Contents of this page: Book Collection Contest winners
|
April 22, 2002 AccoladesBook Collection Contest winnersWinners of the 36th Annual Book Collection Contest, sponsored by the Friends of
the UCSC Library, were announced at the awards ceremony on April 11 at McHenry Library.
Students won in three categories: UCSC; high school (9th and 10th grades); and high
school (11th and 12th grades). Pictured here are (back row, l-r) Ariella Daly
(third place, UCSC), Doug Bevington (first place, UCSC), Erica Ward
(honorable mention 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate School), Lee Ritscher (second
place, UCSC); (middle row) Stephanie Williams (first place 11th/12th, Pacific
Collegiate School), Miranda Popkey (second place 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate
School), Josi Mason (third place 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate School), Sheryl
Uyeda (third place 11th/12th, Monte Vista Christian High School), Kali Grace
Blake (first place 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate School); (front row) Paul
Mandel (honorable mention 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate School), Lily Cheng
(second place 11th/12th, Santa Cruz High School), Noella Boken (honorable
mention 9th/10th, Pacific Collegiate School), Nicole D'Arcy (honorable mention
11th/12th, Merit Academy), Amanda Young (honorable mention 11th/12th, Santa
Cruz High School). Not pictured are Ben Dorfan (honorable mention 9th/10th,
Pacific Collegiate School) and Lani Goto (honorable mention 11th/12th, Monte
Vista Christian High School). Julianne Burton-CarvajalJulianne Burton-Carvajal, professor of literature and Latin American and Latino
studies, was a jury member for the Guadalajara Film Festival in March. She is also
an invited speaker for the University of Manchester's upcoming "The New Latin
Americanism: Cultural Studies Beyond Borders," a major conference bringing together
academics, researchers, and writers to discuss the development of Latin American
studies in the 21st century. Lionel CantúLionel Cantú, assistant professor of sociology, has been awarded a 2002-03
postdoctoral research fellowship from the International Migration Program of the
Social Science Research Council. Established in 1923, the SSRC is an independent,
nongovernmental, not-for-profit international organization that supports social science
research, education, and scholarly exchange. The council focuses on themes of public
importance from human sexuality to the challenges of globalization. Cantú's
work straddles the areas of sexuality studies and immigration studies. He specializes
in the ways in which sexuality influences migration. |
|