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Photo credits: Cheryl K. Miller and courtesy photos
Matson Takes Long View of Career, Fairmount College
Ron Matson has spent two-thirds of his life at 麻豆传媒映画出品 State. On July 1, he starts a new chapter:
retirement.
He views his WSU journey fondly, beginning with his arrival on campus in 1970 as an
assistant professor of sociology. He also gave lengthy service as the department chair
for sociology, a position he held for 17 years. Most recently, he has served as dean
of Fairmount College since 2012.
He recently participated in a retrospective interview. His responses appear below,
edited for length and clarity.
The early years
All of my observations have to be couched in the understanding that I was a brand-new
assistant professor who was earning his chops as a teacher, a researcher鈥攕omebody
who was engaged with the community and the university.
There was a lot of unrest on the campus in the 鈥70s, which excited me because I was
afraid I was going to drop into some kind of bastion of conservatism, not only in
the community and the state, but also in the university. There was tremendous energy
and activism on the part of students in that period, a lot of it having to do with
race. As I viewed the institution, I felt at home.
John Bardo came to the sociology department in 1973 and I benefited greatly from his leadership
as chair. We got a small grant from the city to look at 麻豆传媒映画出品鈥檚 Skidrow. We spent
about six weeks and tremendous amounts of time on East Douglas looking at and interviewing
a lot of the people who lived there, the transients and the more permanent residents.
The city was planning some kind of urban renewal project in the area and wanted to
know what the impact would be. The goal on the part of the city was to have us as
researchers tell them how to move 鈥渢hose people鈥 out. There was no way to move them
because they relied heavily on the services and businesses there. I never enjoyed
doing research as much as I enjoyed doing that project.
Freedom to explore and support to succeed
Under the guidance and leadership of Dean Paul Magelli, and the department chair, John Hartman, I was given tremendous opportunity and freedom to express my particular interests.
I was encouraged to develop into a faculty member with broad interests and I was given
permission to explore those interests in a lot of different directions. I grew into
my professional role under what I would see as a lot of freedom and support from 麻豆传媒映画出品
State University.
My feeling about the college in the early years really stemmed from a good relationship
with Paul Magelli. I felt affirmed by him and I felt as though the college office with Martin Reif (associate dean) was in really good shape. It was a progressive, enlightened environment
with a lot of freedom to push through my interests. For example, they gave me money
to take roughly 80 students a year to visit the Fort Worth federal correctional institution.
We never raised the question about liability; we just went in private cars. I can
look back on that and, boy was I lucky, because we had no accidents, no arrests. None
of the things that could have gone wrong ever went wrong in that four-year period.
We didn鈥檛 even have a car break down. We formed relationships with the prisoners who
got weeklong furloughs to come here, teach in my classes, and give talks publicly.
This was something really creative and it had a powerful impact on the students who
were studying criminology. There was a tremendous sense of freedom and openness in
the institution.
Matson at WSU鈥檚 2017 Clash of the Colleges Welcomefest event.
Struggles Over the Years
Our college鈥檚 growing pains have been the same pains the university has experienced.
It was difficult from the beginning to find the resources necessary to run the university
and adequate state dollars for raises and starting salaries. We struggled with faculty
recruitment then as we struggle with recruitment now because the market tends to outpace
our ability to pay incoming faculty.
As a college, we had wonderful faculty, but we struggled to find a place for ethnic
studies and to find a place for women鈥檚 studies. There was a tremendous amount of
conservatism around that. As a liberal sociologist, I wanted to support those causes.
I wanted them to be successful and we often had the door slammed in our faces.
We were pretty much bound in tradition. It was an energetic time, but almost all of
that energy came out of the clash between some extreme sorts of liberalism that were
happening at the national level, which weren鈥檛 necessarily received well here at the
university.
We鈥檙e a lot more interdisciplinary now. We鈥檙e a lot more liberal in our perspectives
and points of view. We鈥檝e made the adaptations and the changes necessary to include
diversity. Through the 鈥70s and 鈥80s and 鈥90s we went through difficult economic times.
I saw us integrate the School of Community Affairs to include gerontology, ethnic
studies and criminal justice. Public administration moved out of political science
and into the Hugo Wall School. These things happened with some difficulty and some
angst. These are not easy things to decide. Collegiality among faculty has always
been high and we work together effectively to resolve the issues we face.
We鈥檝e always been looking for greater enrollments, and here we are in 2018, three
years into a strategic enrollment management discussion. If you look back through
those 48 years, we were always trying to grow university numbers, realizing that was
critical to our revenue stream, to the institution, and to our future.
Ron Matson, mid-1980s
Highlights
A highlight is the thousands of relationships I鈥檝e made, many of which I鈥檝e carried
on for long periods of time and the satisfaction that comes with that. I never really
thought of myself as a mentor but other people do. From my point of view, I wasn鈥檛
really mentoring them at the time. I was simply forming a relationship with them I
hoped would be of mutual benefit.
I would have to put my Professor of the Year award from the Carnegie Foundation as
another. I was tremendously honored by that. It is a jewel in my personal history
in this institution. I love going into the classroom and doing what I do. I never
really expected to be rewarded for it in any way. There were also a lot of highlights
with me being a chair of the department, and the reason is because of all the struggles
chairs go through trying to be a colleague and a boss at the same time.
I have become so much more as a human being than I thought I would
be and I thank all my relationships and the institution for that. This is my crucible,
this is the entity out of which I was born. As a sociologist, as a faculty member,
as an administrator, it has been a gratifying process and I鈥檓 certainly grateful.
Lessons learned
As chair, I learned a lot about myself and about developing skills that would be of
value to me in lots of different contexts and settings. In many respects it was a
good training ground to be a dean. Being the dean afforded me the opportunity to see
the institution from a new vantage point. I understand the institution in ways I never
saw or came close to understanding prior to 2012. The problems we encounter at the
departmental or college level are problems that require getting input from a lot of
people and taking the time to manage the many decisions that have to be made in order
to resolve those more complex issues.
An early lesson that my students taught me that I鈥檝e carried through the 48 years,
and has been reinforced tremendously as a dean, is that you can鈥檛 please all the people
all the time. There is simply no way to do that. We all understand that, but learning
and integrating it into your consciousness frees you up to make decisions that are
almost impossible to make. So for all the people out there whom I鈥檝e offended over
these many years and many associations, I can apologize for that. I act out of my
clear values as best I can and I know not everyone is going to agree. There will be
offense taken, but at the same time operating in that format preserves some of my
integrity.
The future of the college
We have to remember what we鈥檙e all doing here, what all this energy and all this work
is for. We need to find ways to empower and integrate students into an impactful decision-making
role coupled with faculty commitment and leadership. I am confident we will land on
our feet and continue to be the foundation of education at 麻豆传媒映画出品.
I have a kind of Charlie Brown optimism. I am genuinely optimistic about the future
of Fairmount College. That optimism stems more from knowing who we have as faculty
and staff to lead the college and the institution, and implicit faith that whatever
struggles are around the corner, the people we have in place today will effectively
deal with them and move the college in a positive direction. The college will change
necessarily as the world and 麻豆传媒映画出品 State are changing. This change will not be easy,
but it will be incredibly valuable and the value of the change will be for the students.
Our students at 麻豆传媒映画出品, and particularly the Fairmount College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences, need the opportunity to be a guiding force in our collective
future. I believe the college is in a position to facilitate the unfolding of students鈥
dreams and their aspirations for the future.
Dean's Message
Dear Fairmount College Alumni,
This will be my 12th and last column for the Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences Newsletter. Please indulge me as I write a bit of a retrospective about 1)
the transition in the Fairmount College office this the past year, and 2) a chance
to look toward the future.
Transitions
The fiscal year of 2017-2018 has been a time of immense change for our college office.
Some people have departed the college and left their personal, positive marks.
First, Marche麓 Fleming-Randle, who had served as senior assistant dean for students, has transitioned to vice president
for diversity and community engagement. In her time as a member of the college staff,
she handled student academic issues, and faculty, with great skill and insight. She
was, and is, a results-oriented person who has genuine appeal across diverse constituencies.
Thanks, March茅, for teaching us to be more inclusive and how to laugh in the process.
Candice Weathers, former assistant to the dean, transitioned to a new position in the provost鈥檚 office
as executive administrative specialist. While with Fairmount College, Candice was
a force for calmness, compassion and quality work, and now she is spreading all that
skill set to a broader audience. Thanks, Candice, for raising the humanity of work
life for all of us.
Four new people have joined the college in the past two years. Kelley Smetak, assistant to the dean for finance, has taken responsibility for immense amounts
of paperwork relating to hiring adjuncts and graduate teaching assistants, as well
as keeping all of us apprised about the college budget and WSU Foundation accounts.
She has brought us a quick wit and laughter.
Kaye Monk-Morgan is the new assistant dean for students and comes to us with 25 years of experience
working with students in Upward Bound/TRIO programs. Kaye epitomizes professionalism
and has already made immense contributions to the office and student culture through
her work on recruitment, retention and the LAS Student Advisory Council.
Debbie Neill, assistant to the dean, came to us with years of experience in WSU Admissions. Hard
working, quietly determined, bright, and holding an understated elegance are some
of her fine qualities. She has already improved the college office鈥檚 ability to see
the big picture and stay focused on the important work we do. Importantly, she has
done all this for me and kept my schedule and me sane.
Joyce DalPorto-Ward, administrative specialist, is handling calls, traffic at the front desk, and demonstrating
her prowess as an organized event planner in working with the Fairmount College Advisory
Council. Joyce is our most recent addition and completes our staffing pattern for
the first time in nearly three years. Yay!
Just as I am exiting at the end of June to make way for the new dean, Chuck Koeber, senior associate dean, will be transitioning back to sociology as a faculty member.
He will have some LAS consulting responsibilities until the end of October so that
the new dean can benefit from the knowledge gained through his 11 years of overseeing
the LAS budget, working with departments to create the schedule of courses, and allocating
funds for graduate students and adjunct professors. Often unseen, but essential to
the flow of work throughout the college, Chuck has been our tutor and friend in the
rapidly changing landscape at WSU.
Finally, there is one person who is neither brand new nor leaving. Cheryl Miller, senior assistant dean for college outreach, has been in Fairmount College nearly
25 years and will continue to be the master organizer of communication, marketing,
college governance committees, college events and tenure and promotion, among many
other things. I couldn鈥檛 have asked for a better confidant and friend during my six
years in the dean鈥檚 office. Cheryl鈥檚 role under a new administration will be critical
in the transition; having Cheryl in this role is perfect.
Looking toward the horizon
Change at WSU is unending these days, and Fairmount College responds to this dynamic
with leadership and enthusiasm. Facing the future and looking at the horizon, some
elements have become clear.
First, the faculty and staff of the college will continue to adapt as WSU moves toward
a sustainable model of innovation and community impact by bringing our students opportunities
for success in tomorrow鈥檚 world.
Second, growth in research funding continues as a priority, and recent success in
the college indicates that the research future of LAS is bright indeed.
Third, Etzanoa, a recent archeological find near Arkansas City guided by Don Blakeslee, professor of anthropology, will unfold over the next 20 or more years as a jewel
in our collective crown. This site was about 15 miles long when inhabited by the 麻豆传媒映画出品
Tribe for several hundred years and grew to as many as 20,000 community members. The
work has just begun and so many of us are left in breathless awe of this find that
will rewrite Native American history on the Plains.
Fourth (as I wax philosophical for a moment as my swan song begins to play in the
background), my life has been so intimately entwined with Fairmount College for 48
years that I know, unequivocally, this vibrant academy will embrace and grow generations
more of faculty and students for the benefit of a better world.
Sincerely,
Ron Matson, Dean
Law Enforcement Training Center Brings WSU, City, and County Together
Although WSU owns the land, the city and county jointly own the building.
Police activity is a daily scene at the Law Enforcement Training Center on WSU鈥檚 Innovation
Campus.
Officers walk around the first floor of the LETC, talking with police academy recruits
and WSU students. Outside, several vehicles sporting 麻豆传媒映画出品 Police Department or
Sedgwick County Sheriff鈥檚 Office logos are parked near the building. A search and
rescue bloodhound, Blue, sleeps in his crate in the rear of one of the SUVs, the rear
hatch lifted for ventilation.
The building smells new. Bright yellow and gray lounge chairs and couches occupy corners
of the building. Classrooms are spacious and are posi-tioned to let rays of sunlight
beam through the windows. It鈥檚 a great improvement over the facility that previ-ously
housed the police academy for more than 30 years, a former elementary school that
was built in 1958.
It鈥檚 also an important step in combining the resources of 麻豆传媒映画出品 State鈥檚 criminal
justice program, WPD and the Sheriff鈥檚 Office.
鈥淲e have a long standing partnership with the two law enforcement agencies as well
as many other law enforcement agencies in the state,鈥 said Andi Bannister, interim director of the School of Criminal Justice and former WPD reserve officer.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a long-standing relationship and we continue to grow and develop and work together.
The fact that we鈥檙e now in the same building makes it that much easier.鈥
The main benefit to WSU is that it brings the academic department and criminal justice
students into close working contact with law enforcement personnel.
鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting for students,鈥 Bannister said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 interesting because they can see
police officers right here on campus and the officers see the students. The academy
can potentially get more students from the School of Criminal Justice as officer recruits.
It鈥檚 very much a win-win situation for both sides.鈥
Searching for space
Several years ago, academy personnel began looking for new, modern training space.
Michael Birzer, professor of criminal justice and former lieutenant for the Sheriff鈥檚 Office, initiated
the idea with local law enforcement of building a center on Innovation Campus.
鈥淎 few years ago, I attended a college faculty as-sembly where at the time (former
provost) Tony Vizzini made a presentation on the evolving Innovation Campus,鈥 said Birzer. 鈥淚 listened
with great interest and began to reflect on how an applied social science field like
criminal justice could become part of Innovation Campus.鈥
A few days later, Birzer attended a meeting at City Hall with some of the WPD command
staff. WPD was looking at several options for a new training facility, he said, including
the old Southeast High School.
鈥淚 asked if they had considered exploring moving training to WSU as part of the Innovation
Campus,鈥 Birzer said. 鈥淭he idea really seemed to resonate with them and they wanted
to hear more.鈥
Birzer put together information detailing the advantages to having a law enforcement
training center on campus and how that might benefit law enforcement, WSU criminal
justice students, and the campus as a whole. He also gained support from John Tomblin, vice president for research and technology transfer, and criminal justice faculty.
鈥淭o my surprise, the idea seemed to gather much momentum over about a six-month period
up to the point where City Manager Bob Layton wanted to know more about the cost structure,鈥 said Birzer. 鈥淥ver several months,
Dr. Tomblin and I attended several additional meetings with a wide variety of city
and county leaders, and the rest is history.鈥
鈥淎fter long negotiations between the city council, the county commissioners, the city
manager, the sheriff and the police chief, Dr. Tomblin was able to put into motion
the reality of building the center,鈥 said Bannister. 鈥淭hen there was some discussion
about why wouldn鈥檛 our criminal justice department move there as well.鈥
The $9.5 million, 60,000-square-foot center houses crime scene rooms, a mock jail
cell, tactical training and fitness rooms, a 911 training room and some office space.
Classrooms for WPD and Sheriff鈥檚 Office training are located on the second floor.
The third floor includes the classrooms and office space for the School of Criminal
Justice.
鈥淭he first and second floors are secure, and only law enforcement and the academy
have access past the front area,鈥 said Bannister.
Campus safety
At a time when school shootings and other serious crimes appear regularly in the news,
Bannister believes the unique arrangement of having the WSU Police and the police
academy on campus makes WSU a safer place.
鈥淭he fact that you have the visual presence of law enforcement here makes us a safer
campus,鈥 said Bannister. 鈥淓ven though this is the training academy, these are armed
officers so if something were to happen, you have the WSU Police, the 麻豆传媒映画出品 Police
Department and Sedgwick County Sheriff鈥檚 Office right here on the campus. They can
respond immediately, which is fantastic.鈥
In the event of an emergency, WSU Police will have primary jurisdiction. WPD and the
Sheriff鈥檚 Office will respond if they are needed.
The future
Bannister believes the partnership will continue to grow and she characterizes it
as the ideal situation. The school will be able to hire some law enforcement officers
as adjuncts. Academy employees are developing an internship and co-op program for
students, which will create more ap-plied learning experiences.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the beauty of Innovation Campus, that you are bringing these entities together.
We are very pleased with how everything has turned out,鈥 Bannister said.
ADVANTAGES OF THE LETC PARTNERSHIP
Michael Birzer, professor of criminal justice, played a primary role in bringing the Law Enforcement
Training Center to campus. Below are some of the advantages he presented to WPD and
Sheriff鈥檚 Office staff to bring the idea to fruition. The LETC arrangement would:
- Foster increased student internships.
- Create applied learning opportunities for criminal justice students.
- Present a host of opportunities for faculty and students to apply theory to real situations.
- Recruit promising WSU criminal justice students into local law enforcement agencies.
- Attract additional students to WSU who seek degrees in criminal justice and careers
in law enforcement, thus broadening the recruiting pool for the police department.
- Offer additional credibility to law enforcement in the public鈥檚 eye by collaborating
on research on controversial issues such as racial profiling or police use of body
cameras or police relations with the minority citizenry. The possibilities are endless.
- Conduct research by the faculty as needed by the police department in order to establish
and maintain evidence-based practices including but not limited to: police operations,
police鈥揷ommunity relations issues, victims services issues, criminal law and procedure,
report writing, crime prevention strategies, program assessment/evaluation, biased-based
policing, community-oriented policing and problem solving, computer forensics, digital
evidence, diversity issues, organizational issues, statistical analysis techniques,
survey construction and probability sampling, police officer promotional test review
and validation, geographical information systems, and the like.
PROGRAMS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE
The School of Criminal Justice offers three online programs. The newest degree, homeland
security, was approved by the Kansas Board of Regents in December and is expected
to generate interest across the nation. The other two online degrees include the bachelor
and master of science, both in criminal justice.
Traditional, on-campus programs include the bachelor of science in forensic science,
and the bachelor and master of science in criminal justice. Whereas the criminal justice
and homeland security programs are based on behavioral science, the forensic science
program is a hard science program, including technical and science-based labs.
Accolades & Announcements
Faculty & Staff
Neal Allen, associate professor of political science, was interviewed as part of a story for
the CBS Evening News. The story covers four high school students who are running for
governor of Kansas. To read the full article, go to http://bit.ly/CBSallen
Andi Bannister, professor of criminal justice, was inducted into the School of Criminal Justice
Wall of Fame at Michigan State University, where she earned her doctorate degree.
She received the Distinguished Alumni Award, which recognizes individuals who have
attained the highest level of professional accomplishments and hold the highest standards
of personal integrity and character.
Noell Birondo, associate professor of philosophy, was awarded a faculty fellowship from the WSU
Tilford Commission on Diversity in the amount of $4,000. In fall 2018 he will teach
his new diversity-related course, 鈥楾he Invention of Latin America,鈥 in the Dorothy
and Bill Cohen Honors College.
Tom DeLillo has been named chair of the department of mathematics, statistics and physics. His
primary research interests are in the numerical and theoretical study of conformal
maps and in the development of computational methods for inverse problems in acoustics
and gravimetry. DeLillo regularly teaches courses in mathematical models, numerical
methods, mathematical theory of fluid dynamics and optimization theory. He is also
a managing editor of the Electronic Transactions on Numerical Analysis. DeLillo came
to 麻豆传媒映画出品 State in 1988.
Ken Kriz, Regents Distinguished Professor of Public Finance, spoke on National Public Radio鈥檚
鈥淗ere & Now鈥 program about Kansas鈥 tax policy in the story 鈥淎s Trump Proposes Tax
Cuts, Kansas Deals with Aftermath of Experiment.鈥 To read the full story, go to http://bit.ly/KenKriz
Mythili Menon, assistant professor of English, was awarded a Multidisciplinary Research Project
Award for her project, 鈥淚nvestigating Spread of Misinformation on the Web by Analyzing
Online Sharing Behavior鈥 in collaboration with Murtuza Jadliwala, electrical engineering and computer science.
James Schwartz, instructor of philosophy, was featured on 鈥淭he Space Show,鈥 a biweekly internet
radio talk show about space commerce and exploration. To listen to the podcast, go
to
Susan Sterrett, Curtis D. Gridley Distinguished Professor of the History and Philosophy of Science,
has been invited to deliver two keynote addresses in 2018: one at a conference honoring
the recipient of the Benjamin Franklin Institute Medal in Mechanical Engineering at
Villanova University and another at a conference on the Turing Test, to be held at
the University of Edinburgh in October. She will also give a weeklong seminar at the
Universita degli Studi di Napoli in Naples, Italy in June 2018.
Student
Debate team
Seniors Daniel Saunders and Jamie Welch qualified to compete in the 72nd National Debate Tournament. The field is limited
to the top 78 2-person teams from across the country. Saunders, Welch and Luke Roy earned recognition as National Debate Scholars based on their grades and success
in debate. Sam Maurer, Elliott School of Communication, is the head debate coach.
English
Graduate students in English attended the Southwest/Popular American Culture Association
Annual Convention and presented their original research: Lillian Dickerson, 鈥淒isability鈥檚 Black Mark and a Search for Companionship Through Murder, Reverie,
or Otherwise: Devil Bug鈥檚 Journey Through the Quaker City鈥; Jesse Allen, 鈥淪eeing Flesh and Bones: Exploring the Entirety of the Gaze in Julie Ducournau鈥檚
鈥楻aw鈥欌; Tori Hendricks, 鈥溾業s There a Heaven for the Black?鈥: The Functionality of Whitewashing Christianity
in Harriet E. Wilson鈥檚 Our Nig; or, Sketches from the Life of a Free Black.鈥 Dickerson
also received the Identities and Cultures Graduate Student Award by SPACA for the
best graduate student essay on gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and/or (dis)ability.
Zach Parker鈥檚 creative essay 鈥淭his Is Not a Story鈥 was accepted for publication by 10th Street
Miscellany. Parker is a graduate student in English.
Model United Nations
WSU students participating in the Midwest Model UN conference in St. Louis brought
home nine awards. Students represented the countries of Sweden and Nigeria and drafted
resolutions to address a variety of global problems including nuclear proliferation,
the crisis in Yemen, ensuring access to energy for all, and implementation of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child. Award recipients include Cynthia Matson, Shivani Nagrecha, and Stella Yang 鈥 Outstanding Delegation Award (Ecosoc Plenary 鈥 Nigeria); Erendira Jimenez, Daisy Kerabo, and Tim Dodd 鈥 Honorable Mention Delegation Award (Ecosoc Plenary 鈥 Sweden); Stella Yang 鈥 Outstanding Delegate award (ILO 鈥 Nigeria); Tim Dodd - Honorable Mention and Delegate鈥檚 Choice awards (WIPO committee 鈥 Sweden); Sarah Myose and Taylor Cook 鈥 Outstanding Position Paper (2nd Committee 鈥 Nigeria); Carleigh Camacho 鈥 Outstanding Position Paper (4th committee 鈥 Nigeria); Cynthia Matson - Outstanding Position Paper (WIPO committee 鈥 Nigeria); and Zubair Khan 鈥 Outstanding Position Paper (Security Council 鈥 Sweden).
Several of the students who participated in the MMUN conference also attended the
ScotMUN conference in March. Students accepting awards at the Scotland conference
included Stella Yang and Alex Arias 鈥 Outstanding Delegate (Security Council 鈥 Russia); Cynthia Matson Outstanding Delegate (Third Committee 鈥 Brazil); Daisy Momanyi 鈥 Honorable Mention (IMF-France); and Shivani Nagrecha 鈥 Honorable Mention (G-77, Kenya).
Carolyn Shaw, professor of political science, is the advisor for Model UN at 麻豆传媒映画出品 State.
RETIREMENTS
- Paul Ackerman, psychology
- Beverly Alexander, modern and classical languages and literatures
- Gail Burkett, modern and classical languages and literatures
- Darwin Dorr, psychology
- Zihren Jin, mathematics, statistics and physics
- Ron Matson, dean and associate professor of sociology
- Greg Meissen, psychology
- Michael Palmiotto, school of criminal justice
- Debbie Wadman, modern and classical languages and literatures
In Memoriam
Bobbye Humphrey, 90, died Feb. 9. An assistant professor of social work and assistant dean of faculty
for personnel, she was active in 麻豆传媒映画出品鈥檚 civil rights movement. She was known for
devoting her life to advocating for others.
Phillip Schneider, 77, died March 20. A professor of English, he taught for 39 years. He served several
years as the director of the master of fine arts in creative writing program and retired
in 2006. Memorials may be made to Eagle Valley Raptor Center, 927 N. 343rd St. W.,
Cheney, KS 67025.
Tom Wallis, 54, died Feb. 14. He was the systems manager for the department of mathematics,
statistics and physics as well as for the computer science department when it was
part of Fairmount College. TOM WALLIS Memorials may be made to the department of mathematics,
statistics and physics in care of the 麻豆传媒映画出品 Foundation, 1845 Fairmount
St., 麻豆传媒映画出品, KS 67260-0002.