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BONITA A. DALY, assistant professor of accounting, conducted a continuing professional education workshop titled "Ethics in Business" for the Maine Chapter of the Construction Financial Management Association Annual All-Industry Meeting, held on December 18 in Lewiston.

EILEEN EAGAN, associate professor of history, presented a paper, "Her Story In Stone: Women's History in Public Art," at the National Council for History Education Conference at Saratoga Springs, New York, on October 4. On April 27, she will be on a panel discussing women and public sculpture and "Her Past Around Us" at the National Council on Public History Conference in Houston, Texas.

POLLY KAUFMAN, lecturer in history, has co-edited "Her Past Around Us: Interpreting Sites for Women's History" (Malabar, Florida: Krieger Publishing Company 2003). EILEEN EAGAN'S, article, "Immortalizing Women: Finding Meaning in Public Sculpture," is included in the book.

REBECCA GOODALE, lecturer in art, has work included in the exhibit "Washi in American Artist's Books," that runs through March 29 at The Center for Book Arts in New York City.

MICHAEL HILLARD, professor of economics, presented a paper titled: "Welfarism or Paternalism: Making Sense of S.D. Warren's Path in its Non-Union Era, 1854-1967," at a symposium on Welfare Capitalism in the United States: Policies, Practices, and Possibilities held during the annual meeting of the Industrial Relations Research Association in Washington D.C. on January 3.

ZIP KELLOGG, reference librarian, was asked by the Bangor Public Library to give a presentation on Henry David Thoreau's travels in Maine. He was one of a series of speakers who spoke on various aspects of Thoreau's life and times.

BARBARA KELLY, tradebook manager in the Portland Bookstore, has been appointed to the advisory panel of the New England Booksellers Association.

RODNEY MONDOR, assistant dean of student life, received an award for his community volunteer work at a Greeley Junior High School's Ordinary Heroes Program breakfast held on February 13.

DAVID PIRANI, director of Admission, was selected by the Educational Testing Service of Princeton, New Jersey, to serve on a committee to select scholarship winners sponsored by MBNA. He was also chosen to serve on a panel for parents and students of Hebron Academy where he spoke on "Visiting College Campuses and the College Interview."

ROSE MARASCO, professor of art, was included in the "Taking Pictures: Photography 2003" exhibit that ran from January 25 through February 22 at ICON Contemporary Art, Brunswick.

ANDREW J. POTTS, professor of accounting, has been invited to join the board of directors of American Identity Corporation, a Portland-based company engaged in the detection/prevention of identity fraud.

BARRY RODRIGUE, assistant professor of arts and humanities, Lewiston-Auburn College, had his article "An Album in the Attic: The Forgotten Frontier of the Quebec-Maine Borderlands During the Revolutionary War" included in the winter 2003 issue of The Journal of the Historical Society (Vol. III, No. 1).

FRANCIS SCHWANAUER, professor of philosophy, was listed in "2000 Outstanding Scholars of the 21st Century" (International Biographical Centre).

MICHAEL SHAUGHNESSY, professor and chair of art, was included in the exhibit "Drawing on Ideas: 10 Artists" at Galleries, Portland, February 6-March 1.

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