HUNTINGTON -- Winners of the Maier Awards, sponsored annually by the Maier Foundation, Inc., were announced recently.
The William J. Maier Writing Awards were established in 1973 by William J. Maier, Jr., in honor of his father. These awards, for excellence in writing, are presented annually to students enrolled in English classes at Marshall. Ranging from $100 to $500, the awards recognize and reward good and distinctive writing.
Also, Marshall's Department of Classics sponsors the Maier Latin Scholarship which is underwritten by the Maier Foundation. This $2,000 scholarship is intended to support the work of a student presently pursuing a Latin major at Marshall and who is enrolled in advanced Latin classes.
Here are the winners of this year's Latin and writing awards:
Maier Latin Sight-Translation Contest Winners
Latin I
First place: Stephanie Rice, Covenant School. Teacher - Lois Merritt; Second place: Samara Pollock, Linsly School. Teacher - Nicoletta Villa-Sella
Latin II
First place: Jayan Nair, Home-Schooled. Teacher - Lois Merritt; Second place: Joseph Tyler Williams, George Washington High School. Teacher - Ruth Diller
Latin III
First place: Natalie Tupta, Charleston Catholic High School. Teacher - Robin Snyder
Latin IV
First place: Ceilidh McIntire, Robert C. Byrd High School. Teacher - Judy Dolan
Maier High School Latin Cup Award Winners
First place: Jared M. Jones, George Washington High School. Teacher - Ruth Diller; Second place: Stephanie Werning, Charleston Catholic High School. Teacher - Robin Snyder; Third place: Kayla D. Chappelle, Huntington High School. Teacher - Amy McElroy
Maier Latin Scholarship Recipient
Mark Kalen Lee Ballard, New Martinsville, W.Va., junior, Marshall University
Maier Writing Award Winners 2007-2008
First-year Research
First place: Walter Goff, "Strengthening Economies: A Proposal Regarding the US-Mexico Border Issue (Professor Jennifer Cavender); Second place: Amanda Saguansin, "Homeschooling: Attacking the Myth About Socialization" (Professor Jennifer Cavender); Third place: Maggie Stonestreet, "The Government's Role in American's Obesity Epidemic" (Professor Jennifer Cavender)
First-year Non-Research
First place: Syreeta Njoka, "The Undetected Truth of the Tale of Alamo" (Professor Angell Stone)
Undergraduate Fiction
First place: Travis Forshee, "The Last Days of Melanie Speranza" (Professor Anthony Viola); Second place: Erika Tharp, "A Pair of Pale Blue House Slippers" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Third place: Rebecca Childers, "Following Rudolph's Nose" (Professor Anthony Viola); Honorable mention: Amanda Koncelik, "Oreo Cookies" (Professor Chris Green)
Upper Division Non-Fiction Prose
First place: (tie) Miriam Reasons, "Chaucer's 'Clerk's Tale' and Petrarch's 'Story of Griselda' " (Professor Kateryna Schray); and, Rebecca Fox-Gieg, "New Historicism and the Demonization of the Jews in Chaucer's 'The Prioress's Tale' " (Professor Kateryna Schray)
Graduate Non-Fiction Prose
First place: Ryan Sarver, "The Mind of a Killer: A Psychological Exploration of Rorschach, Watchmen's Noir Detective" (Professor Mary Moore); Second place: Allison Massey, "The Façade of Power: Exclusionary Factors of Discourse in Ann Pancake's 'Strange as this Weather Has Been' " (Professor Chris Green); Third place: Cooper Childers, "Bridge of Ivory, Bridge of Horn" (Professor Mary Moore); Honorable mention: Kelly Broce, "A Familiar Schizophrenia: Personalities That Shape" (Professor Anthony Viola)
Undergraduate Poetry
First place: (tie) Chelsea Elmore, "Office Space" (Professor A.E. Stringer); and, Grant Vandervort, "Trwying to Stand" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Second place: Kaydee Diemler, "Let Your Tongue Dance" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Third place: Amanda Stephens, "L is not for Love" (Professor Anthony Viola)
Graduate Poetry
First place: Sara Blevins, "A Woman Walking in the Desert" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Second place: Nicole Lawrence, "Spin Cycle" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Third place: Sarah Grubb, "Lost and Found" (Professor A.E. Stringer); Honorable mention: Joshua Mattern, "Because the Moon will Go Down" (Professor A.E. Stringer)