Notables
Recent graduates Phillip Hawley, Nicholas Jacobson, Sam Kramer and Amanda Tharp, along with assistant professor of psychology, Salvatore Costa, were published in the April 2011 issue of “American Society of Clinical Hypnosis” for their study, “The Effects of Encoding in Hypnosis and Post-Hypnotic Suggestion on Academic Performance.”
Huping Ling, professor of history, will have her book, “Chinese Chicago: Race, Transnational Migration, and Community Since 1870,” published by Stanford University Press in January 2012. Pre-orders are available at www.sup.org.
Mark Smith, associate professor of communication, will present a paper at the Midwest Radio History Symposium in October at Kansas State University. Smith’s critical historical paper investigates the degree and significance of live entertainment broadcast on a Nebraska radio station in the 1920s and 1930s. This is Smith’s fourth paper accepted at the Midwest Radio History Symposium.
Huping Ling, professor of history, will have her book, “Chinese Chicago: Race, Transnational Migration, and Community Since 1870,” published by Stanford University Press in January 2012. Pre-orders are available at www.sup.org.
Mark Smith, associate professor of communication, will present a paper at the Midwest Radio History Symposium in October at Kansas State University. Smith’s critical historical paper investigates the degree and significance of live entertainment broadcast on a Nebraska radio station in the 1920s and 1930s. This is Smith’s fourth paper accepted at the Midwest Radio History Symposium.