DPVA Faculty was Adjudicator for NANBPWC Vocal Arts Competition

Bill J. Adams, D.M.A., associate professor in NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), served as adjudicator for the National Association of Negro Business and Professional Women’s Clubs (NANBPWC) vocal arts competition at the organization’s 82nd national convention on July17, at the Urban League of Ft. Lauderdale.  The Mary E. Singleton Vocal Arts Competition for Emerging Artists provides a competitive arena for talented young African American musicians to demonstrate their artistic abilities in classical vocal performance. NANBPWC is the first African American civic organization to award monetary scholarships for performance in classical vocal arts.

Nova Southeastern University Receives Grant to Research Pediatric Sarcoma from Thorek Memorial Foundation

Researchers at NSU have received a $200,000 grant from the Thorek Memorial Foundation of Chicago. This grant will be used to support research aimed at identifying biomarkers and developing novel therapies for pediatric sarcoma.

Children diagnosed with sarcoma present significant challenges to the medical community, as many of these cancers can metastasize and are refractory to treatment, with an overall five-year survival rate of only 20-30% in those patients who relapse following standard therapy. Current treatment options remain largely ineffective in increasing overall survival in cases of metastatic refractory disease. There is an unmet need for developing better treatment strategies for pediatric sarcoma patients. A multidisciplinary team of NSU researchers who form the NSU Sarcoma Research Network (SRN) will utilize the award from the Thorek Memorial Foundation to identify novel treatment targets, diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers as well as develop cutting-edge next generation immunotherapies for sarcomas.

Dr. H. Thomas Temple, a renowned oncological orthopedic surgeon for Translational Research and Economic Development and special assistant to President Hanbury, will collaborate with a team of cancer researchers led by Dr. Adil Duru at NSU Cell Therapy Institute in the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine to generate a unique biobank of pediatric sarcoma cell lines. Subsequent detailed characterization of the patient material will offer useful insights into the individual tumor’s genome, proteome, secretome, phenotype and function, as well as of the tumor’s microenvironment including immune cells. This will provide a unique resource in the form of a comprehensive database of information and primary material biobank for sarcomas, which will facilitate the discovery of novel diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers. Researchers involved in this project are also working on developing novel patient-tailored targeted cancer therapeutics. The ultimate goal of this collaborative and multidisciplinary project is to develop unique strategies for designing safe and efficient personalized therapeutics for the treatment of pediatric sarcoma patients.

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About Thorek Memorial Foundation: Thorek Memorial Foundation was created to provide service to the community and to promote and foster understanding of various health and wellness concerns affecting the members of the community. The Foundation will use its resources to identify healthcare needs, improve population health, and address other needs within the community it serves. The Foundation will provide financial support to organizations in the community to assist their operations, activities, and fulfill their missions. Thorek Memorial Foundation will sponsor various scientific, educational and charitable endeavors that result from the identification of certain community health issues. Thorek Memorial Foundation will also support and enrich Thorek Memorial Hospital through various educational activities.

About Nova Southeastern University (NSU): Located in beautiful Fort Lauderdale, Florida, NSU is ranked among U.S. News & World Report’s Top 200 National Research Universities and is a dynamic, private research university providing high-quality educational and research programs at the undergraduate, graduate, and first-professional degree levels. Established in 1964, NSU now includes 16 colleges, the 215,000-square-foot Center for Collaborative Research, a private JK-12 grade school, the Mailman Segal Center for Human Development with specialists in Autism, the world-class NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale, and the Alvin Sherman Library, Research and Information Technology Center, which is Florida’s largest public library. NSU has campuses in Fort Lauderdale, Fort Myers, Jacksonville, Miami, Miramar, Orlando, Palm Beach, and Tampa, Florida, as well as San Juan, Puerto Rico, while maintaining a presence online globally. Classified as a research university with “high research activity” by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, NSU is one of only 50 universities nationwide to also be awarded Carnegie’s Community Engagement Classification, and is also the largest private institution in the United States that meets the U.S. Department of Education’s criteria as a Hispanic-serving Institution. For more information, please visit www.nova.edu.

 

Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences and Ron and Kathy Assaf College of Nursing Collaborate on an Interprofessional Simulation Experience

Students from the Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Healthcare Sciences, Doctor of Physical Therapy Program and the Ron and Kathy Assaf College of Nursing, Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program collaborated in an interprofessional simulation experience. The learning objectives of the experience centered around interprofessional teamwork and communication. Small groups of students provided care to a simulated patient in the acute care setting. During this collaboration, students gained knowledge in their own ability to provide safe and efficient care as well as participating as an active member of the health care team. Each small group debriefed following the patient encounter and a large group debrief was held at the end focusing on interprofessional teamwork and communication. Student commented “I think the scenarios were well done and helped with the interactions between the different health professions”; “I appreciated the interprofessionalism and working together towards a common goal”; “It was a great opportunity to assess the importance in collaboration with physical therapist and nurses and gauge our skills when working as a team.”

We express our sincere appreciation for all students who participated as well as the faculty and staff for coordinating and planning this experience. PCHCS faculty included Shari Rone-Adams, D.BA, MHSA, Archana Vatwani, D.PT, M.B.A.s, Melissa Morris, M.S., and Elizabeth Swann, Ph.D.s, ACON faculty included Sarah Koplow, Ph.D.s, Deborah Papa, Ed.D.,M.S., Heather Saifman, Ph.D.s, Lisa Soontupe, Psy.D., M.S., B.A., Professor Bibi Khan, and Lucille Graham, M.S. Special thanks to our standardized patient, Ms. Vanessa Maloney for lending her experience and expertise.

NSU, Yale Faculty Collaborating on Research with Male Survivors of Sexual Abuse

For over 20 years, the online community MaleSurvivor has been a support outlet for male sexual and gender minority survivors of sexual abuse/assault. Now, members of that community are collaborating in grant-funded research with faculty from NSU’s College of Psychology and Yale University’s School of Medicine.

“I’m really passionate and interested in working with sexual and gender minorities and noticing that there’s a whole span of issues that are going on and we’re not seeing in therapy,” said Assistant Clinical Professor Amy Ellis, Ph.D., of NSU’s College of Psychology.

Societal stigmas and outdated stereotypes that men cannot be raped or that sexual assault changes sexual orientation create barriers for men seeking treatment. Ellis noted that on average, male survivors take 25 years to disclose sexual abuse.

“You have that stigmatization that leads to shame and guilt and even questioning the reality of your own experiences,” Ellis said. “If the entire world is telling you that something can’t be and wasn’t, then why would you step forward and say that it is?”

Now, peer online motivational interviewing for abuse survivors is the subject of a $1.3 million grant from the nonprofit Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, or PCORI. The principal investigator is Joan Cook, Ph.D., an associate professor at Yale, collaborating with Ellis and MaleSurvivor.

The groundwork for a partnership with MaleSurvivor was already laid due to the fact that the Trauma Resolution Integration Program (TRIP), a clinic at NSU’s Psychology Services Center, answers the help desk emails for MaleSurvivor. In contrast to traditional research, Ellis said the project is taking a community-based participatory approach, where focus groups and an advisory board have informed every aspect of the process. Ellis said this approach creates comfort and trust, compared to the stereotype of researchers in lab coats.

As part of the project, 20 peer leaders from within the MaleSurvivor community received training on leading motivational interview groups with other survivors. The project will recruit 344 survivors who will be divided into 42 groups and participate for three years. Participants will be involved in six session interventions for 90 minutes each.

Full story: https://psychology.nova.edu/news-events/2019/cop-survivors-pcori.html

 

Come and View I Paint My Reality: Surrealism in Latin America at the NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale in November

Exhibition features works by Leonora Carrington, Frida Kahlo, Wifredo Lam,
Roberto Matta, Remedios Varo and others

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale will present I Paint My Reality, a new exhibition examining the manifestation of Surrealism in Latin America. Drawn exclusively from NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale’s in-depth collection of Latin American art and promised gifts from the Stanley and Pearl Goodman collection, the exhibition features works by Leonora Carrington, Frida Kahlo, Wifredo Lam, Roberto Matta, Carlos Mérida, Wolfgang Paalen, Amelia Peláez, Rufino Tamayo, Joaquín Torres-García, Xul Solar and Remedios Varo, among others. It follows the flowering of the Surrealist movement in Latin America in the 1930s and examines its continued influence through today, including in South Florida, with works by Juan Abreu, José Bedia, Fernando Botero, Pablo Cano, William Cordova, Demi, Luis Gispert, Guillermo Kuitca, Julio Larraz, Ana Mendieta, Maria Martinez-Cañas, and Jorge Pantoja, among others. I Paint My Reality: Surrealism in Latin America will be on view November 17, 2019 through June 30, 2020 and is curated by NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale Director and Chief Curator Bonnie Clearwater.

The avant-garde Surrealist movement emerged in France in the wake of World War I and spread globally as artists and art works traveled, and ideas circulated through art journals and mass media. Dreams, psychoanalysis, automatism, and chance were among the methods the Surrealists used to tap into the subconscious and stimulate the imagination. The European Surrealists embraced their Latin American colleagues, who nevertheless expressed ambivalence about the movement. Mexican artist Frida Kahlo famously refuted being labeled as a Surrealist, stating that she never painted dreams, instead asserting, “I painted my own reality,” while Uruguayan Joaquin Torres-Garcia advocated for a modern art that was not beholden to the European modern art masters. Latin America’s complex history, magical landscapes, indigenous cultures, archeological sites, mythologies, migrations, and European and African religious traditions shaped these artists’ reality.

The rise of fascism in Europe in the 1930s as well as the Spanish Civil War and World War II shifted the focus of Surrealism to the United States and Latin America, where many of the European artists sought refuge. These artists’ proximity to each other promoted friendships that were especially fruitful during this period and in the post-war years. While many of the exiled European artists who lived in the United States during the war returned home afterwards, those in Latin America and in Mexico in particular, tended to remain there for the rest of their lives.

“The depth and high quality of NSU Art Museum’s Latin American collection made it possible for us to organize a comprehensive exhibition of Surrealism in Latin America drawn exclusively from our holdings,” notes Clearwater. “Fort Lauderdale collectors Stanley and Pearl Goodman assembled an extensive collection of approximately 100 works with the intention of donating it to the museum where it would be a source for multiple exhibitions exploring this rich period of art history.” Clearwater adds, “the museum’s substantial collection of contemporary Latin American art and art by South Florida artists makes it possible to follow the influence of Surrealism, magic realism, and art of the fantastic through today”

Among the exhibition highlights is Leonora Carrington’s masterpiece, Artes 110, 1942, painted the year that the British-born artist arrived in Mexico after fleeing Nazi occupied France where she had been living with her lover, Surrealist Max Ernst. Titled after the address of where she first lived in Mexico City, the painting represents the artist as a spirited young woman flying away from the crumbling old world towards a new land. “Carrington is just one of several women artists in the exhibition who actively contributed to the Surrealist movement in Latin America and whose reputations have soared in recent years.” Others include photographer Kati Horner, Frida Kahlo, Amelia Peláez, Alice Rahon, Bridget Bate Tichenor, and Remedios Varo, to name a few.

“At times it is difficult to distinguish reality from dreams in these works,” notes Clearwater. “The fiery, nightmarish landscapes by Mexican artist Gunther Gerzo, Austrian exile Wolfgang Paalen, and the Chilean Matta, for example, were based on volcanic eruptions in southwestern Mexico.” Another example is a painting by contemporary Argentinian artist Guillermo Kuitca depicting a traumatic childhood experience.

The exhibition also focuses on the catalytic role artists such as Matta played by connecting the European artists with those based in the United States and Latin America. In addition, it explores how Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, Wifredo Lam, Ana Mendieta, and Xul Solar, among others, drew on ancient symbols and myths as well as indigenous cultures for their distinct imagery. Clearwater notes that Latin American Surrealism has had a significant impact on contemporary art in South Florida. “Echoes of this movement are evident in the work of South Florida artists, such as Luis Gispert’s photograph of a mysterious tower constructed of boom boxes that inexplicably occupies a domestic interior, Pablo Cano’s distinctive marionette assemblages, and Jorge Pantoja works that are drawn from Stanley Kubrick’s psychological thriller, The Shining.”

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale is located at One East Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL. For information, visit nsuartmuseum.org or call 954-525-5500. Follow the Museum @nsuartmuseum.org

Halmos Faculty Witness History with Video of Giant Squid

From June 8 – 22, a team of researchers explored the water column in some of the deepest parts of the Gulf of Mexico in order to determine what happens to deep-sea animals when a very important constraint is taken away from them – that of light. As part of this amazing project, researcher Edie Widder, Ph.D., with her colleague, Nathan Robinson, Ph.D., used her MEDUSA camera platform to capture video of a live giant squid deep in the Gulf of Mexico during a recent NOAA Office of Exploration and Research-supported cruise.

This is the first recording of a live giant squid in the Gulf of Mexico (Atlantic Ocean, for that matter), and only the second such filming ever. The research cruise, entitled “Journey into Midnight: Life and Light Below the Twilight Zone,” was led by Sönke Johnsen, Ph. D., of Duke University. Regarding DEEPEND, three of the twelve scientists onboard were from Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography. They were Co-PI Tammy Frank, Ph.D., her student Ruchao Qian, and DEEPEND Director/PI Tracey Sutton, Ph.D.

The giant squid story has been a global media sensation, featured by the NOAA Office of Exploration and Research; Discovery Channel; NY Times; Washington Post; USA Today; OCEANX; and CNN, among hundreds of others.

Alumni Spotlight: Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography – Nicholas W. Carris, Pharm.D.

Nicholas W. Carris, Pharm.D. (’08), is a pharmacist and an assistant professor at the University of South Florida (USF), where he conducts research and teaches at the College of Pharmacy and the Morsani College of Medicine.

Carris completed his B.S. in Biology at NSU, graduating with distinction in 2008. He graduated summa cum laude with a Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Florida (UF) in 2012. He completed his pharmacy residency at Tri Star Centennial Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, followed by a two-year, postdoctoral fellowship in family medicine at UF. Concurrently, he was also serving as an instructor at both UF’s College of Pharmacy and College of Medicine physician assistant program.

A board-certified pharmacotherapy  specialist, Carris holds pharmacist licenses in Florida and Tennessee. He has established a clinical practical in an Accountable Care Organization-a group of health care providers who voluntarily coordinate quality care for their Medicare patients. He is also participating in an initiative to de-prescribe opioids and benzodiazepine.

Among other honors, Carris is the recipient of the 2017-2018 Best Researcher Award at USF’s College of Pharmacy and was recognized as the Top Reviewer by the American Journal of Preventive Medicine in March 2018. He is the author of numerous articles, book chapters and publications and presents at national and regional conferences.

He is a member of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy and the American College of Cardiology.

Professor Michael Caldwell retires from NSU

Throughout his professional life, Michael Caldwell, D.M.A., has worn the hats of reporter, renowned concert pianist, U.S. artistic ambassador, and academic. But after 11 years at NSU in Performing and Visual Arts, he’s hung up that last hat to seek out new adventures.

“I’ve never had sabbatical in 40-plus years,” he said. “I never had the time or was too busy.”

Caldwell, who grew up in Fayetteville, NC, said his parents always encouraged him to follow his interests. Listening to his older brother take piano lessons inspired him to want to learn to play himself. Over time, Caldwell began to play piano and organ at his local church, and by high school, he was teaching others how to play.

“I had always been interested in classical music,” he said. “I would collect 78 records and go to classical concerts.”

Unfortunately, Caldwell’s opportunities to attend classical concerts was limited due to segregation. Caldwell continued playing and won multiple music competitions. Caldwell earned a bachelor’s degree in Applied Music from the University of Miami. Later, Caldwell took on a job as a broadcast reporter after returning from a year studying on a grant. He was handed a camera and instructed to go shoot footage for a story.

Continuing his musical studies, he earned a doctorate in Musical Arts from the University of Arizona. It was that university connection that got Caldwell his first of three appointments as a U.S. artistic ambassador. The program, which started in the U.S. Department of State during the Reagan administration, fosters cross-cultural understanding through the arts. Caldwell was assigned to Jordan and was already familiar with the Middle East and North Africa, having spent time on a self-financed tour and living out of a VW van.

Caldwell’s stints in academia included six years at Broward College as Associate Dean of Visual and Performing Arts. In 2008, he came to Nova Southeastern University and served as the founding director of the Division of Performing and Visual Arts in what was then known as the Farquhar College of Arts and Sciences. The programs in the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences’ Department of Performing and Visual Arts celebrated their 10th anniversary in 2018.

Full story: https://cahss.nova.edu/news-events/2019/dpva-caldwell.html

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