Administrative Staff
Prof. Jeevak Parpia, Department Chair
109 Clark Hall,
(607) 255-6016
Prof. Lawrence Gibbons, Director of Graduate Studies
391 Physical Sciences Building
(607) 255-9931
Prof. Erich Mueller, Director of Undergraduate Studies
115 Clark Hall, 514 Clark Hall
(607) 255-1568
John Miner, Director of Administration
113 Clark Hall
(607) 255-6022
Directs department business operations, oversees administrative and technical staff. Manages areas of finance, budget, personnel and facilities. Coordinates teaching program, assigns graduate teaching assistants.
Deb Hatfield, Administrative Supervisor
109 Clark Hall
(607) 255-6016
Provides administrative support to the Chair and the Administrative Manager. Responsible for department records and processing of appointments.
Kacey Acquilano, Graduate Admissions Coordinator, Graduate Field Assistant and Website Administrator for the Physics Department
117 Clark Hall
(607) 255-7561
Responsible for graduate admissions, graduate student records, website maintenance and various department publications.
Christine Clay, Undergraduate and Events Coordinator
117 Clark Hall
(607) 255-7562
Also responsible for typing course work, exams, correspondence, reports and duplicating work.
Cindee Ball
117 Clark Hall
(607) 255-6017
Primary duplicating operator. Also responsible for mailroom, typing course work, exams, correspondence, reports, department bulletin boards, ordering and maintaining office supplies, and course evaluations.
Rosemary French
121 Clark Hall
(607) 255-7563
Responsible for classroom and course scheduling, grading and course information, registration and enrollments. Also responsible for textbook and desk copy orders.
Nancy Searles
119 Clark Hall
(607) 255-6163
Accounts and purchasing coordinator and payroll representative for the Physics Department.
Dorothy Holland-Minkley
250 Rockefeller Hall
(607) 255-3634
Secretary, Physics 101/102 Testing Center.
Tarek Anous, a formerundergraduate student, who worked at the Wilson Lab with Professor Rich Galik on instrumentation for the International Linear Collider (ILC). The ILC is a proposed next-generation particle accelerator with a target date of 2015 to begin operation. Tarek helped construct a small detector that uses cosmic rays in order to simulate the real detector that will be used in the ILC. Cosmic rays hit the scintillator (a plastic rod) and produce photons whose signals ...