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Volume 33 No. 9 October 2009<br />

A Publication of the <strong>NSU</strong> <strong>News</strong> Bureau <strong>News</strong>letter for the Faculty and Staff of <strong>Northwestern</strong><br />

PEOPLE<br />

Dr. Vickie Gentry,<br />

dean of <strong>Northwestern</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong>’s College of<br />

Education, has been appointed<br />

to the Louisiana Reading<br />

Literacy Leadership Team.<br />

Team members were selected<br />

by Governor Bobby Jindall<br />

by recommendation from<br />

<strong>State</strong> Superintendent Paul G.<br />

Pastorek.<br />

The team will meet three<br />

times in the coming academic<br />

year and will continue to work<br />

on the Louisiana Literacy<br />

Plan.<br />

A poem by Julie Kane<br />

was included in the National<br />

Public Radio program<br />

“Writer’s Almanac,” hosted<br />

by Garrison Keillor. “Particle<br />

Physics” from Kane’s Jazz<br />

Funeral was broadcast on<br />

Sept. 16.<br />

The Writer’s Almanac<br />

is a daily radio program<br />

produced by American Public<br />

Media (APM ). In each<br />

program Keillor presents a<br />

list of cultural events and<br />

anniversaries, many associated<br />

with literary figures, then ends<br />

with the poetry reading. APM<br />

currently distributes the<br />

Continued on page 3<br />

Crisis Leave Program hours depleted<br />

Faculty and staff can consider donating hours to pool<br />

The Crisis Leave Review Committee<br />

is seeking aid from the <strong>NSU</strong> community.<br />

The Committee does not have sufficient<br />

leave available in the pool for new<br />

requests, according to Yvette Williams,<br />

chairman.<br />

“We’ve exhausted the current leave<br />

after the recommended approval of the<br />

most recent request,” she said. “We<br />

normally recommend approval of 176<br />

hours of crisis leave time to applicants.<br />

This is the maximum allowable time that<br />

can be granted.”<br />

Anyone accumulating annual leave<br />

may donate a minimum of 8 hours<br />

or a maximum of 16 hours per fiscal<br />

year. The Crisis Leave Program is a<br />

means of providing paid leave to an<br />

eligible employee who has experienced<br />

a catastrophic illness or injury to<br />

themselves or eligible family member.<br />

The program’s intent is to provide<br />

assistance to employees who, through<br />

no fault of their own, have insufficient<br />

appropriate accrued leave to cover the<br />

crisis leave period.<br />

Anyone who needs a donation form<br />

should see their office manager. Only<br />

annual leave can be donated to the pool.<br />

To date, 30 employees have been<br />

awarded crisis leave, totaling 4,347.5<br />

hours, according to Brett Knecht,<br />

payroll supervisor.<br />

For further info, the crisis leave<br />

policy is available in the policies and<br />

procedures manual.<br />

Theatre & Dance collecting coats for Kiwanis<br />

In conjunction with the local Kiwanis Chapter<br />

and the upcoming performance of Almost, Maine,<br />

the <strong>NSU</strong> Theatre & Dance Department will be<br />

taking contributions of winter coats, jackets,<br />

boots, gloves, hats, and scarves to be distributed<br />

to area children. All sizes from infant to adult are<br />

requested so that we can help children of all ages<br />

and sizes.<br />

Please bring your items to Room 109 of the<br />

Old Fine Arts Building or call Jacki Giesey at<br />

extension 4483 to arrange a pick-up.<br />

The department will begin collecting donations<br />

immediately through closing night of the show on<br />

Oct. 31.


Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

Next Publication:<br />

November 2009<br />

Deadline for<br />

Entries:<br />

Monday, Oct. 26<br />

Please submit<br />

news to:<br />

Leah Jackson,<br />

<strong>News</strong> Bureau,<br />

Prather Coliseum,<br />

FAX 5905 or e-mail<br />

jacksonl@nsula.<br />

edu.<br />

For more information,<br />

call Ext. 6466.<br />

<strong>NSU</strong> <strong>News</strong> is a<br />

newsletter published<br />

by the <strong>NSU</strong><br />

<strong>News</strong> Bureau.<br />

<strong>NSU</strong> <strong>News</strong> serves<br />

the faculty and<br />

staff of <strong>Northwestern</strong><br />

<strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>.<br />

Personnel<br />

on all campuses<br />

are encouraged to<br />

submit information<br />

regarding their professional<br />

accomplishments<br />

as well<br />

as their personal<br />

milestones.<br />

2<br />

Participants attended the two-day conference on federal and state grant opportunities sponsored<br />

by the <strong>NSU</strong> Division of Technology, Research and Economic Development and the Office of<br />

Research and Sponsored Programs.<br />

Conference informs faculty on grant opportunties<br />

The Technology, Research, and Economic<br />

Development (TRED) Division’s Office of<br />

Research and Sponsored Programs (ORSP)<br />

sponsored a two-day regional grants conference<br />

Sept. 15-16 at the Natchitoches Events Center<br />

(first day) and at the Friedman Student Union<br />

Building (second day). The official title of the<br />

conference was “<strong>NSU</strong> Regional Conference on<br />

Federal and <strong>State</strong> (LA) Grant Opportunities.”<br />

Seventy-five faculty members attended the first<br />

day of the conference, and 52 faculty members<br />

attended the second day. The non-duplicated<br />

count of faculty who participated both days was<br />

94, representing institutions of higher education<br />

in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi.<br />

Comments made by those who attended the<br />

conference were overwhelmingly positive.<br />

The conference featured several federal-grant<br />

-program officers—including representatives<br />

from the National Science Foundation (NSF),<br />

the National Endowment for the Humanities<br />

(NEH), and the Grants Resource Center (GRC)<br />

of the American Association of <strong>State</strong> Colleges<br />

and Universities (AASCU)—as well as BORSFgrant-program<br />

managers from the Louisiana<br />

Board of Regents. Also featured both days was<br />

a poster presentation collected by Dr. Betsy<br />

Cochran entitled “Sampler of Undergraduate<br />

Research at <strong>NSU</strong>LA.” Faculty contributors<br />

to the student-research poster-presentations<br />

included Dr. Betsy Cochran, Dr. Gillian Rudd,<br />

Mr. Michael Matthews, Dr. Steven Gabrey,<br />

Dr. Julie Delabbio, and Dr. April French. The<br />

research of 39 <strong>NSU</strong> students was presented, all<br />

of whom were commended for their work in this<br />

Continued on page 5<br />

<strong>NSU</strong>’s Interim Vice President for Academic<br />

and Student Affairs Dr. Lisa Abney, left, and<br />

Vice President for Technology, Research<br />

and Economic Development Dr. Darlene<br />

Williams, right, welcomed Dr. David<br />

Campbell, program director for the National<br />

Science Foundation, and Dr. Wilsonia Cherry,<br />

National Endowment for the Humanities, to<br />

the conference.<br />

The <strong>NSU</strong> ORSP staff greeted presenters<br />

at the conference. From left are Sadie<br />

Wintersteen, Carla Howell, Director of the<br />

AASCU Grants Resource Center Dr. Richard<br />

Dunfee, Dr. Priscilla Kilcrease and Alysia<br />

Jones.


People...Continued from Page 1<br />

program for broadcast to about 320 noncommercial<br />

public radio stations around the<br />

country. See more details on Page 9.<br />

Dr. Julie H. Ernstein, assistant professor<br />

of anthropology and coordinator of the<br />

undergraduate program in Heritage Resources,<br />

served as program chair for the first Louisiana<br />

Studies Conference, hosted at <strong>NSU</strong> on Sept. 26,<br />

which featured more than 40 presentations by<br />

scholars drawn from numerous disciplines.<br />

Ernstein also presented a paper at that<br />

conference titled “Plant the Seed and Watch<br />

It Grow: From Collections Management,<br />

to Disaster Mitigation, to Heritage (Re)<br />

Interpretation at the Kate Chopin House/<br />

Bayou Folk Museum (Cloutierville, LA).” Her<br />

presentation addressed ongoing interpretive<br />

planning work she is performing at the site that<br />

grew out of previous service-learning, disaster<br />

mitigation, and classroom projects resulting<br />

in an online Virtual Museum developed for<br />

this Cloutierville National Historic Landmark.<br />

Ernstein spoke about her project currently<br />

underway to develop an interpretive plan for the<br />

property’s owners (with grant assistance from the<br />

Cane River National Heritage Area) and how it<br />

has been inspired by her students’ considerable<br />

efforts at the site.<br />

Dr. Norann Planchock, dean of the College<br />

of Nursing, was elected chair of the Nursing<br />

Supply and Demand Council (NSDC). As chair<br />

of NSDC, she will serve as a member of the<br />

Health Works Commission and as a member of<br />

the Executive Committee, which consists of five<br />

commissioners from Health Works.<br />

The Health Works Commission was<br />

reestablished last year, by legislature, and<br />

placed under the Board of Regents. One of the<br />

responsibilities of the HWC is to recommend<br />

funding for capitation and stipend programs<br />

which benefit the nursing programs’ faculty and<br />

students.<br />

Dr. Gerra Perkins, College of Education,<br />

and former <strong>NSU</strong> student Amy Foster Johnson<br />

recently had their article “What We Know About<br />

At-Risk Students: Important Considerations for<br />

Principal and Counselor Leadership” published<br />

in the June issue of the NASSP Bulletin. The<br />

article detailed the important role that middle<br />

school counselors play in meeting the needs of<br />

at-risk populations.<br />

A review by Dr. Keith Dromm, associate<br />

professor of philosophy in the Louisiana<br />

Scholars’ College, of Kelly Dean Jolley’s The<br />

Concept ‘Horse’ Paradox and Wittgensteinian<br />

Conceptual Investigations (Ashgate) was<br />

published in the August 2009 issue of Philosophy<br />

in Review. Dr. Dromm’s book Wittgenstein<br />

on Rules and Nature (Continnum Books) was<br />

reviewed by Lars Hertzberg in Notre Dame<br />

Philosophical Reviews in July. Hertzberg<br />

described the book as “rich,” “thoughtprovoking,”<br />

and a “stimulating read.”<br />

A paper written by Dr. Steven Gabrey,<br />

Biology Department, and colleagues from<br />

the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and<br />

Fisheries was named Best Paper in the General<br />

Conservation category at this year’s annual<br />

meeting of the Louisiana Association of<br />

Professional Biologists, held in Lafayette in<br />

August.<br />

The paper, titled Impacts of Nutria<br />

Removal on Food Habits of American<br />

Alligators in Louisiana, reported on the<br />

contents of over 450 alligator stomachs and<br />

appeared in the spring issue of the Southeastern<br />

Naturalist.<br />

Dr. Henrietta Williams Pichon, assistant<br />

professor, Student Peronnel Services, presented<br />

at the 35th Annual Louisiana Association for<br />

College and <strong>University</strong> Student Personnel<br />

Administrators (LACUSPA) at the Learning<br />

Center for Rapides Parish in Alexandria. Her<br />

presentation title was “Getting At-risk Students<br />

Involved in Civic Engagement: The Importance<br />

of Service Learning during Times of Economic<br />

Downtowns.” The service learning project was<br />

supported by the Learn and Serve America<br />

through the Louisiana and Kentucky Campus<br />

Compact.<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

3


Woods seeking participants for 2010 Europe trip<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

4<br />

Whitewater rafting on the River Tay was just one<br />

of the many adventures experienced by <strong>NSU</strong><br />

during a tour of Scotland. Students in the first<br />

boat were Connor Klotz, Cherie Primes, Cynthia<br />

Moreland, Danni Habig, Alexandra Moreland and<br />

Ryan Bossier. In the second boat are Brad Dison,<br />

Megan Edwards, Nichole McGregor and Dr. Lynn<br />

Woods, professor.<br />

COE sponsoring school safety seminar Oct. 12<br />

The <strong>Northwestern</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> School Counseling<br />

and Student Personnel Services<br />

programs will present a forum<br />

entitled “Making Schools<br />

Safer” on Monday, Oct. 12.<br />

A presentation by Michael<br />

Dorn, executive director of<br />

Safe Havens International,<br />

will address practical and<br />

inexpensive ways to improve<br />

school safety, security,<br />

emergency preparedness and<br />

school climate.<br />

“Making Schools Safer”<br />

will cover topics that include<br />

bullying and cyberbullying,<br />

assessment-based approaches of<br />

school safety, practical school<br />

access control, improving<br />

student supervision and<br />

visitor management. Other<br />

topics will address improving<br />

school climate, emergency<br />

preparedness and 3-D school<br />

safety.<br />

“We will have<br />

representatives from each<br />

school in Natchitoches Parish,<br />

but we are hoping educators in<br />

the surrounding parishes will be<br />

able to attend as well,” said Dr.<br />

Gerra Perkins, an organizer of<br />

the event. “We expect to have<br />

members of the community, law<br />

enforcement, parents, college<br />

students, teachers, school<br />

counselors, and administrators<br />

in attendance.”<br />

Dorn heads a non-profit<br />

global school safety center and<br />

has worked in Central America,<br />

Mexico, Canada, Europe, Asia,<br />

South Africa and the Middle<br />

East. He has published 25<br />

books on school safety. During<br />

his 25-year public safety career,<br />

Dorn served as a campus police<br />

officer, school district police<br />

chief, school safety specialist<br />

for the state of Georgia and<br />

later as the lead program<br />

manager of the Terrorism<br />

Division of the Georgia Office<br />

of Homeland Security.<br />

A graduate of the FBI<br />

National Academy, Dorn has<br />

received extensive antiterrorism<br />

training in the United <strong>State</strong>s and<br />

Israel. He has been featured in<br />

numerous school safety training<br />

videos in use around the globe<br />

Dr. Lynn Woods is recruiting students and<br />

others to participate in a trip to Europe in 2010.<br />

Woods takes students to Europe each year for 3<br />

hours credit but the tour is not limited to students.<br />

“These tours are open to the public,” Woods<br />

said. “Students in other majors or even other<br />

universities have found it possible to take the<br />

course and receive credit to transfer to their<br />

particular major.”<br />

In May 2010 participants will travel to<br />

Greece, Italy, Austria and Germany. After 5<br />

days on a cruise ship visiting the Greek islands,<br />

the tour will fly to Venice, Italy, for two days<br />

followed by Verona, Milan, and Innsbruck,<br />

before heading for Germany.<br />

For details of the upcoming tour, contact<br />

Woods, (318) 357 5085 or email llwoods@nsula.<br />

edu.<br />

and is regularly interviewed<br />

by national and international<br />

media organizations, including<br />

NPR, 20/20, CNN and major<br />

networks.<br />

The presentation will<br />

be held from 9 a.m.-noon<br />

in the <strong>NSU</strong> Student Union<br />

Ballroom. Registration is<br />

free. Participants should RSVP<br />

ctreadwa001@student.nsula.<br />

edu.<br />

The in-service is being<br />

provided courtesy of grand<br />

funds from a cyberbullying<br />

research grant that Dr. Perkins<br />

was awarded through the<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Louisiana System<br />

and Learn and Serve America.<br />

The inservice organizers are<br />

College of Education faculty<br />

Dr. Gerra Perkins, Dr. Mary<br />

Lynn Williamson, Dr. Wendell<br />

Wellman and Dr. Nelda<br />

Wellman. The inservice is<br />

being provided courtesy of<br />

grant funds from cyberbullying<br />

research grant that Dr. Perkins<br />

was awarded from the UL<br />

System and Learn and Serve<br />

America.


Grad Fest set for Oct. 7 in the Student Union<br />

The <strong>Northwestern</strong> Alumni Association is<br />

hosting Fall Grad Fest on Wednesday, October<br />

7 in the Student Union Ballroom from 10 a.m.-4<br />

p.m.<br />

During this time, graduating seniors will<br />

have the opportunity to complete exit interviews<br />

with the Office of Financial Aid, order transcripts<br />

from the Registrar’s Office and take a graduation<br />

photo. In addition, students can order class rings,<br />

announcements, and cap and gowns, join the<br />

<strong>Northwestern</strong> Alumni Association and apply for a<br />

<strong>Northwestern</strong> Credit Card<br />

Participants will receive information on<br />

graduate school and enjoy complimentary<br />

refreshments provided by Sodexho, <strong>University</strong><br />

Bookstore, & Jostens. Door prizes will also be<br />

awarded.<br />

Please encourage your Fall 2009 graduating<br />

seniors to attend Grad Fest. This is a convenient<br />

way for those seniors to gain much needed<br />

information.<br />

For more information, contact Lyndsey<br />

Miller, assistant director of Alumni Affairs, at<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

Conference...Continued from Page 2<br />

regard.<br />

On the first day of the<br />

Conference, a short keynote<br />

addressed was delivered by<br />

the Honorable Jimmy Long.<br />

<strong>NSU</strong> President Randall Webb<br />

and Dr. Lisa Abney greeted<br />

and welcomed the participants,<br />

as did Natchitoches Mayor<br />

Wayne McCullen. Dr.<br />

Darlene Williams provided<br />

a conference overview for<br />

both days, and introduced<br />

each speaker. Out-of-state<br />

speakers included Dr. David<br />

Campbell, with the National<br />

Science Foundation’s Division<br />

of Research on Learning in<br />

Formal and Informal Settings,<br />

who is program director of<br />

the “Advanced Technological<br />

Education” section of NSF<br />

and of “International Polar<br />

Year, 2007.” Dr. Campbell<br />

presented and explained grant<br />

opportunities available at the<br />

National Science Foundation.<br />

The second featured<br />

speaker on day one of the<br />

conference was Dr. Wilsonia<br />

Cherry, deputy director of the<br />

Division of Education Programs<br />

of the National Endowment for<br />

the Humanities (NEH), who<br />

presented and explained grant<br />

opportunities available at NEH.<br />

The third speaker was Dr.<br />

Richard Dunfee, director of the<br />

Grants Resource Center (GRC)<br />

of the AASCU, who provided<br />

an overview of the plethora of<br />

grant opportunities available at<br />

all other federal agencies that<br />

sponsor research.<br />

The second day of the<br />

conference again featured Dr.<br />

Dunfee, but with a different<br />

topic, i.e., “How to Write a<br />

Successful Grant Proposal.”<br />

After Dr. Dunfee’s presentation,<br />

Ms. Virginia Pinkney,<br />

senior program specialist<br />

at the U. S. Department of<br />

Education (USDOE) did an<br />

electronic presentation of<br />

grant opportunities available<br />

at USDOE. Following Ms.<br />

Pinkney’s presentation, three<br />

grant-program managers with<br />

the Louisiana Board of Regents<br />

Support Fund (BORSF)<br />

grant programs presented<br />

materials relating to BORSF<br />

Enhancement, R&D, Graduate<br />

Fellows, and ATLAS grant<br />

programs. The Conference<br />

concluded with concurrent<br />

round-table discussions<br />

between BORSF program<br />

managers and participating<br />

faculty. Representatives/<br />

presenters from the Louisiana<br />

Board of Regents included<br />

Ms. Noreen Lackett, Mr.<br />

Bryan Jones and Ms. Zenovia<br />

Simmons.<br />

<strong>NSU</strong>’s Office of Research<br />

and Sponsored Programs<br />

(ORSP), TRED Division, is<br />

indebted to and would like to<br />

thank the following groups and<br />

individuals for helping to make<br />

the “<strong>NSU</strong> Regional Conference<br />

on Federal and <strong>State</strong> (LA)<br />

Grant Opportunities” a success:<br />

(1) Drake Owens and staff at<br />

the <strong>NSU</strong> Foundation; (2) Dr.<br />

Richard Dunfee and staff at<br />

the AASCU’s GRC; (3) Drs.<br />

Margaret Cochran and Jean<br />

D’Amato, Louisiana Scholars’<br />

College; (4) Fred Terasa and<br />

staff at the Student Union;<br />

(5) Sodexo Food Services;<br />

(5) the Natchitoches Events<br />

Center staff; (6) Shawn Parr<br />

and Phillip Gillis of <strong>NSU</strong><br />

Academic Services; and, finally<br />

(7) President Randall J.<br />

Webb, all <strong>NSU</strong> vice presidents,<br />

and their staff members.<br />

5


Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

Dr. Jeff Mathews, in his role as<br />

Commander of the Air National Guard<br />

Band of the Gulf Coast, was asked to<br />

lead a combined tour of the band and<br />

the United <strong>State</strong>s Air Force Band of<br />

the West. The group began its tour in<br />

Norman, Okla., and presented concerts<br />

across northern Oklahoma and northern<br />

Texas. They concluded their tour with<br />

a July 4 performance of the National<br />

Anthem at a Texas Rangers’ Major<br />

League Baseball game. This is the first<br />

time that an Air National Guard Band<br />

and an active duty Air Force Band have<br />

combined for such a tour.<br />

Regents praise COE for<br />

Alternative Certification<br />

The College of Education was praised by the<br />

Louisiana Board of Regents for its outstanding<br />

work with teachers in the Alternative Certification<br />

Program. The program ranked in the two highest<br />

categories of the Louisiana Teacher Preparation<br />

Value-Added Assessment Report. Multiple<br />

Board of Regents members praised <strong>NSU</strong>’s longstanding<br />

commitment to excellence in developing<br />

Louisiana teachers.<br />

Congratulations to Dr. Vickie Gentry and the<br />

College of Education faculty and staff who have<br />

worked so hard to assist our K-12 teachers.<br />

With<br />

Sympathy<br />

Services for Sidney Patrick “Pat” Pichon<br />

Jr., father of Michelle Pichon, Language and<br />

Communication, were held on Sept. 8 at St.<br />

Augustine Catholic Church. A plant was sent to<br />

funeral services from the <strong>NSU</strong> Floral Fund.<br />

Birth<br />

Announcements<br />

Proud grandmother Nancy Rachal,<br />

Physical Plant, announces the birth of Hunter<br />

Gage Rachal, who arrived Aug. 19. Hunter<br />

weighed 7 pounds and measured 19 inches.<br />

His parents are Stephen and Casey Rachal of<br />

Natchitoches.<br />

Joshua and Jacob Antilley were born<br />

Monday, Sept. 14 to Janna and David<br />

Antilley and big sister Lelia.<br />

Joshua was born at 4:53 a.m. and weighed 7<br />

pounds 1-1/2 ounces and was 21 inches long.<br />

Jacob was born at 4:55 a.m. and weighed 6<br />

pounds 5 ounces and was 18-1/4 inches long.<br />

Joshua and Jacob are also nephews to<br />

Melissa Korn in the CAPA office.<br />

“Everyone is doing well and looking<br />

forward to their first trip to <strong>NSU</strong>,” David<br />

reports.<br />

6


Students lend a hand to Habitat for Humanity<br />

<strong>NSU</strong> faculty and students<br />

collaborated on a servicelearning<br />

and community<br />

development project to<br />

help build a house for the<br />

local Habitat for Humanity<br />

organization on Saturday, Sept.<br />

19.<br />

The day’s event was<br />

the first of three Habitat for<br />

Humanity building days<br />

scheduled for this semester.<br />

<strong>NSU</strong> students enrolled in Susan<br />

Barnett’s Psychology 1010 –<br />

Introduction to Psychology, and<br />

Steve Gruesbeck’s Psychology<br />

2450 – Adjustment and<br />

Development, have the servicelearning<br />

project embedded into<br />

these two course sections.<br />

Participating <strong>NSU</strong> Faculty<br />

included Mike Cundall,<br />

Scholars’; Michael Yankowski<br />

and Phil Kidd, CAPA; Bobby<br />

Nowlin and Phil Brown, IET/<br />

EET; Barnett, psychology, and<br />

Gruesbeck, director of Service-<br />

Learning.<br />

“Susan and I agree that this<br />

experience provides psychology<br />

students with early, meaningful<br />

Students Holly Avila, left, and Mary Squyres, right, helped Bobby<br />

Nowlin, center, with a construction project during a community service<br />

project for Habitat for Humanity. Avila and Squyres are students in<br />

Steve Gruesbeck’s Psych 2540 class.<br />

opportunities to meet and<br />

collaborate with others,”<br />

Gruesbeck said.<br />

A second building day<br />

was scheduled for Sept.<br />

26 in which ceilings were<br />

stripped in preparation for<br />

drywall. Another is set for<br />

Nov. 7 in which siding will be<br />

installed. Faculty and staff with<br />

woodworking experience who<br />

are interested in volunteering<br />

can contact Gruesbeck at<br />

sgruesbeck@nsula.edu or by<br />

calling Ext. 5911.<br />

LAATTC@<strong>NSU</strong> co-sponsors ASIST training<br />

The Louisiana Addiction Technology Transfer<br />

Center at <strong>NSU</strong> (LAATTC@<strong>NSU</strong>) successfully<br />

co-sponsored the Applied Suicide Intervention<br />

Skills Training (ASIST) with the Louisiana<br />

Department of Health and Hospitals Office of<br />

Mental Health and Office for Addictive Disorders<br />

on Sept. 10-11 in the <strong>NSU</strong> Student Union.<br />

The two-day training was provided through the<br />

Garrett Lee Smith Grant, Louisiana Department<br />

of Health and Hospitals, and the support of the<br />

LAATTC@<strong>NSU</strong> with 22 participants from the<br />

state of Louisiana, including <strong>NSU</strong> faculty and<br />

staff.<br />

The ASIST training model is an evidencebased<br />

model from Living Works based in<br />

Canada, and is widely used across the continents<br />

of Europe and North America. The training provided<br />

participants with the opportunity to understand<br />

the principles of this suicide intervention<br />

theory, as well as the ability to practice the techniques<br />

it incorporates.<br />

“This training provided mental health and<br />

substance abuse professionals the opportunity<br />

to better serve their clients facing this particular<br />

issue,” said Dr. Jody Biscoe, director of the<br />

LAATTC@<strong>NSU</strong>.<br />

The trainers of the workshop included Dr.<br />

Jody Meek and Don Pledger whose presentations<br />

were interactive, professional, and supportive of<br />

the diversity and levels of experience among the<br />

group. Upon the completion of the workshop, all<br />

participants were awarded certificates in Suicide<br />

First Aid Prevention. Participants were able to<br />

network collectively in efforts to increase the<br />

awareness and prevention of suicide.<br />

If you or anyone you know is thinking of<br />

suicide, please contact our local Northwest Louisiana<br />

Local Suicide Helpline at (877) 994-2275.<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

7


Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

Resources and<br />

Assistance<br />

For assistance in<br />

seeking information<br />

about funding<br />

opportunties,<br />

prepareing proposals<br />

or administering<br />

projects, contact the<br />

Office of Research<br />

and Sponsored<br />

Programs by phone,<br />

357-5222; e-mail at<br />

orsp@nsula.edu, or<br />

visit the ORSP website<br />

at http://www.<br />

nsula.edu/orsp.<br />

ORSP Staff<br />

Dr. Priscilla Kilcrease<br />

Director<br />

Carla Howell<br />

Associate Director<br />

Amy Vaughn<br />

Administrative<br />

Assistant 3<br />

Alysia Jones<br />

Administrative Assistant<br />

1<br />

Office of Research<br />

and Sponsored Programs<br />

Congratulations<br />

Dr. Chris Maggio, Dean of Students,<br />

received notification of an award of $18,900 from<br />

the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and<br />

Corrections for “Student Alcohol Education and<br />

Judicial Program.”<br />

Mr. Jeff Girard, School of Social<br />

Sciences, College of Liberal Arts, received<br />

notification of an award of $74,621 from the<br />

Louisiana Division of Archaeology for “Regional<br />

Archaeology Program 2009-2010.”<br />

Dr. Darlene Williams, Vice President<br />

of Technology, Research and Economic<br />

Development, received notification of an award of<br />

$17,800 from the Louisiana Board of Regents and<br />

Bossier Parish Community College for “Online<br />

Marketing and Promotion.”<br />

Dr. Pamela Simmons, College of<br />

Nursing, received notification of an award of<br />

$49,772 from the National Institutes of Health for<br />

“Are We SAFER? Schools of nursing Aligned<br />

For Emergency Responsiveness.”<br />

Ms. Lisa Rougeou, Department of<br />

Language and Communication, College of Liberal<br />

Arts, received notification of additional funds<br />

of $16,000 from the <strong>University</strong> of California –<br />

Berkeley for “<strong>NSU</strong>’s National Writing Project.”<br />

Mr. Joe Morris, Criminal Justice<br />

Department, School of Social Sciences, College<br />

of Liberal Arts, received notification from the<br />

Bureau of Justice Association of an award of<br />

$250,000 for “Interstate Corridors Project: I-10.”<br />

Ms. Daphne Levenson and Ms. Polly Snell are<br />

collaborators.<br />

Current Activities<br />

Mr. Joseph Biscoe, III, Department of<br />

Psychology, College of Science and Technology,<br />

submitted a proposal to the <strong>University</strong> of Texas<br />

– Austin, Gulf Coast Addiction Technology<br />

Transfer Project, for the continuation of funding<br />

for “Amendment #8 - to cost reimbursement<br />

subaward #UT-403-223.”<br />

Mr. Joseph Biscoe, III, Department of<br />

Psychology, College of Science and Technology,<br />

submitted two other proposals to the Louisiana<br />

Board of Regents, CALL Program, for “CALL<br />

Proposal; Psychology – Substance Abuse”<br />

and “CALL Proposal; Psychology – Addiction<br />

Studies.” Dr. Darlene Williams and Dr. Susan<br />

Barnett are collaborators.<br />

Dr. Paula Furr, Department of<br />

Journalism, College of Liberal Arts, submitted a<br />

proposal to the Louisiana Board of Regents, CALL<br />

Program, for “CALL Proposal; Journalism.” Dr.<br />

Darlene Williams is collaborator.<br />

Dr. Paul Nagel, College of Education,<br />

received notification from the National<br />

Geographic Society Education Foundation of<br />

an award of $23,000 for “Louisiana 2009-2010<br />

Alliance Planning Grant Project.”<br />

Dr. Lisa Abney, Acting Vice President<br />

of Academic and Student Affairs, and Mr. Kirk<br />

Cordell, NCPTT, received notification from the<br />

National Park Service of an award of $409,030<br />

for “<strong>NSU</strong>-NCPTT Multiple Projects Modification<br />

#5.”<br />

Dr. Norann Planchock, College of<br />

Nursing, submitted a proposal to the Louisiana<br />

Board of Regents, CALL Program, for “CALL<br />

Proposal; Nursing.” Dr. Darlene Williams and<br />

Ms. Diane Webb are collaborators.<br />

For more information regarding funding<br />

opportunities, visit ORSP’s website at www.<br />

nsula.edu/orsp.<br />

8


<strong>News</strong> from the Dept. of Language and Communication<br />

Dr. Allen Bauman and<br />

Dr. James Crank received<br />

the news in the spring<br />

of 2009 that their grant<br />

proposal “Strengthening New<br />

Concentration in Film Studies<br />

through a Departmental Film<br />

Library” had been funded<br />

by the Board of Regents for<br />

over $5,000. The proposal<br />

intended to provide support to<br />

the film studies concentration<br />

in the most practical way<br />

possible: by providing a film<br />

library for the department<br />

consisting of movies that have<br />

been requested by faculty<br />

as primary sources to be<br />

used in classes. The grant<br />

promotes the newly developed<br />

“Film Concentration” within<br />

our department’s major<br />

curriculum. Second, the<br />

departmental film library (the<br />

result of the grant monies)<br />

serves as a resource within the<br />

university, and will allow the<br />

expansion of our Master of Arts<br />

in Entertainment Technology.<br />

Finally, the Board of Regents’<br />

grant also helps establish<br />

<strong>Northwestern</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

and its Department of Language<br />

and Communication as one<br />

of the only sites for training<br />

for the constantly-expanding<br />

film industry in northern<br />

Louisiana. We hope to train<br />

and educate future directors,<br />

lighting designers, grips,<br />

and foley artists to work for<br />

Louisiana’s film industry.<br />

Dr. James Crank received<br />

word that the manuscript for<br />

his article, “Racial Violence,<br />

Receding Bodies: James Agee’s<br />

Anatomy of Guilt” has been<br />

accepted for publication in the<br />

collection Agee at 100 (U of TN<br />

Press, 2010).<br />

Dr. Julie Kane’s new<br />

poetry collection, JAZZ<br />

FUNERAL (Story Line Press,<br />

2009) was launched this past<br />

summer with a reading on<br />

June 10 at the West Chester<br />

<strong>University</strong> Poetry Conference<br />

in West Chester, Penn. The<br />

book won the 2009 Donald<br />

Justice Poetry Prize, judged<br />

by David Mason. On June 18,<br />

there was a wine and cheese<br />

reception/signing for the book<br />

at The Book Merchant Book<br />

Shop in Natchitoches, attended<br />

by many <strong>NSU</strong> personnel. On<br />

July 11, Julie gave a reading<br />

in the Powow River Poets<br />

series at Jabberwocky Books in<br />

Newburyport, Mass. She also<br />

signed books afterward. July<br />

25 brought a reading and book<br />

signing at the Garden District<br />

Book Shop in New Orleans,<br />

and the following weekend<br />

Julie read on a double bill with<br />

poet Robin Kemp at The Maple<br />

Leaf in New Orleans. Aug.<br />

5 brought a reading before<br />

the “Young at Heart” group<br />

of the First United Methodist<br />

Church of Natchitoches at their<br />

monthly luncheon meeting.<br />

Julie made appearances<br />

at the Southern Festival of<br />

the Book in Nashville on<br />

Sept. 9, where she read with<br />

poets Grace Bauer and Diann<br />

Blakely, and at the Louisiana<br />

Book Festival in Baton Rouge<br />

on Sept. 16, where she shared<br />

a bill with Darrell Bourque and<br />

Peter Cooley.<br />

Also since the end of<br />

the spring semester, Julie<br />

introduced poet Ellen Bryant<br />

Voigt, the winner of the 2009<br />

Poets’ Prize, at the Poets’ Prize<br />

awards ceremony May 21 at the<br />

Nicholas Roerich Museum in<br />

New York City, and interviewed<br />

Kiem Do, the co-author of<br />

her nonfiction Vietnam book<br />

(COUNTERPART: A SOUTH<br />

VIETNAMESE NAVAL<br />

OFFICER’S WAR) during a<br />

narrative stage session of the<br />

Natchitoches/<strong>NSU</strong> Folklife<br />

Festival on July 18. A poem<br />

from JAZZ FUNERAL,<br />

“Particle Physics,” was featured<br />

on Poetry Daily http://poems.<br />

com/poem.php?date=14500)<br />

and was read by Garrison<br />

Keillor on the Sept. 16<br />

broadcast of Writer’s Almanac<br />

. You can<br />

purchase the book directly<br />

from the publisher here . Also, please visit Dr.<br />

Kane’s professional webpage<br />

here .<br />

Thomas<br />

Reynolds delivered his paper<br />

“Derrida’s Post Card and the<br />

Erotic Triangle: Homosociality,<br />

Power, and Beyond” in March<br />

at the Louisiana Conference<br />

on Literature, Language,<br />

and Culture in Lafayette,<br />

where he earned the Darrell<br />

Bourque Award for the Most<br />

Outstanding Paper. Also in<br />

March, he travelled on an<br />

NEF grant to the Conference<br />

on College Composition<br />

and Communication in<br />

San Francisco, where he<br />

delivered his paper “Franklin’s<br />

Autobiography as a Model<br />

of Empirical Rhetoric.”<br />

Thomas ended the Spring<br />

2009 conference season in<br />

April at the Popular Culture<br />

Association/American Culture<br />

Association national conference<br />

in New Orleans, LA, where he<br />

delivered his paper, “’They’re<br />

Not Paternity Pants; They’re<br />

Fat Pants:’ The Growing<br />

Discourse of Maternity<br />

Literature for Men.”<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

9


NON-CREDIT SHORT COURSES OCTOBER CLASSES<br />

Volume 33 No. 9<br />

October 2009<br />

NOTARY EXAM PREP/DISTANCE<br />

LEARNING CLASS<br />

Date: Oct. 3-Nov. 21, Sat<br />

Time: 1-5 p.m.<br />

Fee: $249 (does not include books)<br />

Location: Russell Hall, Rm. 122<br />

Instructor: Robin Jones, Attorney-at-<br />

Law<br />

PRIVATE ONE-ON-ONE<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY LESSONS<br />

(Availability Limited/Only 2 Students<br />

per Date)<br />

FIRST COME FIRST SERVE<br />

Choose one of the following dates:<br />

Oct. 6, Tues<br />

Oct. 27, Tues<br />

Nov. 3, Tues<br />

Nov. 17, Tues<br />

Choose one of the following times for your<br />

lesson:<br />

10 a.m. -12 p.m. or 3- 5 p.m.<br />

Fee: $85<br />

Location: Dodd Hall, Rm. 132-B<br />

Instructor: Gale Trussell<br />

BASIC FLORAL DESIGN I<br />

Date: Oct 10-24, Sat.<br />

Time: 1-4 p.m.<br />

Fee: $200 + $100 mat. fee<br />

Location: The Master’s Bouquet<br />

Instructor: Dawn Martin<br />

USING FILTERS TO ENHANCE<br />

YOUR PHOTOGRAPHY<br />

Date: Oct. 13, Tues<br />

Time: 6-8 p.m.<br />

Fee: $59<br />

Location: Dodd Hall, Rm. 132-B<br />

Instructor: Gale Trussell<br />

BEGINNING CAKE DECORATING<br />

Date: Oct. 24, Sat<br />

Time: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.<br />

Fee: $75 + $35 material fee (paid<br />

directly to instructor first night of<br />

class)<br />

Fee includes all tools, cake<br />

dummy and icing that you will need to<br />

complete projects in class. All<br />

tools are yours to keep.<br />

Location: Russell Hall, Rm. 132-B<br />

Instructor: Claire Workman<br />

MS PUBLISHER 2007<br />

Date: Oct. 29, Thurs<br />

Time: 5-8 p.m.<br />

Fee: $45<br />

Location: Dodd Hall, Rm. 113<br />

Instructor: Terrie McCallister<br />

GRANT WRITING CLINIC:<br />

WRITING A PROPOSAL THAT<br />

GETS FUNDED<br />

GRANT WRITING SERIES I<br />

Date: Oct. 22, 23, & 24, Thurs, Fri, &<br />

Sat<br />

Time: Thurs & Fri - 5:30 - 7:30 p.m. /<br />

Sat - 9:30 a.m. - 2 p.m.<br />

Fee: $120 + $40 book & mat. fee<br />

Location: The Learning Center for<br />

Rapides Parish<br />

Instructor: Emma Jean Bush<br />

To learn more about our on-line<br />

non-credit courses visit<br />

http://www.gatlineducation.<br />

com/nsula<br />

& http://www.ed2go.com/nsu/<br />

FOR MORE INFORMATION OR<br />

TO REGISTER CALL 800-376-<br />

2422 or 318-357-6355<br />

10

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