Honors Class Notes (Summer 2014)

July 30, 2014

1970s

Robert T. Egan ’74 was appointed chairman of the commercial litigation department of Archer & Greiner, P.C., a regional law firm of over 175 attorneys headquartered in Haddonfield, New Jersey, and among the five largest law firms in New Jersey. James Tierney ’78 moved into show business after leaving Microsoft. He has been director and manager of the Renton Civic Theatre for eight years. He also co-owns and manages The Farm at Cedar Springs, a retreat center and wedding location, which recently saw the addition of five miles of hiking trails, shared with an elk herd. (Roosevelt elk grow up to 1600 pounds.) His youngest daughter is attending grad school in Connecticut, which he considers a nice excuse to visit the state.

 1980s

Steven Smith ’81 currently works as a medical science liaison interfacing between his biotechnology company and cancer researchers. He collaborates with some of the country’s best cancer doctors in the South to provide access to innovative cancer drugs for patients with hematologic malignancies. Steven has recently completed his recertification as a board certified oncology pharmacist from the Board of Pharmaceutical Specialties. He lives with his wife and two children in Gainesville, Fla. Mike Towle ’84 is the General Partner of Fort Hill Partners LLP, a boutique accounting firm specializing in finance and accounting infrastructure and litigation consulting (forensic accounting). Patricia (Sivo) Cole ’85 currently has a private practice at the Rainbow Center for Children and Families in Old Wethersfield, Conn. She also consults to Andover Elementary School as well as other school systems providing evaluations and assistance in program planning. She is married with two daughters, the eldest of whom just completed her first year at UConn in the Honors Program. Elliot Cazes ’86 practices gynecology in Tampa, Fla. He speaks nationally about hereditary cancer risk assessment, breast cancer risk protocols and prevention, in-office toxicology screening, carrier screening genetics, ovarian cancer prevention, and menopause. He also consults for six national biotech/pharmaceutical companies. He lives in Tampa, Fla., with his wife, Pam ’87, and children Matt (22), Monica (20), Brett (18), and Evan (16). Charles Wynn ’89 received an R&D 100 award in 2013. These awards are given annually by R&D Magazine, recognizing the 100 most technologically significant innovations during the year. The award was received for development of the PHASE sensor, which senses trace levels of explosives using an ultraviolet laser and photoacoustic detector. The ability to detect trace explosives from significant standoff distances could significantly impact our ability to detect and defeat deadly threats in a variety of scenarios.

 1990s

Jason Courtmanche ’91 and his wife, Amy Nocton ’92, bought a new home in Storrs. Jason also became the President of the Nathaniel Hawthorne Society on June 15. He was the commencement speaker at Tolland High School on June 20. He also just received two grants from the National Writing Project, from a larger grant awarded by the U.S. Dept of Education, to promote Teacher Leadership and for Work in a High Need School. He will be teaching a new First Year Honors course at UConn in the fall, “Why Read?” Melanie Hancock ’93 was elected Shareholder by the Tampa Bay law firm Hill Ward Henderson. Ms. Hancock practices in the firm’s Executive Compensation & Employee Benefits Group. Chad Landmon ’96, Chair of Axinn, Veltrop & Harkrider LLP’s Intellectual Property and FDA practice groups, has been named a 2014 Law360 “Rising Star” in the life sciences area. The national award recognizes top legal talent under the age of 40 in certain practice areas. Stephen Pavlopoulos ’96 started at Vevo in September and has been producing and writing original music video programming. Jaren (Madden) Herron ’97 and Mark Herron ’98 happily welcomed Alison Rayna Herron to the world on February 5, 2014, 7 pounds, 3 ounces, and 20 inches long. Karen Dahl ’99 has been working on her own as a consultant for a few years, primarily focused on helping nonprofits and service and education-focused organizations with communications and operational needs. She recently took on a new client, Cities of Service, and led the launch of a new website. She lives in New York with her husband and two young children.

 2000s

Dr. Lauren Aleksunes ’00 was recently promoted to Associate Professor with Tenure at Rutgers University in the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy. She was also selected to receive the Board of Trustees Research Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence and the Presidential Fellowship for Teaching Excellence at Rutgers University in 2014. Christina Needham ’00 began her new job as Head Field Hockey Coach at Connecticut College on June 15. She is very excited to be back in Connecticut after seven years away. Dennis Lawson ’01 received an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Delaware Division of the Arts as the 2014 Emerging Artist in Fiction. Also, his short story “Fair Warning” appeared in the anthology Rehoboth Beach Reads: The Beach House, published by Cat & Mouse Press. This story was recently turned into a noir radio drama by Delmarva Public Radio. Erin S. Pirro ’01, Vice President and Farm Business Consultant at Farm Credit East, ACA, was selected as a member of the Hartford Business Journal’s 40 Under 40 Class of 2014. The class will be judged on their ability to leverage the power of social media and drive traffic to the website, so help Erin show the Husky pride by visiting her biography page on the HBJ’s site. Here’s an easy-to-use link. Karalyn Jacobs ’02 completed a Master of Science degree in May 2014 with emphasis on Family Nurse Practitioner from the University of Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Ind. Lindsay Bolt ’04 was promoted this past year to her current position as a clinical nurse educator with the UCSF Medical Center Institute for Nursing Excellence. Sam (Shiv) Sharma ’04 participated in and completed the course “Think Tank on Global Education” at Harvard Graduate School of Education at Harvard University in May 2014. Carla (Hill) Galfano ’05 was married on February 24, 2012, to Giovanni Galfano in Erice, Sicily, Italy. They welcomed their son, Julian Federico, on April 29, 2013. She was recently given the permanent position of Art Museum Registrar and Assistant Curator at the William Benton Museum of Art at UConn after three years as interim registrar. Alex M. Dressler ’06, M.D. graduated from New York Medical College on May 22, 2014. Dr. Dressler will be completing his intern year in internal medicine at Greenwich Hospital, part of the Yale New Haven Health System before beginning his anesthesiology residency at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) as part of the class of 2018. Vanessa Kafka ’06 and her husband, Doug, were married in September 2013 in New Hampshire and just recently went on their honeymoon. They traveled to Singapore and Bali and Lombok (two islands in Indonesia) and loved it! She joined Wayfair in February as Senior Marketing Manager for Lifestyle Brands, DwellStudio and Birch Lane, the latter of which she helped launch at the end of March. Ray Lorenzoni ’07 is excited to have just started his pediatric residency at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore in New York City. The training will last for three years. He attended the UConn School of Medicine and UConn undergraduate Honors Program, which both contributed greately to this recent accomplishment. Paul Millerd ’07 joined Boston Consulting Group in January 2014 as a knowledge expert in their Knowledge Organization. He is working to help build their global Transformation practice and support client teams on long term change projects. Jason Bomberger ’08 was recently promoted to manager in the New York Financial Services Risk Assurance Practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers. In this role, Jason currently serves large fnancial services clients and leads cross-disciplinary teams to re-engineer and optimize significant business processes and related controls. Additionally, Jason is currently pursuing his certification for corporate coaching at the Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching (iPec). Rebecca (Stetz) Cangiano ’08 just celebrated her second wedding anniversary with Michael Cangiano ’08. They met in Honors housing and started dating their senior year at UConn. They married June 2, 2012, in Dedham, Mass. She also just completed her doctorate of physical therapy from the University of St. Augustine in St. Augustine, Fla. Jacob Martin ’08 successfully defended his Ph.D. dissertation titled “Multivalent bioconjugates for the inhibition of anthrax toxin, influenza virus, and HIV,” in spring 2014. He graduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He is currently working as a postdoc in the same lab, with Professor Ravi Kane, to wrap up a couple of research projects as he pursues new postdoc positions at schools other than RPI. David Miller ’08 graduated in May with an MBA from Harvard Business School. He has since moved to New York City where he is working as an associate at Loeb Partners, a merchant banking firm and family office. Go Huskies! Kathryn Grive ’09 received a Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award this year from the National Institutes of Health. Megan Wolf ’09 graduated from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in May 2014, and has returned to Connecticut for residency in orthopedic surgery at UConn Health in Farmington, Conn.

 2010s

Shan Parikh ’10 completing a master’s degree in physiology and neurobiology, in Dr. LoTurco’s laboratory (a fantastic place to get your Honors thesis and graduate mentorship), and then began an M.D./Ph.D. program at Temple Medical School. Upon completing two years of the program, his PI left to go to Nashville, Tenn., and Shan asked to transfer with him. Shan just relocated to Nashville and began his graduate studies at the Vandy MSTP, studying cardiovascular disease. He would like to thank Dr. LoTurco for his continued mentoring and career guidance. Matthew Begue ’11 advanced this year to candidacy in the Ph.D. program of the mathematics department at the University of Maryland, College Park. He was also promoted to Associate Director of the Norbert Wiener Center for Harmonic Analysis and Application. As Associate Director, he organized and ran February Fourier Talks 2014, a national conference held every year at UMD. He is a summer intern this year at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington D.C., working with the Remote Explosives Detection team. Kelly O’Donnell ’11 received a J.D. in May 2014 from University of Michigan Law School (cum laude). Olivia Bogucki ’12 will be attending the University of Maine to pursue her Ph.D. in clinical psychology. Dayton Horvath ’12 earned first prize in the 2014 Tech Push and Grand Prize at UCSB’s New Venture CompetitionAmy McDavitt ’12 graduated from Lesley University (Cambridge, Mass.) in May, with a Master in Education degree. She then received her Massachusetts teaching license in elementary education. Aaron Nelson ’12 graduated from the Air Force Institute of Technology in March of 2014 with a Master of Science in Applied Mathematics. He was named a Distinguished Graduate (top 10 percent of his graduating class) and received the Dean’s Award for best thesis in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics (Title: “About Phase: Synthetic Aperture Radar and the Phase Retrieval Problem”) He is currently stationed at Edwards AFB, CA with the Air Force Operational Test and Evaluation, Detachment 1. Emily Szkudlarek ’12 begins a Ph.D. program in cognition and cognitive neuroscience at Duke University’s Department of Psychology and Neuroscience in Fall 2014. 2LT Nicholas Hurley ’13 graduated April 1st from the U.S. Army’s Field Artillery Basic Officer Leader’s Course with the designation of Distinguished Honor Graduate. He was ranked first in a class of 122 Army and Marine officers attending the five-month course at FT Sill, Okla. He will now be attending UConn Graduate School for a Master in History beginning this fall (expected graduation May 2016). Sam Tracy ’13 started a new job with 4Front Advisors, an Arizona-based medical marijuana consulting company, and will be helping open their new Boston office. He will be working with dispensaries in Massachusetts, Nevada, Illinois, and Arizona to ensure each state’s programs are operated in strict compliance with state laws and with great care for their patients and communities.

Return to the Summer 2014 issue of the Honors Alumni eNewsletter

Medals Ceremony honors students, alumni, and faculty

By Cheryl Cranick, Honors Program

On Saturday, May 3, 2014, the Honors Program recognized a new graduating class of Honors Scholars at the annual Medals Ceremony.

graduation recessional
Honors Scholars depart Jorgensen after the Medals Ceremony

This year marked the largest class in the history of Honors, with 342 students officially completing the rigorous requirements of the program, including the Honors thesis/project. Family, peers, administrators, faculty, staff, and friends of the University witnessed the awarding of medals and gifts to Honors Scholars and University Scholars.

Graduating senior Melanie Castellanos ’14 (Honors-CLAS) delivered the student address, sharing the challenges and victories she experienced as an Honors student. Coming to UConn from Texas, Castellanos admitted to being “indebted to my peers and this program,” and told her story of facing dismissal from Honors after her first semester. She spoke of feeling out of place in those first few months, neglecting her studies, and ending the term with a lackluster grade point average. It was a faculty member who told her a 2.8 GPA would affect her academic career—in addition to risking her future in Honors. That professor would eventually become her research advisor and mentor.

student speaker and mentors
Dr. John Salamone, Melanie Castellanos ’14, and Dr. James Chrobak

This wake-up call reset Castellanos’s path. Melanie realized that if she came back and continued to make the choices she made first-year, “I would not be in Honors, and I would lose so many opportunities.” Starting fresh her sophomore year, she became proactive and started retaking classes. She opened herself up to support from others, sought out extracurricular roles and research placements, and most importantly—in her mind—she relied heavily on the Honors community to serve as her role model. At the ceremony, Castellanos announced her GPA had since risen to 3.7, and expressed her intention of pursing a Ph.D. in her field of psychology. She also hopes to become a professor someday, and follow in the footsteps of her two closest mentors at UConn, Dr. James Chrobak and Dr. John Salamone, both behavioral neuroscience faculty members in UConn’s Department of Psychology. She closed her speech with a universal note of gratitude: “I’m sure I speak for my fellow graduates when I say that we are all here because people believed in us. They knew we Huskies could do great things, not just as undergraduates, but also when we are unleashed on this world a week from today.”

Along with the Honors Scholars, awards were presented to two past graduates of the program and two current Honors faculty members. The 2014 Honors Distinguished Alumni Award recipients are both graduates of UConn Honors as well as graduates of UConn professional schools. Howard M. Sandler, M.D., M.S. ’78 (Honors-CLAS) ’85 (Medicine) ’91 (CLAS) earned his undergraduate Honors degree in physics in 1978 and his medical degree from UConn’s School of Medicine in 1985. He also received a master’s degree in physics in 1991. Upon completing his medical education at the University of Connecticut, Sandler honed his training at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center in Hartford, Conn., as well as the University of Pennsylvania, where he began to specialize in Radiation Oncology. He spent a large portion of his career at the University of Michigan Medical School, in the department of Radiation Oncology, eventually earning the title Newman Family Professor of Radiation Oncology. In 2008, Sandler accepted the role of Chairman for the Department of Radiation Oncology at the Samuel Oschin Cancer Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, where he remains today. Sandler is an active researcher and writer, with more than 230 peer-reviewed articles. He is also the recipient of numerous grants that help support his research of prostate and other genitourinary tumors, and technology treatment methods, including radiation therapy.

Sandler and Lease Butts
Dr. Howard M. Sandler ’78 ’85 ’91 and Dr. Jennifer Lease Butts

Honored with Dr. Sandler was Brian Preleski ’87 (Honors-CLAS) ’91 (Law), a 1987 Honors Scholar who then completed his law degree at UConn’s School of Law in 1991. Preleski earned entry into the Connecticut Bar Association that same year, and began his legal career in the private sector, at a large firm in Hartford. However, this son of a former Connecticut police officer soon switched to the other side of the courtroom, and in 1993 began his initial appointment as Deputy Assistant State’s Attorney in Bristol, Conn. In 1998, he transferred to New Britain, Conn., and in 2011, he was appointed State’s Attorney for the Judicial District of New Britain. The position includes supervision of prosecutors’ offices and courts in his district. During the course of his career, Preleski successfully prosecuted the state’s first cold case homicide and a Constitutional challenge to Connecticut’s sobriety checkpoints, among various other important cases. He was also selected by his peers to serve as the National District Attorneys Association’s official observer to the 2013 war crimes trial of Abd al Rahim al Nashiri in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Preleski, too, is well published in his field, and also teaches a graduate seminar course at the University of St. Joseph.

Preleski and Lease Butts
Brian Preleski ’87 ’91 and Dr. Jennifer Lease Butts

Annually, the recipients of the Honors Distinguished Alumni Award share dinner and speak to an audience of Honors students, faculty, and staff, on the Friday prior to the Medals Ceremony. Sandler’s overarching message encouraged students to be open to opportunities that might cross their paths, remarking that life is a series of fortunate accidents. He illustrated this specifically with a story, where he once offered a colleague a ride, which ultimately led to an important step in his career. Preleski spoke in detail about comparisons of his legal career, having moved from private law to public service. He remarked how having worked on both sides—defense attorney and prosecutor—enlightened his overall understanding and practice of law. Both Sandler and Preleski then joined the Honors Scholars on stage the next day during the Medals Ceremony to received Honors medals, which marked their accomplishments as former scholars and also experienced professionals in their fields.

Additionally, the 2014 ceremony honored two Faculty Member of the Year Award recipients. Nominees for this award are faculty or staff members at the University of Connecticut who are recognized for their contributions to the education of Honors students. Recipient Dr. Patrick Dragon, Assistant Professor in Residence, teaches in UConn’s Department of Mathematics. He encourages an informal environment in his classroom as he instructs on topics such as calculus and topology. However, his relaxed style does not negate his expertise or seriousness about his subject matter. Dragon holds undergraduate degrees in physics, mathematics, and astronomy, and a Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of California-Davis. In his graduate program, Dragon focused not just on math but also pedagogy and methods of teaching mathematics. He is known for his energy and enthusiasm for his subject, and also his ability to challenge his students. On a course evaluation, a former student wrote: “… If you’re looking for an interesting class, take Pat Dragon. If you’re looking for an easy class, get over yourself and take Pat Dragon anyway.”

Csizmadia, Dey, and Dragon
Dr. Annamaria Csizmadia, Associate Dean Dipak K. Dey (CLAS), and Dr. Patrick Dragon

Also recognized at the Saturday ceremony was faculty member Dr. Annamaria Csizmadia, Assistant Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, who teaches predominately at UConn’s Stamford campus. Csizmadia grew up in Hungary, where she began her early education studying languages, specifically Russian, German, English, and Latin. Eager for new experiences, Csizmadia used her language proficiency to study in Germany, earning an undergraduate degree equivalent in English and German language and literature, before moving to the U.S. to complete a master’s degree in German literature at the University of Missouri in Columbia, Mo. It was at Missouri that she realized the evolution of her interests, and turned her focus to social sciences and human development. She earned her Ph.D. there, focusing specifically on Black American youth, immigrant families, and multiracial children. She joined UConn’s faculty in 2008, and has since mentored and advised numerous undergraduate students through research, courses, and Honors thesis/projects.

If you are interested in learning more about the Honors Distinguished Alumni Award and the Faculty Member of the Year Award, including information about past recipients and nomination criteria, please follow the online links associated with each award name.

Return to the Summer 2014 issue of the Honors Alumni eNewsletter

A dolphin tail of two Huskies

By Cheryl Cranick, Honors Program

The ocean is still a place filled with undiscovered mysteries, even among the most well-known creatures. One of those creatures is the dolphin. The general public may not realize there are more than 30 species of marine dolphins globally, but two women know it well. Honors alumni Kathleen Dudzinski Ph.D. ’89 (Honors-CLAS) and Heather Heenehan ’09 (Honors-CLAS) have made studying these lively mammals their life’s work.

Dolphins at play

Kathleen Dudzinski
Dr. Kathleen Dudzinski ’89 (Photo courtesy of John Anderson)

Kathleen Dudzinski Ph.D. ’89 is not exactly sure why people are so drawn to dolphins. “I see dolphins as ‘charismatic mega fauna,’ in that they are flashy and most folks want to see them or read about them or meet them or just plain learn more about them,” she said. Dudzinski capitalizes on this appeal to teach the public about all marine life and ocean ecosystems, with the goal of protecting the less flashy creatures as well, such as jellyfish.

Dudzinski is founder and director of the Dolphin Communication Project (DCP), which is based in Connecticut. She started the DCP in 2000 as a way to share knowledge about dolphin communication. The catalyst for the project was the large format release of the film “Dolphins” (2000), which centered on Dudzinski’s research. Her career has been spent studying dolphin social communication and signal exchange, which was the topic of her dissertation at Texas A&M University. She continued the work during two post-doctoral positions at Mie University in Japan. Yet this Connecticut native narrowed in on dolphins much earlier in her life, during a summer internship while still an undergraduate student at UConn.

“I remember always loving animals, science, and the oceans. But I did not know until college how to make those passions a career,” Dudzinski said. She explored internships, lab placements, and student activities based in the sciences, and in the summer of 1987, accepted a position with a whale watching company. “I loved every minute of it, even though we worked 12 hours a day, every day,” she said. “I began reading as much as I could to learn about marine mammals. I’d found a path into merging my passions for animals, the ocean, and science via studying marine mammals.”

Kathleen Dudzinski
Dr. Kathleen Dudzinski ’89 in the Bahamas with spotted dolphins (Photo courtesy of John Anderson)

For Dudzinski, membership in Honors broadened her access to academics and opportunities, and she began to work closely with her advisor, Dr. Nancy Neff, who taught her “the fundamentals to be a good scientist,” Dudzinski said. As a research assistant, Dudzinski contributed to academic writing projects, learning the scholarly peer-review process firsthand, including “how to accept criticisms from colleagues and to move forward, and make a stronger paper,” she said. “I still get reprint requests for that work … [completed] almost 25 years ago!”

In her work now at the DCP, Dudzinski focus specifically on populations of Atlantic spotted dolphins and Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins—either residing in the wild (in The Bahamas and Japan) or under human care (in Honduras and a second location in The Bahamas). “To conduct the studies into dolphin communication, the way we have, we need a human-habituated group of dolphins and clear water in which to view them,” she said. Having studied both wild and captive dolphins, Dudzinski finds the habitat does not affect the animals’ communication. For that reason, “I much prefer studying the groups of captive dolphins because we do not have to search for them! Eighty-five percent of our effort studying wild dolphins is simply trying to find them,” she said.

Kathleen Dudzinski and dolphin
Dr. Kathleen Dudzinski ’89 with an adult female dolphin, Gracie (Photo courtesy of John Anderson)

Whether on location or back in Connecticut, a large part of Dudzinski’s work is outreach. “The mission of DCP is dual: research and education,” she said. This includes sharing what she learns in the ocean with others, through lectures, field work, podcasts, field reports, books, films, internships, and various outlets on their website. Overall, while Dudzinski says dolphins are an important member of the ocean ecosystem, they also serve a greater role: “If people feel a connection to dolphins, then they will want to protect them and their ocean home.”

Dolphins at rest

More than 500 miles away at the Duke University Marine Laboratory, Heather Heenehan ’09 focuses on the sounds dolphins make in relation to their environment. Heenehan is currently working on her Ph.D. at Duke, after having completed her master’s degree there as well. Heenehan was also fascinated by science from a young age, specifically the sea. “In high school, we had a marine biology course that traveled to Key Largo, Fla., which sealed the deal on marine science for me,” she said.

Heather Heenehan
Heather Heenehan ’09

Heenehan hails from New Jersey, and chose UConn for the community feeling she experienced during a whirlwind tour of schools with her mom. She remembers the Honors Program being an important factor in her decision to enroll at UConn. “The Honors Program affected my college experience because it really was my college experience … I made amazing friends in the Honors Program at UConn and am still close with many of them,” she said. Heenehan also fondly remembers the Honors living and learning community in Shippee Hall, where she was surrounded by fellow females in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) whom she found inspiring and supportive.

Heather Heenehan
Heather Heenehan ’09

It was at UConn, through her Honors thesis research, that Heenehan first developed an interest in marine mammal bioacoustics; however, her study of Hawaiian spinner dolphins was sparked during her first year as a master’s student at Duke. The acoustic experience Heenehan brought from her undergraduate work cinched her role on the team for a project that would soon be under way. She has continued her work with the species during her doctoral program, as part of the Spinner Dolphin Acoustics Population Parameters and Human Impacts Research (SAPPHIRE) Project, a joint effort between Duke University and Murdoch University.

Heenehan travels between Hawaii and North Carolina to conduct fieldwork. Her research uses acoustic loggers to collect recordings in their resting bays to better understand dolphin behavior. Spinner dolphins are an important part of the local ecosystem yet the protected species, which rests in bays during the daytime (and are active at night), often encounter destructive experiences with humans. “We have seen people grab and ride wild dolphins during this time of rest,” she said. Her team seeks to observe and record the effects these interactions have on the populations.

Heather Heenehan
Heather Heenehan ’09 educates via Skype

Though Heenehan’s academic career is steeped in research, she is dedicated to educating others about her field as well. She is a “Girls in STEM” blogger for the Huffington Post; she hosts her own classroom programming on Skype (“Sounds of the Sea”), where she communicates directly with students regardless of their physical classroom location; and she is also a member of the leadership team for the Scientific Research and Education Network (SciREN), a collaboration between graduate students at Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill to make scientific research available to schoolchildren. In one of her Huffington Post blogs, Heenehan wrote: “Every time I interact with a K-12 classroom to share my research, I am reenergized. After each visit I feel ready to face the world, or at least my dissertation (which on some days feels like the world)!”

While these women were undergraduates in UConn Honors more than twenty years apart, and have never met, they are both on a mission to protect dolphins, whether at play or at rest. “When I think back to a singular decision I made that got me to where I am today,” said Heenehan, “it was my decision to go to UConn and be part of the Honors Program family.”

Return to the Summer 2014 issue of the Honors Alumni eNewsletter

Rowe Researcher: Effects of mutants in the I-domain on Bacteriophage P22 coat protein stability and mature capsid structure

Fejiro Okifo conducting research.
Fejiro Okifo conducting research.

February 2014-Present: Effects of mutants in the I-domain on Bacteriophage P22 coat protein stability and mature capsid structure

By Fejiro Okifo, Kevin Robbins, Dr. Carol Teschke

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs

As common as the rhinovirus that visits itself upon us every flu season and as insidious as the HIV virus that causes AIDS, viruses have been afflicting the human race since the dawn of time. And yet there is still much to discover about the mechanism by which they infect their hosts. (more…)

Fall 2014 Political Science Graduate Seminars

July 18, 2014

The political science department invites Honors students to consider taking one of the following graduate seminars. With your advisor’s approval, graduate courses may be included in your Honors Final Plan of Study for graduation. They also count toward your Honors participation requirements.

POLS 5460 COMPARATIVE SOCIAL POLICY
Lyle Scruggs

Social Policy is a large, interdisciplinary field drawing liberally from disciplines of political science, sociology, and economics. It encompasses everything from national public pension programs to neighborhood drug rehabilitation programs. In terms of resource commitment, it is the guts of modern government policy in wealthy countries, and is likely to become so (if it is not already) in emerging countries.

This course is a theoretical overview of comparative social policy, with an emphasis on contemporary research on the political economy of welfare states in Europe and North America. The field ranges from rather abstract theoretical and “macro” to the very practical “micro” aspects of individual case work. We will pay most attention to the theoretical and “macro” issues in this class. (Neighborhood and casework levels are usually emphasized in Schools of Social Work and Public Administration.)

POLS 5605 SEMINAR IN QUANTITATIVE METHODS OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Prakash Kashwan

Introduction to the data analysis techniques most often used by political scientists. Requires no previous background in statistics.

Over the past several years that Professor Kashwan has taught this class, he has developed a ‘non-mathematical’ approach to introductory statistics. The focus of the class, instead is on helping students become adept at understanding and applying the tools of statistics to political and economic questions of the day. This approach facilitates quality student engagement in the group projects that students work on for the semester. The style and the contents of teaching have resonated with students, which is evident in anonymous student evaluations, such as the following comments:

“Quantitative terms and concepts were presented in a way that was easily understood by liberal arts students.”

“Professor Kashwan – YOU ARE SO POSITIVE! You have a great attitude, you keep the humor and morale up in class and you clearly care about the happiness and success of your students. You are my favorite professor for that reason.”

PSYC 3885-001: Special Topics: Community-Based Participatory Research in Obesity Prevention, I

Instructor: Amy Gorin

5 credit course. This course is intended to be taken as part of a year-long sequence; part II will be offered in Spring 2015.

This course provides a unique opportunity to study a complex health problem – obesity – from a social ecological perspective and to work with community partners to assist in the development, implementation, and evaluation of a statewide obesity prevention campaign using community-based participatory research methodology. Lectures focus on current obesity trends, causal factors of excessive weight, and the consequences of obesity. Community-based participatory research skills include focus groups, interviews, and environmental audits to develop an obesity prevention program that meets the needs of a diverse population. The course is designed for honors students and other advanced undergraduates with an interest in applied research, nutrition, physical activity, and health behavior change.

For more information about the course or the Obesity Prevention Learning Consortium, please contact Dr. Amy Gorin.

2014 Rowe Scholar: Ivan Navarro

July 17, 2014

Ivan Navarro
Ivan Navarro (Freshman)

Hailing from Bristol, CT, Ivan Navarro graduated from Bristol Central High School where he started a chess club in order to share his love of the game. A pre-pharmacy student at UConn, Ivan’s interest in a career in the health professions was significantly influenced by his mother, who is a CNA (Certified Nursing Assistant).

2014 Rowe Scholar: Jeremy Figueroa-Ortiz

July 14, 2014

Jeremy Figueroa-Ortiz
Jeremy Figueroa-Ortiz (Junior)

Jeremy Figueroa-Ortiz recently returned from a dental mission trip to the Galapagos Island of Isabella, where he, dental students, and dentists provided free dental care. An allied health sciences major with interests in dentistry and policy, Jeremy has also taken part in a clinically based pilot study called Project Good Oral Health, which focused on the oral health of geriatric communities and preventative health education. Jeremy is a bilingual (English and Spanish) graduate of Farmington High School who hails from New Britain, CT.

Rowe Researcher: Measuring Viral Titer to Analyze Transduction Efficiency in Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Spring 2011: Measuring Viral Titer to Analyze Transduction Efficiency in Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

By Dr. X. Cindy Tian, Yong Tang, and Michael Tassavor

Stem cells have the ability to dramatically change the medical landscape, allowing regrowth and regeneration of tissues previously irreparable to modern science. Severe burns, spinal breakages, and muscle damage all can benefit, as well as more abstract diseases such as Parkinson’s, Multiple Sclerosis, and cancer. Until quite recently, however, sources for stem cells were limited to embryonic material.

In 2007, researchers managed to convert specialized adult cells to pluripotent stem cells capable of taking any somatic form in mice. This is highly useful in that it negates any need for embryonic stem cells in stem cell therapy, sidestepping legal and moral issues, as well as public outcry. Furthermore, it allows customized cells grown from the patient’s own cells, preventing immune rejection. Non-embryonic stem cells also have the benefit of allowing research to proceed with government grants, which, depending on the state and federal agencies involved, prohibit embryonic stem cell research. (more…)

Rowe Researcher: Investigating Propargyl-Linked Antifolates

Summer 2012-Spring 2014: Investigating Propargyl-Linked Antifolates in Inhibiting Bacterial and Fungal Dihydrofolate Reductase

By Joshua Andrade, Dr. Amy Anderson’s Lab, and Dr. Dennis Wright’s Lab

Antimicrobial agents have been invaluable in reducing illness and death associated with bacterial infection. However, over time, bacteria have evolved resistance to all major drug classes as a result of selective pressure. The advancement of new drug compounds is therefore vital.  The Anderson-Wright Lab has focused on developing potent and selective inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), an enzyme key in cell proliferation and survival, in several pathogenic species.  The lab has found that a set of compounds, known as propargyl-linked antifolates, are DHFR inhibitors that are both biologically effective and have strong pharmacokinetic properties. (more…)