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COSS 2017 Abstracts Poster and Concurrent Sessions 5 April 2017 Concordia College Moorhead, Minnesota CONCURRENT SESSIONS PRESENTATIONS Oral Presentation Number: C01 How Big Data is Perpetuating Inequality in the U.S. Angela Cole In 2016, Amazon offered Prime same day delivery to many major cities across the country. Millions of Americans lived in cities where these services were offered. Amazon's reliance on data left out minority communities. Google, Nikon, and Hewlett-Packard have also received this backlash for their algorithms perpetuating racism and bias. Society does not question numbers or data because they are thought to be unbiased. Since the data is collected by humans, who inherently have biases, these algorithms perpetuate racism that has plagued the United States. Before big data takes over every aspect of business and ultimately human decisions, we must become aware of the harmful effects of using big data and how we can fix them. By using social criticism, utilizing case studies, and discourse analysis, I was able come up with solutions to fix the harmful effects produced by algorithms. Social criticism is the act of locating reasons for horrible conditions in society. It is a tool in helping fix a flaw in social structures. Case studies investigate a problem, provide alternative solutions, and propose an effective solution to the problem. Discourse analysis seeks to analyze written, vocal, or any significant semiotic event. It is a tool in reading between the lines in regards to a problem and works to create solutions. By using all three approaches, it was evident that historical data is racist. It was also apparent that companies working with big data suffer from lack of diversity in their employee pool. Oral Presentation Number: C02 Critiquing Social Ranks and Ableism Through Literary Adaptation Shelby Reidle This project analyzes Diana Peterfreund’s For Darkness Shows the Stars as a proximation, or modern adaptation, of Jane Austen’s Persuasion. I argue that the purpose of proximation is to make a classic text more accessible to a modern audience by addressing relevant issues and moral dilemmas. Peterfreund adds to Austen’s criticism by using the lens of ableism to highlight the issues which arise when using birth and lineage as a means to award power and status. In both novels, the existing hierarchal structure is challenged, and using theories of social classism and ableism, this hierarchy and the methods used to maintain it will be deconstructed. One such method is the use of names and titles to assign value to individuals based on the rank and family they were born into. Not only do these texts critique the existing social structure, but they provide an alternative of evaluating people on merit and character regardless of their social standing. Oral Presentation Number: C03 Participatory Defense: A Solution to a Systematic Cycle of Inequality or Perpetuating a Public Defense Problem? Marina Que In 1963 the United States Supreme Court ruled on the landmark case of Gideon v. Wainwright, a ruling that guaranteed the right to counsel. For 54 years, public defenders have advocated for the incarcerated to ensure that they will get equal justice under the eyes of the law. However, while the population of incarcerated has grown in the United States at an exponential rate, the number of public defenders that work to advocate for them, has declined. With states continuing to roll back funding for public defense, public defenders are facing large workload burdens and limited resources. In order to combat this inequality in the judicial system, Raj Jayadev created the participatory defense model in 2007. The goal of the participatory defense model is to educate communities on how to advocate for the incarcerated, and in doing so, improving the state of the public defense system. While Jayadev's model seeks to reform the judicial system, the current implementation threatens to continue to perpetuate the cycle of injustice within the judicial system, rather than provide a solution. Through the examination of the model, a greater understanding of how participatory defense is transforming judicial engagement. By applying the model to significant cases, an understanding of how lives are impacted are achieved. Finally, with this greater understanding of the model, an opportunity to draw critical implications for the future allows questions to be asked on how the Participatory Defense model really is shaping the landscape of public defense in the United States. Oral Presentation Number: C04 Finding Meaning Despite Suffering and Trauma: The Myth of Sisyphus and the Book of Ecclesiastes Amanda Nameniuk How can people who suffer trauma find meaning in life? As children, we are taught that the world is fair, governments are just, and we reap what we sow. As we grow older the awareness of injustice, suffering, and death begin to erode these values and call into question the meaning of life. When suffering and trauma occur, the values and ideals we once held onto for comfort no longer make sense in an indifferent and chaotic world causing the question of "meaninglessness" to occur. Qoheleth, from the biblical Book of Ecclesiastes, points out the vanities and indifference of the world by focusing on death, suffering, and injustice. Despite the admission that human beings exist in an unfair, chaotic world, he finds hope and meaning anyway focusing on our choices and resilience, even in overwhelmingly traumatic situations. Albert Camus, an existential philosopher, uses the Greek Myth of Sisyphus to demonstrate the indifference and suffering of the world, but finds meaning anyways. Both Camus and Qoheleth proclaim that because of, and despite the suffering, chaos, and injustice of the world people can find meaning and happiness. By approaching and exploring these two narratives, one theistic and the other non-theistic, this paper will consider the question of "meaninglessness," a critical question for our time- not only as an individual mental health concern, but as a community responsibility for cultivating resilience and encouraging work for justice. Oral Presentation Number: C05 Examination of Changed Relational Views Post Disclosure of Previous Romantic Sexual Assault Shawn Deegan, Sarah Nelson The purpose of our study is to examine perceived changes a secondary partner may develop in a romantic relationship post disclosure of previous sexual assault and create a framework for future research on this subject. The examination of supporting the current partner is one of the most important aspect of sexual assault recovery due to the ability romantic partners have on influencing the well being of the survivor. Data collected through an anonymous online survey resulted in insufficient responses; however, this research lays the foundation for future research, suggestions for improvements, and discussion of gathered data through the lens of Communication Privacy Management and Dialectical Tensions. Oral Presentation Number: C06 Activism Through Mourning: An Analysis of the Syrian Sea Cemetery Taylor McMillin This past summer the Syrian Sea Cemetery appeared off the coast of Turkey in the Mediterranean Sea. This project, through TBWA Istanbul for the humanitarian group Support to Life, is seeking to call attention to the Syrian refugee crisis. While the project gained attention, it raises the question of how successful activism through mourning can be. This lead to the research question: Does the Syrian Sea Cemetery successfully utilize mourning as a form of advocacy? Through an analysis of the project, using Erin Rand's 2007 article in the Journal of Rhetoric and Public Affairs - "Repeated Remembrance: Commemorating the AIDS Quilt and Resuscitating the Mourned Subject" the research question is answered. The Sea Cemetery is analyzed through three tenants: activism through mourning, unification through memorial, and the bridging of empathy. As memorials continue to pop up to argue for a cause, it is important for to understand how to create memorials that not only lead to activism, but respect the mourned subject. Oral Presentation Number: C07 Sex, Money and Glory: A Comparison of Spending in Intercollegiate Athletics Ashlee Ahlrich, Andrew Dosch, Cade Montplaisir Spending in intercollegiate athletics varies widely across the United States, both between institutions and among sports teams at single institutions. Assessing athletic department expenditures between Concordia College varsity sports teams and across the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference allowed us to make a quantitative comparison of these differences. We performed statistical analyses on a number of spending figures that are made available by the Education in Athletics Disclosure Act, which requires reporting of athletic expenditures by all coeducational institutions of higher education who have students receiving federal financial assistance. The analysis of differences in intercollegiate athletics spending is useful for two main reasons. First, assessing differences in spending between teams at a single institution can be used as a tool to help ensure compliance with Title IX and provide a measure of equity. Second, it gives athletic departments the ability to assess the spending power of their sports programs with schools that they are competing with directly for students and on-field victories. Oral Presentation Number: C08 Modernizing Gender Discrepancies from the 19th Century to the 21st Kaley Sievert, Samantha Peka, Kaitlin Preusser, Jeremy Pierce The purpose of the Film and Literature course, English 439, was to take students from various disciplines and use their skills to adapt literature from a different era into a short narrative film. Our production team chose to adapt "The Story of an Hour", by Kate Chopin, a story encompassing the oppressive societal expectations of a woman in the household and how she yearns to be free. In our film adaptation, "The Engineer's Wife", we contemporized the setting of the story and the source of the oppression: a verbally abusive husband. The purpose of our adaptation was to modernize the gender discrepancies of the story to make it more relatable to a present day audience. The process to adapt literature to film included the following roles and steps: writing a screenplay that modernized the details of the film; creating a storyboard that helped visualize the major scenes; organizing set design to bring our film to life on the screen; casting actors; filming; editing footage; and using public relation tactics to network, promote, and advertise the film. While fulfilling these roles, we built relationships within the Fargo/Moorhead community, analyzed literature, and applied film theory to create our own artistic interpretation of the story. As new filmmakers, we learned how to overcome obstacles by utilizing our individual talents and knowledge, and applying the experience we had gathered from this class and others. Our presentation will include still images and short clips to demonstrate our creative research and resulting project. Oral Presentation Number: C09 Wasted Potential: Wes Anderson and the Agency of Female Characters Allison Cassell, Annika Benson While Wes Anderson is a visionary in many aspects of cinema, his female characters suffer. Initially, Anderson attempts to present strong women in their careers, their relationships and with their families, but often ends up portraying reactive characters whose agency diminishes over the course of the films. To date, only two of Anderson's films have passed the Bechdel Test, a measure of female presence in popular motion pictures. This analysis focuses primarily on four of Anderson's female characters. Felicity from Fantastic Mr. Fox, Agatha from The Grand Budapest Hotel, Eleanor from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, and Rita from The Darjeeling Limited all demonstrate some level of character growth in the early stages of their respective movies. They all fall flat in the end, however, overshadowed by their husbands, children and even death. The potential that all of these women show throughout the course of their films is set aside and cut short to promote other storylines, ultimately relegating them to secondary, flatter characters. Beginning as determined women, these characters end up showing more wasted potential than anything else. Oral Presentation Number: C10 Can Bullying of Ugly Ducklings be Stopped Altogether? Matthew Johnson Why do kids like to bully other kids in school? Does it make them feel powerful? Can it be stopped? Will it ever be eradicated from our society? Bullying has been around since the dawn of time. Almost every place you go in our world you will find both those who bully as well as those who are bullied. It has never vanished, yet evolves with the changes of society. In 1800 the bullying was more physical than it is now. Well-known people in history, like Hans Christian Andersen, experienced bullying in school. Today bullying has expanded from the sphere of physical space and time into the world of cyberspace with the easy access we now have to the internet via computers and phones. The tale of "The Ugly Duckling" shows how bullying has existed in society for generations. It shows the effects bullying has on the one who is considered the outcast of society. But it also shows how good influences of others can counteract the negative effects of bullying. Many studies show how and why bullying happens. They also show the effects bullying has on both children and adults. The studies also provide details about anti-bullying programs. Yet, the question remains, does this mean bullying will be stopped such that there is no longer a need for tales like "The Ugly Duckling?" Oral Presentation Number: C11 Pure Wild Animal Craziness: Personification and Naming in Wes Anderson's Films Will Kuball, Molly Weyer The world of Wes Anderson is one that demands exploration. Every character, setting and event has a unique title that was conceived by Anderson. On a broader scale, what inspirations in film and literature and what about Anderson's upbringing and experiences caused him to bestow the titles and names that he did? It can be assumed that the answer to this sort of question will only shine light on Anderson's creative process in his auteur style of filmmaking. If we delve deeper into his creative work and overarching themes, there can be deeper meanings behind the seemingly innocent labels. One example of this would be his usage of the terms "human" and "wild animals" in The Fantastic Mr. Fox. These overarching themes and deeper specifications can come from inspirations from a variety of sources. Roald Dahl and J.D. Salinger are major literary influences on Anderson's work and Alfred Hitchcock and François Truffaut are major cinematic influences. One can also comparatively assess Anderson's movies through literary works such as Indra Sinha's novel Animal's People and Czeslaw Milosz's anthology Luminous Things. Oral Presentation Number: C12 Comparison of Small Mammal Communities on Restored and Remnant Prairies in Northwestern Minnesota Grant Vagle, Danielle Braund, Chloe Whitten, Amie Schulz, Jessica Watson Remnant prairies are one of the most threatened habitats in North America. This has led to the restoration of prairie habitats by some organizations to support and protect native prairie species. The effectiveness of these restored prairies to support small mammals is not well studied, however. We trapped small mammals on various plots of restored and remnant prairies in northwestern Minnesota during the summer of 2016, adding to the existing dataset from previous years. Trapped sites were in Becker, Clay, Mahnomen, and Norman counties. Our goal was to examine whether restored prairies had equal biodiversity of mammal communities as compared to remnant prairies. The dominant species caught included Microtus pennsylvanicus, Peromyscus spp., and Ictidomys tridecemlineatus; rare species encountered included Poliocitellus franklinii, Mustela spp., and very rarely Perognathus flavescens. It appears that restored and remnant prairies in this area have similar patterns of diversity, though proximity of restored sites to remnant sites may have an influence on diversity. Oral Presentation Number: C13 Constructing Wes Anderson's World: A Social System Turned Upside Down Brady Jensen, Aaron White A good movie invites the viewer into an imagined, constructed universe. Among film directors, not many are better at world-building than Wes Anderson. His work does this so well because of Anderson's ability to construct his narratives and the objects contained in them. He then uses these physical objects to place the audience in his world. Using psychoanalysis, specific objects and images are able to be pinpointed as being deliberately placed by Anderson in order to frame his films within a universal theme. One of these themes that appears in this constructed Andersonian universe is his depiction of social classes. In his films, Anderson portrays an idea that as social standing increases, happiness decreases. This is a change from the commonly accepted idea that more money equates to higher levels of happiness and differs greatly from Karl Marx's ideas on increasing the happiness of every social class by eliminating classes altogether. Using Anderson's movies and various publications on the correlation between social standing and happiness, the conclusion has been reached that Anderson's approach, while unrealistic, works as an example of the idea that money doesn't buy happiness, arguing that social class and happiness are completely independent of each other. Oral Presentation Number: C14 Applying LMX to the Relationships of the NCAA and its Members Ian Jahnig In the fanaticism and glory of collegiate athletics, the communicative relationship of individual schools and their relationship to other schools can often be lost. In the NCAA, most members school are arranged into conferences, such as the Pac-10, Big Ten, Big 12, ACC, and SEC, which are commonly referred to as the "Power 5" conferences. This paper will seek to uncover the underlying communicative relationship between member schools and their respective conferences. Further, the relationship between member institution and the NCAA will also be examined. As the premier collegiate sporting association in the United States, the NCAA has grown to immense size. Currently, the NCAA encompasses 1,281 member institutions, and almost 500,000 student-athletes. The reach of the NCAA is evident in not only it's size and member affiliation, but also in its influence in the world of professional sports. Through an analysis of similar articles, I hope to identify and define connections between member schools, their conferences, and the NCAA. To frame it in such a way that there may exist a parent-child like metaphor that exists, and, to follow along with that metaphor, that there is a "favorite" among the "children", which is expressed through revenue streams, communications, and favorable opportunities. Finally, I will compare the analysis of these components and frame this analysis through the concept of LMX, which typically exists as an interpersonal communication theory. Oral Presentation Number: C15 The Patron's Pyramid: Social Networks, Patronage, and Collective Action in Turkish Politics Matthew Lillehaugen Collective action is central to the understanding of many political phenomena, but too little research has been done to assess the role that the network structure of social relations may play in either facilitating or preventing collective action. This project seeks to fill that gap by developing a new model for networked collective action and demonstrating how this might be applied to the case of Turkey. This research builds on the model of patronalism developed by Henry Hale to describe politics in the post-Soviet world. The project first develops Hale's paradigm into a concrete mathematical model with implications for the fields of collective action and network formation/dynamics and possibilities for further extension. This model differs from most existing game-theoretic models of network formation by allowing for "ebb and flow" in a sort of dynamic equilibrium, as well as endogenous shocks to the system that incorporate issues such as coups and revolutions. The project then examines the specific case of Turkey and demonstrates that Hale's patronalism is applicable to the Turkish case. This allows for a new perspective on Turkish and Ottoman history, and allows for greater understanding of developments in contemporary Turkey, including the attempted coup of July 2016. Ultimately, this suggests that the perspective of patronalism provides an understanding of the underlying continuity throughout various phases of Turkish and Ottoman history. Likewise, it suggests that the recent coup attempt was unlikely to succeed, but that the subsequent crackdown on dissent should not have been surprising. Oral Presentation Number: C16 Millennial Snowflakes Morgan Hinton This research investigates the phrase "millennial snowflake" and other instances of millennial-shaming within the framework of emotional epistemology, which helps explain how millennials are devalued as knowers because of their emotional reactions to phenomena. It also explores the ways in which the term has been harnessed by the political alt-right as an insult used in hopes of discrediting the people who champion liberal and "identity politics." In my research, I explore emotional epistemology and instance where this has been used to discredit millennials as knowers about current political issues as well other rhetoric alt-right groups and bloggers use to undermine the legitimacy of these "emotional," "triggering," or "liberal" topics associated closely with the millennial generation. My analysis ultimately argues that such attempts at discrediting millennials are problematic in their logic as well as in their assumption that emotion is opposed to reason. It also shows that social justice and "identity politics" aren't of any lesser value because they are championed by millennials or because they involve topics of an emotional nature. Oral Presentation Number: C17 Concordia College Students' Political Ideology and Political Party Preferences Cole Cymbaluk A survey of the political preferences and ideologies of Concordia students was carried out in the Fall of 2016, with a 30.5% response rate (631 respondents out of 2066 possible) The results provide interesting information about the political leanings of Concordia students. They also show links between majors and political leanings, as well as how other factors may impact students' political leanings. Additional demographic info was also collected, allowing for the analysis of gender and year of study in relation to political values. Collected information about student views of political parties, ideologies, and the 2016 presidential candidates give a useful indication of how the campus leaned politically last Fall. Analysis of this information matched some preliminary expectations, such as the findings that the campus leans liberal overall and that programs in Humanities lean heavily liberal. The data also showed that contrary to popular belief, there is a solid contingent of conservative students on campus, and that as opposed to Concordia stereotypes, they are not all Business majors. Overall, this data allows for an understanding of political values and preferences at a small Christian liberal arts college, and it can be used to further compare Concordia to other colleges of a similar size or to the distribution in colleges in general. Oral Presentation Number: C18 "It's a Match!": A Qualitative Exploration of Online Dating and Expectancy Violations Theory Samantha Severance The researcher sought to understand the experiences of individuals who use online dating websites and applications. Participants were interviewed on their online dating experience, how they and their romantic interest presented themselves online, and how expectancy violations may have impacted meeting their romantic interest face-to-face. Drawing conclusions from these variables helps the researcher understand how individuals form relationships online and face-to-face and how Burgoon's expectancy violations theory can help predict the future of these relationships. Oral Presentation Number: C19 An Arithmetic Method for Proving Propositional Logic Caleb Camrud Logic exists at the center of formal argumentation, yet many are put off by its abstract symbology and difficult computation. In this presentation, I propose a solution to making propositional logic more approachable to the general public. This arithmetic system allows logic to be understood using modular arithmetic, with the simple operations of addition, multiplication, and modulo 2. In opposition to the current methodology for proving tautologies of propositional logic, this method allows those with an elementary mathematical background to prove and translate propositional logic formulas. The presentation will consist of a general introduction into the world of formal logic, a demonstration of the current tableau method for proving tautologies, and finish by discussing the advantages of the novel approach of the arithmetic method. Oral Presentation Number: C20 Siri the Confidant: An Exploration of Electronic Self-Disclosure Kali Reginek Siri and Okay Google are integral parts of many smart phone users. From asking directions to spur of the moment curiosities such as what whales sound like. Siri, and other conversation technologies like it, have taken a new role as a confidant to sexual assault disclosure. The goal is to examine how interconnected our technology has become in our lives and to understand that technology is no longer used for basic assistance but higher needs like emotional assistance too. More specifically how is Siri used as an assistant for emotional crisis like rape and suicide support. We must understand the ramifications and benefits of Siri's new relationship status Sir in order for us to confide in her with such requests. It was conducted by examining scholarly articles looking at the importance of word choice, feedback and relationship management, the role of being an effective confidant, and self-disclosure and relationship management. It was concluded that there are no conclusions, rather room for further research. Artificial intelligence is incredibly new that it is difficult to have concrete conclusions. We can focus upon the ideas needed to improve Siri's newfound relationship status, potential flaws with these new features, and whether or not these new features are truly relevant. This study was important to conduct because as A.I. programs become an integral part in our lives we need to consider the empathy and importance behind true human relationships, and what mimicking that would do to the individuals who use such programs. Oral Presentation Number: C21 Interpretation of the Symbolic Veil Kila Dumas Often misunderstood and misinterpreted, women who veil are the embodiment of a longstanding religious, cultural, and artistic symbol. The veil is a multivalent symbol with a wide scope for interpretation. The Muslim veil, commonly understood as relating solely to Islamic women's religious devotion, does, in fact, have roots that reach far beyond modern and ancient Islam. It is crucial to note that the practice of female veiling has significant origins throughout ancient Christian contexts. Although, as the veil is most commonly perceived of as being influential throughout modern Islam rather than modern Christianity, the origins of the veil throughout ancient Islam prove to be an imperative piece of discussion towards the understanding of why women practice veiling. Modern Egypt serves as a useful archetype for the evolution of the tradition of veiling for Muslim women. This essay argues that the veil is a multivalent symbol through which the women who wear the veil communicate something about their identity to the wider community. Some of the meanings of the veil are religious, cultural, practical, political, and artistic. The wearing of a veil can be, and often is, intended with one set of meanings, but read through an entirely different set of assumptions. The history of veiling has been influenced by a largely Orientalized lens of trauma. This paper explores varied meanings regarding the symbol of the veil drawn from a variety of Muslim writers, Islamic commentators, Edward Said and personal interviews. Oral Presentation Number: C22 Spatial and Behavioral Interactions Between American Red (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) and Eastern Gray (Sciurus carolinensis) Squirrels on an Urban College Campus Jessica Watson Tree squirrels (Order Rodentia, Family Sciuridae) are one of few groups to thrive in an urban setting such as Concordia College's campus in Moorhead, MN. Our campus has a mix of deciduous and coniferous trees and supports populations of both American red (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) and eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis). These two species are found usually in different habitats, with gray squirrels associated with deciduous trees and red squirrels associated with conifers. Red squirrels actively defend exclusive territories and at the center of these territories is typically a midden. By contrast, gray squirrels are not territorial and use scatterhoarding to store food. Gray squirrels exhibit a dominance hierarchy. Over the past two years we have collared 58 squirrels and documented over 691 locations. Recently we have observed some shifts in habitat use. During 2014 we observed gray squirrels almost exclusively using deciduous trees and red squirrels using coniferous trees. Over the summer of 2015, we saw a decrease in the number of gray squirrels (high mortality coupled with apparent dispersal) and have seen more red squirrels using deciduous trees. During 2016, an increase of gray squirrels has been observed and red squirrels have been exclusively using conifers. Our hypothesis is that the two species will partition the campus in such a way that gray squirrels will occupy deciduous trees and red squirrels will move back into predominantly coniferous trees. We further predict red squirrels and gray squirrels will have low overlap of locations determined through telemetry. Oral Presentation Number: C23 Examining Foreign Medical Aid in Francophone Africa from a Postcolonial Perspective Anna Dovre A significant aspect of the study of Francophone regions is the understanding of the role that colonization has played, and continues to play, within those spaces. I will use postcolonial theory to illuminate the ways foreign medical aid has been a major stage upon which colonial structures of oppression have played out in Francophone Africa. The film Le Grand Blanc de Lambarene (1995) will serve as a lens to consider the role of racism and orientalism in colonial medical care in Subsaharan Africa. I will compare this to modern foreign medical aid provided by Médecins Sans Frontières, who are seeking to reframe medical aid by using it to empower local healthcare providers. Oral Presentation Number: C24 Harry Potter Amplification: An Exploration of Cultural Assimilation Ashley Warner Embedded in Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire's world of wizardry and magic is the opportunity to highlight the struggles people often face when they travel to different cultures and are expected to assimilate with those around them. This reimaginary adaptation of JK Rowling's Harry Potter series, specifically, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, explores the presence of culture in the novel. It does so by featuring personal insight from Harry, Cedric Diggory, Fleur Delacour, and Viktor Krum during the triwizard tournament. Using themes from the novel, theorist interpretations of the text, and popular culture, this work blends the world of magic with modern issues of cultural disconnect and assimilation. The character development created by Rowling set the groundwork for teenage wizards struggling to fit in with various cultures while at Hogwarts. This adaptation supplements the fourth Harry Potter novel by creating a deeper understanding of the residents of Hogwarts and those who travel to it. Modern crosscurrents are the underlying theme of this series of personal journal entries as they connect to people in today's society who constantly are being exposed to cultures that sharply contrast their own. Oral Presentation Number: C25 Coming Together and Coming Apart: Relationships and Drug Use in Wes Anderson Films Jeremy Pierce Audrey Long Rick and Ilsa in Casablanca, Clarice Starling and Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs, and Butch Cassidy and The Sundance Kid; cinema thrives on the depiction of close relationships. Hollywood shows us relationships that grow and relationships that fall apart. Knapp's Relational Development Model shows how a relationship develops in a ten step process. In the model there are two phases called "Coming Together" and "Coming Apart," representing the stages at the beginning and end of a relationship. Each phase has five steps varying in intensity and dependent on the characteristics of the relationship. Relationships can move fluidly through the steps and even skip over steps. Wes Anderson creates absurd and comical relationships that move through Knapp's model. Much like characters make choices to be in relationships, characters can also make choices to abuse substances. Wes Anderson characters often use alcohol and narcotics to forget their pasts or shape their identities. Their substance abuse relates to their behavior and sometimes symbolizes their downfall. Psychological theorist Hans Eysenck developed a link between personality traits and a person's drug of choice. He believed that people use drugs to modify their temperaments; people with lots of energy use depressants and people with less energy use stimulants. Later psychological theories showed the "Big Five" personality traits which connect personality and drug use. This paper will explore these theories in Wes Anderson films such as Rushmore, The Darjeeling Limited, and The Royal Tenenbaums, as well as his other films. Oral Presentation Number: C26 Twenty Below Coffee and/or Temperature Isak Johnson As college students coffee can sometimes be an integral part of our lives, whether it be in our rooms, Anderson Commons, or at a coffeehouse off-campus. Last spring, I conducted an ethnography (a small scale cultural study) of Twenty Below Coffee Co. Throughout the roughly eight weeks of my project, I observed the interactions between employees and patrons and conducted a series of interviews in order to better understand the aura of a welcoming community of Twenty Below, which seemed to be at the core of the coffeehouse's atmosphere. These observations and interviews helped describe to me the strong sense of community that was being created through conversation and more than a little coffee. Oral Presentation Number: C27 When Alcoholics are Forced to be Anonymous: The Hidden World of College Alcohol Abuse Grace Hoffa In a period that is often called the best years of their lives, college students are simultaneously surrounded by norms that encourage addictive behavior yet they are left nearly alone when they become addicted. From the norms and myths that perpetuate the drinking culture to campus support and treatment, the common methods of recognizing and rectifying the damages of alcohol has left college aged alcoholics isolated and ostracized. As a feminist scholar, my methodology centers on the relationship that intersecting aspects of life have on addiction. My sources can be separated into subcategories. First, I ground most of my research in the social sciences. I take an active look in the psychology behind both addiction and society's reaction to addiction and addicts as people. I also ground my research in examining the current system as it relates to alcoholism. This entails inspecting the current availability of treatment centers, as well as investigating how different universities and institutions both attempt to identify and potentially provide treatment to students. The conclusion that I anticipate and have seen in my research is that our society has actively avoided the conversation about alcohol abuse among students. Even now, in an era where more research on alcohol use in colleges exists, there is a large gap in the conversation when it comes to addiction. The norms and myths of the college experience have allowed society to evade labeling and aiding students who may be at risk for addiction or may be struggling with addiction. Oral Presentation Number: C28 Racial Commentary in Marvel Comic's X-Men Series Sarah Osborne The "X-Men" Series, created by Jack Kirby and Stan Lee was originally created in the 1960s when the civil rights movement had a strong swing in society. The comic series told the story of a minority group with unique abilities that was feared and oppressed by society. Professor Charles Xavier, used to convey the rhetoric of Martin Luther King Jr., taught a nonviolent resistance to the oppression while they struggled to find a place in the world around them. Hate groups in the comic universe directly reflected the words and ideals of real groups such as the KKK. By applying the rhetorical dimensions of myths and narratives to the comic series, one is able to see how symbolism in storytelling taught the wrongness of racism in the "X-Men" and created a racial commentary. Through the use of symbols, archetypal metaphors, and parallels we can see how the series was written to teach the audience about the injustice in their own society. Oral Presentation Number: C29 Communication Management Units, The Dark Side of Our Penitentiary System Lacy Tooker-Kirkevold In the United States there are two federal prison units that are not directly connected to any one branch of government. These units are called Communication Management Units, or CMUs, which work to repress the communication of second tier terrorists in the system. These facilities differ from ordinary prisons in that prisoners are allowed only limited communication with the outside world and the rest of the inmates within the facility. CMUs disproportionally prosecute Muslim Americans and openly employ harmful tactics to suppress their native language, culture, and religion. CMUs were opened without any actual policy to back them up and no federal agency that is formerly in charge. Communication Management Units are an unconstitutional and unchecked flaw in our penitentiary system. Oral Presentation Number: C30 Trump: An Analysis of the Role of Race and Minorities in the 2016 Presidential Campaign of Donald Trump Ian Jahnig, Taylor McMillin, Kacey Finch, Lauren Arnold, Jian Shen The last two U.S. Presidential elections have been examples of the wide range of political affiliations, personalities, and backgrounds that can exist in the political sphere. With the historic election of President Barack Obama, the first minority president voted into office, the issue of race in presidential elections has come into the spotlight. The role of minorities in presidential elections is one which has been more recently examined, although further research must be done. In the 2016 presidential election, the effective campaign strategy of Donald Trump lead to his election to the presidency. As the newly elected president takes office, the strategies and tactics that lead to the election can now be examined. This paper seeks to expand on the research done on the role of race in presidential elections. Through analysis of video advertisements, the authors hope to uncover a connection between the use of minorities, the portrayal of minorities and the presence of stereotyping in political advertisements. Video advertisements endorsed by Donald Trump in the 2016 presidential election are examined as a means of uncovering the suspected findings. Oral Presentation Number: C31 What about Jessie?: Historical Research and Community Involvement Sarah Anderson, Teagan Brogdon, Kate Campion, Thomas Froland, Nicholas Larson, Leah Olson, Shelby Reidle, Kaitlin Rubash, Marissa Senstad, Keith Sullivan Inquiry 100: Backstories partnered with the Comstock House Museum and the Historical and Cultural Society of Clay County, two organizations that desired information about Jessie Comstock. While much is known about other members of the Comstock family, limited information had been gathered about the family's second child, Jessie. Our class started researching broadly at first, and each of us eventually selected an aspect of Jessie's life to study. We conducted original research using both primary and secondary sources to better understand various dynamics of the time period with a strong focus on women. Our research took us to numerous archives and research sites in the Fargo-Moorhead area as well as the Twin Cities. After extensive investigation, we created individual posters that drew conclusions about both Jessie and the societal norms of the time period. We then presented our posters to the Concordia College community and answered any questions they had. Following the Credo poster session, we synthesized our research into three banners which related directly to our findings about Jessie. The final banners will be displayed in the Comstock House to supply information to the broader Fargo-Moorhead community. This session will outline our learning processes with historical research skills and community collaboration. Oral Presentation Number: C32 Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells in 3D Bioprinting Adam Kolling Lung conditions such as emphysema, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, and pulmonary hypertension can necessitate transplantation of one or both lungs. However, challenges with lung donation make transplantation difficult–less than 20% of deceased organ donors have transplantable lungs. The biggest barrier to lung transplant is chronic rejection of these histoincompatible organs despite the use of immunosuppressive drugs. Harnessing 3D printing technology for adaptation with biological materials may provide a patient-specific alternative to transplantable lung shortages. Using human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) embedded in a hydrogel consisting of gelatin, alginate, and digested porcine lung extracellular matrix, we printed three-dimensional cellular constructs. This research focused on refinement of this hydrogel scaffold, so as to improve resolution of printed constructs, maintain high cell viability during and after the printing process, and establish an environment for differentiation of constructs into definitive endoderm, a precursor to lung tissue. Varying relative concentrations of biological materials in hydrogel mixtures elucidated many combinations unsuitable for 3D printing with cells, with workable mixtures proving challenging as well. Although progress was made over the course of this research toward creating a suitable combination of materials, still more investigation is needed in this relatively new field to find an optimal supportive hydrogel. Oral Presentation Number: C33 First-Time Filmmakers: The Process of Adapting Past to Present Ellen Rethwisch, Ben Deetz, Nicolas Restad, Jaron Dahle, Grace Murray, Madeleine DuBore, Leah Jensen In today's culture, film is often taken for granted. What is seen on the screen is only a small portion of the artistry that goes into creating a film. The students of the Film and Literature capstone course were given the objective to take a piece of literature from a different time period and adapt it onto the screen. The group read a collection of 21 different pieces and analyzed which would be most compatible with film. Our selection process led us to a 19th century short story by Guy de Maupassant, which we decided we could update to Fargo in the 21st century. The process of adapting and producing the short film Abandoned challenged the preconceived notions of the movie-making process and introduced new ways of viewing and understanding film. Throughout the course, the students also studied a variety of theories, including narrative theory and reception theory, which served as tools when analyzing preexisting films as well as their own. This presentation will reveal some of the most challenging aspects that the students faced, including the difficulty of preserving the themes of gender and class that are present in the original story while making the content relevant to the current time period. In addition, the students will describe the specific ways in which they adapted the text through plot changes and modernization of language. Stills and film clips will provide visual evidence of our creative research and problem-solving process. Oral Presentation Number: C34 Track: Curbing vs Cones Nicholas Peterson An NCAA policy is going into effect January 2018 that will require every college with an indoor track to have a 2" curb on the turns on the track. This preliminary study is designed to check the validity of the policy by looking for a difference in foot spacing from the inside of the lane using cameras to track athletes as they run the turns. The spacing will create a difference in distance on the turns, a shorter distance will result in a faster time. The anticipated results are that there will be no significant difference in foot distance between a curbed lane and a coned lane. Oral Presentation Number: C35 Color Selection of Quasar Candidates Behind the Extended Gaseous Regions of the Triangulum Galaxy William Harvey We report new quasar candidates in the extended gaseous region of the Triangulum (M33) Galaxy as observed with the Wyoming Infrared Observatory in the u, g, r, and i optical passbands during the Summer of 2016. Our survey produced a sample of 10526 point sources to a limiting depth of g ≤ 20.9 in a region of ~ 16 square degrees, 34 of which are ultraviolet-excess selected known quasars with redshifts up to z < 2.2. Color-color plots were created using extinction-corrected magnitudes of u, g, r, and i as well as near-ultraviolet (NUV) and near-infrared (W1) magnitudes as taken from Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) respectively. Using a series of color cuts in NUV, u, g, r, i, and W1 bands, we recover high-quality quasar candidates. Based on optical colors alone we project ~ 30 new candidates per square degree, and report 271 new, high quality quasar candidates. Spectroscopic follow-up of these candidates could yield new, bright quasars behind M33. Oral Presentation Number: C36 Mapping Aquatic Plant and Sediment Data at Long Lake, Becker County, MN Andrew Dosch, Ruth Sexton Determining sediment composition in relation to depth and plant composition can be useful to help identify preferred plant habitats and sediment types throughout a lake. Our project focuses on identifying and mapping the distribution of sediment types, depth, and flora in Long Lake, Becker County, Minnesota. GIS software was used for mapping distributions, while the hydrometer method was used for particle size analysis. The Identification of sediment composition in relation to plant species presence, diversity and depth can help identify ecological preferences of each plant species. This could give land managers a better understanding of where invasive species are likely to take root. Additionally, this research could be used as a base for future research, such as analyzing patterns relating particle analysis and the presence of aquatic fauna, allowing scientists to predict aquatic animal species using sediment composition. Oral Presentation Number: C37 Reclaiming the Good News in the Gospel of Mark Andrea Bonneville Traditional scholarly interpretation of the Gospel of Mark focuses on the journey to Jesus' crucifixion on the cross. Mark 16:1-8 is considered to be an epilogue to the Gospel when the three women go to the tomb intending to anoint Jesus' dead body. The women discover an empty tomb and are instructed by "a young man" at the tomb to "tell his disciples and Peter that he is going ahead of you to Galilee" (Mark 16:7). The women flee from the tomb and say nothing "for terror and amazement had seized them" (16:8). Traditional scholarship views the women as failed followers of Jesus due to their inability to speak. This paper reconsiders the traditional interpretation and considers the importance of the ending. The women as traumatized survivors represent the community within the Gospel. This paper uses the contemporary narratives of mothers of black sons who have been killed due to police brutality to better understand the trauma that the women faced when Jesus was executed. Like the women within the Gospel, these mothers' lives have been radically changed by death. The trauma experienced and the resilience of the mothers provides insight into the silence of the women at the tomb and how they continue to live as traumatized survivors. The ending of the Gospel of Mark is unsettling because it does not provide readers with closure. This ending may seem hopeless because of the silence of the women and the abrupt ending. At the heart of trauma is the loss of hope. In the Gospel of Mark is a new understanding of where hope lies. This paper will argue that for victims of trauma the ending of the Gospel of Mark conveys hope. Oral Presentation Number: C38 Understanding Anxiety: The Science Behind our Fears Nate Adamietz, Elli Emerson, Kate Kvidera Anxiety is one of the most prevalent mental illnesses among college-aged students. According to the National College Health Assessment Survey around 1 in 6 college students will be diagnosed with anxiety - surpassing the rates of depression diagnoses in the same age group. Thus, it is important to provide information regarding the biochemical pathways in which anxiety occurs within the brain to the public in order to create a larger understanding of the mental illness. We will especially target this presentation for the students of Concordia that have a limited scientific background. We will achieve this by reviewing various current research articles pertaining to how anxiety is formed and how it specifically relates to academic anxiety in a university setting. There are many structures in the brain that are involved in anxiety. Commonly in those experiencing anxiety, the HPA (HypothalamicPituitary-Axis) is overactive leading to lasting heightened sympathetic nervous responses. Paired with the heightened stress response is an abnormally strong memory formation. The memory formation centers associated with this abnormally strong memory formation are the hippocampus and amygdala. Another goal will be to provide an overview of the treatments for anxiety and their mechanisms that prevent symptoms from occurring. These treatments can involve drug therapy or behavioral therapy. By increasing the understanding of how anxiety relates to academics and the treatments currently available we hope to better prepare Concordia student to deal with anxiety in their lives. Oral Presentation Number: C39 Peak Performance: Dealing with Performance Anxiety Cole Bartels Performance anxiety is an unfortunate reality for every performing musician regardless of their chosen instrument. It is something that we grapple with on a recurring basis, and for some, performance anxiety can be completely crippling when the stage door opens and it is time to step into the public eye. Many musicians perceive performance anxiety as an issue that can only be tackled in the moment, meaning there is nothing one can do to prepare to face these challenges until the actual performance. This however, is a huge misconception. Taking a read through Dr. David Roland's The Confident Performer reveals that performance related anxieties are actually deeply rooted underlying psychological and physiological issues that need to addressed in the long term. My research focuses on identifying both the short and long term causes of performance anxiety, identifying the various ways in which performance anxiety manifests itself, and finding effective strategies for coping. I draw my findings from many sources, including: various scholarly books and articles, interviews with fellow students and faculty members, observation of professionals in performance, and my own experiences as a performing trombonist. My findings will be a valuable insight for each and every musician at Concordia to help maximize their performance potential. Oral Presentation Number: C40 Adaptation and West Side Story: Retelling Shakespeare's Tragic Tale Jonathan Immel In 1961, Stephen Sondheim delivered one of the most memorable adaptations of Shakespeare's tragic tale, Romeo and Juliet, entitled West Side Story. While the story of star-crossed lovers among two feuding families remains intact, there are many other aspects of West Side Story that make it different, rather, adapted. An adaptation takes an original text and recreates the story in a different genre, style, or format, such as drama or film, often to appeal to a modern audience. West Side Story, a dramatic adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, deals with relevant themes at the time of its writing, and today. As with all adaptations, the questions scholars ask are, "How does a work stand compared to its source? Is it dependant on the source text, or can it stand alone?" West Side Story stands alone when compared to Romeo and Juliet, telling a similar tale while the updated story appeals to modern audiences with themes including immigration and racism. Through the analysis of the texts through ideas of Adrian Poole, Henry Jenkins, and other adaptation scholars, West Side Story proves to be a standalone adaptation of Romeo and Juliet. Oral Presentation Number: C41 "I love you, but you don't know what you're talking about." Perception of Honesty and Familial Relationships in Wes Anderson Films Graham Hegstad, Alyssa Dalen In Wes Anderson's films, communication between characters plays a dramatic role in the outcomes of relationships and the storylines of the films themselves. Thematically, Anderson uses honesty, or the lack of honesty, to define interpersonal relationships among and between many characters. This perception of "radical honesty" creates a dynamic of distrustful and dysfunctional communication that affects the bonds made between characters and drives the action forward. In the family setting, the relationships between parents and children are central to the storylines of many Anderson films. Anderson portrays a host of poor parenting examples, all of which affect the actions of their children. In, Moonrise Kingdom, The Royal Tenenbaums, The Darjeeling Limited, and The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, subpar parenting is prevalent, leading to unhealthy decisions that penetrate many aspects of the young characters' lives. The way parents care for their children is known in the field of psychology to influence how children interact and form relationships of their own. The relationships between parents and children, along with the bonds between all characters, continue to be major thematic components of Anderson's films. Oral Presentation Number: C42 Uncovering the Importance of Social and Familial Relationships in the Films of Wes Anderson Rachel Rose, Andrew Johnson From the humble beginnings of Bottle Rocket to the extravagance of The Grand Budapest Hotel, Wes Anderson portrays father figures as prominent examples of the importance of interpersonal relationships. Human connection is often overlooked as a necessity. It is something that can be taken for granted and often misunderstood. Anderson acknowledges this emotional connection in his films through incompetent, absent, and substitute fathers. One such example is between Chas and his negligent father, Royal, in The Royal Tenenbaums. Anderson uses complicated relationships to be reconciled later on, in order to reach a state of self-reflection and, eventually, healing. Instances such as Chas and Royal are not uncommon. Other complicated relationships are portrayed in Anderson's films Moonrise Kingdom, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, and The Grand Budapest Hotel. Such examples support Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs; the theory that points to the importance of love and belonging in order to reach a place of self-actualization. Overall, the importance of interpersonal relationships in the characters' lives will be explored in order to generalize the findings to real human experience. One primary resource of our findings involves fatherhood dynamics, such as how an absent or incompetent father can impact the child's character and development, as well as how a substitute father figure can be integrated into and affect a child's life. Using the father figures in Anderson's films and other connections between characters, the importance of social relationships will be further explored. Oral Presentation Number: C43 Parmenides, Heraclitus, and Hugh Everett: A Comparative Reconciliation of Ontological Inconsistency Caleb Camrud In contemporary physics, perhaps the largest current conflict is the apparent contradiction which exists between quantum mechanics and general relativity. Not only do these disciplines hold conflicting predictions about the future of the universe, but their ontologies in particular refute one another. General relativity suggests that spacetime exists as an independent entity, and purports that all things may be dependent on its curvature. It also suggests a four-dimensional perspective of the universe, incorporating a deterministic view of the future, presuming all future events to be part of a singular whole. Quantum mechanics, on the other hand, suggests no independent spacetime, with all things being depicted by wave functions alone. It includes within these wave functions an inherent indeterminacy about the state of things, and most importantly the concept that the future is currently indeterminate. This paper seeks to philosophically reconcile these two conflicting ontologies, and looks first toward the Atomists' reconciliation of the ancient ontologies of Heraclitus and Parmenides to generate a possible methodology for achieving such a solution. This process, when combined with the modern interpretations of general relativity as Parmenidean and quantum mechanics as Heraclitean, leads us to consider the universal wave function proposed by Hugh Everett as ontologically reconciling these two apparently inconsistent branches of contemporary physics. Oral Presentation Number: C44 Modern Use of Rhetorical Theories: A Rhetorical Analysis of Donald Trump's Speech Amarachi Nasa-Okolie The aim of this research is to use theories of rhetoric such as the situational model by Lloyd Bitzer and artistic proofs by Aristotle to analyse the speech given by Donald Trump on the 24th January, 2015. The research asserts that Donald Trump gives a new meaning to the artistic proofs (i.e. logos, pathos, ethos) as laid out by Aristotle and exposes the quasi-logic within his discourse. This research is particularly important for the field of Communications because it exposes the transforming power of theories i.e. how theories from the Greek period can be applied to understanding modern situations. For the project, I used the rhetorical situational model and the artistic proofs by Aristotle to construct my argument. Oral Presentation Number: C45 Re-Placing the English Classroom: A Justice-Oriented Place-Based Pedagogy Libby Hiller In 2003, David Gruenewald sought to address some common issues in an educational approach known as place-based education by proposing what he termed a "critical pedagogy of place," or a merging of critical pedagogy as described by Paulo Friere (1968) and place-based education developed by educational theorists such as David Sobel (1996). Gruenewald believes the two pedagogies can be mutually beneficial because of the intersectionality of race and the local environment. I propose justiceoriented place-based education to both clarify Gruenewald's meaning and to create a space for a restitution of local issues in a global context. Justice-Oriented Place-Based Pedagogy is an educational approach to enhance the teaching of a subject that immerses students in local engagement and global comparison through critical analyses of power structures that privilege some and disenfranchised others within the local culture, heritage, and bioregion. A justice-oriented place-based pedagogy roots student learning in a place within a global context from which concerns of placelessness in American Education can be addressed by preparing students for a complex world that is entangled in the ecological, political, cultural, and historical aspects of a place. My paper advocates for a critical placebased pedagogy by discussing the current issues that contribute to a sense of placelessness in American education, several educational approaches that have been used to solve these issues, the benefits to a critical place-based approach, and how and why it should be applied to the teaching of reading and writing. Oral Presentation Number: C46 Examining the Link Between Obesity, Metformin Treatment of Type II Diabetes, and Pancreatic Cancer Robin Fettig, Chloe Bakkum Recent research has suggested a significant link between obesity, Type II Diabetes, and pancreatic cancer but conclusive links between these three factors are currently unknown. The gut microbiome has been one link that has not been researched yet and it may play a greater role in this connection than previously thought. One of the most common treatments for individuals with Type II Diabetes is metformin. Metformin, one of the most commonly prescribed Type II Diabetes medication in America, has been previously determined to have a negative impact on the gut microbiome, often leading to gut dysbiosis. In addition, people who develop Type II Diabetes are often obese which also puts them at an increased risk for gut dysbiosis. When these two factors are brought together, it can cause an abnormally large population of harmful bacteria to harbor within the gut microbiome. One of the more prevalent harmful bacteria that resides normally in small amounts within the gut is H. pylori and in large colonizations, can cause the inflammation of neighboring organs, specifically the pancreas. If the pancreas becomes inflamed for prolonged periods of time, chronic pancreatitis can develop and is a well known risk factor for developing pancreatic cancer. When examining this domino-effect of problems, it suggests that obesity and metformin-induced gut dysbiosis may be responsible for the increased risk of developing pancreatic cancer in individuals with metformin-treated Type II Diabetes. Oral Presentation Number: C47 Childhood Obesity and Mass Media: How Memorable Messages Impact Childhood Obesity Campaigns Meredith Gruenes In today’s society, we are seeing an epidemic of obesity throughout the nation; not only in adults, but we as a nation is also seeing this epidemic in children as well. “Obesity among children and adolescents in the United States has tripled in the past three decades and nearly one in five 12–19-yearold adolescents in the United States is obese,” (Ogden, Carroll, Curtin, Lamb, & Flegal, 2010; Ogden, Carroll, Kit, & Flegal, 2012). Because of this epidemic, there is now a rise in childhood obesity campaigns from First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move to The Campaign to End Obesity (CEO). While parts of these campaigns work to an extent, they still have a long way to go in order to combat childhood obesity. This study is being researched to understand how childhood obesity campaigns can use memorable messages to prevent and treat childhood obesity in America. Previous research has stated that “the use of mass media campaigns to change health-related beliefs, attitudes, and behavior is a common and often effective public health strategy,” (Wakefield, Loken, & Hornik, 2010). This study uses a qualitative research design to explore memorable messages that are used in Childhood Obesity campaigns. Participants of this study will first be shown three different anti-obesity campaign videos. Once shown, participants will be interviewed based on their reaction to the three videos. We anticipate that the result from this study will show that anti-obesity campaigns are not successful in using memorable messages to help combat childhood obesity. Oral Presentation Number: C48 Inflammation Induced PDAC Mediated by Diabetes Jackson Barber, Jack Will, Cassie Roeder, Sarah Hildebrandt It is well known that type 2 diabetes and obesity greatly increase the risk of pancreatic cancer, but the mechanism of how and why this occurs remains unclear. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the most common type of pancreatic cancer and has a very high mortality rate. In 80-90% of PDAC patients there is a mutation in the KRAS gene. We hypothesize that chronic inflammation due to obesity, causes the activation of KRAS. The activation of KRAS also increases the production of inflammatory mediators. These inflammatory mediators further contribute to KRAS activation. This increase in Ras activity then initiates pancreatic tumorigenesis. Hyperinsulinemia and hyperglycemia that are commonly associated with type 2 diabetes cause the proliferation of an already established tumor. Hyperinsulinemia promotes mitogenicity, while hyperglycemia provides additional energy for cancerous cells. Our new hypothesis is innovative in linking inflammation induced pancreatic cancer with progression stemming from diabetes and obesity. In our hypothesis, obesity and diabetes each independently contribute to the progression of PDAC. If clinicians take into account the KRAS activity biomarker for pancreatic cancer as well as the hyperglycemic and hyperinsulinemic conditions of PDAC, advances can be made to prevent, diagnose, and better treat PDAC. Oral Presentation Number: C49 Dorothee Soelle: A Political Theology of Active Resistance in the Age of Trump Rachel Crippen Born in 1929 in Germany, Dorothee Soelle was raised in a world that stood on the verge of the second World War. Shaped by childhood experiences in her home country, Soelle's theology was also deeply impacted by her experiences bearing witness to injustices practiced by governments around the world. Offering a framework for peaceful resistance in the face of unjust authority, the theology of Dorothee Soelle is especially relevant in today's political and social context. Dorothee Soelle's writing and activism present a theology of resistance which demands to be used as a tool for dismantling and transforming political structures which practice injustice. Where the Christian tradition teaches that its followers ought to be more like Christ, Soelle's Christology takes that mandate a step further into the realm of political activism. For Soelle, "Christ is a political Christ, historical in opposing institutional power; his presence evokes imagination, freedom to risk, and brings liberation."• Demanding the participation of the church in confronting voices which enable and promote violence, Soelle gives language to the kind of holistic, active resistance which she posits all Christians are divinely mandated to participate in; a resistance against temporal authorities who suppress dissent, mock peace, and pose a significant threat to the lives of the most vulnerable. This form of resistance does not advocate divisiveness, rather it is centered around the truth of unity that is found in the practice of mysticism; a resistance founded out of a belief in the ultimate oneness of all living beings. Oral Presentation Number: C50 Use of Symbolism in the Refutation of Patriarchic God-Speech Helen Hill She Who Is by Elizabeth Johnson is a book focused on feminist aspects of Christian theology. Johnson defines feminist theology generally in the first chapter as a theology that is based on the experiences of Christian women serving to assert the humanity of women and the legitimacy of their connections with the divine, independent from "personal identification with men." As the movement has picked up momentum, feminist theology has "uncover[ed] and criticiz[ed]" the sexism found within the church, reiterating women's equal "image and likeness of God." Throughout the book, Johnson draws on these female experiences, both from historical contexts and from present-day events. She focuses on the female image as it is portrayed in Scripture and in the Early-Christian Movement, along with its application to God and the Trinity. She deconstructs these different examples of feminine images, recognizing any potential or already-present implications of them while breaking down and refuting the seemingly perpetual patriarchy present in the church. Overall, Johnson explains the effects that different theological symbols have had on Christian life, specifically the lives of women who have been marginalized by the androcentric speech used to talk about God. This patriarchal God-speech that, over the centuries, has marginalized women will be refuted using the images of Spirit (or "shekinah"), mother, and Wisdom (or Sophia), basing much of this on the language of Johnson: "The symbol of God functions." Oral Presentation Number: C51 Contemporary Embroidery: A Feminist Collaboration Between Generations of Women Katelyn Mitchell It is a common misconception that embroidery is an outdated craft that is really only practiced by grandmothers. In reality, the second and third waves of feminism brought with their vision of equality a revival of crafts such as embroidery and instilled the practices of such crafts in the younger generations of women. These women took the art of embroidery in a completely new direction from where it had been in the past, and created innovative pieces that challenged the medium of embroidery's place in the art/craft divide, a divide that fuels gender inequality in the art world. The works of contemporary embroidery artists utilize various techniques to get a feminist message across, most notably, the reuse of vintage materials to create a dialogue between generations of women past and present. Because of the historical connotations of femininity associated with the craft, embroidery has become the chosen medium to create discussion inducing juxtapositions between medium and subject matter. Through the analysis of art pieces by contemporary feminist embroidery artists, such as Orly Cogan, and readings of art historical scholarship, this paper aims to bring awareness to an often unheard of topic and discuss some of the techniques that make this medium ideal for sharing feminist ideas. Oral Presentation Number: C52 Sylvia Sleigh and the Male Nude Ivory Clark For centuries, the Western art tradition had at its center the genre of the female nude. Within this genre, the female form was objectified and debased under the oppression of the male gaze. The way in which female nudes had been conventionally rendered revealed the patriarchy present within the Western art community. These are the issues that Sylvia Sleigh, a feminist artist known for her portraits of friends during the 1970s, subverts in her work. By appropriating the female nude paintings of famous male artists (such as Diego Velazquez, Jean Ingres, and Titian), and replacing the female figures in them with renderings of her male friends, Sleigh shocks the viewer into questioning the validity of established Western gender roles. The power relationship present between men and women, subject and artist, becomes disrupted in her work and highlights the issues of misogyny not only within Western art, but society at large. Sylvia Sleigh persistently appropriates canonical paintings and "feminizes" the nude male body in an effort to challenge the dominance of the male gaze and promote equality between the erotic representations of men and women. Oral Presentation Number: C53 Defining Student Success in Education Jonathan Sutton With the intent of pursuing an educational framework in which all students succeed, the purpose of this research is to examine and critique the current guidelines for student success, approaching the issue with different ideological positions and proposing solutions to improve our current educational system and guidelines for success. I look at current standards, policy, and implementation surrounding the goals of our education system to propose solutions that can be implemented within the current system. Oral Presentation Number: C54 Beauty, Strength, and Speed Do Not Come in One Size/Athletic Success and Female Body-Shaming Lauren Arnold "I was at the Olympic Games winning medals and I still doubted my image. I doubted what I looked like.. . . I was always compared to Nastia Luken my teammate who was six inches taller, long and lean, and flexible, and I was what [the media] would describe as bulky, stocky, powerful, too big, too short, and too fat" (Shawn Johnson, Olympic Gymnast). Whether at Olympic, collegiate, or high school levels, female athletes with muscular builds often struggle under the weight of cultural expectations for femininity/thinness. Media criticism directed at Shawn Johnson, and the subsequent self-doubt she experienced, exemplifies this trend. This criticism highlights the problem of body-shaming that pervades the world of women's sports. To better understand and address this problem, we need to ask: What female body types are deemed acceptable within specific sports and in the broader U.S. culture? How does the media project and normalize female body-shaming? What are some specific examples of body-shaming in women's sports? Based on an exploration of these questions through scholarly research and interviews with Concordia's female athletes, this paper argues that within America's image based culture, female athletes with larger, muscular builds, are often subjected to body shaming critiques despite their athletic achievements. Oral Presentation Number: C55 Interfaith Understanding and Cooperation: The Enhancement of Christian Faith by Buddhist Ideas Lindsay Schneider The increasing religious diversity in Western society creates growing debate that spills over into college communities. Since in college there is for many students a heightened sense of religious difference, there is, for some, a great temptation to judge and reject those who are religiously different is plaguing the minds of countless college students. The need for interfaith cooperation is exemplified by many theologians, authors, and leaders, who exhibit the benefits of learning from different relationships with those affiliating with different religions. Paul Knitter, a theologian, exemplifies how learning from a different religion can enhance one's own religious identity. Knitter studied Buddhist practices and ideas and found that learning from another faith helped him become stronger in his own Christian faith and identity. My research focused on Paul Knitter's book, Without Buddha, I Could Not Be a Christian, which illuminated Knitter's journey of strengthening his Christian identity and faith while learning and studying Buddhist ideas and practices. My research also utilized a variety of sources that provided background information about the interfaith movement and the increasing need for interfaith in today's world. I found that Paul Knitter's work represents the wisdom and potential of the interfaith movement by showing how Christian faith can be enhanced through its engagement with Buddhism. Ultimately, my research illuminates the necessity for the interfaith movement in today's society and how one's religious identity can be enriched and empowered when one is engaged in interfaith cooperation and dialogue. Oral Presentation Number: C56 Diocese of Crookston Faith Development Assessment Program Brett Hettenbaugh, Ciara Duffy-Gideon Research in recent decades has shown that increasing numbers of young adults and adolescents are disaffiliating from religious organizations. This study examined religious and spiritual attitudes among adolescent Catholics from a number of parishes across an entire Catholic diocese. Previous research has investigated prayer and worship practice, attitudes towards religious organizations and activities and spiritual well-being. This study investigated these variables in light of participants' belief in a personal relationship with God. From the 288 valid surveys, regression analysis revealed that personal prayer, denominational participation, and parish denominational demonstration were significant predictors of students' degree of personal relationship with God. Oral Presentation Number: C57 Understanding Grief and Bereavement in a Christian Community: The Disciples' Reactions to the Coming of Christ in John 20 Quentin Markfor The following essay examines the twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John, specifically how the body of Jesus Christ positively aids the grief journey of the major disciples. The essay first presents definitions of grief and bereavement and then focuses on major themes of the Gospel of John and how the Gospel stands from the rest including the story of the Apostle Thomas and the theme of evangelism found within the Gospel. This paper concludes by finding that the body of Jesus Christ and their interactions with the risen Christ aids the disciples in how they journey through their personal grief and bereavement processes. Throughout the argument there are two main themes regarding grief that are present and illustrated through examining the text. The first is that weeping and grieving openly should be a more widely accepted process and that second is that wanting a physical body to grieve over, that is having proof before faith, is also accepted within the community of disciples and should be a more commonly accepted practice. Oral Presentation Number: C58 Landfill Leachate: What is It and What to Do with It Grete Oanes This project focused on finding a more sustainable way to dispose of the leachate that is generated at the Clay County landfill. Currently, the landfill is transporting its leachate to the City of Fargo's Waste Water Treatment Plant multiple times a day which is expensive and damaging to the environment. Finding a new way to dispose of the county's leachate would be beneficial to the community. The objectives of this project were to research potential options, analyze which would be best based on the county's needs, and give my personal recommendation. To find a potential solution, I researched what different options are currently being use and narrowed it down to which would be feasible for Clay County based on some key criteria that needed to be considered when evaluating leachate disposal options. I also visited several different sites to learn about what happens both at the landfill and at different waste water treatment plants where leachate is treated. After this the options were narrowed down to two different categories: onsite and offsite. From here, I went into further exploration of the pros and cons of each option based on the criteria that was created earlier. The option that was found to be the most sustainable and cost efficient was a system called Leachbuster which functions similar to reverse osmosis with a more active and aggressive system for treating water producing a nominally pure sample of water at the end. Oral Presentation Number: C59 Insiders, Outsiders, and Packsackers in Ely, Minnesota: Ideology, Community, Environmental Legislation and the Struggle to Find Common Ground Kelsey Dodge Today, Ely's community is facing division between two groups: those that wish to protect the wilderness surround Ely with heavy regulation and those that wish to use the area to provide work in the form of mining. This research looks at the history of the conflict between environmental advocates and Ely residents by examining how important environmental legislative changes were conceived and how those changes impacted Ely's lifestyle. Research indicates that the tension between advocates and residents today stem from past feelings of mistrust and aversion earned by both sides during the stressful transitions induced by the Wilderness Act of 1964 and BWCA Wilderness Act of 1978. In order for the animosity between the two groups to hopefully fade, advocates and residents must work together to find common ground and develop new ideas that combine freedom and responsibility in the wilderness. Oral Presentation Number: C60 Exploring the Intersections Between Climate Change and Reproductive Justice Jessica Shamdas, Grete Oanes Our interdisciplinary research is focused on the relationship between two different discourses, stemming from environmental and sociological realms, and analyzing how to connect and bring them together. Recent studies reveal a key contributing factor to climate change in addition to increased greenhouse gas emissions, is human population growth. In light of this, we are studying population growth as an environmental issue and the role that reproductive justice has in this discussion. The dichotomy between them has historically led to disunion, but research indicates that they are closely interrelated. Through our research, we have examined various literature sources regarding both topics in order to bridge the gap between them and create a framework for future dialogue, as well as investigated the implications this may have on society and the environment. In addition, we have interviewed local professional involved in both fields to gain their perspective. Results have demonstrated a lack of awareness and discussion between both topics in the community. Therefore, by examining both these environmental and reproductive justice issues, we hope to extend our research to the larger community by discussing the intersectionality between them and how it may be incorporated into education or activism. We believe this topic is important to the growing climate crisis and may provide an opportunity for us to serve as global models in the environmental sustainability movement. Oral Presentation Number: C61 Satellite Development for Deep Space Navigation and Solar Flare Observation Luke Granlund The University of Minnesota - Twin Cities SmallSat Team is developing two CubeSats for X-ray and gamma ray characterization to fulfill two missions. The first mission is to characterize gamma-rays from gamma ray bursts emitted by celestial sources that have the potential to be used as deep space navigational sources. The second mission is to characterize hard X-rays emitted during solar flares to increase the understanding of particle acceleration taking place in the sun during the solar flares. Over the past two years, two prototype CubeSats have been developed and flown on a high altitude balloon to prove the hardware in a near-space environment. In this process, the author developed the software to operate the prototypes. The software was responsible for taking in readings from the sensors, detectors, and clocks in the prototype and turning it in to data that could be saved to memory or transmitted over radio. For both prototypes, the software was written in C, but differing underlying architectures required different approaches. Lab testing has shown that the detector can successfully characterize X-rays and gamma-rays, but the balloon flights have given critical insight into the improvements that need to be made, such as better shielding and changes to the structure and mounting, to improve the detector to handle the background noise and interference of a real-world environment. Oral Presentation Number: C62 Nomadism & Characterization of Setting in Wes Anderson Films Sean Zimny, Samantha Kise Not everyone settles down and has a normal family life with a house, a spouse, and children. Some people spend their lives in a constant state of motion, sort of like Newton's laws "they are not acted on by an outside force", not pushed to stay in one place. The protagonists in Wes Anderson's films tend to take part in this nomadic, transient lifestyle. Anderson's characters express this nomadism and transience through their connections with hotels as "living spaces" particularly Zero, Royal Tenenbaum, and Jack Whitman. Nomadic tendencies are rooted in identity, and we see this struggle with identity through these characters. Nomadic tendencies are also related to location and how Anderson portrays setting in his films. Star Wars has the Death Star. The Shawshank Redemption has Shawshank Prison. Jurassic Park has Jurassic Park. No one does it better than Wes Anderson. Does what exactly? Wes Anderson essentially makes the locations and settings of his films their own entity. As a filmmaker, Anderson gives personality and profound characterization to the places, locations, and settings of his films. This presentation explores the characterization and personification of the settings and locations within Wes Anderson films, using examples from many of the movies in Anderson's filmography, his specific use of colors, his use of stop-motion techniques, his usage of the "doll-house" technique in filming the settings, and how the settings and locations in Anderson's films can in fact tell the audience a great deal about the central characters. Oral Presentation Number: C63 Origins Star Wars Thomas Froland When we think of Star Wars and its beginning we think of the classic 1977 movie later renamed A New Hope. But contrary to popular belief, this was not the definite origin of the iconic franchise. In my project focused on literary adaptions I analyze two of the three major proceeding drafts to Star Wars to explore how they influenced the final cut and how the legendary film could have been very different. Using "The Star Wars: First Draft" by George Lucas and Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker novel by Alan Dean Foster I put the galaxy far, far away under critical lenses I have studied in the Literary Afterlives Credo 326 class to discover a new perspective of looking at the first installment of the original trilogy. Themes touched on will include imperialism, the patriarchy, realworld parallels, and the topic of science fiction and its place in the "literary canon." POSTER SESSIONS PRESENTATIONS Poster Presentation Number: P01 Comparing Effects of Roads on Native and Invasive Species in Prairie Habitats Olivia Hamilton, Talia Dalzell, Sara Whiteman Previous research has shown that the abundance of invasive species is higher than that of native species near roads in a given area. However, a large majority of these studies have focused on the interaction of the species near roads in very urbanized areas, such as cities. Prairies are important to many ecosystems in the North Dakota and Minnesota landscapes. Therefore, we wanted to test if roads have the same effect on the invasive Wormwood Absinthe plant, Artemisia absinthium, and native Yellow Coneflower, Ratibida pinnata, in prairies as they do in urban areas. The prairies near the Long Lake field station resemble typical prairies which are undisturbed by humans. They are very diverse and provide a niche for the many organisms that live there. Two transects were measured in prairie fields from both gravel and paved roads. Data indicated that non-native Wormwood counts increased in transects taken closer to the road, compared to the transects in the middle of the field. The native coneflower species was found in higher counts, on average, in the middle of the field. This suggests that the Wormwood may be outcompeting the Coneflower. The spread of non-native species could infringe on the survival of the species native to the area, which could result in the reduction of the area's biodiversity. If Wormwood Absinthe outcompetes Yellow Coneflowers to the point of extinction of the Coneflower, a homogenous landscape would dramatically alter the prairie ecosystem. Poster Presentation Number: P02 Burn Year Effects on Coneflower Biomass Luke Teigen, Michael Solc Fire often activates the recycling of nutrients in terrestrial systems. Plants that encounter fire more frequently are more likely to utilize the nutrients to grow larger the next growing season. Yellow coneflower (Ratibida pinnata) thrives in soil recently burned due to nutrient regeneration. For our experiment, we investigated how fire affected biomass of the yellow coneflower. We hypothesized that the biomass of the yellow coneflower will be greater in the fields that were burned most recently. Ten yellow coneflower plants were collected from prairie units at the Long Lake Field Station. These units differ in how long they have undergone a prescribed fire treatment. Plants were collected at least ten meters from roads to avoid possible influence from road runoff. Plants were dried for two weeks and leaves were removed to eliminate water storage. Masses of stems and cones were determined using a hanging scale. Burning of prairies had an effect on plant biomass when comparing to an unburned control unit (p<0.05). However, Tukey post-hoc tests did not reveal a difference in plant mass between two prairie units burned in 2013 and 2014. Our hypothesis is only supported by comparisons involving the unburned field. Possible errors could have resulted from lack of a desiccator. Future research could involve doing experiments regarding biomass and burn year but with invasive species, as well as examining the effects of prescribed fire on reproductive structures of plants. Poster Presentation Number: P03 Urban Green Spaces: Rethinking Backyards Using the EcoHouse Jenna Januschka, Ben Stubbs, Sam Ferguson Habitat fragmentation, agricultural practices, and development have been the main contributing factors to the loss of prairie within the state. Several species that are of special concern or threatened within Minnesota rely on native prairies, such as the Western Prairie Fringed Orchid, Dakota Skipper, Baird's Sparrow, etc., and native prairies serve as critical refuges for pollinating species. With an increasing amount of people living in predominantly urban areas, restoration within urban areas can provide a unique opportunity to help educate non-rural communities on native plant species and simultaneously provide habitat for pollinator species. The purpose of this project is to create a native, pollinatorfriendly garden in the backyard of Concordia College's EcoHouse. The purpose is also to determine how best to incorporate the local community while educating the public on native plant communities and how to support them in an urban environment. The goal of the project is to turn the backyard of the EcoHouse into a site demonstrating the attractiveness, viability, and benefits of landscaping with native, pollinator-friendly plants in residential areas of the Fargo-Moorhead area. Poster Presentation Number: P04 Consumer Confusion: Expiration Labels Leading to Food Waste Emily Pothast, Rachel Kmett The government agencies USDA and EPA have set a goal to reduce food waste by 50 percent by the year 2030. Currently 21% of food loss is derived from the consumer. Multiple studies have indicated consumer confusion when interpreting food expiration dates which has resulted in food loss. Food waste in the United States has lead to efforts to promote a better understanding of date labels, such as "Best by," "Sell by," and "Use by" as a possible way to eliminate food waste. Manufacturers provide food dates to help consumers decide when food is at its best quality; however, it is not an indicator of the product's microbiological safety causing people to throw out food before necessary. The United States does not require open date labeling for most food products, in comparison to the stricter regulations of the European Union. In conclusion, new proposals will be recommended to consolidate date labels, one to indicate safety and another for quality. Poster Presentation Number: P05 The Implications of Polyculture Agricultural Systems in a Changing Climate Ben Glogoza, Tyler Schneider, Liam Nuhring The effects of pesticide utilization and application in conjunction with traditional monoculture type crops has broad and severe implications for the farmer, the consumer, and the health of the environment, particularly in a changing climate. Current farming practices utilize high amounts of insecticides in order to repel pests and other unwanted elements that are harmful to monoculture agricultural systems. It is hypothesized that the implementation of polycultural techniques will contribute in a positive way to combating climate change and creating more sustainable farming practices. According to recent research, efforts to introduce polyculture agricultural solutions into mainstream farming systems, as well as on residential and commercial property, has been met with significant success in attempts to reduce the amount of chemicals applied to crops and private properties. This study aims to identify the overall benefits and drawbacks of introducing polyculture solutions, through a meta-analysis of popular and relevant research. A review of the current literature on the effects polyculture has on agricultural systems was undertaken with an emphasis on the effects polyculture systems have upon insect populations, plant health, the reduction of insecticide use, and climate change effects within agricultural systems. Findings from each source were then synthesized into a coherent whole and used to analyze the effects of polyculture systems and determine if its practice is a viable means of reducing the negative effects of monoculture systems and human-induced climate change. Poster Presentation Number: P06 Increase in the Protein Levels of an Anti-sprouting Factor and Integrin Receptor, Thy-1, with Age in the Supraoptic Nucleus: Implications for a Role in Collateral Axonal Sprouting Talia Dalzell, Nadia Toumeh, Molly Pignato It has been demonstrated that a young brain can overcome injury by axonal sprouting; however, it is well understood that the mature brain has a reduced capacity for functional or structural reorganization following injury. To this point, following injury, uninjured axons from the supraoptic nucleus (SON) undergo collateral axonal sprouting in the 35-day-old rat, but not in 125-day-old rats. Therefore, it appears that within the SON there are age-related changes that preclude the older rat from recovering following injury. Cell adhesion molecules have been previously demonstrated to play a role in axonal sprouting, both in a stimulatory and inhibitory manner. Thus, we compared protein levels of the integrin family of cell adhesion molecules and the integrin receptor, thy-1, in 35- and 125-day-old SON using Western blot analysis. Our results demonstrated that in the 125-day-old SON, there was a significant increase in thy-1 protein levels, which is an anti-sprouting factor that interacts with integrins. Conversely, there were no changes in the protein levels of alpha v, beta 3, or beta 5 integrin when comparing the sprouting (35-day-old rat) and non-sprouting SON (125-day-old rat). Additionally, there were no changes in protein levels of thy-1 or the integrin proteins in the neural lobe (posterior pituitary), which is the site of axonal sprouting. Our results suggest that the observed increase in thy-1 protein levels in the SON with age may contribute to an environment that prevents the collateral axonal sprouting in the SON of an older rat. Poster Presentation Number: P07 Silica Nanoparticles De-acidify Endolysosomes and Increase Amyloidgenesis in Primary Cultured Neurons Yan Ye, Liang Hui, Hannah Wollenzien, Leo Lakpa, Xuesong Chen, Yuqian Xing, Julia Zhao Silica nanomaterials (SiNPs) are increasingly being used as carrier molecules in consumer products and in biomedicine. Because nanomaterials are endocytosed and because endolysosomes are important sites for amyloidogenesis we tested the hypothesis that SiNPs may change biological functions of endolysosomes including beta-amyloid (ABeta) formation. In this study, we found that following endocytosis of SiNPs into primary cultured hippocampal neurons, ABeta1-40 secretion was significantly increased and that this increase was accompanied by elevated protein expressions of NAPP and BACE-1. In addition, we found that SiNPs caused rapid deacidification of neuronal endolysosomes and that this increase in pH persisted for at least 24 hours after SiNP application. Furthermore, application of the lysosomotrophic agent glycyl-L-phenylalanine 2-naphthylamide (GPN) induced lysosomal calcium release and that this release was reduced by SiNPs. Moreover, two agents that caused endolysosome acidification, MLSA-1 (TRPML1 agonist) or CGS21680 (adenosine A2A receptor agonist), significantly decreased SiNP-induced deacidification of endolysosomes and ABeta140 generation. Collectively, our findings suggest that SiNP-induced deacidification of endolysosomes might be mechanistically linked to increased amyloidogenesis and such findings provide a cautionary note about using certain NPs because of potentially negative effects on neurons and the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disease where ABeta is implicated. Poster Presentation Number: P08 Investigating the Molecular Partners of VISTA Signaling Logan Jacobs The immune system is regulated by co-stimulatory and co-inhibitory ligands and receptors that give T cells the second signal for activation. These ligands balance positive and negative co-stimulation to respond to foreign bodies, but also inhibit autoimmune responses. One of these B7 ligands is the Vdomain Ig suppressor of T cell activation (VISTA) expressed on antigen presenting cells (APCs) and T cells. VISTA has been shown to suppress T cell activation and its absence increases susceptibility to autoimmunity. However, not much is known about its molecular interactions such as the receptor or intercellular signaling pathway. Considering the potential role of VISTA in autoimmune diseases, characterizing the signaling pathway could provide future targets for anti-autoimmune prevention or therapy. Previous work utilized a BioID technique to identify proximal proteins with the cytoplasmic domain of VISTA molecule. A biotin ligase was fused onto the cytoplasmic tail of VISTA which biotinylated the proximal proteins. Biotinylated proteins were captured and identified through mass spectrometry; the results provided candidates for further study. One of the candidates Discs Large Homolog 1 (Dlg1) is a scaffolding protein that has been shown to be important in couple extracellular stimuli and intracellular signaling. Studies have also shown Dlg1 has a role in TCR signaling as a negative regulator of T cell proliferation. The important signaling functions are the result of its ability to interact with cytoskeletal regulators and signal transducers. These attributes make Dlg1 a worthy interacting candidate for interaction with the VISTA molecule in inducing a negative signaling cascade. Poster Presentation Number: P09 EphrinB1 Expression in Pediatric Leukemia Alexandra Hopkins In leukemia, normally developing hematopoietic precursors acquire a leukemogenic mutation early in differentiation, transforming hematopoietic stem cells into leukemic stem cells. This transformation results in a differentiation arrest that inhibits normal blood cell maturation but still allows rapid proliferation, leading to the build up of immature leukemia cell blasts. Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) and Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) are forms of pediatric leukemia that continue to have poor clinical outcomes despite aggressive treatment. EphrinB1, a receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), is part of a family of RTKs that modulate cell growth and immune mediated clearance of tumor cells. EphrinB1 in particular has recently been identified as a possible regulator of tumor suppression in AML. The objective of this study was to gather baseline expression of ephrinB1 in pediatric AML and ALL human cell lines, as well as measure how ephrinB1 expression changes over leukemic transformation in a mouse model. In part one of the experiment, bone marrow was harvested from mice, followed by a lineage depletion procedure to isolate the bone marrow progenitors. An ex vivo transduction of leukemic oncogenes into the lineage negative bone marrow was used to create a leukemic mouse model. In part two, the pediatric leukemia human cell lines were maintained. cDNA was synthesized from both the mouse model cells and human cell lines, then ephrinB1 expression was quantified using RT-qPCR and SYBR green for amplification detection. Poster Presentation Number: P10 Undergraduate Research on Undergraduate Research Adam Kessler In today's global economy, employers are asking higher education establishments to place more emphasis on developing "skills such as critical thinking, complex problem-solving, communication, and applying knowledge to real world settings"• (Hart Research Associates, 2013, p.7). Recent studies on undergraduate research have demonstrated student gains in these skills. It has been found that, compared to less active pedagogies, undergraduate research is more likely to meet the needs of STEM workforce development and that undergraduate research is associated with gains in creativity, problem solving and innovation. To contribute to the body of research on undergraduate research, and to better understand the impact of our own programming, this research utilized self-report survey data to determine the effectiveness of undergraduate research at Concordia in providing students with the personal and intellectual gains needed to succeed in graduate and professional life. This project focuses on alumni perspectives of the summer research program at Concordia, however, it also compares current student and alumni gains in personal development, intellectual skills, and skills related to research or a career. Analysis of the summer research survey data revealed that students report significant personal and intellectual gains, as well as significant gains in skills connected to research and careers for both current students and alumni. Poster Presentation Number: P11 Morphological and Biochemical Variation in Elodea spp. in their Native and Invasive Ranges Rebecca Dahl, Ruth Sexton Elodea nuttallii (Hydrocharitaceae) and E. canadensis are two aquatic plants common throughout North America. They provide valuable shelter and grazing opportunities for fish, muskrats and waterfowl in lake or river ecosystems, but can also become overgrown nuisances in their native ranges. In Europe, E. canadensis and E. nuttallii have different invasion histories, which may have created morphological and biochemical changes as each responded to the unique circumstances of their invasion. In some cases, E. canadensis is considered to be an environmentally harmless naturalized species, whereas E. nuttallii is often considered a nuisance species. Three populations of E. canadensis and E. nuttallii from Minnesota and France were observed for morphological and chemical differences. E. canadensis was found to have greater biomass, leaf area, and leaf width than E. nuttallii. Understanding differences that exist in the invasive and native ranges will help determine whether there are variables that can be exploited in controlling invasive plants. Poster Presentation Number: P12 Effect of Plant Density and Diversity on Nutrient Retention in Soil David Supinski, Wyatt Lautt The importance of rain gardens is found in their ability to filter storm water before it contaminates natural water supplies and also to collect and return it to the water table before it floods man-made water management systems. A rain garden's ability to handle large amounts of water greatly depends on the type of soil present and the types of plants found in the rain garden. To investigate the effectiveness of the rain garden at Long Lake Field Station, we measured plant diversity and density and compared it to nitrogen and phosphorous concentrations in the soil. We conducted tests on three different sites to isolate the variable of vegetation density and diversity. We found the rain garden retained a higher concentration of nitrogen and phosphorous in conjunction with its greater plant variety and richness. The pseudo rain garden, selected for its comparable vegetation profile contained high levels of nutrients also while the grass site was measured to be significantly lower. Considering the rain garden showed the highest plant diversity and density and reported the greatest concentrations of nutrients, our results support our hypothesis that higher plant density and diversity have a positive effect on nutrient retention in soil. These results can be applied to further research and to justify the use of rain gardens to improve environmental conditions. Poster Presentation Number: P13 NADPH Inhibition of Cytoplasmic Glutamate Dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli Taylor Crothers The goal of this research was to uncover some of the regulatory effects that alter the way E. coli glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) functions. Specifically, the effects of NADPH, which is a product of the oxidative deamination reaction catalyzed by GDH. This was done by using constant concentrations of GDH, water, MOPS buffer, NADP+, with variable concentrations of NADPH, and glutamate. This was analyzed at both half-saturated and saturated NADP+ at both pH 8.0 and pH 9.0. It was found that NADPH exhibits a mix of competitive and non-competitive inhibition. Poster Presentation Number: P14 Ammonia Inhibition of Glutamate Binding on E. coli Glutamate Dehydrogenase Tatum Holt, Cullen Knowles, Jessica Warzecka Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) catalyzes the reversible oxidation-deamination reaction of Lglutamate to alpha-ketoglutarate (2-oxoglutarate) using NADP+ (Sharkey 2013). We examined the effect of ammonia on E. coli GDH over a wide range of ammonia concentrations. The LineweaverBurke plots displayed noncompetitive inhibition of ammonia on GDH. Poster Presentation Number: P15 Speciation of Neisseria Isolates Using the rplF Gene Coulton Dangerfield, Bethany Freeland, Madeline Gemuenden, Erika Grinde, Sarah Hildebrandt, Kailey Lamb, Scott Opatril, Erin Pennington, Isabella Stromberg, Kevin Wolfe The bacterial genus Neisseria includes the pathogens N. meningitidis and N. gonorrhoeae, as well as non-pathogenic species that are part of the healthy human microbiome. The presence of particular nonpathogenic Neisseria at pharyngeal and oral body sites has been correlated with protection against N. meningitidis, dental caries, and periodontitis. Nonpathogenic Neisseria are also being investigated for their ability to produce new antimicrobial agents. The goal of our project is to use a recently- developed genetic approach to accurately determine the species identity of 48 nonpathogenic strains of Neisseria from a Concordia College isolate collection. Previous speciation approaches relied on growth characteristics, biochemical testing, and analysis of the 16SrRNA gene. However, sequence analysis of the rplF gene, which encodes a ribosomal protein, has been shown to be a more reliable technique for neisserial speciation. We have extracted genomic DNA from the members of our isolate collection and successfully used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify rplF sequences from 47 of the 48 target strains. We have also implemented spin column and enzymatic techniques for PCR product purification and prepared highly purified products from nine of the target strains. Once rplF amplification and purification is complete, we will determine the DNA sequence of the genes and use bioinformatics tools to compare our sequences to the sequences of known Neisseria species in the Oxford Maiden Group Bacterial Isolate Genome Sequence database. Our speciation results will be utilized in future studies examining the pigmentation, antimicrobial activity, and other intercellular interactions displayed by different Neisseria. Poster Presentation Number: P16 Bioinformatic Identification of Cell-to-Cell Communication Molecules in Neisseria Species Scott Opatril, Bethany Freeland, Sarah Hildebrandt The genus Neisseria includes a diverse group of bacteria. Nonpathogenic Neisseria species are important components of the normal human microbiome, which contains over 700 bacterial species. N. meningitidis and N. gonorrhoeae are human pathogens. Some bacteria produce known signaling molecules that facilitate interspecies and intraspecies communication, however this is not well characterized in Neisseria species. The goal of this project is to determine if Neisseria contain known sequences involved in cell-to-cell communication. We used BLAST to search the genomes of 25 Neisseria species in the NCBI database for the translated amino acid sequences of genes involved in two distinct signaling systems. One communication method involves N-acyl homoserine. The genes involved in the production of N-acyl homoserine are luxR and luxI. No significant matches were identified. The second communication method we investigated involves the production of autoinducer2 (AI-2). This has previously been studied in N. meningitidis, but not in other Neisseria species. Two proteins involved in the biosynthesis of AI-2 are Pfs and LuxS and the proteins LuxP and LuxQ are receptors for AI-2. The pfs, luxS, and luxQ sequences were each found in the same 16/25 Neisseria species. The simultaneous presence of biosynthetic and receptor proteins may indicate that AI-2 is used for intraspecies communication in some Neisseria species. The remaining nine species that do not contain these sequences do not appear to use this system. These results can contribute to our understanding of bacterial communication in the human microbiome and provide possible insight into protection from pathogenic Neisseria. Poster Presentation Number: P17 Cultural Awareness in the Healthcare Field: Dignifying the Needs and Values of Muslim Patients Chelsey Petrich, Jessica Kongelf Cultural barriers can lead to challenges in providing optimal healthcare to patients of various ethnicities, religions and races. This research focused on how cultural differences of Muslim patients may create obstacles and confusion between the healthcare provider and the patient. The beliefs and values of Muslim patients can affect their behaviors within various healthcare settings and with various providers. A basic understanding of Muslim patients' needs can help providers offer culturally appropriate care. The most prevalent points of discord that were found throughout the sources utilized were language and communication barriers, the role of modesty in medicine, the restrictions on skin-toskin contact, and the dietary guidelines that can affect the administration of nutrition and medication. Following the general research conducted, interviews with various healthcare providers in the FargoMoorhead area were held in order to gain a better understanding of how this issue is handled locally. An interview with an Emergency Room Registered Nurse and a Doctor of Optometry were conducted via email. The perspectives and experiences given by these providers were consistent with the broader research conducted prior. Thorough communication and gaining a basic understanding of the values and beliefs of Muslim patients' needs can help eliminate any potential for embarrassment and give the patient dignity by respecting their needs. However, providers should be cautioned not to generalize or oversimplify the unique needs of each individual patient to avoid solidifying any adverse stigmas. Poster Presentation Number: P18 Underlying Cause of Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome Karsen Granning, Graham Hegstad, Andrew Johnson, Emma Chandler Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is a congenital disorder that affects the left side of the heart. The aorta, aortic valve, left ventricle, and mitral valve are underdeveloped and unable to pump blood throughout the body effectively. The underlying cause is unknown, but there is research that suggests that genetics could be the origin of this disorder. Two of the genes that are proposed as being a cause is the MYH6 and MYH7. The MYH6 gene encodes for myosin heavy chains prevalent in the atrium during development and the ventricle after birth. The MYH7 gene also encodes for myosin heavy chains prevalent in the ventricle during both development and adulthood. The underlying cause of HLHS is linked to mutations on the MYH6 and MYH7 genes located on the fourteenth chromosome. These mutations lead to improper development and function of the myosin heavy chains which result in the underdevelopment of the left side of the heart. A viable form of treating HLHS would be gene therapy on the developing fetus. Viruses and hematopoietic stem cells would be utilized to infiltrate and deliver the new DNA sequences would replace the defective code. Poster Presentation Number: P19 The Effect of Video Games on Aggression: Gamers vs Non-gamers Allison Chudy Video games have been a topic of discussion since their invention, especially the more violent ones. Researchers have been trying for years to figure out if violent video games cause violent or aggressive behavior. However, much of the research published only focus on adolescent boys, not adults or women. Most research also only focuses on the aggression itself, not the factors that could potentially cause variation. My research attempts to look into this question from a different angle by looking at differences between genders, types of gamers, and life satisfaction. I wanted to know how aggression was affected by gender, frequency of game play, and life satisfaction. The participants will be playing a frustrating video game and I will take measurements on their aggression levels pre and post game play and how satisfied with their lives they are. This is an ongoing project at the time of submission, but I am expecting to find that video games will raise aggressive affect temporarily, but the frequency of which one plays violent video games will not affect their life satisfaction. The second outcome I am expecting to finds is that people who don't play video games will have more temporary aggression than the people who play video games. The third outcome I am expecting to find minimal variation between the genders. Poster Presentation Number: P20 Immunization Hesitancy: Strategies for Professionals Jennifer Keibler, Reba Arberle, Grant Curtis, Taylor Gendreau Reducing child mortality has been identified as 1 of 8 Millennium Development Goals by the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Worldwide the under-five mortality rate has been reduced by two-thirds between 1990 and 2015. A large part of this success has been efficient vaccines to decrease preventable disease. Despite the success story of immunizations and cost-effectiveness for reducing childhood mortality and morbidity in the United States and worldwide, some parents continue to not vaccinate their children. The number one reason parents cite for not vaccinating their children is fear of adverse effects including disease contraction and autism. A literature review of research was undertaken, aimed at evaluating current research about parental immunization hesitancy and parental education in hopes of finding a proper educational strategy for health care providers as well as the need for further research. While there are several organizations, including the CDC and the Research Council of Norway, researching ways to decrease parental immunization hesitancy, there are few to no studies done by the nursing discipline. Some nursing research was found but focused on other topics such as: evidence-based practice of administration of the immunizations by distraction, and increasing immunization rates via school nurse programs. Nursing staff is often the ones administering immunizations as well as offering education, thus a model for consistent nursing interventions could be an efficient modality to further increase immunization rates and decrease the childhood mortality. Further nursing research could include trials of nursing staff utilizing some of the educational resources developed by the CDC and the Research Council of Norway or development of a nursing specific education protocol for immunizations. Education that begins prenatally for expectant parents could also greatly impact the rate of immunization among children. Poster Presentation Number: P21 Feminism in Saudi Arabia: The Struggle Between Tradition and Equal Rights Rosie Breimhurst Women's rights in Saudi Arabia are limited in comparison to many of its neighbors - yet many conservative Saudi Arabian women do not support the loosening of gender roles and restrictions, on the grounds that Saudi Arabia is the closest thing to a "pure Islamic nation" and is "under threat from the West". There are many common misconceptions about women's rights in Saudi Arabia, and Islam is not to blame for "gender segregation", it is the culture. Saudi Arabia is often presented as the poster child for women's oppression in Western media. It is very true that these women face difficulties in almost every facet of life, and many believe that the whole system of women's subordination to men needs to be dismantled. I spoke with Saudi Arabian artist Hend al-Monsour, who had an art exhibition during Symposium week. I asked her a few questions about life as a woman in Saudi Arabia as she knew it, and received some very interesting and informative answers. Saudi Arabia is a perfect place for those who share similar customs and values that are imposed by Sharia law, and that equality there is interpreted differently. There are many Saudi Arabian people, including women, who believe that the gender segregation they experience is just and equal under the Qu'ran. Many are content with their lives and believe they aren't entitled to more, while many other women believe the opposite and advocate for their rights. Poster Presentation Number: P22 To Oppress and Empower: The Paradox of the King James Bible Ali Froslie Published in 1611, the King James Version of the Bible (KJV) has been and remains one of the most popular English translations of the Bible. This text has been used to oppress and bless. For example, the King James translators interpreted the Greek word for "slave" with the milder word "servant," making, for some, slavery easier to defend as a biblical concept. However, the KJV has also been a symbol of hope and empowerment for the disenfranchised. In Old England, some thought English peasants unworthy to read the Bible, but the peasants nevertheless wished to read a Bible in their own language. The African American community in the USA also took the text that helped enslave them and turned it into a symbol of freedom, power, and knowledge. The Bible motivated many to seek literacy. The KJV, while owning to its role as the great oppressor, has also found a place as the great opportunity maker. Poster Presentation Number: P23 Music: A Meditative Form of Mindfulness Sarah Johnson In today's busy world, people are often caught up in the hectic pace of their daily lives, and their bodies, minds, and souls suffer. We become forgetful, tired, numb, and our entire well-being decreases. The lack of mindfulness in America today is staggering. However, with the curative power of music, our bodies and minds can be restored into a renewed sense of presence and well-being. Listening to music can alleviate our physical and mental suffering; thus music can play a meditative role in calming the body and mind. Scientific studies suggest that listening to music for even short periods of time can help regulate heartbeat, elevate mood, relieve anxiety, raise self-esteem, and increase equanimity. Making music has been shown to have similar meditative benefits, increasing a person's sense of presence and peace. In addition to consulting and analyzing scientific research on the meditative benefits of music, I also draw on some musicians' memoirs to illustrate how attending to the melodies, notes, intention, imagery, and emotional beauty of music promote self-awareness, introspection, physical health, and sensitivity to others. Ultimately, my paper uses scientific research and personal stories to illuminate the meditative function and the therapeutic/transformative power of music. Poster Presentation Number: P24 Understanding Stigma and the Negative Effect of Stigma on Mental Health Sarah Strand A mental illness is a psychological disorder that can affect mood, cognitive thinking, and certain behaviors. The majority of mental illnesses are caused by a combination of genetic, neurological, social, and environmental factors, which is different from how society may view a mental disorder as a flaw or weakness of the mind. This lack of understanding and negative view of mental illness has led to increased stigma towards psychological disorders over time, leading to negative stereotyping and discrimination in society of mentally ill people. By exploring the topic of mental illness and the specific psychological disorder of depression through psychological research articles, it is evident that the stigmatization of mental illness comes from the lack of understanding of what a psychological disorder is. Another cause of stigma includes how society views those with a mental illness as the dangerous outcasts of society, which is a stereotype perpetuated by the media. Furthermore, the stigmatization of mental health negatively affects those with psychological disorders because it prevents such persons from seeking treatment and ultimately renders them unable to be a fully contributing member of their community. In order to reduce this stigma, important figures in the field of psychology and medicine should speak out to educate society, become more involved in policymaking, and understand mental illness as a bio-psycho-social issue. Poster Presentation Number: P25 Fruits and Vegetables of the Spirit: Does Scripture Promote a Plant-Based Diet? Katherine Trapani Some Christian vegetarians follow an agrarian lifestyle as a matter of their faith; however, it is unclear if commonly used Scripture in the defense for vegetarianism is truly about following a plant-based diet. This analysis refutes that vegetarianism is a biblically-based standard for modern Christians as it is not supported by various biblical commentators and religious doctrine. The Seventh Day Adventists follow a vegetarian lifestyle as supported by Ellen White's visions from God which should be encouraged though not regarded as Scripturally supported. Regarding vegetarianism from a truly Scripture-based belief, there is no definitive biblical support that God intended humankind to follow such a lifestyle. Passages such as Genesis 1:29-31, Isaiah 11:6-9 and Daniel 1:1-21 tell of God's provision, salvation and faithfulness, respectively, but not of dietary patterns. Other verses, such as Genesis 9:2-3 and Luke 24:42-43, plainly state that all food is clean. Christian vegetarians should not feel discouraged from their dietary lifestyle, but instead need to be aware of biblical context that supports an omnivorous diet. Instead, Christians can explore biblical themes or other worldviews to defend their eating habits. Poster Presentation Number: P26 Cerebrospinal Fluid Diversion: Regonizing and Treating Shunt Malfunction Stephanie Halvorson, Samantha Pratt, Rachelle Rajdl, Kayla Stanelle Among the pediatric population, hydrocephalus is a major cerebrospinal fluid problem occurring in about one to two of every 1,000 newborn babies. Hydrocephalus is caused by a buildup of cerebrospinal fluid in the ventricles of the brain due to blockage of flow or absorption of fluid. Due to the buildup, the ventricles will enlarge, causing pressure and swelling that can be damaging to the brain. To decrease the amount of pressure in the ventricle and help treat hydrocephalous, shunts have been initiated and inserted to divert the cerebrospinal fluid to another part of the body where it can be reabsorbed as it should have been in the ventricle. The purpose of this research project was to conduct a literature review of current nursing literature regarding the trends in the management of children with shunts, and to highlight the institutions conducting research on this topic. Poster Presentation Number: P27 Does the Bit Fit?: Determining the Validity of the Fitbit Charge 2 in Estimating Energy Expenditure in Physically Active College Students Cara Stadstad The Fitbit Charge 2 is one of the newest models of physical activity trackers which is specifically designed to track active fitness. Although widely used, the validity of Fitbit physical activity trackers, particularly the Fitbit Charge 2, is not well established. The goal of this research study is to determine the validity of the Fitbit Charge 2 in estimating energy expenditure. Ten physically active college aged individuals from Concordia College in Moorhead, MN were recruited for this study. Each participant completed two exercise trials of 20 to 30 minutes on a treadmill of moderate and vigorous intensity respectively. During each trial, energy expenditure was measured using Fitbit Charge 2 and indirect calorimetry, via Medgraphics Metabolic (CPET/CPX) cart, and was compared to standard metabolic equations. Moderate intensity was valued at 75-85% age-predicted maximum heart rate and an RPE of 12-14. Vigorous intensity was valued at 85-90% age-predicted maximum heart rate and an RPE of 1517. Results have not yet been obtained as data collection for this study is currently ongoing. Results will be analyzed using ANOVA comparing caloric expenditure among the three methods. Although results have not yet been gathered and analyzed, other research studies determining the validity of Fitbit physical activity trackers have found that Fitbits generally overestimate energy expenditure. Therefore, it is hypothesized this model of the Fitbit will also overestimate energy expenditure in comparison to indirect calorimetry and standard metabolic equations. Poster Presentation Number: P28 The Calculus of Proportional αDerivatives Laura LeGare, Grace Bryan We introduce a new proportional α-derivative with parameter α in [0,1], explore its calculus properties, and give several examples of our results. First, we provide an introduction to our proportional αderivative and some of its basic calculus properties. We next investigate the system of α-lines which make up our curved yet Euclidean geometry, as well as address traditional calculus concepts such as Rolle’s Theorem and the Mean Value Theorem in terms of our α-derivative. We also introduce a new α-integral to be paired with our α-derivative, which leads to proofs of the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus Parts I and II, as applied to our formulas. Finally, we provide instructions on how to locate αmaximum and α-minimum values as they are related to our type of Euclidean geometry, including an increasing and decreasing test, concavity test, and first and second α-derivative tests. Poster Presentation Number: P29 Determining What Are Considered Adaptations: Dante's The Divine Comedy and C.S. Lewis's The Great Divorce Logan Jorgenson The world of adaptation studies is broad. In this field of study, the focus is on the intertextuality of the many creative works that are related to each other. This comes with classifying which works should be considered adaptations on other works and which works should be considered originals. While there is no clear-cut way to determine what is an adaptation and what is not, this question must still be asked, and an answer must be attempted. This question arises when looking at Dante's The Divine Comedy and C.S. Lewis's The Great Divorce. Both these works draw from many outside sources, however, Lewis's work should be considered more of an adaptive work while Dante's should be considered more of an original work. This is because Dante did not build on his sources directly but used them to advance his story. In Lewis's case, The Great Divorce draws on outside sources but is too closely related to Dante's work in structure and symbol to be considered completely original. By looking at secondary sources that explore The Divine Comedy and The Great Divorce separately and in relation to one another, I show that Dante's work is only influenced by the works of Homer, Ovid, and Virgil but is not a direct adaptation on them and that Lewis's work is an adaptation in several ways, mainly a responsive text, a parallel, a pastiche, and an allusion. Poster Presentation Number: P30 Immigration, The Current Conundrum Maret Wibel The United States is built on a history of immigration. With the new presidency many changes are being proposed to the system that is currently in place. My project looks at the system of checks that is already in place for refugees looking to enter the United States and the implication of new proposed policy on asylum seekers. I also look at how an immigration ban will impact our policy and ability to serve those seeking asylum. My project addresses proposed changes to detention centers, the way the US prosecutes illegal immigrants, and the way that ICE officer's jobs will change under the legislature that Trump has proposed. This is important because to be informed citizens we need to understand the realities of the immigration system in the United States. My project specifically concentrates on how changes to the policy will impact illegal immigrants and refugees attempting to enter the United States. Through my research I have found that the policy already in place is so difficult to navigate it hinders our ability to serve refugees and that the proposed changes to combat illegal immigration will be an economic burden as well as harmful to those attempting to enter the United States. Poster Presentation Number: P31 Aloha Survivance: The Decolonization of Hawai'i in Victoria Kneubuhl's Plays Sara Funkhouser, William Huff Towle, Abby Kruse, Margaret Noah, Kate Rinke, Sarah Schauer, April Sympson, Andrea Tedrick, Johnathan Wagner Victorian Kneubuhl's four Hawaiian plays take on issues of Hawaiian history, identity, religion, environmental degradation, sexual commodification, and the politics of cultural appropriation. We have created a SCALAR website that provides critical assessment of these four plays and explores the context and implications of the attendent issues. In our analyses, we draw on Native American novelist and critical theorist Gerald Vizenor's concept of survivance that recognizes how indigenous peoples develop strategies not merely to survive the onslaught of EuroAmerican dominance but moreso to resist being inundated by the colonial power. Through using select contemporary critical approaches including postcolonial and ecofeminist lenses, we demonstrate how Kneubuhl's plays document instances of the survivance of Hawaiian culture. After the COSS launch, the website will be available for scholars and readers all over the world to engage at http://scalar.usc.edu/works/aloha-survivancethe-decolonization-of-hawaii-in-victoria-kneubuhls-plays/index. Presenters will guide COSS attendees through the design and features of the website. Poster Presentation Number: P32 Transgender Management for Pediatric Nursing Paige Jagol, Rachel Tolkinen, Leah Benthin, Lexie Lee, Emily Honl Transgender children, sometimes referred to as children with gender dysphoria, refers to those who are born with the genetic traits of one gender but have assumed the characteristics of another gender. This specific population faces many challenges in the development of their identity as well as challenges within society due to cultural expectations. Striving for balance, learning to cope, questioning, and eventually becoming comfortable with one's gender identity and sexual orientation are of utmost importance for healthy growth and development. Without proper support and management from healthcare providers for these challenges, the risk for unhealthy behaviors increases. It is vital that support is given to transgender youth to assist with gender identity and to decrease additional risk factors. A review of top 10 nursing journals from 2005 to 2009 had only 8 articles (out of 5,000) that focused on LGBT issues. Research found on transgender management from 3 credible, medical databases found: CINAHL with the search "transgender", "pediatrics", and "nursing"= 3 sources in the last 5 years; PubMed with the search "transgender", "pediatrics", and "nursing"= 6 sources in the last 5 years; and Academic Search Premier with the search words "transgender", "pediatrics", and "nursing"= 7 sources in the last 5 years. Databases provided minimal resources to address the topic of healthcare management and transgender youth. Need for more nursing research is evident due to the increasing number of referrals to pediatric medical centers for gender dysphoria. Poster Presentation Number: P33 High-Protein Meal Replacement Shakes Kendra Stoick, Anna Herkenhoff The purpose of this study is to determine if high-protein meal replacement shakes (MRS) can be used for healthy weight loss and other health benefits among college students. In recent years, MRS have become a popular source for individuals to consume convenient, low-calorie meals to reduce weight. Studies have compared different types of MRS based on their amount of protein content to determine which types of MRS have higher health benefits. In this study, we surveyed Concordia College students to determine the types of MRS they consume and how frequently they consumed them. This survey also determined what types of students are more likely to consume MRS and their reasoning for consumption. The result of this study will help determine the frequency of use of these products by college students and how these fit into their traditional meal patterns. Poster Presentation Number: P34 Fat Face Off: Which Oil is Best? Nicky Crane, Erica Hauf There is significant controversy over which oils are most beneficial to consume on a regular basis. Coconut, olive, and vegetable oil were compared based on their effect on both low and high density lipoproteins, or bad and good cholesterol, as well as their essential fatty acid content. Research shows that the type of oil you consume affects your health. College students who are responsible for their own cooking were surveyed on which oils they think are the most beneficial and which they consume most often. For example, coconut oil is a current interest of research in the United States and is perceived as being a healthier fat despite being saturated. There is no miracle oil, each oil has a different composition and different health benefits or drawbacks. Poster Presentation Number: P35 Solution or Scam: The Gluten Free Diet Aaron Senne, Dan Marquette Celiac disease and non-immune gluten sensitivity combined make up to 4 million people of the general population, and the only treatment is by adhering to a gluten free diet. Yet, recently in last few years these groups aren't the only people buying gluten free products. An estimated 40 million people are purchasing gluten free products for either Celiac, gluten sensitivity, or fad diet purposes. The gluten free diet, although used as a treatment, is very hard to adhere to without help of a registered dietitian. It is costly, and can be low in vital nutrients. For every $33 a person with no gluten restriction spends at the grocery store, a gluten free consumer spends $100 dollars. Along with the gluten free diet not only being expensive, research has shown this diet is often low in Vitamins D, B12, folate, iron, zinc, magnesium, and calcium. Poster Presentation Number: P36 Recovery of Biodiversity through Shoreline Restoration Megan Dondelinger, Ariana Huber, Riley Kramer, Amelia Amon In 2009 Concordia College began the process of restoring habitats at the Long Lake Field Station, near Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. One of these restorations involves a piece of shoreline that was previously landscaped by the former owners. The main goals of restoration include attempting to bring the species abundance and diversity of the land back to its original state. In order to assess the progress of these efforts, we conducted experiments comparing species abundance and diversity at three locations around Long Lake. These locations were a natural area, the restored property, and a currently landscaped area. A 10 x 10 meter area was established at each location and species were captured in these areas using sweep netting. When the data were analyzed, we found the highest species abundance and diversity in the natural shoreline and the restored shoreline numbers very similar to natural shoreline. Alternately, the landscaped shoreline had very few species and very low diversity. Our results indicate that the restored shoreline is more comparable to the natural shoreline than the currently landscaped shoreline. In conclusion, it appears that Concordia's shoreline restoration efforts at Long Lake Field Station are accomplishing the goal of reestablishing species abundance and diversity. Poster Presentation Number: P37 Behavioral Differences of Red Squirrels (Tamiascurus hudsonicus) and Eastern Gray Squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) on an Urban College Campus Dianessa Dizon, Beth Ringwelski, Kailee Zabolotny, Brooke Maruska, Meia Kjellberg The behavioral patterns of American red (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) and eastern gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) were observed on Concordia College's campus. Squirrels are beneficial to study since they are in such close proximity to humans and exhibit complex behaviors. Also, the pattern in which they store food differs between species and serves as a model for other animals. The Competitive Exclusion Principle states that two species are not able to coexist in the same habitat, if they are using similar resources in similar ways. This may apply to the red and gray squirrels as they are using a similar food sources in the same location. The purpose of this research was to compare and contrast the activity budget of each of the squirrel species. Our goal was to examine squirrel behavior to see if there were differences in resource use that would reduce competition, allow for resource partitioning, and promote coexistence. The behaviors observed between the squirrels did differ. The red squirrels spent more time chasing, while the gray squirrels spent more time foraging. This difference conveys the fact that though red and gray squirrels are a similar species but their behavioral patterns differ, particularly with food acquisition and territoriality. Thus they are able to inhabit the same location even though their sources of food are similar. Poster Presentation Number: P38 Benevolent Sexism as a Moderator of the Effect of Attachment Anxiety on Romantic Relational Quality Emily Campbell, Sarah Mattison Individuals who have high anxious attachment desire closeness, but have fears that they will be rejected or abandoned, resulting in increased distress and decreased relational quality around couple conflict. Benevolent sexism (BS), one of two ambivalent sexism ideologies, prescribes the expression of caring and protecting attitudes toward women (Overall, Sibley, & Tan, 2011). A study by Cross, Overall, and Hammond (2016) found that males who act out of BS ideals may help anxiously attached women feel more secure and satisfied in their relationship. The present study investigated the relationship between women's attachment anxiety and relational quality, predicting that male's BS would be a positive moderator of this relationship. Participants were undergraduate students from a small liberal arts college. Measures for attachment anxiety, relational quality, and benevolent sexism were administered to couples in questionnaires prior to and following a conflict discussion. A multi-level modeling analysis was conducted to determine the relationship between women's attachment anxiety, relational quality and men's BS. The hypothesis was not supported; however, the relationship between female attachment anxiety and male relational quality was significantly moderated by male BS. Additionally, female BS led to decreased female relational quality. BS endorsed by men and women appears to negatively impact their own relational quality, and this is possibly due to the stringent expectations of men and women to conform to traditional roles in the relationship. Future studies should consider measuring variables on affect and partner-perceived BS. Poster Presentation Number: P39 Is ISIS Really Winning the Media War? Haley Jaeger, Taylor Smith The twenty-first century is a time for mass communication through the use of social media and other media outlets. There was the invention of Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter; all platforms by which ideologies can be spread quickly. That being said war can't just be won on the battlefields anymore. Ideologies must be fought through media. You must inspire your own side while breaking down the other sides will to fight. Extremist groups have been using media for decades, but the importance of it hasn't been clear until the last few years. The war in media is just as if not more important than the war on the battlefield. We will look at videos, Twitter, and magazines being used by ISIS to determine if they are really winning the media war. Poster Presentation Number: P40 Coping with Death when Diagnosed with a Terminal Illness Sam Parsons, Peter Vukovich-Simonson Upon diagnosis of a terminal illness, the method of coping differs for each person. One of the main differences arises from whether the end-of-life patient is particularly religious or not. This affects possible feelings of hope or uncertainty (Sand, 2009). In a study, it was found that religious people generally feel more comfortable about the concept of death than non-religious people. Using palliative care or a nursing home also influences these patients (Bradley, Frizelle, & Johnson, 2010). Various terminally-ill patients develop unusual coping mechanisms, such as a newfound reliance on drugs or alcohol (Jha, Plummer, & Bowers, 2011). Different experts analyzed terminally-ill patients and came up with their own perceptions on various coping styles. Boyraz developed three main ways that people cope with death, the "accept," "neutral," and "escape" attitudes (Boyraz, 2014). Kübler-Ross focused on the "normal" way to deal with impending death by coming up with a list of stages of dying. She distinguished five steps, which were "denial," "anger," "bargaining," "depression," and "acceptance" (Kübler-Ross, 1969). Wright opposes the ideas of Kübler-Ross and says there is no normal way to cope (Wright, 2003). Instead, he lists "relationship styles" that he finds is common, but not necessary, with terminally-ill patients. He mentions "imprisoned by death," "carpe diem," "carpe mortem," "life and death transformed," "silenced by death," and "waiting for death." Levels of death anxiety affect how end-of-life patients function in their daily lives (Tong, 2016). For example, low death anxiety often results from "counterfactuals," which is denying incoming death (Gilbar & Hevroni, 2007). This poster will explore these different types of coping styles and reflect on the different ways psychologists study end-of-life patients. Poster Presentation Number: P41 Recognition and Management of Oncologic Emergencies: An Analysis of Current Research Kristin Drechsel, Jadin Heidrich, Lauren Lee, Erin Mackenthun According to the University of Minnesota, there are more than 350,000 survivors of childhood cancer and adolescent cancer in the U.S.. Advances in technology, knowledge and research have led to the increasing survival rate among this population. A big factor that has lead to many great outcomes with pediatric oncology comes from the recognition and management of oncological emergencies. Nurses play a vital role in preventing, recognizing, and treating the emergencies that are associated with pediatric oncology. Septic shock due to infection continues to be a major cause of death in this population and delays in the initiation of antibiotic therapy have been associated with decreased survival. A literature review of the research was conducted to examine the variables common in oncologic emergencies, including fevers and infection, and how to prevent septic shock and death among pediatric oncology patients. We examined the barriers to timely antibiotic administration as well as strategies to improve the time from clinic or emergency department admission to antibiotic administration from a nursing standpoint. Poster Presentation Number: P42 Assessing the Need for Special/Medical Diets in the Fargo-Moorhead Community Food Pantries Noah Taylor, Rachel Kmett, Cody Rahman, LeAnn Flanigan, Kevin Lee Our objective was to assess the needs for appropriate foods for special/medical diets in the food pantries of the Fargo/Moorhead community. During the week of February 13 to February 17, 2017 we administered anonymous surveys to 89 clients (48 at the Emergency Food Pantry and 41 at the Dorothy Day Food Pantry) who voluntarily agreed to participate. The survey was intended to assess what types of special/medical diets are present among clients, the clients understanding of the diets, and if the accommodations provided by the food pantries is adequate. 28% of households responded that they had one or more people who required a special/medical diet. Of the 26 responders with a medical/special diet, over 50% indicated they had diabetes and/or high blood pressure. 59% of clients surveyed reported they understood the needs that the special diet entailed, while 10% reported not understanding. Only 43% of clients agreed that the food pantries provided enough of the foods required for their diets. The top three special/medical diets indicated by several clients were chronic diseases such as diabetes, high blood pressure, and high cholesterol, which are potentially preventable through a healthy diet and physical activity. While a firm conclusion cannot be drawn, the data seems to suggest the provision of foods for special/medical diets by food pantries could possibly have a beneficial effect on the conditions and diet quality of the clients. Poster Presentation Number: P43 Investigating the Role of VTCN1's Ig-like Domains in Treg Induction Hunter Huff Towle The inevitable progression of Type 1 diabetes (T1D) involves the destruction of insulin-producing beta cells, located in the pancreas, by autoreactive T cells. Such beta cell destruction and the accompanying loss of endogenous insulin leaves T1D patients reliant on the lifelong use of exogenous insulin injections. A major issue in diagnosis of T1D is that the disease progresses "silently."• That is, up to 90 percent of functional beta cells have already been destroyed by the time of diagnosis. Consequently, there is a great need for early biomarkers of T1D and one protein in particular, V-set domaincontaining T cell activation inhibitor-1 (VTCN1), shows promise. VTCN1 is a negative co-stimulatory molecule expressed on the surface of antigen presenting cells. Due to its negative co-stimulatory function, binding of VTCN1 to its cognate receptor(s) on T cells provides a crucial balance between abnormal T cell activation and anergy. One finding regarding VTCN1's negative co-stimulation is its ability to increase and support Tregs, which prevent autoimmunity through the suppression of effector T cells. A question that still remains, however, is whether the new Tregs arise by induction from a naïve state or proliferation from existing Treg populations. To explore this, my lab studied the domainspecific effects of VTCN1's two Ig-like domains, IgV and IgC, on T regulatory cell (Tregs: CD4+, CD25+ FOXP3+ T cells) induction and cytokine production. Poster Presentation Number: P44 Literature's Reflection on the African American Struggle Abby Kruse Through a political lens, this project covers the similarities between the Civil War and the Civil Rights movement as highlighted by the characters within the short story "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" by Ambrose Bierce and an original adaptation of the story in the historical context of the 1960s. Highlighting the literary aspects of realism and postmodernism, the essay will also show the similarities of the literary style between the two periods as well as the similarities of the political movements regarding African American advancement in America. The project is researched to display the similarities and also the progression of the political situation of African Americans across time. Through extensive research, a synthesis of sources will be used to support the claim that Bierce's short story is best to be adapted to the 1950-60s due to the racial issues surrounding the time. Poster Presentation Number: P45 Minnesota Nice or Minnesota Ice?: Perceptions and Experiences from Native and Non-native Minnesotans Ciara White, Rachel Dieter, Karissa Chouinard This research study was designed with the purpose of examining the various perceptions people have about the concept of Minnesota Nice, and how these perceptions differ based upon where a person grows up, being either in Minnesota or out of the state. A qualitative method was used to collect data for this study where 12 students, 4 male and 8 female, from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, were selected for an interview with one of the researchers. Half of the interviewees were native Minnesotans and the other half were not native to Minnesota. These students were recruited based on where they are from and their willingness to share their thoughts and ideas clearly and concisely. The participants were asked a series of questions in an interview format consisting of similar questions for both groups, but the questions asked to the non-native participants had a more comparative aspect to them. The interviews were recorded and then transcribed to be analyzed for common themes commented on by the participants about Minnesotan culture and communication in order to determine if the concept of "Minnesota Nice" holds true. Poster Presentation Number: P46 Needs in Local Food Pantries: Cooking Equipment and Skills Julia Kohler, Joseph Hendrickson, Luis Martinez, Sara Baumann Lack of cooking skills and equipment tends to be a concern overlooked when assessing needs of food pantry clients. Clients were surveyed (n=89) at both the Dorothy Day Food Pantry in Moorhead, MN and the Emergency Food Pantry in Fargo, ND, to determine if this concern limited clients when cooking and preparing food. A survey was conducted including questions about the clients' perspectives on cooking along with what types of equipment they are in need of or want to properly make the food they receive. In general, clients who responded to the survey indicated that they enjoyed cooking and were able to prepare foods received at the food pantry: 86.3% of the respondents reported that they liked to cook and 82.7% agreed or strongly agreed that they knew how to prepare the food given to them. Equipment that is most desired by the clients, in descending order, include additional pots & pans, a crock pot, microwave, and cooking utensils. In addition, clients showed interest in learning new recipes, baking skills, and how to prepare raw meat. In finding that there was a strong majority of clients who enjoyed cooking already but lacked certain equipment, direction, and skills, the results call for addressing these specific needs. Availability of handouts regarding food-specific directions (e.g., raw meat preparation, baking) and cookbooks could be increased. Food equipment drives would encourage community members to donate clean, usable items to pantries for client use. Poster Presentation Number: P47 Cultural Surprises and Adjustment Experienced by International Students and New Americans Wil Schafer, Troy Bialka, Allison Chudy, Kennedy Erickson, Sonja Flancher, Dylan Harcey, Felicien Gubandja, Michael Heitzman, Phillip Jansen, Andrew Lindor, Jamie Mentzer, Andie Palagi, Joshua Prichard, Jacob Probst, Abby Ring, Barret Salberg, Kristin Traiser, Gregory Tucker Given the volume of immigration to the U.S. since the 1970s and the attention to immigration policy in the 2016 Presidential election campaigns, mutual understanding and respect between “old” Americans and “new” Americans is essential. Sociologists and anthropologists have studied the experiences of immigrants to the U.S. since the late 19th century. For ongoing understanding, it is necessary to revisit these issues in contemporary and local contexts. Our study focused on experiences of international students and New Americans in the Upper Midwest region. Eighteen students in Cultural Anthropology (SOC217) each interviewed someone in the Upper Midwest region who is originally from another country with the following research questions in mind: What do you find most surprising about living, studying, or working in the Upper Midwest and what adjustments have you had to make? Interviewees came from different countries on five continents – Asia, Africa, Europe, South and North America. Our class identified three common themes of special interest: misconceptions about what the U.S. was like before arrival; differences in family relations, especially between younger and older members; differences in the U.S. education system that required significant adjustment. Poster Presentation Number: P48 Health at Every Size Hannah Steffen, Ally Jones According to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report published in 2015, 37.7% of adults and 17% of children are considered to be obese as evidenced by body mass index. Efforts of traditional weight loss such as eating fewer calories, exercising more frequently, and modifying unhealthy behaviors cannot be negated; as there is a plethora of research to show that healthy eating behaviors and exercise are effective in both weight loss and weight management. While obesity rates are not drastically increasing, traditional weight loss efforts are not making an apparent impact in decreasing numbers as more than 90% of weight losers tend to regain the weight lost. In accordance with the Health at Every Size (HAES) movement, it has been suggested that shifting from a weight-focused paradigm to one centered on holistic health may be the extra push that is needed in order to see the obesity trend decrease. Research shows that by redirecting this focus from numbers to health, weight loss becomes a side effect of living out a positive mindset and lifestyle. Poster Presentation Number: P49 DASHing Towards a Healthy Lifestyle Michaela Koenig DASH stands for Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension. The DASH diet was first implemented for hypertension by focusing on lowering the consumption of sodium and increasing the intake of potassium. According to the American Heart Association, one out of every three adults over age 20 has high blood pressure and nearly 20 percent do not even know they have it. The DASH diet is a healthy approach to lowering the risk of chronic disease and simple to implement into daily living. Originally developed for hypertension, the DASH diet has been recently shown to have a positive impact on kidney disease due to its high potassium, protein, and phosphorus intake. Adequate nutrition is a major component of the DASH diet as well as smart choices to maintain an active lifestyle. A well-planned DASH diet containing low-fat dairy, fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean protein, nuts, seeds, and legumes can provide the proper nourishment to combat hypertension and other chronic diseases and improve overall health. Poster Presentation Number: P50 Core Cardiac Transcription Factors GATA4, NKX2.5, and TBX5 Involved in HLHS Pathogenesis Alexandra Thom, Jessica Shamdas Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS) is a congenital heart defect that occurs in 2.6/10,000 U.S. births. Underdevelopment of the left ventricle is the most severe symptom presented in HLHS patients. Although the cause is unknown, we hypothesize that pathogenesis of this disease has genetic origins. Specifically, cardiac transcription factors involved in early heart development may undergo mutations, which result in phenotypes associated with HLHS. Transcription factors GATA4, NKX2.5, and TBX5 work in conjunction to activate the NPPA gene, which is necessary for cardiac development. Future experimental research manipulating cardiomyocyte genes would provide a better understanding of HLHS pathogenesis. Poster Presentation Number: P51 Increasing Access to Fruits and Vegetables: A Study of Nutritional Adequacy Among Food Pantries in the F/M Area Anna Herkenhoff, Katherine Christopherson, James Jamison, Kimberly Schaible, Cole Vlasak In order to assess the nutritional efficacy of local food pantries, 89 surveys were distributed to patrons of two local food pantries. Patrons were surveyed on age, gender, education level, ethnicity, and other demographic variables as well as access to an appropriate variety of foods to meet nutritional adequacy. Over half did not meet the recommended intake of fruits (89%) and vegetables (60.8%) although the majority (86.2%), if given the option, would consume more fruits and vegetables. However, over half of the clients who visited the food pantry said that the pantry provided them with access to an adequate amount of fruits and vegetables, so it can be concluded that accessibility at the food pantry is not a factor. This phenomenon may be connected to food preferences and/or the fact that most food pantry patrons do not visit on a regular basis. A possible offset to this problem could be to expand the "daily bread" section at local food pantries to include fruits and vegetables so patrons can have increased access to fruits and vegetables. Poster Presentation Number: P52 Pediatric Radiation Exposure: Sources and Protection Cody Bekkerus, Paige Deckert, Kendal Haverland, Lauren Otto, Anna Wood Radiation is the emission of energy as electromagnetic waves or as moving subatomic particles, especially high-energy particles that cause ionization. External sources of radiation include: X-ray scans, Computerized Tomography (CT) scans, Meckel's scans, Nuclear Medicine, and Intravenous Pyelogram (IVP) scans. Internal sources can come from seeds or capsules that are implanted near a cancerous tumor. Long-term effects of radiation in pediatric populations includes: cancer, particularly leukemia and myeloma, as well as aplastic anemia. A literature review was conducted using CINAHL and PubMed databases. Key words used included "pediatric radiation" and "pediatric radiation exposure". Results showed very limited to no research articles on nursing pediatric radiation exposure and protection. Poster Presentation Number: P53 Women on the Front Lines Against ISIS Jacqueline Day, Allison Ross This presentation will explore the question of why women are on the front lines, and how can they make a difference on the war against ISIS. The presentation argues that the power of women's spirit, enlisted through either words or weapons, has the potential to stop the terrorist group ISIS. Women are taking revenge on ISIS for the mistreatment of their people, and the mass genocide against them. Women will put a stop to ISIS through their narrative about the atrocities women have faced at the hands of ISIS. This presentation argues that the most important thing a woman from on any background can do is share her testimony. Due to the rise in social media platforms and the attention of the mass media, women have a shot at stopping ISIS. The presentation gives an in-depth look at several women fighting on the front lines today. Some will fight with weapons, others will fight with words. Either way, women are the ones that will help end ISIS. Poster Presentation Number: P54 Prevention of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in Sudan Bethany Freeland, Makayla Van Derostyne Female genital mutilation (FGM) is defined as all procedures that involve partial or total removal of the external female genitalia for non-therapeutic reasons. Sudan is a country in Northeastern Africa that has a high FGM prevalence and also practices the most severe forms of FGM. Many preventative measures are being taken in Sudan to reduce the prevalence of FGM and eradicate the practice. However, factors such as religion, education, and culture contribute to FGM's deep roots in the Sudanese culture. Eradication of the FGM has to focus on changing the mindset of the Sudanese people regarding the practice. Poster Presentation Number: P55 α-Ketoglutarate Inhibition of Cytoplasmic Glutamate Dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli Kate Kvidera This experiment examined the kinetics of E. coli Glutamate Dehydrogenase in the presence of varying concentrations of NADP+ and α-ketoglutarate. It found that α-ketoglutarate is a competitive inhibitor of this reaction in the direction of oxidative deamination. The reaction was found to run better at pH 9.00. There was a decrease in the Vmax that was correlated to the concentration of α-ketoglutarate. Poster Presentation Number: P56 Genes Encoding Antibacterial Defense Mechanisms in Neisseria Isabella Stromberg, Erika Grinde, Kailey Lamb Neisseria is a gram-negative bacterial genus containing pathogenic and nonpathogenic species. N. meningitidis and N. gonorrhoeae are pathogens that cause meningitis and gonorrhoea, respectively. Several non-pathogenic Neisseria species are common members of the human microbiome where they interact with many other bacterial species. Due to competition within the microbiome, it is vital for bacteria to possess defense mechanisms. Preliminary evidence suggests some Neisseria species display antimicrobial activity; however, the mechanism of this antimicrobial activity is unknown. One way bacteria exhibit antimicrobial activity is through the production of antibacterial proteins. The goal of this research project was to search for the presence of known genes associated with bacterial defense mechanisms in a broad range of Neisseria species. Known categories of antibacterial proteins include: (1) contact-dependent, (2) contact-independent, and (3) the recently discovered protein encoded by abp1. The bamA gene encodes the receptor associated with the contact dependent inhibition (CDI) system of E. coli, whereas mutR and mutA are genes encoding contact-independent proteins produced by S. mutans. N. subflava has been found to contain abp1, a gene with an unknown mechanism of antimicrobial activity. Using the NCBI database, BLAST searches were conducted for bamA, mutR, mutA, and abp1 in 25 Neisseria species. The mutR and mutA genes were not found in any Neisseria; however, bamA was present in 7 species, and abp1 in 15 species. These results provide insight into possible defense mechanisms Neisseria may use against other bacterial species within the human microbiome. Poster Presentation Number: P57 Homology of Known Pigment Producing Pathways with Neisseria Coulton Dangerfield, Madeline Gemuenden, Erin Pennington, Kevin Wolfe Neisseria is a bacterial genus composed of pathogenic and nonpathogenic species which mainly occupy mucosal surfaces. The nonpathogenic species are commonly found in the human microbiome. Some Neisseria species produce a yellow pigment under certain conditions. There is little known regarding pigment function in Neisseria, but in other bacteria pigments provide various benefits including antimicrobial activity, antioxidant function, and protection from extreme temperatures. The gene pathway that encodes yellow pigment production in Neisseria has yet to be identified. In our research, we attempt to identify this unknown pathway by using bioinformatics to compare the sequences of known genes that encode yellow pigment production in other organisms with whole genome sequences of 25 species of Neisseria. We obtained the known query sequences from UniPROT, then used BLAST to compare the sequences with Neisseria genomes in PubMLST and NCBI. The genes we researched included the crtMNPQO pathway of Staphylococcus aureus, the crtB gene of Rhodobacter capsulatus, cpkC of Streptomyces coelicolor, and aroE of Xanthomonas oryzae. Our searches to date found significant homology between 18 of 25 Neisseria species for the crtM gene and 0 of 25 for crtNPQO, 12 of 25 for crtB, 13 of 25 for cpkC, and 11 of 25 for aroE. Ongoing research will include investigating the nature of these similarities. Identifying pigment genes in Neisseria might give insight into the type of pigment Neisseria produces and its functions. Poster Presentation Number: P58 α-Ketoglutarate Product Inhibition of Glutamate Dehydrogenase Evan Camrud, William Asp Glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), an enzyme found in all living organisms, catalyzes the chemical reaction of L-glutamate to α-ketoglutarate and NH3+, using NADP+ as a coenzyme. GDH exists in the mitochondrial matrix and participates in the Kreb's cycle, while in prokaryotes (obviously lacking a mitochondria) the enzyme is free in the cytosol. A small number of bacteria, including many E. coli subspecies, can also utilize this enzyme to fix nitrogen under high ammonia conditions, but the reverse reaction is of course more common. The importance of this reaction in biological systems prompts the depth of research it receives. In our research, we observe the product inhibition effect of αketoglutarate on GDH, and analyze the data with a Michaelis-Menten model. Poster Presentation Number: P59 Ethnography in Ecuador Taylor Strelow The purpose of this study was to conduct ethnographic research on a micro-culture to understand diversity in the world. I took this experience outside of the Fargo-Moorhead community by completing the ethnographic research while on a mid-semester trip to Ecuador. While in Ecuador, I spent a week at La Casa de Fe, or The House of Faith, a home for abandoned, orphaned, and special needs children. During the experience, my research objectives were to observe and interact with a micro-culture completely different than one I had ever experienced. At La Casa de Fe, I did so by volunteering and interacting with the children, staff, and other volunteers who were currently residing or working there. During my experience, I encountered a sense of faith and family that was fostered and encouraged by those at La Casa de Fe. This theme that seemed so present there became my hypothesis, and I used observation, interaction, interviews, and research to explain and prove this. In my work, I explain how the children, staff, and volunteers each play an integral part in forming this environment of family and faith, and how each of these groups is affected in return. This work, now more than ever, seems relevant to me as we encounter a world where distrust, judgment, and discrimination exist against those who merely seem different than ourselves. My ethnographic work in Ecuador taught me to look beyond differences and to fully appreciate people for who they are, regardless of race, ethnicity, or disability. Poster Presentation Number: P60 Curandero or Doctor: An Exploration of Medicines in Spanish-Speaking Countries Sarah Mattison Non-English speaking immigrants face language barriers when coming to the United States, even in health care settings. It is important that interpreters are available to assist in these situations, but it is even more important that these interpreters are aware of cultural differences from country to country. In some Spanish-speaking countries, it is common to use alternative medicine in practice instead of traditional medicines. Instead of going to the doctor's office or to the drug store to buy over-the-counter medications when one is sick in the United States, some people choose to go to a store called a botánica where they can buy herbs, roots, and powders to help cure them from various ailments and consult a curandero, or a folk healer, about usage of medicinal herbs and plants. Fourteen students interviewed people who at one time lived in Hispanic countries or currently reside there. The interviews covered many topics, including where they are from, where their parents are from, various important cultural aspects specific to their country, and finally the medical system in their country and the use of traditional and alternative medicines. From these interviews, we discovered that every country views alternative medicines differently. Poster Presentation Number: P61 Surgical Management and Nursing Considerations in the Treatment of Gastroschisis Megan Erkens, Adam Lacher, Megan Lindquist, Lauren Orson Gastroschisis is a serious congenital defect in which the intestines protrude through an opening in the abdominal wall. It requires surgical repair soon after birth and is associated with an increased risk for medical complications and mortality during infancy. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that about 1,871 babies are born each year in the United States with gastroschisis. A literature review of the most current nursing research was undertaken to understand this diagnosis and to reveal nursing trends of diagnosis and treatment. Poster Presentation Number: P62 Record Keeping in the Digital Age Allison Cassell Record keeping has been transformed by the technological age. Practices that were once limited to pencil and paper can now be digitized and collected online. Cultural heritage organizations across the globe face the struggle of finding the best databases to manage collections. The Concordia College Archives has faced this challenge as well. In order to find the best suited content management system (CMS) for its collection, this study analyzed four different systems against nine criteria to determine which CMS was best suited to meet needs. An in-depth analysis of CONTENTdm, PastPerfect, CollectiveAccess, and Omeka against criteria such as cost effectiveness and user accessibility, demonstrated that CONTENTdm was best suited for Concordia's needs. The second part of this project, was to utilize the system to inventory and update the Concordia College Art Collection and establish best practices for collection maintenance. Poster Presentation Number: P63 Hyperinsulinemia: Pancreatic Cancer Catalyst? Andrew Dosch, Chris Wiger, Dezmond Ward Numerous scientific studies have suggested a link between type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), pancreatic cancer, and obesity, as they are commonly diagnosed together. However, a definitive mechanism by which these diseases are connected has yet to be discovered. Hyperinsulinemia, a manifestation of both obesity and T2DM, is at its most severe just before the onset of T2DM. Insulin is known to trigger mitotic pathways regulated by proteins which are commonly mutated in pancreatic carcinomas. We believe that this influx of insulin increases the likelihood that insulin-mediated proliferative pathways will be triggered, leading to a higher risk of cancer formation. We conducted a literature search and analyzed existing research. Based on this analysis, we propose that the initial overexpression of plasma insulin in diabetic and obese individuals catalyzes pancreatic cancer proliferation through the MAPK signaling pathway via mutated ras proteins in most carcinomas. Due to the interconnectedness of type 2 diabetes, pancreatic cancer, and obesity, this hypothesis could be a bridge to future research that may lead to improved treatments or cures for each of these diseases. Poster Presentation Number P64 - No poster. Poster Presentation Number: P65 "I'm with Her": Gender and Politics in Facebook Posts Ali Froslie, Sara Funkhouser, Lexi Scanlon "I'm with her." This was a phrase that floated through both the real and digital worlds during the 2016 United States Presidential election. For the first time in United States history, the country saw an election with a male and female candidate running against each other. With this gender divide in the political sphere, the researchers were interested to see if this would impact the way in which men and women posted about politics on Facebook. It was predicted that because politics is in the social sphere of men in real life, that this trend would continue to the social media realm as well. In order to reach conclusions about how men and women post about politics on Facebook, the researchers created a content analysis to research different aspects of random, publicly available Facebook profiles. Areas of profile that were coded included: age of the poster, who the post was about, how many males and females commented and responded respectively, and whether the post included humor. The researchers found that in the weeks of November 1st-15th, women posted more about politics on Facebook than male users, breaking down the norm that politics was considered to be in the social sphere of men. Poster Presentation Number: P66 Concordia College to Become a "Bee Campus USA" Katie Black, Kaya Baker, Danielle Braund, Jessica Watson The dependence on pollinators for food production and agriculture is astoundingly high, with roughly 90% of plants in need of assisted pollination. The habitat that pollinators need in order to thrive is used in ways that benefit humans, but hinder pollinators. Public understanding of the importance of pollinators is crucial to their survival, as is creating urban spaces that promote pollinators' well-being. Our interdisciplinary research team is seeking to promote the native pollinator populations in the F/M area by proposing that Concordia College becomes a "Bee Campus USA" organization. Therefore, this research will discuss the criteria associated with becoming a bee-campus: developing pollinatorfriendly habitat, offering pollinator-focused curriculum, and educating the community on the importance of maintaining the biodiversity of pollinators. Becoming a "Bee Campus USA" would help to increase the biodiversity of local plants in the Fargo-Moorhead community, integrate sustainability into our campus, and increase opportunities to improve our local food system. Poster Presentation Number: P67 Mapping Concordia College's Trees Using ArcGIS Jessica Watson Ersi Community Maps program is a collaboration by the ArcGIS world-wide community to create a multi-scale map of the world. This includes data from sources such as cities, countries, and college campuses. Concordia College has been working to be included in the Community map programs and has recently completed one of the last steps, mapping the trees on our campus. The trees were mapped using the ArcGIS Collector program, ArcGIS Desktop and ArcGIS online. This map will be used for the ongoing squirrel telemetry research on campus, and will be available for others to use, including facilities. Currently data on tree species and size has been collected but other tree information can be added in the future. This map also illustrates the other potential uses of ArcGIS for collecting and mapping data for classes and research projects. Poster Presentation Number: P68 Recent Occurrences of the Plains Pocket Mouse (Perognathus flavescens) in Northwestern Minnesota Chloe Whitten, Danielle Braund, Jessica Watson, Grant Vagle Trapping of remnant and restored prairies in northwestern Minnesota has provided data on presence and population levels of small mammals that inhabit those prairies. Among the species caught over a 12 year span (2004-2016) was Perognathus flavescens. The species reaches its northern and eastern range limit in Minnesota. We have caught a total of nine individuals at sites in Clay and Norman Counties. In Clay County, one site was a remnant prairie and the other site was a restored prairie. The Norman County site is a remnant prairie. The total number of sightings has remained low through the years of trapping. Throughout 28,229 trap nights, only nine individuals have been caught. Additional sampling and continued vigilance is recommended in order to determine if the species should be one of conservation concern. Poster Presentation Number: P69 Identification of Peromyscus leucopus and P. maniculatus in Minnesota Habitats: Comparing Molecular Analysis of Salivary Amylase to Body Morphology Predictions Ann Marie O'Connell, Gift Ben-Bernard White-footed (Peromyscus leucopus) and deer mice (P. maniculatus) are two of the most abundant small mammals in North America and are identified as significant seed dispersers, predators of pest insects, prey items of avian and mammalian predators, and disease vectors and reservoirs. These two species are extremely difficult to tell apart in the field. Morphological measurements, typically used for identification, are inconsistent. Reliable identification is possible through different allozymes for salivary amylase. We collected saliva and used cellulose acetate electrophoresis for identification from a variety of sites throughout northwestern Minnesota between 2004 and 2016. We tested 940 Peromyscus saliva samples from a variety of habitats and compared the amylase results with morphological data. Our objective was to definitively identify Peromyscus to species in a region with high habitat overlap and to examine how well morphological predictors compared to the amylase identification. Previous to 2014, we found that 33% of the captured mice could not be identified by measurements because of extensive overlap. Additionally, we found 15-25% of identifications based on morphology were incorrect. In sum, the cumulative error when trapping Peromyscus results in up to 48% of the mice we captured being unidentifiable or incorrectly assigned to species based on the body identifiers. Currently we are continuing to adjust our analyzing techniques to more efficiently analyze Peromyscus salvia samples from 2014-2016. There is a trend that the 2016 Minnesota prairie Peromyscus saliva samples are determined to be almost exclusively P. maniculatus, but further analysis is required. Poster Presentation Number: P70 Comparison of Bird Communities on Restored and Remnant Prairies in Northwestern Minnesota Ben Stubbs Prairie habitats have been reduced to approximately 1% of their pre-settlement area. As a result many efforts have been made to reclaim or restore this imperiled habitat. Little data is available on the response of the avian community to these restoration efforts, especially in northwestern Minnesota. During June and July 2016 we examined bird communities on remnant and restored prairies in northwestern Minnesota. We sampled a total of four sites, two restored and two remnant. At each site we walked a 150-m transect and recorded birds heard and seen within a detectable distance in the habitat. During the first two sampling sessions only birds present were recorded, but during sessions three through nine we also recorded the number of individual birds. Although we had similar numbers of species overall at both restored and remnant sites, we had more bird species associated with prairies at remnant sites. The bird community also seemed to be influenced by surrounding areas as one of the restored sites was surrounded by additional remnant prairie and showed greater diversity of prairie species as compared to the other, more isolated restored site. We recommend further research to examine the effectiveness of restoration on bird communities, particularly in reference to additional factors, such as the influence of surrounding habitats, age of restored prairie, and plant species composition. Poster Presentation Number: P71 Characteristics of Cone Caches by American Red Squirrels on Concordia College Campus Jenna Stilwell, Glory Kom, Maddie Howard, Mackenzie Wild We examined the cone collecting behaviors of American Red Squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) on the Concordia College campus. Red squirrels are solitary, territorial, and known to conduct larder hoarding and create one or more food caches that are actively defended. Previous observations of squirrel foraging, cone collecting, and the storage of cones under, or in campus trees lead us to ask questions about the characteristics of the cones stored in these caches. We wanted to see if there were certain sizes or masses of cones that were more likely to be stored. Random samples of cones were collected from each of the three caches chosen around campus. Cones were organized into categories based on weight and size. They were then dyed by size class, and placed back into their piles for further observations. The results of the study indicate that campus squirrels tended to collect middle weightclass cones most frequently, as they are easy to transport and contain enough seeds to make the effort of storing them worth the effort. Future studies would aim to investigate the sizes of cones that are available to squirrels on campus and compare them to the cones that are selected for storage. Poster Presentation Number: P72 Fruiting Body Preference of Trees Peter Bueide, Kevin Marzolf, Brandon Wayne Fungi often share in mutualistic relationships with tree species. A particularly important mutualistic relationship lies between trees and the mycorrhizal fungi that interact with their root structures. This interaction is crucial to tree and forest health. At Long Lake, the forest directly west of the field station contains primarily aspen and oak species. Within the western forest, the east contains primarily aspen species while the west contains primarily oak. The purpose of the experiment was to determine which tree species has a stronger mutualistic relationship with mycorrhizal fungi. The hypothesis tested was that oak trees were more likely to have fruiting bodies near their base associated with mycorrhizal fungi. To test which species were more likely to contain mycorrhizal fungi, trees were observed at the base within a 1m radius for fruiting bodies along four separate 30m transects. On average, aspen species have more fruiting bodies near their base than oak species, however, this trend was not conclusively significant (p=0.082). Understanding the relationship between trees and mycorrhizal fungi could be a beneficial tool in forest rehabilitation as well as in monitoring ecosystem health. Poster Presentation Number: P73 Red River Market: A Social Hub in a Revitalized Downtown Brady Jensen Recently, Moorhead has started the initiative to revive its once-great downtown. This is very similar to a move made by Fargo in the year 2000. Now, Fargo's downtown is a blossoming center of nightlife, boutiques, and restaurants. The greatest evidence of this change is the Red River Market, a local farmers' market that acts as a social hub on Saturday mornings between July and October. In order to learn more about the Red River Market, I visited it on three separate occasions and logged a total of eight hours there. During my time there, I collected notes in a field journal, writing down any behavioral patterns that I could observe. From there, I deducted a bit about the social aspect of the market and followed up my information with interviews of four market participants. This research was then supplemented by the works of others who had already conducted similar studies at various other farmers' markets across the nation. Finally, I gathered information on the history of Fargo's downtown, finding that it has only recently become the gem it is now. This landed me at the conclusion that the people of the Red River Market are a highly social group whose interactions stem from the casual atmosphere and common purposes shared by its people, but it is also evidence of a wider change in Fargo's revitalized downtown area. Poster Presentation Number: P74 Suicide in Prisons: An Analysis of Paula Meehan's Cell and the American Comedy Series Orange Is the New Black Samantha Peka The inspiration for this project emerged from an interest in women's incarceration experiences and the factors that can lead a female prisoner to commit suicide. The four main factors that can contribute to a female prisoner's suicide are prison conditions, mental illnesses, bullying, and drug abuse. Separately, these factors may be less likely to motivate a female prisoner to commit suicide; however, when combined, female prisoners often do not know how to deal with the stressful environment and end up committing suicide. Furthermore, the conditions that female prisoners must live through influence their coping mechanisms which are unique to their gender. Paula Meehan's play Cell, and the American comedy series Orange Is the New Black, support current research that conditions within prisons, mental illnesses, drug abuse, and bullying are the main factors which can contribute to the suicide of female prisoners. Poster Presentation Number: P75 Recognizing White Male Privilege: Key to the Anti-Racist Crusade Sean Zimny The implications of my research pertain to the anti-racist crusade and the campaign towards racial equality, and equality of all kinds. The question that arose, for me, was: "How can a privileged white male, who recognizes his social privilege, best use this privilege effectively to support the struggle for racial inequality?" To combat racism in our society today, white males like myself, who have the utmost, predominant privilege in our culture, must first recognize and utilize our privilege in the struggle against racial inequality and oppression. To recognize such privilege, a white male must educate himself about the concept of race, specifically the production of race as a social construct and not a biological imperative, and utilize this education to provide support in the anti-racist campaign, and to provide that support as an equal, not as a superior or "helper" in a falsely perceived hierarchical, invisible system. In my research, I used a varying array of sources from scholarly articles, doctoral theses, and books on white privilege, to scholarly works on recognizing white privilege along with privilege of other kinds, such as homosexuality. My research contends that recognizing one's privilege is an essential aspect of reaching equality in our anti-racist campaign. Poster Presentation Number: P76 Lifting the Veil of Silence: The Evolution of Silence and Memory in PostHolocaust Norway Kaitlin Preusser For more than twenty years after War II ended, Norway's Holocaust memory was swept under a veil of silence internally and internationally. As the only Scandinavian country involved in the implementation of the Final Solution, Norwegians not only fostered a strong resistance force that helped almost one thousand Norwegian Jews escape to Sweden, but they also abetted a group of Nazi sympathizers, including members of the police and local government, who aided in the deportation of seven hundred and seventy-two Norwegian Jews. Conflicted by their role in the war as both perpetrator and victim, many Norwegians and Norwegian Jewish survivors felt inclined to leave their troubling past experiences behind, untouched and unspoken. Norwegian Jews especially struggled to confront their identity after the war as either Holocaust survivors or refugees and also as Norwegians due to the country's long history of anti-Semitism and constitutional ban on Jewish immigration. However, through recent publications of Norwegian Jewish Holocaust narratives, improved education curriculum, construction of museums and monuments, and the acknowledgement of Holocaust remembrance days, Norway been able to better accept its past and assert its present-day position as a leader in world peace, human rights, and humanitarian aid. The research for this project explored memoirs of Norwegian Jews, personal interviews with current Norwegian university students, the politics of individual and collective memory, and Norway's history of xenophobia. Poster Presentation Number: P77 Between YOLO and FOMO: Millennials and Memory Shelby Reidle, Emily Laaveg, Benjamin Dyrhaug, Clark Brown In January of 2017, Shahak Shapira's Yolocaust project highlighted the dichotomy between millennial culture and Holocaust remembrance. There is a great disconnect between the millennial generation and the Holocaust, and this distance increases as the survivor generation dies out. Holocaust representation in the public sphere, particularly in artistic medias, has fostered the proliferation of narratives and multiple interpretations of the Holocaust by millennials. This project is an attempt to highlight the inherent tension between social media culture, that is based on capturing sensational and exciting moments, against a memory culture rooted in catastrophe. Poster Presentation Number: P78 Lichen Density on Trees of Different Species and Habitats Breann Adamek, Nadia Toumeh, Sabrina DeBlaere, Bailey Ebert Lichen, a symbiotic relationship between fungi and algae, can be an indicator of ecosystem health and change. Lichen is also an important photoautotroph that contributes to nutrient cycling within ecosystems. Our experiment was conducted at Concordia College's Long Lake field station in Detroit Lakes, MN. Its purpose was to compare the lichen density on Bur Oak (Quercus macrocarpa) and Green Ash (Fraxinus pennsylvanica) trees found in forested and open areas. We hypothesized that Bur Oak trees found in open areas will have a higher lichen density than Green Ash trees found in the open areas near Long Lake. Mean percent coverage of lichen on trees was measured for all four cardinal directions through the use of the Braun-Blanquet Method. This method consisted of using a 100 cm2 quadrant on the tree trunk, placed a meter above ground surface. The results of the experiment were significant for tree species as well as the interaction of tree species and habitat, but were not significant for habitat type alone. Our hypothesis was supported, though percent coverage was variable between treatment types. Our data suggests that lichen may gravitate towards certain tree species and/or that a specific combination of species and habitat type allows for maximum lichen growth. Further research is needed in order to determine what tree species and habitat best support the growth of lichen. Poster Presentation Number: P79 Species Survey of the Hell Creek Formation in the Northern United States Breann Adamek, Sarah Curran Over the last twenty-five years, Concordia College has provided the opportunity for research students to participate in annual paleontology digs. The field work carried out by these students and their advising professor involved the collection of fossil samples from the geological formation, Hell Creek. This colossal formation stretches across multiple states in the Northern U.S. The goal of our research was to provide a survey that displays the Hell Creek species quantitatively. The Hell Creek formation research trips have focused on sample collection rather than data collection and analysis. Data collection and analysis are less popular strategies in paleontology, making our research not only unique, but also more challenging. Our survey of the area was made more difficult as the type of research performed involved choosing quality specimens while leaving behind the substandards, i.e. weathered or broken samples, which does not provide an entirely accurate species survey representation of the area. Our second goal of this project was to form a better understanding of which species occupied the area, through the identification of microfossils. Species surveys of this geologic era are relevant as many observed species have modern day counterparts. In this way we can comparatively study evolution, specifically of cold-blooded organisms, for the reference of future research. Poster Presentation Number: P80 Beyond the Mere Exposure Effect: How Does an Experiential Nutrition Education Program Aid in the Healthful Diets of Children? Angelica Anderson, Megan Matthews There is a definite need to increase fruit and vegetable affinity and consumption in children and adolescents. Obesity rates have risen twofold in children 2-5 and threefold in those 6-11 from 20092010 according to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. An increase in fruit and vegetable consumption could aid in reducing obesity and preventing other weight related issues due to their low energy and high nutrient density. Our research exploration outlines the effectiveness of the Mere Exposure Effect along with experiential nutrition education programs. After analyzing current and relevant interventions, we conclude that although the Mere Exposure Effect has significant benefits, an experiential nutrition education program offers young individuals a broader skill-set that will aid in successful fruit and vegetable consumption in the future. Cooking lessons, parent involvement, mealtime experience, and school nutrition programs were found to be important aspects in increasing rates of fruit and vegetable consumption and preference. Poster Presentation Number: P81 Flipping a Psychology Course: Student Perceptions and Test Score Itohan Agbenin, Natalie Rivera Flipping the classroom has become a widely used teaching pedagogy in recent years. The purpose of the study was to appraise the effectiveness of this pedagogy. A total of 54 students, 54% female with an average age of 19.49, enrolled in a flipped Educational psychology course over spring 2015 (27 students) and fall 2015 (27 students) were assessed. The majority of students in the sample were in their sophomore year (68%). The perceptions of students in the flipped classes were assessed using the College and University Classroom Environment Inventory (CUCEI) which measures several dimensions of the classroom environment. The CUCEI data revealed that students perceived Cohesiveness as the weakest dimension and Task Orientation as the strongest dimension of the flipped classroom environment. In addition, the test scores and course evaluations of students in the flipped classes were compared with those of 43 students enrolled in a traditional Educational Psychology class taught in spring 2014. Results from data analyses showed that there was no significant difference in test scores between students in the flipped class and those in the traditional class. However, students in the flipped course gave higher ratings for the overall teaching of the course compared to those in the traditional class. Additionally, students in the flipped class were significantly more likely to agree that the teaching approach used contributed to their learning, stimulated their interest in the content, and improved their ability to address problems and make informed decisions. Suggestions for making the flip more effective are offered. Poster Presentation Number: P82 Recognizing and Treating the Effects of Excessive Stress in Teenagers: A Systematic Review of the Current Research Emily Luckhardt, Cassandra Morlock, Amy Loftness, Cassandra Pollard, Ruby Lunzer Stress is defined as, "A condition that is often characterized by symptoms of physical or emotional tension. It is a reaction to a situation where a person feels threatened or anxious. Stress can be positive or negative". The American Psychology Association reports that, "American teens report experiences with stress that follow a similar pattern as adults", however, for this study, research is being limited to studies focusing only on teenage specific stress. A systematic review of the literature published on the topic of teenage stress research in the field of nursing was performed. Research data bases CINAL, PubMed, and National Institution of Nursing Research were used to pioneer the search. The terms, "Stress", "Teenage", and "Nursing" were used exclusively as search terms and were in the fashion of a Boolean search. Different combinations of these terms were used along with refined search tools per cites ability. Such tools included ability to search within specific dates and search articles which had only nurses as authors. A date range of between 2013-2016 was determined. Websites of unknown authenticity were automatically disqualified from this search. A team of five members each spent roughly 2 hours searching for articles using the above search term, resulting in 10 hours of extensive literature search. From each search, the number of articles published exclusively in the year 2013 were recorded. This continued for all 4 years within the predetermined range. In addition to the number of articles found within a year, key terms describing the topic of each article was recorded in order to understand what large themes are predominating this field of research. In addition to literature review, major nursing research institutions websites were assessed for information pertaining to research being done about teenage stress. Websites were accessed by two members of the team and were assessed by looking under their nursing department research page for insight to any work being done in relation to teenage stress. Websites were determined both by professor recommendation and popular search in the browser Google to determine modern and trending research on Teenage Stress. The number of articles found which were published between 2013-2016 and were authored by nurses varied greatly between search sites. The breakdown of articles found when using Boolean search, "Stress" AND "Teenage" AND "Nursing" is inconsistent. PubMed search resulted in a total of 915 articles meanwhile CINAHL resulted in a total of 25 articles. Through reviewing the articles, key words describing topics of those articles was recorded. Consistent key words which were found were "Teen Pregnancy", "Adolescent Parenting", "Parenting", "Smoking", "Violence", and "Parents with Cancer" among others. Alongside the article search, six major institutions were included and few reported projects in this area. The major research institutions which were assessed were: The University of Minnesota, Duke University, University of North Caroline, John Hopkins, and none had research in the topic of interest. A search of modern and trending research using Google resulted in the finding of nursing research occurring at two institutions. The University of New York (NYU) and The University of Texas-Austin both have articles published. NYU 2015 article entitled: "NYU Study Examines Top High School Students' Stress and Coping Mechanisms". University of Texas- Austin 2014 article titled, "A systematic review of interventions to reduce stress in adolescence."