The Department is very pleased to announce the students who have earned Departmental and College honors.
Eileen Johansen Scholarship
- The Johansen Award honors the memory of Eileen Johansen, an alumna of our department who had been a returning student and the department's first GIS intern, who was killed in a boating accident. The scholarship was endowed by her family and friends in the geography and GIS communities to encourage the aspirations and honor the achievements of other students like her.
- Ms. Leeta Latham
Rodney Steiner Fellowship
- The Steiner Award honors the memory of Dr. Rodney Steiner, a faculty member and chair of our department and a scholar and editor of the Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers. The award recognizes excellence in academic achievement and requires that the recipient work for the department but specifically not in the LA4-207 lab!
- Ms. Nadine Gano
Burton Anderson Scholarships
- The Anderson Scholarships honor the memory of Dr. Burton Anderson, a faculty member in our department from 1958 to 1979.
- Ms. Doreen Jeffrey
- Ms. Leslie Edwards
Best Thesis
- The Department nominates the best of the theses completed in the previous academic year for recognition by the College of Liberal Arts.
- Ms. Angela Cangelosi, for her thesis, "Development and Change in Oil Company Road Maps Produced by General Drafting Company, 1925-1980"
Outstanding Graduate
- The Department also recognizes one of the graduating seniors as the Outstanding Graduate.
- Mr. John Wynhoff
Certificates of Academic Merit
- The Department calls out for special honor those undergraduate students who have maintained very high GPAs.
- Ms. Bryna Dambrowski
- Mr. Hugh Dittrich
- Ms. Nadine Gano
- Mr. Andrew Huston
- Mr. Christopher Johnson
Distinguished Students of the College of Liberal Arts
- The Department is proud that several of its students have received recognition as distinguished students for outstanding achievement throughout their academic careers by the College of Liberal Arts, to which the Department belongs.
- Ms. Bryna Dambrowski
- Ms. Leslie Edwards
- Ms, Kayla Folkins
- Ms. Doreen Jeffrey
- Ms, Leeta Latham
- Ms, Joy Turlo
- Mr. John Wynhoff
The Department held its annual Spring Awards Banquet Friday, 16 May, in the Golden Sails Restaurant on PCH. Fifty-eight revelers turned out for the party, including guests Dr. Frank Fata (Associate Dean, College of Liberal Arts, sporting a Geography polo shirt), Dr. Jean Wheeler (Professor Emerita), Ms. Anne Pollock (the very first secretary of the Department!), Ms. Phyllis Steiner (widow of faculty member, Dr. Rodney Steiner, who endowed the Steiner Scholarship), Ms. Nancy Yoho (alumna of the Department, who now works at Thomas Brothers) and her husband, Mr. Steven Yoho. Students earning the Steiner Award, the two Anderson Scholarships, and the Johansen Scholarship were announced as were those receiving certificates of merit from the Department and awards from the College of Liberal Arts. Dr. Edward Karabenick's retirement was noted with speeches by Drs. Wheeler and Tyner, culminating in gifts of a gorgeous atlas and enough Chartroom "funny money" to ensure Dr. Karabenick a welcome spot at his favorite restaurant on campus for a long time to come! Dr. Rodrigue discussed the research of Drs. Del Casino and Lassiter and the impact of Dr. Lee's grant work on student lives: She had put them forward for recognition by the College of Liberal Arts. She also reviewed other faculty activities and achievements. She then turned over the floor to Dr. Del Casino, who presented a "faculty roast," particularly turning Drs. Sidorov, Laris, "Obi-Wan" Splansky, and Lee quite a golden brown!
Commencement for Geography takes place in College of Liberal Arts Ceremony II, on Thursday, 29 May, 1 p.m.. As usual, the Department will host a send-off party for the grads, their families, and friends at 11 a.m., in LA4-100. You can learn more about commencement from the Department's home page or going the direct route here.
Finals Week is THIS week, the 19th through the 23rd of May. Are we still a little hazy on just when our finals are? There's a link to the campus final schedule on the home page, and you can also get there by clicking here. The best of luck!
The Sixth U.S. Conference and Workshop on Lifeline Earthquake Engineering will be held from August 10th-13th at teh Westin Long Beach Hotel. You can learn more by clicking here.
The Palos Verdes Peninsula Conservancy has research opportunities available to help in its habitat restoration projects (damaged and degraded lands, control of non-native plants, local seed collection and propagation, and long-term monitoring studies). The Conservancy is interested in making its lands available to those studying various geoscience and bioscience topics. This might be a great opportunity for graduate students looking for possible thesis projects or faculty interested in developing a local field research site. To learn more, please contact Andrea Vono at (310) 541-7613 or avona@pvplc.org. There's a flyer on our bulletin board, too.
For information on minimum requirements and abilities, please see notice on bulletin board. To obtain an application, please call (323) 584-6210 or visit http://www.huntingtonpark.org under Personnel Department.
- Ms. Samantha Antcliffe presented "Native Plant Recovery of a Riparian Habitat within the Tijuana Estuary."
- Ms. Lisa Pitts gave a talk entitled, "GIS in High School."
- Mr. Brian Sims spoke about "Accuracy Assessment of Viewshed Predictions in a GIS with High Spatial Resolution Digital Surface Models."
- Ms. Janet Troeger presented her work on "Monitoring Phenological Variability Using MODIS Imagery in the Mojave Desert, California."
The work of Dr. Rodrigue and her collaborator, Dr. Eugenie Rovai (Chair of Geography and Planning at CSU Chico) on the Northridge earthquake is discussed in Keith Smith's Environmental Hazards: Assessing Risk and Reducing Disaster, 3rd ed. (London and New York: Routledge, 2001).
As a member of the Airborne 1 team, the Data Processor's duties will include:
Experience with various GIS, CAD, Surveying/GPS, and remote sensing software packages would be useful, as would prior experience with terrain modeling and visualization software, such as TerraModel and TerraVista. More importantly, Airborne 1 is looking for people who are technologically adept, have a problem-solving mind and who can work with minimum supervision: Only the smart, willing and highly-motivated need apply.
This position is based in Los Angeles, with occasional travel throughout North America. Full benefits, a coastal Los Angeles location and employee stock options in a very hot young company are added incentives. The day-to-day atmosphere is typical of a small high-tech startup, where our workloads are only exceeded by our opportunities. If interested in any of these positions, please respond with a copy of your résumé or c.v. to employment@airborne1.com and indicate which position you are applying for; only those candidates under consideration will be contacted.
About Airborne 1
Airborne 1 provides flexible access to advanced LiDAR technology for clients in the photogrammetry, surveying, and mapping fields. Airborne 1's digital mapping services and solutions include a dedicated airborne LiDAR survey group operating state-of-the-art Optech ALTM sensors; flexible fractional ownership plans for clients without dedicated access to LiDAR technology; LiDAR data processing, analysis and application development; LiDAR field survey coordination and project management. Airborne 1 was incorporated in 1998, the same year in which it took home the coveted USC MBA "Best Business Plan" award. For more information contact:
Airborne 1 Corporation
5777 W. Century Blvd. #725
Los Angeles, CA 90045
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