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Students came up with an ingenious
way to provide food to the needy during the holidays by donating their
meal card "swipes," each worth $3.80. Rather than using their
swipes for meals, students donated their swipes to charity. Organizers
of the program set a goal of 1,000 swipes, but surpassed their goal and
raised $10,000, enough to purchase 50 trays of baked ziti, 50 trays of
salad, as well as cookies and other desserts that were donated to the
Human Needs Food Pantry in Montclair. "We can't wait to do it again,"
said organizer freshman Angelo Lilla. "People aren't hungry just
during the holidays." Pictured unloading the food are, from left,
freshmen Anthony Guttilla, Lilla, Jamie Dresher, sophomore Shawana Morris
and senior Scarlett Morris.
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Two
EAES faculty work on NASA projects
NASA has
recognized the expertise of two professors in Earth and Environmental
Studies (EAES) by choosing them as principal investigators on two
major environmental projects. Mark Chopping is working on NASA's Earth
Science Enterprise program, which will use data from NASA's Earth
Observation System satellites to map carbon pools in the southwestern
United States, while Yuan Gao will investigate natural iron fertilization
in the ocean and its impacts on ocean nitrogen fixation and carbon
cycles. (Full Story)
Diversity
training fosters understanding and respect
With
779 international students and close to 100 visiting scholars from
all over the world, the campus has embraced a population that grows
more diverse each year. An environment as diverse as Montclair State's
fosters the University's goal of becoming a center of global study
and understanding. But what does it mean to be "all together
different?" The Office of Student Leadership Programs and the
Office of Diversity and Equity Programs/Women's Center attempts
to answer this question at its Diversity Training Initiative for
faculty and staff. (Full Story and Photo)
Students
talk to professors as they
explore Panama's rainforest
Hundreds
of school children from New Jersey, New York, Tennessee and Texas
are exploring Panama's rainforest with Jacalyn Willis and her husband
Greg this week. But those students didn't need passports or plane
tickets. The rainforest is coming to them via live videoconferencing
from a tropical forest research facility. (Full
Story and Photos)
CSAM
sponsors first regional Science Olympiad
More
than 500 students from 15 middle schools and 13 high schools from
across the state were on campus last week to participate in the
first Northern Regional Science Olympiad. Sponsored by the College
of Science and Mathematics (CSAM) in partnership with the Research
and Development Council of New Jersey, the Olympiad is one of several
events sponsored by CSAM each year that exposes students of all
ages to science and math programs. (Full
Story)
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