Memorial service to be held for Karls
A memorial service will be held for Michael and Irene Karl Feb. 23 in the Connor Auditorium at the Farrell Learning and Teaching Center.
Introducing new faculty members
The following are among the new faculty members at the University. Others will be introduced periodically in this space.
Werner Ploberger, Ph.D., joins the department of economics in Arts & Sciences as professor. He earned a doctorate in applied mathematics at Vienna University of Technology (Austria) in 1981 and a Habilitation in Econometrics there in 1993. He has been affiliated with Vienna University of Technology, the University of St. Andrews (Scotland) and the University of Rochester. He was tenured in 1993 (Vienna) and promoted to full professor in 1995 (University of St. Andrews). He has been at the University of Rochester since 1997. His research focus is in the areas of statistics, econometric methodology and time-series econometrics.
Stephen Williamson, Ph.D., joins the department of economics in Arts & Sciences as professor. He earned a doctorate from the University of Wisconsin in 1984 and has since been affiliated with Queen’s, Western Ontario, the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and the University of Iowa. He was tenured in 1989 (Western Ontario) and promoted to full professor in 1992 (Iowa). He served as department chair at Iowa (2000-03). He is co-editor for Economic Theory and associate editor for Journal of Monetary Economics and Review of Economic Dynamics. His research is mainly on macroeconomics, monetary economics and financial economics.
Jimin Ding, Ph.D., joins the department of mathematics in Arts & Sciences as assistant professor. Ding earned a doctorate in statistics from the University of California, Davis, under the guidance of Jane-Ling Wang. She works in a modern form of survival analysis using techniques that will be applicable to many other areas of statistics.
Xiang Tang, Ph.D., joins the department of mathematics in Arts & Sciences as assistant professor. He was previously a visiting research professor at the University of California, Davis. He earned a doctorate in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley, where he worked under Alan Weinstein. His areas of expertise are noncommutative geometry, symplectic geometry and quantization. He worked on mathematical problems in statistical thermodynamics while still an undergraduate at Peking University.
Kharasch named Shelden Professor
Evan D. Kharasch, M.D., Ph.D., has been named the Russell D. and Mary B. Shelden Professor of Anesthesiology.
Campus Watch
Feb. 13
3:22 p.m. — A person reported unknown person(s) used her debit card online to make a purchase. The fraudulent purchase occurred Jan. 30. The victim had possession of her debit card when the fraudulent activity took place.
Feb. 14
12:03 a.m. — The complainant reported that suspect(s) unknown entered their unsecured dorm rooms in Myers Residence Hall and took two cameras and an iPod. They believe that the incident occurred between Feb. 11 in the evening and today.
Turner elected member of prestigious National Academy of Engineering
The NAE is a private, independent, nonprofit institution that has approximately 2,000 peer-elected members who are among the world’s most accomplished engineers.
Update on Campus Assault
University Police offer an update on recent assault on the South 40.
Lost Tennessee Williams poem published
An unknown poem by famed playwright Tennessee Williams was a fortuitous find for Henry I. Schvey, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences.
‘Rice gone bad’: Plant biologist investigates
A University plant evolutionary biologist has received a two-year, $1.12 million grant from the National Science Foundation to perform genetic studies on red rice.
Sustainability Web site offered
The members-only resources of the Web site for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education now is available to everyone on the Danforth and School of Medicine campuses.
HIV protein enlisted to help kill cancer cells
This PET scan shows high levels of an anticancer agent in the tumor.Cancer cells keep growing because they don’t react to internal signals urging them to die. Now researchers at the School of Medicine have found an efficient way to get a messenger into cancer cells that forces them to respond to death signals. And they did it using one of the most sinister pathogens around — HIV.
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