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YU News

Honors Programs at Stern and Yeshiva College Offer Interesting Summer Programs

Aug 1, 2006 -- Students in the Honors Program at Stern College for Women and in the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein Honors Program at Yeshiva College are exploring the land and the sea this summer with several interesting programs. The first program of the summer for Stern College students was a marine biology course taught by Stern biology professor Joseph DeSantis. The first week was spent on campus and the second at the Darling Marine Center in Walpole, Maine, the marine laboratory of the University of Maine. “During this week, students met with local marine biologists, conducted research on the open ocean, studied the intertidal zone and mudflats, dredged in the Damariscotta River, and collected live specimens for laboratory analysis,” Dr. DeSantis said. Land lovers from both campuses were eligible to take a special course in Biblical archaeology held at Tel es-Safi, which is identified as Biblical Gath of the Philistines. The course was designed to provide students with the opportunity to gain academic and practical experience in the recovery and analysis of the material remains of an ancient culture. Dr. Aren Maeir of Bar-Ilan University, Dr. Jill Katz of Yeshiva University and Dr. Jonathan Price of Tel Aviv University were tapped to teach the course. Students will participate in all aspects of the excavation such as digging, surveying at the site, and washing and reading pottery at the base camp. Students will take field trips to nearby historical and archaeological sites and museums, and attend evening lectures on topics relating to the site, the archaeology of Israel, and archaeological methodology. Closer to home, Stern College students could participate in “Art of New York,” taught by YU Professor Jacob Wisse. The three-week course offers an intensive investigation of the visual arts of New York through firsthand experience of the city’s most important museums, galleries and private institutions. Through readings, critical analysis, discussions and firsthand research, students will be encouraged to consider issues pertaining to the collection, preservation and display of art in the modern world. Visits are planned to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Frick Collection, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, The Jewish Museum, Yeshiva University Museum, Isamu Noguchi Museum, Asia Society and Museum, Studio Museum in Harlem, Museo del Barrio, Neue Galerie, The Museum of Modern Art, American Folk Museum, and The Cloisters. Two special science courses are being offered in conjunction with Brookhaven National Laboratory and taught by Dr. Anatoly Frenkel of Stern College and Drs. Gabriel Cwilich and Fredy Zypman of Yeshiva College. The first course, “Nanoscience for Poets,” is geared toward non-science majors. The second course, “Discover Nanoscience" was developed to introduce students to exploration of alternative energy sources, one of the most urgent scientific and technological challenges.