Philosophy Department's Honors Reception

18 May 2005

(For the Department Honors Reception of 2004)
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I. 2005 Initiates to Phi Sigma Tau:

The following students were inducted by Phi Sigma Tau officers Akiva Glick, Galil Gertner, and Ben Ableson, and faculty liason Prof. Acampora:
Marissa Boeck

Adam Israel

Elizabeth Maglieri

Shawn Rahman (Queens College)

Adele Sarli

Catherine Schoeder

Nadan Tsur
 
Profressor Kirkland made the following announcements:

II. Students Graduating with Honors:

Noam Barzilay

Bracha Mandel

Catherine Mietek

Lori Taverna

Martin Tzanev

III. Significant Student Accomplishments: Current Students


Marissa Boeck has earned a competitive internship at ABC network in New York City. She will complete a directed study in the ethics of journalism as she undertakes her internship this fall.

Laura O’Neil has been accepted into the University of Colorado’s Summer Seminar in Philosophy, a competitive program for undergraduates across the country to engage in intensive study and discussion of a philosophical topic. This year the topic is God. The seminar runs from 11 July to 29 July 2005.


IV. Significant Student Accomplishments: Graduates


Celina Bragagnolo, class of 2004, accepted with a 5-year Turner Fellowship and tuition waiver to the PhD Program in Philosophy at SUNY, Stony Brook.

Brian Crowley, class of 2004, accepted with a 5-year teaching assistantship and tuition waiver to the PhD Program in Philosophy at the University of Kentucky.

Marilyn Hoffman, class of 2004, accepted into the MA Program in Philosophy at Fordham University.

Takashi Ishida, class of 2003, accepted into the PhD Programs at the University of Tokyo and University of Kyoto in Japan. He is still deciding on his choice.

Sarah Sausner, class of 2002, accepted with 5-year fellowship and tuition waiver to the PhD Program in Sociology at the University of Washington. Has also had a co-authored paper published.

Sadaf Mirza, class of 2001, and JD from Yeshiva Law School (2003), accepted to the MA Program in International Relations at Stanford University (or John Hopkins).

Alicia Siebenaler, class of 1998, worked at the Council on Foreign Relations and now accepted into the MA Program in Philosophy at Columbia University.

Allison Marek, class of 1997, has directed a film entitled “Contagious” featured on the cable network Showtime and premiered at NYU’s First Run Festival this past April.


V. Significant Faculty Achievement: Part-Time


Daniel Greenspan has been awarded a yearlong Fulbright Doctoral Fellowship to do research on his dissertation on Kierkegaard in the Kierkegaard Research Center at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.

James Snyder won the Graduate Student Essay Prize in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies, offered by the Renaissance Society of America, for his paper “Thomas Hobbes and His Early Political and Scientific Manuscripts.” He also won the Society’s Travel and Research Grant for travel to and study at the Vatican Library in Rome for research on various early Christian manuscripts on Plato’s Timaeus.

Chris Mirus will be leaving the department to assume a full-time position in the philosophy department at SUNY, Albany. We thank him for his work in the department over this academic year and wish him nothing but the best in his new position.


VI. Significant Faculty Achievement: Full-Time


James Freeman’s book, Acceptable Premises: An Epistemic Approach to an Informal Logic Problem, has been recently published by Cambridge University Press. The book has already elicited favorable reviews from prominent philosophers in the field.