Photo Spotlights

  • March 9, 2004

    RIT students and faculty learn the art of paper folding at Midnight Breakfast on Feb. 20. Around 400 students attended the feast, held just before winter quarter final exams, and many faculty and staff volunteered to serve food and hang out with students to ease their pre-final fears.
  • March 8, 2004

    Jim Watters, vice president of finance and administration, became chef for a day as he assists Jose Vargas in preparing food for the Celebrating Our Cultures Luncheon, on March 5. The event highlighted the cultural diversity of the entire F&A staff by offering ethnic dishes prepared by guest chefs selected from the staff. Here, Vargas prepares his offering of “Chicken ala Jose” from the Dominican Republic.
  • March 5, 2004

    The New York State Assembly has awarded the Center for Integrated Manufacturing Studies $400,000 to support research and industry outreach efforts in remanufacturing. Assemblyman Joseph Morelle made the announcement on March 4 during a press conference in CIMS’ Imaging Products Laboratory. Morelle's advocacy of CIMS' programs has resulted in nearly $4 million in state funding since 1998. He states the overriding benefit has been the ability to create and retain manufacturing jobs in New York.
  • March 4, 2004

    RIT President Albert Simone commends Linda Meyer, director of the Higher Education Opportunity Program, during a ceremony honoring RIT’s principal investigators. Meyer is among four PIs whose cumulative research grants since 2000 have exceeded $1 million. During 2003, the total value of RIT research projects funded by various grants exceeded $31 million.
  • March 3, 2004

    Christopher Morrison, fifth-year computer engineering major, right, explains the ICU home-security system to Harvey Palmer, dean of the Kate Gleason College of Engineering. Morrison created the remote-access and notification home-monitoring system as a senior design project with fellow student Kyle Jones. Among other projects demonstrated on Feb. 12 in Erdle Commons were a wireless weather-monitoring system, a wireless PDA text-messaging device and an automotive diagnostic data logger.
  • March 1, 2004

    Barry Culhane, executive assistant to RIT President Albert Simone (right), was presented with the second Four Presidents Distinguished Public Service Award in a ceremony on Feb. 12. Al Davis, RIT vice president emeritus (left), created the award in honor of RIT’s past presidents. RIT honored Culhane for his commitment to groups like the Al Sigl Center, the Vietnam Veterans Association and the Rochester Rotary Club.
  • February 27, 2004

    Medal of Honor recipient Gary Beikirch stands in front of a portrait of himself, recently unveiled in front of ROTC offices in the Ross Building. Beikirch served in an Army special forces unit during Vietnam and is one of only 131 living Medal of Honor recipients in the U.S. He frequently works with RIT ROTC. Beikirch’s medal of honor citation from the president and congress is adjacent to the painting. The portrait was painted by a fellow Vietnam soldier.
  • February 25, 2004

    Chef Tricia Miller, from RIT’s Student Alumni Union Café and Catering, recently won a silver medal for texture and a chef’s choice award for her chocolate creation at the 18th annual Chocolate Ball sponsored by the Epilepsy Foundation. Copacabana is an orange macadamia brownie that supports layers of chocolate orange buttercream, macadamia, macaroons and orange.
  • February 20, 2004

    Democrat & Chronicle photographer Will Yurman shoots the make up session for a character in the NTID play Frankenstein for Day in the Life at RIT, appearing as a special section in today's newspaper. www.democratandchronicle.com
  • February 19, 2004

    Students from Rochester City elementary schools 4 and 37 spend part of the day on the RIT campus, Feb. 11, as part of RIT's annual Love Day. Children enjoyed a visit from the Zoo Mobile, activities with RIT clubs and a comedy and juggling show.
  • February 18, 2004

    Jeff Flowerday of RIT's Facilities Management Services spreads potassium chloride near Frank Ritter Ice Arena on Feb. 3. The reddish-brown substance is an inorganic chemical fertilizer that melts snow and ice more efficiently and is kinder to concrete and plants than traditional road salt.
  • February 17, 2004

    Gabriella Noriega, a second-year electrical engineering student, manually places a component on a circuit board in a lab session in RIT's Center for Electronics Manufacturing and Assemby on Feb. 4.