Achievements

Publications and achievements submitted by our faculty, staff, and students. 

 

Faculty Dr. Michael S. Bruner, Ms. Brittany Stuckey Communication

Communication Professor Michael S. Bruner presented the paper, "Methods for Accounting for the Reception of Food-Related Photographs," at the annual meeting/conference of the Association for the Study of Food and Society in Pittsburgh, PA, June 24-28, 2015. The paper was co-authored by Brittany Stuckey, an Undergraduate Research Fellow in the CAHSS. The study reported on four research methods, including a Bruner & Stuckey photo array and survey of 170 HSU undergraduates in Spring 2015, using the International Affective Picture System.

Submitted: July 4, 2015

Faculty Dr. Michael S. Bruner Communication

Communication Professor Michael S. Bruner's article, "Labeling: Organic, Local, Genetically Modified," appears in the new SAGE Encyclopedia of Food Issues. See Vol. 2: 877-882. The article arose from previous work in the HSU Communication Department on California Prop 37 and on the organic food movement. The three volume encyclopedia was released in hardcover this month, Ken Albala, Ed. (Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, 2015).

Submitted: May 26, 2015

Faculty Sarah Jaquette Ray

Sarah Jaquette Ray attended the "Rethinking Race in the Anthropocene" symposium at the University of Oregon May 7-9.

Submitted: May 13, 2015

Faculty Selma Sonntag Politics

Politics Professor Selma Sonntag is one of two editors of State Traditions and Language Regimes, recently published by McGill-Queen’s University Press, in which scholars from Asia, Europe, and North America shift focus from the consequences of language policies to how and why states make language policy choices.

Submitted: May 12, 2015

Faculty Marcy Burstiner Journalism & Mass Communication

The California Newspaper Publishers Association awarded Professor Marcy Burstiner first place for best column in the weekly newspaper division in its 2014 Better Newspapers Contest. The CNPA presented Burstiner with the award May 9 in a ceremony in San Diego for two columns published in the North Coast Journal: "What's Not to Know," published Feb. 27, 2014 and "The Big Chill," published March 27, 2014. Burstiner has written a monthly column on local media, the public's right to know and First Amendment issues for the Journal since 2006.

Submitted: May 11, 2015

Student Diover Duario, Israel LeFrak, Rebecca Gallegos, Ian Bradley, John Ferrara Journalism & Mass Communication

The California Newspaper Publishers Association awarded The Lumberjack newspaper first place for general excellence in the 4-year college newspaper category in its 2014 Better Newspapers Contest, deeming it the top student newspaper in the state for 4-year colleges. The judges said: “The paper has a professional look. Excellent layout and design throughout. Stories were tight and well-written. Headlines are clean and crisp. News reporting was balanced and covered all sides well. Overall, a great college newspaper executed with flair and authority.” The 2014 Lumberjack teams were lead by students Diover Duario, Rebecca Gallegos, Israel LeFrak and Ian Bradley.

Submitted: May 11, 2015

Faculty Matthew Derrick Geography

Matthew Derrick, assistant professor in the Department of Geography, recently published a chapter titled “Territoriality and the Muslim Spiritual Boards of Russia” in The Changing World Religion Map (New York: Springer), edited by Stan Brunn.

Submitted: April 28, 2015

Student Jesus Perez Sociology

Jesus Perez’s senior thesis “Latina/o Self-Identified Students at HSU: Beyond Their Freshmen Year” was selected for the 2015 Distinguished Undergraduate Student Paper Award from the Pacific Sociological Association (PSA).

Submitted: April 24, 2015

Faculty Gil Kline Music

Professor Gil Cline, Department of Music, has been recognized by the international music world via inclusion of his biography in the recent German publication "Das grosse Buch der Trompete" ("The Big Book of the Trumpet") A survey of accomplished, leading trumpet performers from around the globe, this honor stems in large part to his practical research on renaissance and baroque trumpets, which have led to performances of historic music on the natural trumpet, without valves, having no additional tuning conveniences. Locally, his Trumpet Consort von Humboldt, comprised of Cline, HSU undergrads, and recent graduates, explores the performance of music from 1500 - 1850 in a variety of settings, from concert hall to outdoor amphitheater, and from land to sea. TCvH was a hit in New York City at the 2012 Second International Symposium of the Historic Brass Society.

Submitted: April 23, 2015

Faculty Marcy Burstiner Journalism & Mass Communication

Professor Marcy Burstiner, chair of the Department of Journalism & Mass Communication, was accepted as one of 12 journalism instructors from Hispanic Serving Institutions to attend the Dow Jones Multimedia Training Academy. The intensive workshop in El Paso, Texas, is scheduled for May.

Submitted: April 23, 2015

Student Shea King Theatre, Film & Dance

Directing "Slipping". Gist Hall Theatre, April 23-26, April 30, May 1-3

Submitted: April 20, 2015

Faculty James Floss Communication

James Floss (Communication Department) has directed “Clybourne Park” opening on April 30 at Redwood Curtain Theatre in Eureka. Clybourne Park is a contemporary, Pulitzer Prize winning follow-up to Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun”. Act One takes place in 1959, as nervous community leaders anxiously try to stop the sale of a home to a black family. Act Two is set in the same house in the present day, as the now predominantly African-American neighborhood battles to hold its ground in the face of gentrification.

Submitted: April 17, 2015

Student Maggy Waurin Art

Art major Maggy Waurin has received an assistantship as a studio technician in the Jewelry & Metals Studio for the Idyllwild Arts Summer Program 2015 for Adults. More information at:
http://www.idyllwildarts.org/page.cfm?p=722

Submitted: April 16, 2015

Faculty John W. Powell Philosophy

Philosophy Professor John Powell presented an invited paper to the April 2015 meeting of the North American Wittgenstein Society, in Vancouver, British Columbia. The paper title is "Just War Theorists and Pacifists As Ships Passing in the Night." Powell argues that it's too soon to declare just war theorists as victors (as many have done) and that better-grounded arguments and a clearer view of global stakes may renew this crucial debate.

Submitted: April 13, 2015

Student Ben Taylor English

Since completing service as a Peace Corps volunteer teacher-trainer in the Federated States of Micronesia in August 2014, English student Benjamin Ryan Taylor has traveled the country sharing his experiences. In October 2014, he spoke at a Peace Corps recruiting event at his undergraduate alma mater, Knox College in Galesburg, Illinois; and in February, gave two recruiting presentations at Humboldt State. He was also featured on KIEM News Channel 3, Eureka. In March, Taylor presented his work at the TESOL 2015 convention in Toronto, Canada, and in April, he will participate in HSU’s IdeaFest.

Submitted: April 3, 2015

Student Carlrey Delcastillo, Noemi Pacheco

Carlrey Delcastillo and Noemi Pacheco have received a College of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences award to conduct research on campus this semester on Latin@s and Sustainability at HSU. Professor Sarah Jaquette Ray will present their research at the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment conference, at "Latin@ Environmentalisms: A Pedagogy Workshop" in Moscow, Idaho in June.

Submitted: April 2, 2015

Faculty Alison Holmes Politics

Alison Holmes, Program Leader of International Studies, has been named a Visiting Scholar to the Roosevelt Study Center in Middelburg, The Netherlands where she will work in the archive on European diplomacy.

Submitted: March 30, 2015

Student Barbara Klessig Anthropology

Master's student Barbara Klessig, and Dr. Isabella von Holstein with Christian Albrechts University, Kiel, Germany will be co-chairing a round table discussion at this year’s EAA conference in Glasgow, Scotland. The session, titled “Integrating Textiles Studies into Mainstream Archaeology/Anthropology Curriculum” brings archaeologists, educators and researchers together to address the lack of textiles studies at the university level and how to better integrate them into the teaching of archaeology and anthropology at universities. Discussion will explore the teaching of textile studies, use of experimental archaeology & making textiles studies relevant.

Submitted: March 26, 2015

Student Ivan de Soto, Paradise Martinez Graff Geography

Students Ivan de Soto and Paradise Martinez Graff have been chosen to attend the California Forum for Diversity in Graduate Education at Sonoma State on April 18-20, where they'll learn about the challenges and opportunities of pursuing grad school. They also received a competitive CAHSS research award to attend the Association for the Study of Literature and Environment Conference in Idaho in June with ENST Program Leader Sarah Jaquette Ray, where they'll be participating in "Latin@ Environmentalisms: A Pedagogy Workshop." Ivan has also been elected co-director of CCAT.

Submitted: March 26, 2015

Faculty John Meyer Politics

Politics Professor John Meyer's book, "Engaging the Everyday: Environmental Social Criticism and the Resonance Dilemma," has been published by MIT Press. http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/engaging-everyday

In the book, he argues that an environmental agenda that emerges from everyday concerns would resonate more deeply with ordinary citizens.He will be giving a talk based on the book as part of the Sustainable Futures speaker series, Thursday, April 9th, 5:30pm, BSS 166.

Submitted: March 20, 2015