Photo Spotlights

  • April 7, 2009

    Vinton Cerf, who is widely regarded as a “father of the Internet,” spoke at RIT April 3 as part of the B. Thomas Golisano College of Computing and Information Sciences Dean’s Lecture Series. Cerf delivered a presentation titled “Making the Internet More Accessible.”
  • April 6, 2009

    Tim Wallenhorst, one of RIT’s Outstanding Undergraduate Student Scholars, celebrated his honor with Sister Bernadette Okulicz, FSSJ, a long-time mentor from St. Francis High School, Athol Springs, N.Y. Twenty-seven faculty mentors from various high schools and community colleges across the country attended the scholarship event April 2 in Gordon Field House and Activities Center.
  • April 4, 2009

    Nicholas Schneider, one of RIT’s Outstanding Undergraduate Student Scholars, celebrated his honor with Denis Coakley, a long-time mentor from St. Francis High School, Athol Springs, N.Y. Twenty-seven faculty mentors from various high schools and community colleges across the country attended the scholarship event April 2 in Gordon Field House and Activities Center.
  • April 3, 2009

    The Isaac L. Jordan Diversity Award was presented to Thomas Warfield on March 30. The award is given to an RIT faculty or staff member who has made a significant contribution to diversity efforts on campus and within the Rochester community.
  • April 2, 2009

    Johnnetta Cole, the first African-American woman to serve as president of Spelman College in Atlanta, was the keynote speaker for the fourth annual Diversity Day on April 1. The program, sponsored by the RIT Board of Trustees, focused on the diversity initiatives taking place on campus.
  • April 1, 2009

    RIT announced a new research and academic collaboration with Singapore during a ceremony on March 26. The agreement between the Golisano Institute for Sustainability and the Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology will include graduate student exchanges, joint research projects in sustainable production and additional academic partnerships.
  • March 31, 2009

    Ainoa Mazeika, left, a sustainable engineering graduate student, discusses job opportunities with Karen Klein from Life Technologies during RIT’s Spring Career Fair. Representatives for 170 employing organizations gathered in the Gordon Field House and Activities Center on March 25. While the current economic slowdown affected overall employer attendance, small to mid-size companies, such as Life Technologies, took on added prominence.
  • March 30, 2009

    The importance of making and crafting things in American society and culture was the focus of a hands-on “makers” workshop by new-media journalist, author and web logger Mark Frauenfelder on March 27. The event was sponsored by the Caroline Werner Gannett Project.
  • March 27, 2009

    Filmmakers Willy Lindwer and Tom Linszen gave a talk on the making of their collaborative documentary film, Anna’s Silent Struggle, which will be featured in the Deaf Rochester Film Festival March 26-29. For more information on the Deaf Rochester Film Festival, including descriptions and schedules of screenings, workshops, panels and other activities, refer to ideatools.rit.edu/drff.
  • March 26, 2009

    Country star Billy Currington performed March 21 in RIT’s Gordon Field House.
  • March 25, 2009

    Celebrate the 10th anniversary of Gallery r March 26 at an auction benefit at One Bausch & Lomb Place. 13 WHAM-TV news anchor Norma Holland will emcee the event, and each $150 ticket admits two guests and guarantees one work of original art from an RIT student, alumni or faculty member. Above is a bowl created by Ronald Pearson. The reception runs from 5:30 to 7 p.m. with light hors d’oeuvres, desserts and cash bar, followed by the art drawing from 7 to 9 p.m. For tickets, call 475-5154 or 475-2733.
  • March 24, 2009

    Dan Batcheldor, associate research scientist in the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science, has expanded the Hubble Space Telescope’s capability without the need for new instruments or billions of dollars. Batcheldor and his team improved the calibration of the Near-Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer to enable high-precision polarimetry, a tool used for reading scattered light when investigating active galactic nuclei and for finding proto-planets around very young stars.