12/10/2001
People
 

Robert Aldridge of Music has been commissioned by the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra (NJSO) to write a piece that will be performed by the NJSO next season. He also wrote a commissioned piece, "War Stories," that will be performed by the Montclair State Symphonic Band in the spring. His opera, "Elmer Gantry," will premiere in Germany, Finland and Tulsa, Okla. in 2003-04. Aldridge, who has been at Montclair State for two years, also wrote "The Third Person," a musical that was given a staged reading last summer by TheatreFest, and will be given it's fully staged world premiere this spring in London's West End.

George Antoniou of Computer Science published a paper, "A review on the minimal state space realization for a class of n-D discrete time lossless bounded real functions," in the Advances in Neural Networks and Applications, World Scientific and Engineering Press, 2001.

Thomas Devlin of Mathematical Sciences was presented with a distinguished service award by the American Statistical Association. The award, presented at the 2001 Joint Statistical Meetings, honors Devlin for excellence in the teaching of statistics, leadership associated with the founding of the New Jersey Chapter of ASA and continued contributions to the Program and Symposium committees.

Ted Fiore of Athletics, head men's basketball coach, earned his 200th career win when Montclair State beat William Paterson, 51-54, Nov. 28. He has compiled a 200-146 ledger (through Dec. 1) in his 13 seasons as a collegiate head coach, which includes nine campaigns at St. Peter's College and the last four years with Montclair.

Scott Kight of Biology and Molecular Biology received $88,644 from the National Institutes of Health for "Communities of Inquiry: Bridging the Associate, Baccalaureate and Beyond." The program promotes the transfer of A.S. track minority students from Essex County Community College to Montclair State to complete their baccalaureate degrees and pursue professional careers in the biological and health careers.

Deena Linett of English had her book, Rare Earths, chosen as a semi-finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. The book was selected from thousands of poetry books. Finalists will be announced Dec. 31 and winners announced the end of January.

Richard Taubald of the Gifted and Talented Program participated in a screening and discussion of "No Place to be Smart: The Brightest Kids in Public Schools." The one-hour documentary will air Dec. 13 on New Jersey Network followed by the discussion.

James Woods of the Gifted and Talented Program presented a pre-Halloween video and lecture, "Vlad the Impaler," the basis of Bram Stoker's 1897 novel, Dracula, at the Englewood Public Library.

WORTH QUOTING...
The following excerpts are from newspaper and magazine articles. Copies of the complete articles are available from the Office of Public Information, College Hall, Room 313.

"Students, after all, are our customers, and we certainly try to incorporate their thoughts in everything." --Edward Oberhofer of Physical Plant, quoted in The Herald News, Oct. 16, 2001. Headline: "MSU students 'environmental firebrands' "

"Anytime the feds reach out to give incentives so folks can participate in higher education, it's always good for society as a whole." --Bryan Terry, director of Financial Aid, quoted in The Sunday Star-Ledger, Oct. 7, 2001. Headline: "New laws foster opportunity." Terry also was quoted in the Sept. 20, 2001 Courier-Post in an article headlined "Key to financing college is to start saving when student is still a child."


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