” She emphasized that the passion
and dedication he had for teaching was shared alike with undergraduate and
graduate students.
“I didn’t get the sense that Bill had a time frame, for him it was an adventure,”
she said, “Bill was one to embrace whatever experiences life brought him.”
As for being among the first to receive a Legacy Award, she said, “I think he
would be very humbled by it. It would mean a lot to be recognized.”
In remembering his late colleague, Dr. Stephen Foster, an associate professor
of physical chemistry, said it was an “honor to work with Bill for the last 20 years.
“He was friendly and welcoming to all,” Foster continued. “He always was
engaged and would unfailingly volunteer to help,” which meant “he was an ideal
professor, happy to spend time with undergraduates and graduate students.
He maintained very high standards in the classroom but, even so, was almost
universally loved by his students.”
Foster said one of Henry’s biggest impacts in the department was his love of
undergraduate research. “Many, many students spent time in ‘Doc’s’ research
lab, and large numbers were inspired to head to graduate school in chemistry.
When alumni are asked about their experience in the chemistry department, they
almost universally talk about Bill Henry and the influence he had on their career.”
JOHN MARSZALEK
When Marszalek joined the MSU history
department, he taught Civil War, Jacksonian
America and basic American history survey
classes before, in time, leading graduate
seminars. Of special note, he is credited
with introducing the first classes in sports
history, and he also taught black American
history for a time.
In 2008, Marszalek came out of
retirement to become the acting executive
director and managing editor of the Ulysses S. Grant Library. It was at this
time that the extensive Grant archival material was coming to campus from its
previous home at Southern Illinois University.
Since becoming the full-time executive director and managing editor,
Marszalek said the Ulysses S. Grant Library Association has acquired a significant
amount of material relating to the famed general who led Union Army forces
to victory in the Civil War and was elected in 1869 to the first of two terms as
U.S. president.
“We believe we have a copy of every letter Grant ever wrote in his life, or any
letter ever written to him,” Marszalek said. “You come here, and you can look at
as good a collection of Grant material as anywhere in the world.”
Marszalek said he was humbled and honored to receive an award that
carries Wolverton’s name.
“I have the highest respect for Dr. Wolverton, and I’m thrilled to be recognized
by the college and by the university as having some sort of impact on the place,”
he said. “I’m just thrilled, I really am. It’s one of those things that doesn’t always
happen.”
Marszalek thanked Frances Coleman, dean of libraries and others on the
library staff with whom he works. He also expresses appreciation to MSU
President Mark E. Keenum, Provost and Executive Vice President Jerry Gilbert
and Dean Dunaway for their support.
“That feeling I had when I first came here, the feeling of acceptance, I still feel
it now,” he said. “It’s not something they say, but do.”
16 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
Finding a career centered on their
interests may prove difficult for
some people but not for Ben Mims. He
has found a career that incorporates two
of his passions, cooking and writing.
Shortly after entering Mississippi State in
2003 as a freshman from Kosciusko, he
changed his major to communication/
journalism with plans to pursue a career
in writing and liberal arts. To enhance
his classroom training, he also served for
three years as a writer and copy editor for
The Reflector. He also became involved
in several other campus organizations,
including Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity,
MSU Roadrunners, Alumni Delegates
and Interfraternity Council.
During the summer prior to his senior
year, Mims first was introduced to the
art of food writing while working at the
Vicksburg Post. The experience led him
to seek a career writing about food and
cooking.
“My natural affinity for cooking and
writing produced the perfect storm,
especially after the recommendation
from the food editor in Vicksburg to
pursue it as a viable career,” he recalled.
Following graduation in the spring of
2007, Mims decided to move to New
York City, one of world’s food capitals,
and enroll in the highly regarded French
Culinary Institute. “I wanted to attend
a great culinary school and be in the
center of journalism, so there was really
only one choice,” he said.
His culinary training led to a writing
position at Saveur, an award-winning
New York magazine known for in-
depth stories on various world cuisines.
In time, he was named associate food
editor. In the publication’s test kitchens,
he now could research, develop and test
recipes while composing recipes and
stories for both the print and online
editions.
Food for Thought:MSU Alumnus Finds Career in Food WritingBy Erin Patterson
17COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
During five years at Saveur, Mims’ writing included an essay about
Southern layer cakes that caught the eye of an editor at Rizzoli, a
leading publishing company in culinary arts, which led to the offer of a
cookbook publishing deal.
Released in September, Sweet & Southern: Classic Desserts with a Twist
is a 224-page exploration of the art of Southern baking. “Well written,
great updates to classics and for a non-baker, easy to follow recipes!,”
was the response of one purchaser on an online site.
Of all those he included, Mims said the coconut cake recipe is his favorite,
“because it is a family recipe and is so quintessentially ‘Southern’ in spirit.
“It gets the best reactions
from everyone who tries
it, even coconut haters,”
he added.
Mims said he found work
on his first cookbook to
be very gratifying.
“I loved getting to
develop my own recipes,”
he said. “Thankfully, I
had already done that
with many recipes in my
own spare time, so I had
a good list to pull from
already. Getting to share
my viewpoint and feel
like I can help people
become better cooks was
the best part.”
If Sweet & Southern
does well commercially,
Mims said he is prepared
to do a second, but in a
different way.
“I shot the whole [first]
book in one week, 80
pictures, which was way
more difficult than I could ever have imagined,” he explained. “If I do a
second book, I’ll definitely make sure to hire several assistants to get all
the work finished without having to lay in bed for three days afterward
like this one.”
Completion of the cookbook led to another major change in Mims’
life. He left the Big Apple and travelled across the U.S. to begin as a
pastry chef in San Francisco, another world food capital. A few months
back in the kitchen, however, led him to change position again, this time
becoming a freelance recipe developer and food writer.
However he might have enjoyed the generally balmy California climate, it
was the offer of an associate food editorship at Food &Wine magazine,
a Time Inc. publication, that would draw Mims back to New York in
May 2014.
Looking back on his student years at MSU, the now much-travelled
and experienced Mims said he appreciates the many important career-
enhancing lessons he learned while on campus.
“I learned the fundamentals of journalism, how to pitch a story, and
how to network to get a job,” he said. “As a journalist, I learned to
always question everything to make sure it’s true. That way of thinking
has helped more than
anything to produce my
best work, be it writing or
developing a recipe.”
Specifically, he added:
“(Communication department
instructor) Frances McDavid
was definitely my biggest
influence. She was very
honest and helpful in offering
real world advice and critiques
to make the work of every
student she taught better.”
Beyond his communication
training, Mims said his
favorite classes “were the
fun ones that interested me
or dealt with my hobbies:
geography, geology, horse-
riding, contemporary dance
and philosophy, which goes
to show how important liberal
arts courses are to the college
experience.”
Asked what advice he would
pass on to current students,
Mims said, “I would tell them
to learn as much as they can while they’re in school: take as many different
classes as you can manage to get a well-rounded experience, take what you
learn to heart and follow it, but when you graduate, set it all aside and
welcome new experiences.
“Remain skeptical about everything that comes your way so you can be
discerning and make decisions wisely, and work harder than the person
next to you,” he continued. “A lot of people have talent or a personality,
but the one that gets the job is the hardest worker, and that’s a quality that’s
not easily taught.”
18
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Dr. Ty Abernathy
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Airgas USA, L.L.C.
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DONORS
Dear alumni and friends,
Discovery.
Every day, our faculty and students are investigating the problems and challenges of the world, seeking new knowledge and ways to improve our lives and surroundings. In each issue of Vision, you see a small slice of how the College of Arts & Sciences progresses on this mission of discovery. You have the opportunity to partner with us in that mission. Two of our goals for the Infinite Impact campaign (www.infiniteimpactmsu.com) are to create endowed funds to support undergraduate research and to initiate and expand the research done by our faculty and students.
The opportunity to conduct research as an undergraduate student adds tangible value. Students learn how to conduct quality research in an area of interest, and also build a valuable relationship with the supervising professor to create an experience that distinguishes them from fellow applicants for jobs and graduate or professional schools.
Endowed funds for research would broadly support the research efforts of the College of Arts & Sciences. These funds could, among other things, provide seed money to kick-start projects and strengthen applications for external funding, upgrade equipment to maintain state-of-the-art research environments and premiere laboratories, and engage additional undergraduate and graduate students in research projects.
What did you discover during your time at Mississippi State? You likely discovered new friends and relationships. You probably discovered new and fascinating information about the world around you and the people who live in it. Maybe you had the opportunity to engage in research that has impacted this current generation of students. Perhaps you discovered a career path and a new trajectory for your life.
Would you join us in this effort? If you are interested in creating support for these, or other areas in the College of Arts & Sciences, please contact me at [email protected] or 662-325-3240. Thank you for all that you do for the College of Arts & Sciences and MSU.
Hail State,
Alex McIntosh(Class of ’07, ’12)Director of DevelopmentCollege of Arts & Sciences
19COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
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20 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
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Mr. James H. Rule
Mr. Donald M. Rushing
Mrs. Deborah Rutherford
Ms. Katrice D. Rutherford
Mr. Chess Rybolt
Dr. Charles Sallis
Mrs. Kara L. Sanders
Dr. Benjamin F. Sanford, Jr.
Mr. Clifton W. Sawyer
Mr. Wallace H. Scoggins
Dr. Joe D. Seger
Mr. Curtis L. Sessions
Dr. Stephen D. Shaffer
Mrs. Daphne C. Shannon
Shell Oil Company Foundation
Mr. Gary L. Shelton
Mr. G. Richard Sheridan
Dr. Wahnee J. Sherman
Dr. Kathleen M. Sherman-Morris
Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, Inc.
Dr. Howard E. Shook, Jr.
Mrs. Virginia W. Shurlds
Mr. Jason M. Simpson
Dr. Rich L. Simpson
Mrs. Lib Sistrunk
Mr. Arville O. Slaughter
Mrs. Caitlin C. Smedema
Mrs. Ann Ardahl Smith
Ms. Cailin Smith
Dr. Hugh C. Smith
Southern Ionics, Inc.
Mr. Benson P. St. Louis
Mr. David A. Stampley
Starkville Area Arts Council, Inc.
Starkville Civitan Club Inc.
Starkville Pediatric Clinic
State Farm Insurance
Statewide Federal Credit Union
Mr. Robert A. Stephenson
Ms. Cynthia M. Stevens
Mr. Kyle T. Steward
Mr. Barry T. Stewart
Ms. Bobbie S. Stone
Dr. Randolph Stone
Student Affairs Administration in Higher Education
Dr. Arthur D. Stumpf
Dr. Martha H. Swain
Mr. Chester A. Tapscott, III
Mr. Charles H. Tardy
Ms. Brenda F. Tate
Mr. Kevin M. Tate
Mr. David P. Taylor
Dr. Douglas H. Taylor
Mrs. Leslie M. Terrell
Ms. Lynda G. Terreson
The Annie E. Casey Foundation
The Benevity Community Impact Fund
The Bower Foundation
The Brinks Company
The G. V. Sonny Montgomery Foundation
The MidSouth Aquatic Plant Mgt Society
The Steve Azar St. Cecilia Foundation
Col. Jerry A. Thomas
Dr. Timothy N. Thomas
Mr. J. Wilmot Thomson, Jr.
Mr. John Thornton
Ms. Catherine A. Thrash
Mrs. Amanda Jones Tollison
Ms. Amy Tuck
Mr. J. R. Tucker
Mr. Joe G. Tuggle, Jr.
Dr. James S. Turner
Ms. Sharon D. Turner-Davis
Mr. Kevin D. Veal
Vicksburg Hospital Medical Foundation
Mr. Britt Virden
Dr. Ben M. Waggoner
Mr. Harold D. Walker, III
Dr. Diane E. Wall
Mr. Scott Waller
Mrs. Jean W. Ferguson
Mr. John D. Wax
Mr. Tom Webb
Dr. Richard Weddle
Mr. John P. Weir
Wells Fargo & Company
Mr. Graham M. Wells
Dr. Marion R. Wells
Wenner Gren Foundation
Miss Julie L. West
Mr. Christopher A. White
Dr. A. Randle White
Mr. John P. Whitecar, Jr.
Dr. David E. Wigley
Ms. Ladonnal Wiley
Dr. Thomas L. Wiley, Jr.
William Winter Institute for Racial
Reconciliation
Dr. Clyde V. Williams
Mr. John C. Williams, III
Mrs. Laurie R. Williams
Mr. Lee B. Williams
Dr. James F. Williamson, Jr.
Mr. Homer F. Wilson, Jr.
Mr. Phil B. Wilson
Dr. David O. Wipf
Dr. Perisco A. Wofford
World Health Organization
Mr. Mark A. Worthey
Mr. James A. Yarborough
Mr. Fuchang Yin
Mrs. Camille Scales Young
Dr. Judy K. Young
Dr. Dongmao Zhang
21COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015
COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES ALUMNI BOARDFrom left, front:
Bill Gillon, Adrienne Pakis-Gillon, Dr. Karen Hulett, Kitty Henry, Hank Johnston, Dr. Ralph AlewineCenter:
Hunter “Ticket” Henry, Llana Smith, Laurie Williams, Dr. Tom Wiley, Dr. Bill HulettRear:
Dr. John Rada, Dr. Don Hall
In Memory of Dr. William P. Henry By Audra Gines
Dr. William P. Henry, or “Doc” as he was affectionately called by many of his students, was a Mississippi State University chemistry professor who died in February at his home.
Though born in Delaware, he lived much of his early life in Toronto, Canada, where his father was a chemist for a chemical company. He was a 1979 University of Notre Dame graduate who went on to receive a 1986 master’s degree from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. His UN-L doctorate in organometallic chemistry was completed under the direction of Dr. Reuben Rieke, and he was a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratories of Dr. Russell Hughes at Dartmouth College and Dr. John Oliver at Wayne State University.
Henry, who joined the MSU faculty in 1988 as an assistant
professor, is survived by wife Jackie Edwards-Henry, a professor of applied piano, group piano and piano pedagogy, coordinator of group piano and MSU’s music department curriculum chair.
“Bill was a real people person,” she said, reflecting on her late husband’s career. “He loved his students and was excited about chemistry.” She also noted that a memorial service in Chicago where much of Bill Henry’s family currently resides drew one of his early graduate students at Nebraska.
This and other personal testaments to his dedication help illustrate how greatly he will be missed by the many whose lives he touched over a 28-year teaching career.
22 VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
VISION magazine is the newsletter for alumni, students, faculty and friends of the College of Arts & Sciences. We want to showcase the great things the College has to offer, and to do that, we need your help. Past issues have featured pretigious awards won by professors, organizations making a difference in the community and impressive faculty projects. If you have anything that you feel would fit in with what we do, please send it to us!
Simply send an e-mail or letter to:
Karyn BrownDirector of CommunicationMississippi State UniversityCollege of Arts & Sciences
P.O. Box ASMississippi State, MS [email protected]
WE WANT YOUR
news!
ARTS & SCIENCES NEW FACULTYNew Faculty as of August 1, 2014
Air Force ROTCLt. Nicholas Charney
Anthropology and Middle Eastern CulturesD. Shane Miller
Army ROTCMaj. John Carter, Maj. Bradley
Hollingsworth and Maj. Terrance
Seals
Biological SciencesHeather Jordan, Victoria McCurdy
and Robert Outlaw
ChemistryCharles Edwin Webster
Classical and Modern Languages and LiteraturesSalvador Bartera and Karina Zelaya
CommunicationMelody Fisher, Meaghan Gordon
and John Nara
EnglishDaniel Austin, Katie Doughty, Amy
Mallory-Kani, Eric Vivier,
and Abigail Voller
GeosciencesAdam Skarke, Chris Fuhrmann and
Lindsey Morschauser
HistoryMarsha Barrett, Brandon Byrd and
Andrew Lang
Mathematics and StatisticsTung-Lung Wu
Philosophy and ReligionKristin E. Boyce, Alicia A. Hall,
William Kallfelz, David C. Spewak,
and Danielle J. Wylie
Physics and AstronomyLamiaa El Fassi and Mark Worthy
Political Science and Public AdministrationJames Chamberlain, Daniel Fay, Kyle
Kattelman and Jiahuan Lu
PsychologyArazais Oliveros
SociologyRachel Allison, Margaret Hagerman
and Margaret Ralston
RETIREES
Walter J. Diehl, College of Arts & Sciences .........................................6/30/2014
Janet Rafferty, Anthro. & Mid. Eastern Cultures ................................6/30/2014
Dwayne Wise, Biological Sciences ..........................................................5/15/2014
Peter Rabideau, Chemistry .......................................................................8/15/2014
Betty J. Durst, Communication ...............................................................5/15/2014
Godfrey N. Uziogwe, History ...............................................................12/31/2013
Marjorie Crittenden, Mathematics & Statistics ......................................7/7/2014
Betty Scarbarough, Mathematics & Statistics .....................................12/31/2013
Marty Wiseman, Political Sci. & Public Admin .................................12/31/2013
23COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES | VISION SPRING 2014
Reporting SuccessEach day, Mississippi State University’s faculty and students are finding success through opportunities both inside and outside the classroom. Thanks to the financial support from our many alumni and friends, students like Kaitlyn can gain valuable real-world experience while at MSU.
KAITLYN BYRNECLASS OF 2014
REFLECTOR EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT,
FOUNDATION AMBASSADOR
FRANCES MCDAVIDMSU ALUMNAREFLECTOR ADVISER, JOURNALISM INSTRUCTOR
SUCCESS DISCOVERY OUTREACH GLOBALIZATION EXPERIENCE
VISION FALL/WINTER 2014/2015 | COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCIENCES
R
Mailing Address:Post Office Box AS
Mississippi State, MS 39762
Physical Address: 175 Presidents Circle
Mississippi State, MS 39762
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