Travel Abroad Brings Forth Education

Travel Abroad Brings Forth Education
Photo Submitted

Thirteen students from our university will make their way to Greece with their teachers this summer, in order to study the history, language and culture of the Greeks.

Read the Greek version of this story.

“I am very pleased with this opportunity,” said Daniel Levine, one of the two teachers. “The students of Arkansas always do the best work and learn a lot. Truly, travel abroad is the best education.”

Levine and his colleague George Paulson will be in Greece for 28 days with their students who love to learn.

Contacts

Daniel Levine, professor
Classical Studies
479-575-2951, dlevine@uark.edu

Headlines

Former U.S. Senator Mark Pryor to Receive Honorary Degree

The U of A will award an honorary degree to Mark Pryor, an alumnus and former U.S. senator, during its spring university commencement ceremony at 8:30 a.m. Saturday, May 11, in Bud Walton Arena.

Semiconductor Research and Fabrication Facility Celebrates Topping Out

The new facility will produce microelectronic chips made with silicon carbide, a powerful semiconductor that outperforms basic silicon in several critical ways, and allow testing of industry prototypes.

Kendyl Link Named Undergraduate Winner of Felix Christopher McKean Memorial Award

A senior involved in University Programs and Greek Life, Link's poem "Fish" will appear in Issue 9 of The Diamond Line, the U of A's undergraduate literary magazine, this spring.

Patitz Awarded NSF Grant for Research on DNA-Based Nanostructure Research

Matthew Patitz, associate professor, plans to construct nanoscale structures using DNA sequences designed to fold into elongated slats that then form complex geometries.

Interior Architecture Students Make Metropolis' Future100 List, Win Portfolio Competition

Isabel Provisor Lemery, one of three national winners, and Lacey Oxford, both students in the Department of Interior Architecture and Design, are featured among the Metropolis magazine's Future100.

News Daily