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Mathematics Student’s London Conference Presentation

Posted on: September 21st, 2013 by erabadie
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Eleanor Anthony

by Caty Cambron, courtesy of the Daily Mississippian
September 20, 2013

In March, junior mathematics and philosophy major Eleanor Anthony traveled to Vercelli, Italy, and discovered what has become one of her life’s passions.

As part of the Lazarus Project, a group of people specializing in the multispectral imaging of cultural heritage pieces sponsored by the University of Mississippi, Anthony visited the Museo del Tesoro del Duomo.

It was here that Anthony first laid eyes on the Vercelli Book.

While studying the Vercelli Book and conducting spectral imaging on the book’s text, Anthony learned the importance of finding ways to successfully transcribe old data and manuscripts.

“For me, data and narrative has always been fascinating,” Anthony said. “As humans, we think in terms of narrative, and so much of what we do, as humans, is contributing a piece to a larger conversation.”

According to Anthony, going to Italy allowed her to see “a physical instantiation of that conversation that has existed since the 10th century.”

In July, Anthony submitted an abstract, a written summary of her own proposal for how transcription methods can be improved, to the DigiPal Symposium, hosted by the Department of Digital Humanities at King’s College London.

Her abstract was accepted, and she spent more than a month preparing before traveling to London to give her presentation.

“It serves as a testament that we’ve still got part of the conversation playing into what we’re talking about today,” Anthony said.

On Sept. 16 Anthony spoke for 20 minutes about a correlation and probabilistic-based approach to transcription methods of damaged manuscripts. Her presentation touched on the history of the Vercelli Book and the Archimedes Palimpsest, as well as the basic mathematics behind the system she hopes to extend and implement while addressing the current problems within the data being researched now by the Lazarus Project.

Anthony was the only undergraduate student speaker at the DigiPal Symposium while being among notable paleographers and scholars.

The Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, the College of Liberal Arts, the English department and the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs sponsored Anthony to travel to London to present her abstract.

According to Anthony, her recent presentation serves as the primary research that will lead to the design and implementation for her capstone project and honors college thesis to be called “Archimedes’ Palimpsest to the Vercelli Book: Dual Correlation and Probabilistic Network Approaches to Paleography in Damaged Manuscripts.”

“If anything, I was given great advice about the improvements of my initial start that will be part of my final thesis,” Anthony said. “I’m really thankful for all the support I received.”

Anthony’s ultimate goal is to create a computer program that improves transcription methods through looking at the correlation of the word level and by looking at the cause and relationship of words at the sentence level.

Teaching Success in Mississippi

Posted on: August 20th, 2013 by erabadie

Meet two alumni, Jonathan Cornell and Cortez Moss, who stayed in state to teach.

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Mississippi Teacher Corps’ Jonathan Cornell

Mississippi Teacher Corps
Former linebacker Jonathan Cornell now tackles teaching Meridian High School students African American literature and public speaking for the Mississippi Teacher Corps, a two-year program offering noneducation graduates teacher training and job placement in critical needs schools in Mississippi along with the opportunity to earn a master’s degree at the University of Mississippi School of Education free of charge.

Cornell grew up in Azusa, California, and received a football scholarship to UM where he earned a B.A. in political science in 2011. “He’s extremely positive and wants to share his experiences,” said Aaron Johnson, acting Teacher Corps program manager. “He came from a challenging background, became a successful football player, and then a teacher in a critical needs school. He reaches out to students and teaches in an almost coaching fashion.”

Cornell uses techniques learned on the field and in the classroom. “I knew we were reaching him when he started drawing parallels between theories of international conflict and football,” said Susan Allen, associate professor of political science. “I have no doubt that his students in Meridian are starting to make connections between the things they learn in Mr. Cornell’s class and their everyday lives.”

For one of Allen’s classes, Cornell remembers submitting drafts of a research paper while the professor repeatedly asked him to reevaluate his work with questions such as “Why do you think this?” and “Why do you propose that?” Today he brings the same challenge to his students. He also applies his football experience to his new career. “I remember Coach O used to always tell us ‘be a pro’,” he said. “I didn’t fully understand until I joined the Teacher Corps. As a teacher you have to be a pro every day with all that you do.”

Not unlike athletes, teachers review their performance on video and address strengths and weaknesses as classroom leaders during the program’s rigorous summer training. “You’re thrown out there and you either sink or swim. The majority of us end up swimming but a few end up sinking,” Cornell said. “That strengthens you.” The UM School of Education recognized Cornell’s success with its student of the month award last February.

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Cortez Moss Teaches for America

Teach for America
Cortez Moss completed his first year teaching English as Greenwood High School Teacher of the Year.

The University of Mississippi Hall of Fame student from Calhoun City (B.A. public policy leadership and English, ’12) became interested in the career when he spoke to the Mississippi House of Representatives’ education committee about charter schools. “After that, I understood the challenges the state faced providing all children with high-quality education, and I had to do something different and it wasn’t through policy,” Moss said. “I knew I had to be a classroom teacher to make a difference.”

Moss is a member of Teach for America, a national corps of leaders who commit to teach for two years in low-income communities to ensure that kids receive an excellent education. His first choice location was the Mississippi Delta and he plans to remain long after his commitment is up.

“I think my students understand the reason I am in the Delta, that I am a Mississippi boy and face challenges like they do,” said Moss, who eventually wants to become a school administrator. “As an African American male, I can say that I’ve done this and it’s possible for you to do the same—but it takes hard work.

“Looking back on my college experiences, every Associated Student Body meeting and public policy leadership class challenged me to think outside of the box to convince and educate; that is the art of teaching in the Mississippi Delta. I do that every day now. I am eternally grateful for those experiences.”

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Students Spent Spring Break Digitally Mapping Vercelli Manuscript

Posted on: April 3rd, 2013 by erabadie

Group visited Italy as part of UM’s Lazarus Project

The Lazarus Project team in Vercelli, Italy. Photo by Mary Stanton

Four University of Mississippi students recently traded sunshine and relaxation for ancient manuscripts and the chance of a lifetime.

The three sophomores and one freshman, all students in the university’s Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, spent spring break in Vercelli, Italy, digitally mapping a 10th century text called the Vercelli manuscript as part of the Ole Miss Lazarus Project. The medieval text is one of four major works of Old English writings and includes sermons and poems such as “Dream of the Rood.” The text was damaged by a 19th century attempt to use chemicals to make the faded text more legible, and the imaging the students performed will help restore some of that lost writing.

The team of young researchers and scholars are using multispectral images and ultraviolet light to study ancient manuscripts such as the Vercelli manuscript (10th century) and the Globe Map of Vercelli (late 12th century). Led by Gregory Heyworth, UM associate professor of English, the team photographs the manuscripts with a 50-megapixel camera, specially designed multispectral lights and filters, and specialized imaging software to recover portions of the text invisible to the naked eye.

“Working with these documents, it’s unreal,” said Leigh Anne Zook, a sophomore international studies and intelligence and security studies major from Huntsville, Ala. “These are priceless artifacts, and thinking of how few people have seen these, and the ones who have are experts in their fields, and me as a sophomore being able to work with these manuscripts – it’s not even a trade-off, it’s an absolutely wonderful experience.”

Other sophomores were Eleanor Anthony, a mathematics and philosophy major from Jackson, and Elizabeth Wicks, a French and pharmacy major from Ocean Springs. Freshman Meredith Oliver, a pharmacy major from Collierville, Tenn., also participated.

While in Italy, the students also were able to assist in imaging a 12th century map of the world, or mappamundi, one of only 12 in existence.

Previously, the Lazarus Project took students to Washington, D.C., where they examined a possible William Shakespeare signature, and to Dresden, Germany, where their efforts revealed writing in another unique medieval manuscript, “Les Eschéz d’Amour” (The Chess of Love), a long 14th century Middle French poem thought until recently to have been too badly damaged during World War II to be recovered.

Since its inception, the Lazarus Project has used its portable multispectral lab to analyze several documents, including the Skipwith Revolutionary War Letters, which were donated to Ole Miss by Kate Skipwith and Mary Skipwith Buie, great-granddaughters of Gen. Nathanael Greene; and the Wynn Faulkner Poetry Collection, 48 pages of early poetry written by William Faulkner between 1917 and 1925 that were donated by Leila Clark Wynn and Douglas C. Wynn.

For more information, visit the Lazarus Project.

Black History Month Ends with Moses’ Lecture on Thursday

Posted on: February 22nd, 2013 by erabadie

Sarah M. Moses will close Black History Month as speaker on Thursday, February 28, at 5:30 pm at Overby Center Auditorium.  Sarah Moses is an assistant professor  of religion at the University of Mississippi.

This lecture will focus on the intersection among Christian social ethics, feminist/womanist studies, critical race theory and postcolonial studies. Floyd- Thomas is a nationally recognized scholar and teacher in the field of religious ethics; she serves as executive director of the Society of Christian Ethics and was awarded the American Academy of Religion Teaching Award in 2007.

Sponsored by: Department of Philosophy and Religion, Sarah Isom Center for Women and Gender Studies, Office of the Dean of Students/ Multicultural Affairs, University Lecture Series, Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College

Leadership Laboratory: From Pupil to Pulpit

Posted on: February 12th, 2013 by erabadie
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C.J. Rhodes

This year Black History Month events at the University of Mississippi began with a speech by alumnus Rev. C. Edwards “CJ” Rhodes (B.A.’04).

Rhodes’ years at UM shaped the leader he is today. The son of famed civil rights attorney Carroll Rhodes Sr., was the youngest pastor of the oldest historically black congregation in Jackson, Mount Helm Baptist Church, from 2010 until September 2013 when he became Alcorn State University rector of the Oakland Memorial Chapel, director of student religious life and assistant professor in the Department of Social Sciences. The author and radio show host also serves on the board of the Urban League of Greater Jackson, the Center for Ministry, the Mississippi Religious Leadership Conference, and is former president of the Farish Street/Main Street Project.

The Hazlehurst native took full advantage of his collegiate experience—working with the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation, serving an appointment to the Chancellor’s Committee for Respect and Sensitivity, co-founding two college ministries and serving as associate minister to youth and young adults at two local Baptist churches.

“I was surrounded by great professors and students who saw my potential and persuaded me to use my gifts to do good,” he said. “Through the Winter Institute and the leadership of director Susan Glisson, I found a safe space to think out loud about strategies and goals to help the University become greater through challenging the administration and student body to reimagine who we are.”

The only black philosophy major at that time found support in the department. “I still laugh at Dr. Bill Lawhead, who inquired how a Baptist-Pentecostal preacher found his way into philosophy, given how mistrusting many Evangelicals are of the area of study,” Rhodes said. “I am a better leader because folks like him inspired me to be.”

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Dr. Ethel Young-Minor, Senior Fellow at the Lucky Day Residential College and associate professor of English, first saw him sitting on the floor in the Union bookstore reading books about religion from the shelf as if in a library. “I was so intrigued by this voracious reader that I had to ask his name and by the end of the conversation I was taking him home to meet my husband, who took him in as our son in ministry,” she said.

UM prepared Rhodes for Duke Divinity School, where he earned a master’s and served as vice president of the Black Seminarians Union. “There were a few moments at Duke where my ability to mediate tense conversations around race and gender, cultivated during UM days, were essential in moving seminarians and administration through difficult yet critical decisions,” he said.

Rhodes appreciates his time in college and advises students, “You have at least four years to get a quality, world-class education. Get it! Let nothing or no one get in the way of becoming intellectual and culturally well rounded and deep. Get as much book knowledge as possible, attend every major lecture or event. Ask the right questions. Be in the room when decisions are being made. When you leave, know that you’ve amassed excellent skills to be competitive in the market but more importantly to be a global citizen able to do the most good in your chosen field of influence.”

Ole Miss News and the Daily Mississippian contributed to this story by Mary Love Fair.

Cinema Studies Minor Presence Grows

Posted on: February 8th, 2013 by erabadie

Steeped in literary tradition, University of Mississippi and Oxford look to support visual storytelling and independent movie making with a cinema minor and a fast growing film community.

Like digital filmmaking, the cinema minor is steadily making its mark on campus as one of the largest and quickest growing minors.

Long gone are the days of the clicks and cranks of cameras and editing machines.

Instead the new visual storyteller is liberated by digital cameras and laptops. With just a great story and these relatively low-cost tools, international film festivals have seen new and diverse stories emerging, and the same situation is occurring on the UM campus.

This budding minor seems to have already found its legs.

“I’m seeing voices coming from all cultures of Mississippi,” said Alan Arrivée, theatre professor and director of the cinema minor.

He describes much of the student work as realistic in process, but possibly with a Southern Gothic influence or biblical references. Some emerging stories are “things that cut against the grain of the culture.”

As part of this program, the university has the UM Cinema Competition where students apply and submit proposals for monetary awards to help realize what they envision.

Students submit scripts, storyboards and budgets among other things in categories of narrative, musical, dance and documentary.

The best of these works are then showcased in the spring in “An Evening of Cinema” in Meek Auditorium.

This year the showcase will take place April 4-7 and there will be an A and B program so each work screens twice. This alteration is in response to a packed house and sold out shows last year.

The minor is an opportunity to complement many majors on campus.

Faculty teaching for cinema also teach English, history, theatre, southern studies, religious studies and gender studies. The curriculum is well rounded as students learn critique and analysis as well as hands-on applications in scriptwriting, cinematography and all aspects of the production process.

Arrivée said he sees excitement and groups forming to produce works, similar to what one would see in any film school. He sees that energy and excitement transfer to students who “do best when they don’t see (the project) as an assignment.”

“I want this to be empowering,” he said.

Most kids would be afraid of watching horror films in the dark at 6 years old, but they form part of an early memory for English major Mack-Arthur Turner Jr.

Growing up, he and his family shared movie watching experiences with western, drama and actions genres.

In his first semester at UM, Turner took a  film studies class where he  put critical analysis and vocabulary to all those years of being a movie fan.

That same year, the cinema minor started and Turner began exploring visual storytelling as well as majoring in English.

Turner hopes that more students explore classes in the minor and that classes reflect the diversity on campus and not continue have film making only look to male-dominated Hollywood.

He feels Mississippi stories can compete on an international level.

“We should use the Mississippi experience to connect to the world,” he said. “It’s possible to connect with people in Belize or parts of Africa or Ecuador, especially with subjects of poverty, or health and social issues, it resonates with them.”

Besides the minor and Oxford Film Festival adding to the culture, the Yoknapatawpha  Arts Council Film Endowment has been created which Arrivée describes as a “Junior Austin Film Society.”

The council hopes to support the budding film culture in Oxford, set up educational opportunities and attract filmmakers to the region.

Arrivée sees students staying in Oxford to make films after graduation. The Film Council will have an editing bay and equipment cage that will help complement what is available to cinema minors.

So as the independent film scene opens up to more people, it’s never been a better time for UM students to tell their stories and attempt to create the great American film.

Youngest Pastor of Jackson’s Oldest Black Church to Deliver Keynote for Black History Month

Posted on: February 4th, 2013 by erabadie

UM alum co-founded the Department of Minority Affairs, was appointed to Chancellor’s Committee for Sensitivity

The co-founder of the Department of Minority Affairs at the University of Mississippi is the keynote speaker for the first in a series of Black History Month events scheduled for February.

The Rev. C. Edward “CJ” Rhodes II delivers the public address at noon Feb. 5 in the Ole Miss Student Union lobby. He will discuss the celebration of diversity and culture at the university. The UM Gospel Choir will perform and the Lift Every Voice Awards presented.

“I am very humbled and honored to be asked to deliver the keynote for such a historic occasion,” said Rhodes, the 23rd and youngest pastor of Mt. Helm Baptist Church, Jackson’s oldest historically black church. “This is the 50th year of the university’s integration, the assassination of Medgar Evers and Dr. King’s most memorable speech in Washington, D.C . As we look back on the achievements and sacrifices of those from the past, this generation is challenged to do great things not just for themselves, but for others and the world as well.”

The event is co-sponsored by the Black History Month planning committee, Office of the Provost and Multicultural Affairs, Office of the Dean of Students and Multicultural Affairs and Office of Campus Programming.

“The Black History Month committee is very pleased that Rev. Rhodes agreed to serve as this year’s Black History Month kickoff speaker,” said Valeria Ross, assistant to the UM dean of students. “During his tenure as a student, he worked with the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation, was appointed to the Chancellor’s Committee for Respect and Sensitivity, co-founded two college ministries and was an associate minister to youth and young adults at two local Baptist churches.”

The son of famed civil rights attorney Carroll Rhodes Sr., Rhodes earned his bachelor’s degree in philosophy in 2004. He continued his education at Duke Divinity School, where he served as vice president of the Black Seminarians Union in Raleigh, N.C.

Now ordained, Rhodes serves on the board of the Urban League of Greater Jackson, the Center for Ministry and the Mississippi Religious Leadership Conference, and is the former president of the Farish Street/Main Street Project. The recipient of numerous awards and recognitions, he also serves as host of “The CJ Rhodes Show” on WRBJ-97.7 FM and is author of “Thy Kingdom Come: Reflections on Pastoral and Prophetic Ministry.”

“If my address can inspire those who hear me to seek to change the world for the better, then I will have done my duty,” Rhodes said.

Other Black History Month dates and events scheduled include:

  • Feb. 1-28: “Featured Books” in Ole Miss Bookstore;
  • Feb. 6: Award-winning Poet Michael Warr reading;
  • Feb. 7: National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day at various locations in L-O-U community;
  • Feb. 7: “The Armageddon of Funk” poetry reading by Michael Warr reading at Bryant Hall beginning at 6:30 p.m.;
  • Feb. 7-28: “Independent Expression: Self-Taught Art of the Late 20th Century” art exhibition by Gordon W. Bailey at University Museums;
  • Feb. 19: Black History Month Concert
  • Feb. 21-23: Porter L. Fortune Jr. History Symposium featuring opening presentation “New Networks, African Slaves and the Reimaging of Information in the Colonial South” by Alejandra Dubcovsky of Yale University;
  • Feb. 22: Wollworth Sit-In Panel Discussion;
  • Feb. 21-24: Tenth Annual Oxford Film Festival, various times at the Malco Oxford Studios;
  • Feb. 15 and 28: 4th Annual “Because of Who You Are” Awards at various locations in LOU community;
  • Feb. 22: How to Use African American Primary Source Databases workshops at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. in J.D. Williams Library Room 106D;
  • Feb. 25: T.P. Vinson Memorial Scholarship Banquet at 6:30 p.m. in Johnson Commons Ballroom;
  • Feb. 28: Stacey Floyd Thomas Lecture.

For a complete schedule of UM Black History Month events, contact Valeria Ross at 662-915-7247.

Rev. CJ Rhodes Gives Kickoff Keynote for Black History Month

Posted on: January 31st, 2013 by erabadie
author

A graduate of the University of Mississippi and Duke Divinity School, CJ is one of this nation’s emerging leaders

On Tuesday, Febuary 5, Rev. C. Edward “CJ” Rhodes II will present the keynote address at the Black History Month Kickoff event.  The UM Gospel Choir will perform for the kickoff at noon at the Student Union Lobby. The son of  famed civil rights attorney Carroll Rhodes Sr.,  he is the  youngest pastor  of Mount  Helm  Baptist Church,  the  capital city’s oldest historically black congregation.

Prior to graduating from the University of Mississippi with a B.A. in philosophy, Rhodes worked closely with the William Winter Institute for Racial Reconciliation. He continued his education at Duke Divinity School, where he served as vice president of the Black Seminarians Union in Raleigh, N.C.

Now ordained, Rhodes serves on the boards of the Urban League of Greater Jackson, Center for Ministry and Mississippi Religious Leadership Conference, and is former president of the Farish Street/Main Street Project. The recipient of numerous awards and recognitions, he also serves as host of “The CJ Rhodes Show” on WRBJ 97.7 FM and is the author of Thy Kingdom Come: Reflections on Pastoral and Prophetic Ministry.

For a comprehensive list of events, contact the Office of the Dean of Students, 422 Union, call 662-915-7247 or 662-915-7248, or email Valeria Ross at vross@olemiss.edu.

 

 

Environmental Professor Speaks October 16

Posted on: October 15th, 2012 by erabadie

Author Katharine Wilkerson will speak Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 5 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom at the University of Mississippi as part of the National Science Foundation funded Climate Literacy Partnership in the Southeast (CLiPSE) project.

Wilkerson will discuss and sign her book entitled “Between God and Green,” a study of evangelical Christian viewpoints toward the environment and climate change.

“Dr. Katharine Wilkerson studies the emerging perceptions and attitudes of many in the evangelical Christian community toward environmental issues in general and climate change more specifically,” said David Rutherford, executive director of the Mississippi Geographic Alliance and assistant professor of public policy and geography.

“Her book, titled ‘Between God and Green,’ emerges from her extensive research on this topic. This talk and book signing are part of the Climate Literacy Partnership in the Southeast (CLiPSE) project that seeks to improve understanding of climate science and implications in the Southeastern U.S. through respectful dialogue, critical thought, and effective communication among leading theologians, scientists, agricultural groups, educators, and culturally diverse communities,” he added.

For more information contact David Rutherford, Assistant Professor of Public Policy and Geography and Executive Director Mississippi Geographic Alliance, at druther@olemiss.edu, 662.915.1337 and 662.915.3776

Recent Honors College Grad Named Prestigious National Portz Scholar

Posted on: September 14th, 2012 by erabadie
Andrew Paul

Andrew Paul

A recent University of Mississippi graduate has gained national recognition as a creative writer with a piece of fiction that explores boundaries of the human heart.

Andrew Paul of Clinton, who graduated in May as a member of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, is one of three new national Portz Scholars, named by the National Collegiate Honors Council. This is the second consecutive year for UM to produce a Portz, and Paul becomes the university’s fourth Portz Scholar since 2002.

Majoring in religious studies, Paul composed his winning work, titled “The River Thief: A Collection of Short Fiction,” for his honor’s thesis. He has been invited to present it at the November NCHC convention in Boston.Each year, the NCHC invites honors colleges nationwide to submit outstanding research/creative papers written by their students; from those submissions, only three scholars are selected.

“When we select our nominee for the Portz, we look for work that pushes the boundaries of what is known, and does so in a professional manner,” said Honors College Dean Douglass Sullivan-González. “Andy uses fiction to explore the boundaries of the human heart. It is not an easy journey, but Andy makes it rich and worth the risks.”

Paul’s skills as a creative writer were honed under the tutelage of two award-winning writers, both UM faculty members. Jack Pendarvis, writer-in-residence, and Tom Franklin, assistant professor of fiction writing, served as director and second reader for Paul’s collection.

Paul said it’s a real honor to be recognized for his work.

“I would have been happy enough to simply finish the collection, but having other people enjoy it and want to promote it is amazing,” he said. “I plan on expanding my thesis by another two or three stories, then beginning a new collection.

“I’m particularly interested in what it means to be a modern Jew in the South. I tried my best to merge the Southern writing that I love – Lewis Nordan, Barry Hannah, Tom Franklin and others – with Eastern European Jewish archetypes and folktales. A lot of Southern Jewish ‘culture’ I’ve seen appears to boil down to Judaism meets fried chicken. I want to show that there is a lot more to it than that – that there are a lot of complex nuances and issues related to the culture.”

As for the future, Paul said he plans to apply to M.F.A. programs around the country and hopes to eventually get his first collection of stories picked up by a publisher.

Other UM Portz Scholars are Ryan Parsons (2011) of Hattiesburg, international studies and Chinese; Heather Carrillo (2006) of Little Rock, Ark., classics and art history; and Amanda Guth of Tremont (2002), psychology and biology