Reflections Magazine Issue #46 - Summer 1997 | Page 23

The Inside Scoop 23 It’s been said that Siena Heights is one of higher education’s best kept secrets. Let us be secretive no more! Here are just a few (of the many possible) examples of the outstanding accomplishments that emerge regularly from the classrooms and laboratories of our Adrian campus. Prizewinning Enterprise Six Siena business students defeated 36 colleges from five states to win the regional Students In Free Enterprise championship in April. The students presented their outreach project on Siena’s Mexico educational study program to a panel of 40 business leaders and entrepreneurs who rated the effectiveness of each team’s efforts--and named Siena Heights #1. As regional champions, Siena joined 92 other college teams at SIFE’s International Exposition in May, where team members made valuable job contacts. SIFE works in partnership with business and higher education to help students apply classroom business learning to real-life situations. Team members were: Cortney Ford ’97, Mirta Carrello (an exchange student from Cuernavaca, Mexico), Beth Elliot ’97, Heather Hulbert ’98, Daniel Morris ’99 and Keith Rusie ’99. Roger Pae, associate professor of marketing, advises the group. Siena Songbird Sophomore Choi Lim Palms-Cohen was named best college vocalist at the 24th annual Aquinas College Jazz Festival in February, which showcased jazz ensembles from 24 Michigan high schools, colleges and universities. In addition to singing with the Siena Heights jazz band, Choi is a member of the Madrigal Singers and the Cecilian Choristers. She is majoring in music business. Adding Up Honors Three mathematics students presented research at this spring’s 14th Annual Rose-Hulman Conference on Undergraduate Mathematics in Indiana. One of the nation’s most prestigious undergraduate mathematics conferences, the event showcases research from across the country. Only 24 students were chosen to present research to the convention. “To have three students from one school selected is an extreme honor,” said math professor Rick Trujillo. “It highlights the quality of the mathematics program at Siena Heights.” Margaret Jahnke ‘97 presented “Matrix Invertibility: A Graphical Approach with Mathematica.” Maryann Herman ‘97 presented “Causes of War.” Angela Root ’99 presented “Investigations of Cyclic Quadrilaterals Using the Texas Instrument-92 Graphing Calculator.” Dramatic Diversity Theatre Siena focused on two very different American families this spring in plays exploring Jewish and AfricanAmerican cultural experience. The March production of A Shayna Maidel, directed by Mark DiPietro ’83, focused on a family reunited after World War II, building a new life in the aftermath of the Holocaust. The April show, August Wilson’s Fences directed by Doug Miller ’75, portrayed a 1950s black family in middle America before the civil rights revolution, and was the first production in memory at Siena to feature an all-African-American cast. Women in Science: Academic Dean and chemist Sharon Weber, OP ‘69 congratulates graduating biologists and Beta Beta Beta members Amanda Adams (left) and Mary O’Connor. of Organismal Biology and Ecology with her paper, “Early Developmental Experience and Mate Selection of White-eyed Drosophila Melanogaster.” This is the second straight year a Siena Heights student has won the Brooks award. Stewart Isley ’97 placed third in oral research in Cell and Molecular Biology for his study of heavy metal accumulation in wild and ranch-raised mink. Scott Ortsey ’97 took third in the poster competition with his population census of the least shrew. Spread the Word Research Recognition Siena’s Xi Omega chapter of Beta Beta Beta National Biological Honor Society hosted the Region 4 District Convention this spring. Student biologists from colleges and universities in Michigan, Ohio and Indiana came to campus for the oral research paper and research poster competitions. Eleven Siena students presented research at the conference and three won awards. Mary O’Connor ’97 won the Frank Brooks Award for best oral research presentation in the area Don’t be shy: Tell the world where you went to college and why. And remember: Any son or daughter of a Siena Heights graduate who enrolls full-time qualifies for a $1,000 annual alumni scholarship. Spread the good news!