Photo Spotlights

  • April 30, 2008

    IMAGINE RIT EXHIBIT—Viewed through a small hole, multiple reflections of a molecular model are created using parallel mirrors. The intent is to show the symmetry of the reflections as each successive one is reversed front to back. In addition to this exhibit, College of Science presenters George Thurston, Ronald Jodoin and Bernard Brooks will display a large version of the Mobius trihedral kaleidoscope. An observer can insert a straight object, such as a stick, in alternate positions to form, together with its reflections, a cube, an octahedron or a tetrahedron. In addition to being startling, this clearly demonstrates common symmetry elements of these regular polyhedra.
  • April 29, 2008

    James E. Hammer, president and CEO of Hammer Packaging Corp., has been recognized by RIT for his business success in the Rochester community. The E. Philip Saunders College of Business named Hammer as recipient of the 2008 Herbert W. Vanden Brul Entrepreneurial Award. Hammer, on screen, was honored during a noon luncheon on April 23.
  • April 28, 2008

    Nadia Pasicznyk, an accounting major at the E. Philip Saunders College of Business, was among 52 RIT students, alumni and other business professionals who recently spent a day teaching students at Kodak Park School No. 41 about business and economics.
  • April 26, 2008

    President Bill Destler on April 25 unveiled the official poster for this year’s Imagine RIT Innovation and Creativity Festival. Carly Schonberg’s design was selected from 32 student entries to promote the May 3 festival. In another contest, Georgi Unkovski was recognized as the creator of the festival’s YouTube video clip.
  • April 25, 2008

    Anne Mulcahy, chairman and CEO of Xerox offered a broad perspective on the advantages of sustainable practices as a presenter at the university’s Presidential Colloquium. Following her address, Sustainability: Crisis and Opportunity, she pledged $2 million on behalf of Xerox to benefit The Golisano Institute for Sustainability at RIT.
  • April 24, 2008

    IMAGINE RIT EXHIBIT—A simple idea to wallpaper classrooms with images, movement and sound using digitally networked projectors has taken hold and is inspiring professors across campus to dive into a new way of teaching. The approach is simple, flexible and easily adapted to traditional learning environments and more experimental, active classrooms that incorporate screen displays. A variety of immersive and wide-view large projection displays will be showcased at Imagine RIT May 3. The prototype immersive classroom shown above will be on display in the Color Science Building. Here, Van Gogh’s “The Starry Night” is projected across the screen. Color scientist Roy Berns uses spectral information from the painting to simulate what it would look like under different light sources. Berns is the Richard S. Hunter Professor in the Munsell Color Science Laboratory in the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science in the College of Science. The immersive display program is directed by Mitchell Rosen, also a faculty member in Color Science and Imaging Science.
  • April 22, 2008

    Marcia Birken and Anne Coon have spent more than 20 years exploring the links between mathematics and poetry in their research and in the RIT classroom. Their new book, Discovering Patterns in Mathematics and Poetry, examines counting patterns, patterns in form, fractal patterns and patterns for the mind—such as proof, paradox and infinity. The book grew from Birken and Coon’s interdisciplinary course Analogy, Mathematics and Poetry (later renamed Patterns in Mathematics and Poetry). Birken is professor emeritus in the School of Mathematical Sciences, and Coon is senior associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts and professor of English.
  • April 21, 2008

    RIT’s Department of Communication hosted the annual regional Conference for Undergraduate Research in Communication on April 18. Students from Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York and Virginia participated in the daylong event. The conference culminated with an awards ceremony recognizing top papers and posters. All presented papers will be published in a print-on-demand paperback, available through Lulu, an electronic publishing website. Here, Kaitlin Santanna, Villanova University, presented her paper, Don’t Ask Me, I’m Just a Girl: Gender Roles in the Popular Television Sitcom The Simpsons.
  • April 19, 2008

    The College of Applied Science and Technology has a new home. The CAST Building, which features the McGowan Center for Telecommunications, Innovation and Collaborative Research, the REDCOM Telecommunications Systems Laboratory and the American Packaging Corp. Center for Packaging Innovation, was dedicated during an April 18 ceremony.
  • April 18, 2008

    Students were treated to a barbecue and a sunny day on April 16 near the Infinity Loop. The event was held to provide information about the upcoming Imagine RIT: Innovation and Creativity Festival on May 3.
  • April 17, 2008

    Dr. Carol Whitlock’s product development class, offered by the School of Hospitality and Service Management, has been given the Dove Chocolate Challenge (Dove-At-Home business division). Students were asked to develop new recipes using at least two Dove ingredients. They worked in the kitchens at the New York Wine & Culinary Center in Canandaigua on April 16 and presented their creations to three Dove representatives. One example was a cream puff with a rich chocolate ganache filling, topped with a decorative chocolate leaf and dusted with chocolate powder.
  • April 16, 2008

    RIT’s Women’s Council hosted its Spring Fashion Show April 11 at Locust Hill Country Club in Pittsford. The event featured fashions and accessories from Jane Morgan Little House of Aurora, N.Y., and proceeds benefited the Women’s Council of RIT Scholarship Funds for female students.