Wednesday, September 19, 2007
NEWS FROM AUM ALUM MELYSSA BOONE
About three weeks ago, I was promoted to legal secretary/administrative assistant. My former supervisor was grooming me for this ever since I was hired since I was overqualified for the receptionist position with my degree. The administration believed my English degree would benefit me in the legal department. I now support three attorneys as well as the district contracts manager. My tasks vary, including document control with contracts and various accounting issues concerning legal consultation. Amazingly enough, my new supervisor even had me travel for business, sending me to our corporate office in Omaha, Nebraska, to train with his old secretary. I never believed I would get to travel for work so soon out of college!
Even though I feel amazingly blessed by this position, I feel called to go to the Philippines and work in an orphanage for three months as a missionary. God called me to this work during my time in Africa and I'm so excited about working for a longer duration now that I've graduated. I am in the planning phase now, completing my application, and will hopefully be purchasing my ticket soon. I really can't wait for this opportunity and look forward to God using me to make a difference in a child's life.
I still find myself missing AUM at times and hope to visit before leaving for the Philippines. No matter how far I may travel, I'll never forget my times there!
Friday, September 14, 2007
NEWS FROM AUM ALUM LINDA PEGRAM (NOW LINDA GOLD)
After five years as a managing editor with a Montgomery publishing company (same company as Kurt Niland), I moved to beautiful British Columbia in September '99 to marry a wonderful Canadian man I met via the Internet. I landed a job in communications with the Government of British Columbia in September 2000, and have been here ever since - how time does fly! Since I've been here, I've worked in communications for a number of different ministries, including Energy and Mines, Finance and, most recently, the Ministry of Health, where I've been since June. My job involves LOTS of writing - news releases, speeches, communications plans, etc.
FREE JOURNALISM WORKSHOP ON OCTOBER 4
The APA office needs copies of the registration from and copies of resumes by Sept. 28. Copies of the registration form are available in the AUMNIBUS office 318 TC for staff. If your department would like copies, please reply to this email.
For more info, contact Bethany Carr at 205-871-7737 or 1-800-264-7043.
(submitted by AUM English major Ashley Wright)
BOOKS CONTAINING WORK BY AUM STUDENTS RECOMMENDED IN STANDARD ANTHOLOGIES
Books containing scholarly work by students at AUM are recommended for use by students elsewhere in a number of recent editions of widely-adopted anthologies of literature.
The newest edition of The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women (NALW) reprints the text of a seventeenth-century autobiographical poem titled “The Memorandum of Martha Moulsworth, Widow.” Moulsworth’s poem has been the subject of three different books containing work by AUM faculty and students. Two of those books are recommended by the editors of NAWL, including one that contains work by AUM alumnus Neil Probst, who is currently a staff writer with the national magazine of the Civil Air Patrol. Moulsworth’s poem was also included in the seventh edition of The Norton Anthology of English Literature.
Meanwhile, two books containing work by more than a hundred former students at AUM are recommended by the editors of the seventh edition of The Norton Anthology of American Literature (NAAL). The books, which deal with American authors Kate Chopin and Ambrose Bierce, are among select titles recommended in bibliographies at the end of volume I of NAAL.
Finally, the book on Chopin is also recommended by the editors of the ninth edition of Prentice Hall’s Anthology of American Literature.
The recommendation of these books by the editors of the various anthologies means that scholarship done by students at AUM will be assisting the further scholarly work of students at many other campuses throughout the U.S. and abroad.
Monday, September 3, 2007
VERY IMPORTANT NEWS; SPREAD THE WORD!
UPDATES FROM AUM ALUMS ALISHA SULLIVAN AND BOB GENETSKI
Well, this weekend I have mostly been avoiding the streets of Reno in order not to run into any playa dust-coated "Burners" (people who have attended the week-long Burning Man Festival in the Black Rock Desert).
More relevant to the blog update, perhaps, this fall I am starting on my second year in the Literature and Environment program at UNR, working on my MA in English. I have some interesting courses to look forward to this year, including "The Transcendentalist Tradition" and "Ecocriticism." I taught freshman composition last year, but this semester I'll be a discussion leader for Core Humanities.
Over the past summer I presented a paper at an academic conference for the first time. I also worked as a research assistant for a professor putting together a graduate seminar in environmental justice literature -- a topic that was especially interesting to me after my AUM internship with WildLaw.
I had some non-academic fun out here in the West, too. I did some hiking in the Sierras, went swimming in Pyramid Lake and Lake Tahoe (SO cold even in mid-summer!), and made a trip or two to San Francisco to hear music at the Fillmore and see the sights!
Hope all is well back in Alabama. I hear it was a very hot and dry summer. It was a very dry year here on the eastern slope of the Sierras, too. We had several bear and mountain lion sightings as they ranged farther out looking for food and water.
BOB GRADUATED IN 1991; HERE IS HIS REPORT:
I am well. I am still teaching at-risk students in Grandville, MI. It is still a wonderful challenge that humbles me on a regular basis. It is very humbling to be cussed out by a 15 year old kid.
I have created a few short fiction pieces, which, when I get the courage, I will submit somewhere!
Soon I will formally declare my candidacy for the Republican nomination for State Representative for the 88th District of Michigan (Michigan has the worst economy in the nation at present). It will be an exciting and challenging race.
I earned my M. Ed from Grand Valley State Universityin Technology during 2004. However, I will apply to a university of greater esteem. The first master's was to appease my school district. The next one will be for me.
I live in Saugatuck, MI - where I regularly write"letters to the editor" to complain about the taxes here (which no one changes). I have published a guest editorial appearing in the Holland Sentinel and Grand Rapids Press. The editorial slammed state universities for the tuition increases we have seen for 6 years straight. I have also penned an article for the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, which called out teacher certification in Michigan as a waste of time and taxpayer money.
I am blessed to be playing ice hockey twice a week.
HERE IS BOB'S POLITICAL WEB SITE; IF YOU VISIT, YOU CAN PARTICIPATE IN AN ON-LINE VOTE: http://voteforbobg.com/
NEWS FROM ASHLEY WRIGHT ABOUT AUM'S CIRCLE K CHAPTER
The AUM chapter will engage in various activities such as tutoring children who are not performing well in school, conducting book drives for children at the Brantwood Children's Home, arranging food drives for the benefit of the needy, and more rewarding activities. The organization, which exists on 525 college campuses around the world, is designed to serve various groups of people, particularly children.
The student-run group would also be happy to work in conjunction with other clubs. In 2006, the club represented AUM well by winning several awards at the state level, including the single service project award and recognition as a newly charted club.
The AUM chapter has been in limbo since the previous club president graduated in December 2006, but AUM student Courtney Tillery has decided to revive the club. AUM Circle K Faculty Sponsors, Professors Eric Sterling and Samantha Harvey, welcome Tillery's enthusiasm about the organization and the service it will provide to the campus and the community; however, she needs new members in order to reactivate the club and make it beneficial to those in need in Montgomery and the surrounding areas.
If you would like to be a member of the club, please contact Courtney Tillery at ctiller1@student.aum.edu for information about how to get involved.-- Ashley M. Wright
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
NEWS FROM RIAN RIDER AND SAMANTHA BATTEN
Rian, presently a corporal with the Montgomery City Police, reports as follows:
Samantha, who is presently a grad student at Auburn, provided these details of her recent life:
"I'm teaching 5 classes this semester (a world lit and two developmentals at Southern Union and two comp Is here at AU) and taking two (including my SIXTH theory class. . . . Gotta love some Jacques Lacan ;) "
If you have any info that YOU'D like to share, please send it to englishrce@aol.com
FIRST ASF CULTURE FEST
Jessica Skarda, a former AUM intern whose internship led to a regular position at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, has been instrumental in helping to plan ASF's first annual Culture Fest, which takes place on Saturday, September 1, 2007 from 1:00 to 7:30 p.m. For further details and a full schedule, please visit this link: http://newsletters.al.com/dm?id=D73E234FC1C48048A51FE8F0100F0B3050131FF9B4CFB7F2
Jessica is one of a number of past and present AUM English majors who have also been teaching this year in the university's English as a Second Language program. Other students involved include Audra Hagel, Mary Beth Hogan, Yer Kim, and Deborah Solomon.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
ENGLISH AND PHILOSOPHY CLUB MEETINGS
The English Club will be affiliated, fairly closely, with Sigma Tau Delta (the International English Honor Society founded in 1924). Unlike the English Club, Sigma Tau Delta membership is limited to those who meet certain prerequisites. For more information about joining Sigma Tau Delta, speak with the Sigma Tau Delta sponsor, Dr. Michel Aaij or see the Sigma Tau Delta website -- http://www.english.org.
In somewhat unrelated news, the Philosophy Club is also seeking members. Members are expected to enjoy and partake in conversations of a philosophical nature while maintaining a friendly and at least somewhat intellectual debate. Topics are selected by members, and meetings usually are held at local coffeehouses. The coffeehouse chat system has worked well, but we are always open to fresh and even eccentric ideas. Other activities have included movie nights, followed by discussions of relevance and philosophy of the films watched. Our meetings are always relaxed and friendly. Please contact Charles Leigh (contact information listed below) if interested in joining. Dr. David Walker is the Philosophy Club sponsor.
As an English Club and Sigma Tau Delta member, and as Philosophy Club President, Charles Leigh is more than willing to answer questions via email at cleigh@student.aum.edu in relation to any of these fine student organizations under the English and Philosophy Department.
Monday, August 27, 2007
MAJOR ACCOMPLISHMENTS
Kurt Niland, who graduated from the AUM English Department in the early 1990s, is surely one of the most widely published of all AUM English majors. During his time as an undergraduate at AUM, Kurt was the author or co-author of five peer-reviewed scholarly publications (all of which are indexed in the MLA Bibliography). He was selected as a recipient of a highly prestigious Younger Scholars fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities (just before that program was eliminated because of budget cuts). His fellowship allowed him to do intensive research for one month at the Beinecke Library at Yale University.
In the time since his graduation, Kurt turned to publishing of a different sort. He worked as a writer and editor for a number of companies, and he also found time to write a number of his own books, including such coffee-table guide books as Florida's Emerald Coast (1995), Philadelphia (2002), Gwinnett: Success Lives Here (2003), and, most recently, The Churches of Alabama (2003), which has been a major best-seller and is now in its second printing. Kurt, who spent a year in Thailand while in high school, has always been interested in foreign travel; recent trips have taken him several times to Polynesia, especially Tahiti.
Meanwhile, Kurt's good friend, Wendi Lewis, also a graduate of the AUM English program, now serves as Director of Communications for the Montgomery Area Chamber of Commerce. Wendi is the co-author of a very handsome coffee-table book titled Montgomery: At the Forefront of a New Century (1996). A similar book titled Montgomery and the River Region: Together We Build (2001) contained significant contributions by Heather Edwards, who currently works for the AUM Speech and Hearing Clinic.
Ben Beard, an especially dynamic former English major who graduated in the late 1990s, is the author or co-author not only of Muhammed Ali: The Greatest (2002) but also of This Day in Civil Rights History (2005). Ben, who was himself a highly talented actor (especially noted for his role as Roderigo in a summer production of Shakespeare's Othello), for a time was a journalist whose job was to interview Hollywood celebrities (we are serious: this is not a joke).
Foster Dickson, who graduated with an undergraduate degree in English from AUM and is currently working on his Master of Liberal Arts degree, has become an award-winning creative writing teacher at Booker T. Washington magnet high school in Montgomery, where he has taken an active hand in fostering (pun intended) published work by his own students. In 2005, for instance, he helped edit (along with current stellar AUM English major Kevin Garner) a collection titled Taking the Time: Young Writers and Old Stories, and most recently he was the driving force behind a new book titled Our Hope, which was the subject of a major article in the Montgomery Advertiser (http://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070816/NEWS01/708160322/1007)
Foster and Ben, who were good friends and who worked together at Montgomery's NewSouth publishing company, co-edited a number of books, including Hollow Bodies and Other Stories, King Midas in Reverse, and Kindling Not Yet Split (all published in 2002).
Scott Johnson, who graduated with a degree in English in the early 90s, was for years a copy-editor at the Montgomery Advertiser before recently trying his hand as a reporter. Scott's stories frequently appeared on the front pages of various sections of the paper, but he has now resumed the quieter life of a copy-editor -- a position also fulfilled at the Advertiser by Gary Goodson, also a graduate from Scott's era and a man widely admired for his skills as a wit, bon vivant, and raconteur. Neil Probst, also a graduate from the Age of Johnson and Goodson and also a one-time copy-editor and reporter at The Advertiser, now works as a full-time writer for the national magazine of the Civil Air Patrol. Before taking that job, Neil was a writer for Colonial Bank. His greatest accomplishment, however, was persuading fellow English major (and one-time departmental secretary) Julliana Ooi to become his wife. They are now the very proud parents of four very brilliant children: Noah, Caleb, Jonas, and Hannah.
MONTGOMERY
AS IT APPEARED
DURING THE
YOUTH OF GARY GOODSON
MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS
Eric Atkins is the proud occupant of a new house. Marjean Corkran has begun teaching full-time at Enterprise Junior College. Heather Edwards was seen having supper recently at the Green Papaya (a restaurant she highly recommends). Lisa Harrison has begun working as a free-lance book editor and is receiving rave reviews from her clients. Mary Beth Hogan and her husband Kevin are doing their best to cope with the challenges of what Kevin has dubbed "mortability." Wanda Isham, Jennifer Jacobs, and Linda Uranga have begun teaching as adjunct instructors at AUM. Jennifer's brother, Andrew Jacobs, continues to wow his students at Faulkner University. Dallas Merritt and Catherine Winn were united this summer in holy matrimony; the new Mrs. Merritt began working this month as a tutor in the AUM Learning Center. Jessica Skarda recently accepted a position at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival after impressing everyone as an AUM intern there. Deborah Solomon and her husband Charles Solomon are celebrating their second wedding anniversary; earlier this spring they visited relatives of Deborah in Germany. Deborah was heavily involved in promoting this summer's CLEFWORKS chamber music series. Sarah Fish is having fun with her students at Macon East Academy. Robin Sulkosky visited Peru during the summer break, where he not only did some sight-seeing and mountain-climbing but also managed to survive the major earthquake that rocked Peru during his visit. Ashley Wright recently celebrated a birthday and was serenaded by a massive throng of musically-challenged admirers.
SCHOLARLY WORK BY AUM STUDENTS SELECTED FOR INCLUSION IN MAJOR DATABASE
Among the books selected for inclusion in LRC are titles dealing with such writers as Ambrose Bierce, Kate Chopin, Ben Jonson, and Frank O’Connor, plus a comprehensive volume dealing with American and British short stories. In addition, LRC also reprints the newest edition of a comprehensive volume titled Close Readings: Analyses of Short Fiction from Multiple Perspectives by Students of Auburn University Montgomery. An earlier edition of that book had already been reprinted in the Ebrary database (www.ebrary.com), which is also available through many libraries in the US and abroad.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW? NEWS ABOUT RECENT GRADS
ERIC ATKINS, after earning a master's degree in English at Middle Tennessee State University, is now employed in Montgomery as a program officer by Colonial Bank. SAMANTHA BATTEN is enrolled in an M.A./Ph.D. program at Auburn University. AMY BOAK was a full-time employee at the Fun Zone Learning Center before it was devastated by a tornado. (Fortunately, no one was seriously injured.) HEATHER FINLEY taught at Taylor Road Academy and then worked full-time in AUM's TRIO program. SARAH FISH recently earned her Master of Liberal Arts degree at AUM. JEFF GLASS teaches full-time at Wetumpka High School. LESLIE GROOMS owns and operates Invisible Fence, a company that helps solve that urgent question, "Who let the dogs out?!" MARY BETH HOGAN began a new job this year at East Memorial Christian Academy in Prattville. This summer she was an instructor in the AUM English as a Second Language program. MEG LEWIS is the Public Relations Manager at the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, a job she earned after participating in the AUM internship program. KIM PATTERSON works full-time at Barnes & Noble bookstore. MANDY McALISTER earned her Master of Liberal Arts and is now in the Ph.D. program at Auburn University. JESSICA McNEILL, after graduating, received an attractive position working in public relations (thanks, in part, to her experiences in the internship program). MARGO PARASKA earned her MFA degree in creative writing at Colorado State University. HOLLY PETERSON is working for Planned Parenthood in Birmingham. STACIE PRITCHETT is enrolled in the graduate program at Oral Roberts University. RIAN RIDER is an officer on the City of Montgomery police force. BEN ROBINSON works at the Federal Court House and has just begun work on his law degree at Faulkner University. DANIELLE SEYMOUR teaches high school in Lannett, Alabama. She is currently working on a master's degree in Education. FLANNERY STANFORD teaches English full-time in a high school in Brewton. ALISHA SULLIVAN is in the second year of graduate studies at the University of Nevada, Reno. JONATHAN WRIGHT recently finished his Ph.D. at the University of Alabama and is now on the faculty at Faulkner University. [Preceding information is accurate and current, to the best of our knowledge, as of 8/27/07. If you spot any inaccuracies or need for changes, please let us know by writing to englishrce@aol.com.]