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Obituary: Candace Burnham, retired Admissions receptionist

Candace (Watson) Burnham, 64, of Amherst and Marco Island, Fla., retired receptionist at the Undergraduate Admissions Office, died Nov. 28.
 
Born in Winchester, she graduated from Danvers High School in 1966. In 1968 she received her associate’s degree in art from Lasell Junior College.
 
After college, Candy began her six-year career as an airline stewardess.

Prior to joining the campus staff, she earned her real estate broker's license and had a small business selling her hand-painted apparel. She worked on campus from 1989 until her retirement in 2004.
 
She leaves her husband,

Obituary: Janet Fleury, former Placement Office clerk

Janet M. Fleury, 85, of Amherst, a former junior clerk/stenographer in the Placement Office, died Nov. 29.
 
Born in Holyoke, she grew up in Hadley, where she attended local schools. She graduated from Northampton Commercial College.
 
She worked on campus from 1947-61.
 
She leaves her husband, Horace (Leo) Fleury, her daughter Lori and son-in-law William Saylor of Hadley; her son Timothy Fleury and daughter-in-law Patricia Halpin of Sunapee, N.H., and daughter-in-law Maria Fleury of Jacksonville, Fla., and six grandchilden.
 
A Mass of Christian Burial will be held Tuesday, Dec.

Chilton addresses conferences in Spain and Turkey

Anthropology professor Elizabeth S. Chilton was an invited presenter at the meeting of the Study Group on the Heritage Status of Aboriginal Cultural Property, sponsored by the Fonds québécois de la recherche sur la société et la culture (FQRSC) and hosted Nov. 11-14 at the University of Barcelona. The topic of the meeting was “Indigenous Cultural Heritages and Sustainable Development” and the title of her presentation was “Why Does the Past Matter? Towards a Social Science of the Past.”

Chilton also presented a paper, “Towards an Ecological of Heritage,” at the international conference

Center for Digital Education names Schweik a 'top innovator'

For his cutting-edge use of open-source software in the classroom and as a research focus, Charles Schweik, associate professor of Environmental Conservation and Public Policy, has been named one of this year’s top 50 innovators in education by the Center for Digital Education, a national research and advisory institute specializing in education technology trends, policy and funding.
 
Schweik joined the faculty in 1999 and was an early proponent of using wikis as a learning tool to help engage his students.

Roche selected for Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute

B.J. Roche, senior lecturer in Journalism, has been selected as one of 12 fellows to the 2013 Scripps Howard Journalism Entrepreneurship Institute held at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University in Phoenix.

The weeklong institute, which is held in January, is designed to help journalism educators build their programs' curriculum in entrepreneurial journalism.

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