Awards, Publications, & Projects, 2021-2022

Covers of four faculty books

Awards, Publications, and Projects for English Department Faculty, Emeriti, Lecturers, Visiting Faculty, Graduate Students, and Undergraduates in 2021-2022.

Recent and Forthcoming Faculty Books

 

Lucy CorinThe Swank Hotel book coverThe Swank Hotel, with Graywolf Press, was released in October 2021.
Tobias MenelyClimate and the making of worlds book coverClimate and the Making of Worlds: Toward a Geohistorical Poetics was published with the University of Chicago Press in 2021.
Elizabeth Freeman[cover forthcoming]The co-edited anthology Queer Kinship: Race, Sex, Belonging, Form will be published in Fall 2022 with Duke UP.
Liz MillerExtraction Ecologies book coverExtraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion was published with Princeton University Press in October 2021. 
Katie PetersonLife in a Field coverLife in a Field, Katie Peterson's fifth book, was published by Omnidawn Press in May 2021.

 

Faculty Updates

 

Gina

Bloom

Gina Bloom has been collaborating with South African teacher Lauren Bates to study the impact of Play the Knave (a mixed reality Shakespeare video game she co-created at UCD's ModLab) in Cape Town high school classrooms. Their article "Play to Learn: Shakespeare Games as Decolonial Praxis in South African Schools" was just published in the journal Shakespeare in Southern Africa.

Seeta

Chaganti

Seeta Chaganti's article "Boethian Abolition" appeared in PMLA in early 2022. She also delivered the closing plenary at the 2022 Medieval Academy of America meeting.

Lucy

Corin

Lucy Corin published her novel, The Swank Hotel, with Graywolf Press. It was released in October.

Elizabeth

Freeman

Beth Freeman put her co-edited anthology Queer Kinship: Race, Sex, Belonging, Form into press with Duke; it is due out this fall. She also published an essay, "Committed to the End: On Caretaking, Rereading, and Queer Theory," in Scott Herring and Lee Wallace's anthology Long Term, a short piece on queer temporality for a special issue of Time and Society, and the keyword "Temporality" for the anthology Keywords in Gender and Sexuality Studies.

Erin

Gray

Erin Gray's essay, "Facing Emmett in the New Nadir" was published in the spring 2021 issue of Critical Ethnic Studies in a special forum on Kevin Wilson Jr.’s 2017 film, My Nephew Emmett. Her article, "The Incendiary Image of Lynching: Now! and the Red Summer of 1965" will be published in the summer 2022 issue of Black Camera. Her essay, "Grotesque Melonation in the Art of Mike Henderson," will be published this fall in Mike Henderson: Before the Fire, 1965-1985, which will accompany an exhibition of Henderson's art at the Manetti Shrem Museum. In fall 2021, she moderated an event called "Abolitionist Thought and Praxis: the Black Organizing Project (Oakland USD) and Black Minds Matter (Peralta Community College District) in Dialog with Cops Off Campus" hosted by the Center for Ideas and Society at UC Riverside. In winter 2022, Erin was awarded a Faculty Research Fellowship and a Faculty Development Award.

Pam

Houston

Deep Creek won the Colorado Book Award, the Mountains and Plains Booksellers Advocacy Award, and the High Plains Book Award. This year, Pam has been chosen to judge the National Book Award in fiction. Her book Airmail was also published in 2020.

Hsuan

Hsu

Hsuan has presented his research on olfactory literature and art at the Royal College of Art, the University of Edinburgh, the University of Strasbourg, Yale University, Duke University, and at a symposium for Anicka Yi's Metaspore Exhibition in Milan (all virtual presentations). He has also been working as an editorial board member for the Broadview Anthology of American Literature, scheduled for publication in the Summer of 2022.

John

Marx

The scholarship that John Marx is proudest of this year will be published any minute now: a special issue of the journal Novel: A Forum on Fiction (55.1, 2022) on “The Novel and the Global Reach of Black Lives Matter” co-edited with Justin Mitchell (University of Michigan) and featuring excellent essays by Jesse McCarthy, Madhu Krishnan, Kinohi Nishikawa, Priscilla Layne, and more. Mostly though, Marx’s writing in the last twelve months has taken the form of email correspondence and more or less monthly newsletter columns related to the university’s new Sacramento campus for research and teaching innovation. The columns are collected here.

Tobias

Menely

Tobias Menely published Climate and the Making of Worlds: Toward a Geohistorical Poetics, with the University of Chicago Press.

Liz

Miller

Liz was awarded the Richard Stein Essay Prize from the Interdisciplinary Nineteenth Century Studies Association for her essay "Drill Baby Drill: Extraction Ecologies, Open Temporalities, and Reproductive Futurity in the Provincial Realist Novel." The article was taken from her book, Extraction Ecologies and the Literature of the Long Exhaustion, which came out with Princeton University Press in October 2021. For the 2022-23 academic year, Liz has been appointed Visiting Researcher in the Department of English and German at the University of Granada, in Spain, where she will be collaborating with colleagues in the environmental humanities and 19th-century literature.

Katie

Peterson

Life in a Field, Katie Peterson's fifth book, was published by Omnidawn Press in May 2021. The book, a collaboration with her partner, Davis Studio Art Professor Young Suh, a photographer, combines text and image in a lyric fable in which a girl and a donkey form an uncertain and intimate friendship. The book has been widely reviewed, with positive notice in Publisher's Weekly and the Los Angeles Review of Books, among other publications. Additionally, the Datz Museum in Gwangju South Korea presented an extensive gallery show of Peterson's further collaborations with Suh–books, video, photographs–in Fall 2021. Peterson was named an Associate Editor of the Phoenix Poets Series, a reboot of the longstanding series at the University of Chicago.

Claire

Waters

Claire Waters served her first year as department chair and has continued to work with ACLS on their Design Workshop for the New Academy. Her 2018 edition and translation of Marie de France's Lais led to a conversation with Esquire.com about Lauren Groff's novel Matrix and she contributed an adapted translation of the lai "Chevrefoil" as the text of a new composition by Professor Pablo Ortiz of the UC Davis Music Department (performance by Helena Sorokina here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwFzuVOh5so ). She was also recently awarded a 2022 Teaching Excellence Award from Phi Beta Kappa of Northern California.

Tiffany

Jo Werth

Tiffany Jo Werth has continued to run the reading groups for the “Sea” group under the Oecologies’ umbrella. Their final symposium is finally happening at Bodega Bay in May.

 

 Graduate Students




 

Hillary 

Cheramie

Hillary Cheramie received a 2022-2023 Russell J. and Dorothy S. Bilinski Educational Foundation Dissertation Writing Fellowship.

Laura

Frater

Laura Frater is now working as an Investigative Journalist at the Two Rivers Tribune, a hard copy newspaper based on the Hoopa Reservation in Humboldt County. In this role she is writing on missing people cases, specifically Native people, who have gone missing on and around reservation land. If you would like to read and share these articles, please email Laura and she will send you pdf versions.

Allison

Fulton

Allison Fulton was a selected participant for a short residential course on natural history illustration at the Oak Spring Garden Foundation. She also presented a paper titled "Crafting Flora: Orra White Hitchcock and the Illustrated Herbarium” at a virtual workshop hosted by the Consortium for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine.

Augusta

Funk

This year, Augusta presented a paper, "Landscapes of Cohabitation in Hannah Weiner's Clairvoyant Journal" at the 2022 American Literature Association Conference. She was also the recipient of the department's David Noel Miller Award Miller Essay Prize, which is awarded for the best critical essay submitted each year by an English Department graduate student.

Mario

Giron

Mario Giron received a 2022-2023 Russell J. and Dorothy S. Bilinski Educational Foundation Dissertation Writing Fellowship.

Jessica

Gray

Jessica's book chapter entitled "Foreign Relations: Utopian Fictions and the Birth of Scientific Citizenship" will appear in the forthcoming edited collection Cultures of Citizenship in the 21st Century. This year, as a Business Development Fellow with the UC Davis Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, she joins advanced MBA students and an interdisciplinary cohort of PhD candidates in exploring Graduate School of Management coursework, practicum, and events geared toward networking and developing entrepreneurial skills.

Yasmine

Hachimi

Over the past year, Yasmine Hachimi has been invited to talk about her work on the racialization of Anne Boleyn for the Race & Queenship Lecture Series at Butler University, the Mahindra Humanities Center at Harvard, and the University of York’s Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past. She attended the Renaissance Society of America’s annual convention in Dublin, where she was on the “Gendering Whiteness in Early Modern England” panel, sponsored by The Newberry Center for Renaissance Studies. Yasmine collaborated with the Woolly Mammoth Theatre in an Instagram Live to support their production of Teenage Dick, a contemporary retelling of Richard III and she participated in a lively reading and discussion of The Old Wife’s Tale with The Hurly Burly Shakespeare Show podcast. She was recently invited to interview Margo Hendricks in support of the release of Hendricks’s new book, Race and Romance: Coloring the Past (ACMRS Press). Yasmine will be joining the Newberry Library in the fall as a Public Humanities Postdoctoral Fellow and she is also the recipient of the Mellon Foundation funded RaceB4Race Social Media Fellowship.

Kristen

Hanley Cardozo

Kristen Hanley Cardozo has an article coming out in ABO in May, "Unmasking Polly: Race and Disguise in Eighteenth-Century Plantation Space."

Clara

Jimenez

Clara Jimenez presented a paper titled "Sound and Silence: Examining Voice, Movement, and Interpersonal Dynamics in Gayl Jones’ White Rat" as part of the "Silences, Oral Traditions, Archives" panel at the virtual Gayl Jones Symposium sponsored by Boston University, CSU Fullerton, and UC San Diego.

Faith

Merino Riley

Faith has accepted a Stegner Fellowship in fiction at Stanford University.

M.A.

Miller

M.A. Miller published several new pieces including: "George Eliot's Wetland Form" in the journal Nineteenth-Century Literature, " 'Making Room': Queer Domesticity in Jane Austen's Emma and The Anne Lister Diaries" in the edited collection At Home in the Eighteenth Century: Interrogating Domestic Space, "Intimate Matters: Soil and Inter-species Sexualities in James Grainger's The Sugar Cane" forthcoming in the edited collection Unsettling Sexuality: Eighteenth-century Queer Horizons, and "Constructing the Ideal Proto-transwoman Settler Subject: The Costs of Passing in The Story of an African Farm" forthcoming in the journal Victorian Studies. Miller has been invited to be part of a plenary panel on ecological injustice at this fall's North American Victorian Studies Association's conference where the above work on settler transness and passing will be presented. Miller will be finishing their dissertation, "Gender Unconformities: Becoming-with the Environment in the Nineteenth-Century Anglophone Novel" because they have accepted a position as a Postdoctoral Teaching Fellow in English at University Nevada, Reno for 2022-2024.

Michael

Mlekoday

Michael Mlekoday's second book of poems, All Earthly Bodies, was published by the Univ. of Arkansas Press in March of 2022. They had a poem and a craft/criticism piece (on Larry Levis) published in The Sewanee Review  and a poem published in The Adroit Journal.
Lauren PetersonLauren will be an assistant professor at Walla Walla University beginning fall of 2022.

Bethany

Qualls

Bethany Qualls published a chapter on gossip and Eliza Haywood’s The Tea-Table in the edited collection A Spy on Haywood (Routledge) in fall 2021. She is also publishing the article “Gossip’s Ephemeral Longevity: Power, Circulation, and New Media” in the NECSUS special issue on Rumor (Spring 2022). The online finding aid about forgotten women of metal type design that she created for Letterform Archive (when a 2021 Mellon Public Scholar) will be going live this summer. She gave invited talks at both Texas Woman’s University and Brandeis University, plus presented on mezzotints and B-list celebrity at the 2022 American Society of Eighteenth-Century Studies (ASECS) annual meeting. She continues to co-coordinate the #WriteWithAphra global collaborative writing support initiative, about which she co-wrote multiple pieces for ABO. Bethany was also invited to represent ASECS as a society scholar at the 2022 ACLS Intention Foundry, a Mellon-funded, 3-year initiative to explore innovative practices of equity, inclusion, and structural change in the academy.

Jonathan

Radocay

Jonathan Radocay has contributed an essay titled “Geographies of Allotment Modernisms” to the Routledge Handbook to North American Indigenous Modernities and Modernisms, eds. Kirby Brown, Alana Sayers, and Stephen Ross, forthcoming late 2022. He has also received a 2022-2023 Ford Foundation Dissertation Fellowship. This summer, he is presenting a paper on Winnemem Wintu futures in Progressive Era Periodicals at the Symposium on Indigenous Print Cultures, Media, and Literatures, hosted by The Obama Institute for Transnational American Studies at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany. 

Breanne

Weber

Breanne Weber is the recipient of the 2022-2023 Leeds Hoban Linacre–Huntington Exchange Fellowship from the Huntington Library and Oxford University, awarded to support international archival work for the completion of her dissertation. Her review of Tony Doe and Christopher Thornton's edited collection Dr. Thomas Plume, 1630-1704: His life and legacies in Essex, Kent and Cambridge was published in the March 2022 issue of the Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, and she co-published a public-facing post entitled “Book History, Manuscript Studies, and Navigating Special Collections during COVID-19” with OSU PhD Candidate Tamara Mahadin for the Folger Shakespeare Library’s The Collation in August. She was invited to introduce The Show Must Go (On)Line’s virtual performance of Doctor Faustus with a talk entitled “The Body as Book in Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus.” Breanne also completed her Graduate Certificate in Writing Theory and Practice through UC Davis and letterpress certification through the San Francisco Center for the Book.

Kaelan

Yen Smith

Last November, Kaelan Yen Smith's podcast, "Leonard: Political Prisoner," about Indigenous activist and political prisoner Leonard Peltier, co-written and co-produced with Rory Owen-Delaney and Andrew Fuller, won the Duke University 2021 Human Rights Audio Documentary Award for its "use of audio storytelling to indict centuries of broken treaties, stolen land, and a racist legal system that denies Native Americans their legal and human rights." 

 

Click Here for updates from recent grad student alumni


Emeriti




 

Alessa

Johns

Alessa Johns enjoyed a residential research fellowship at the Duke August Library in Wolfenbüttel, Germany from February to March 2022 to study "English at the Ritterakademie Wolfenbüttel." She published on her experience of pandemic teaching in " 'Dreadful Visitations': Witnessing Disasters," in Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture 1660-1700, 45.2 (Fall 2021): 9-14. Her article, "'The Tranquil March of the Revolution': German and German-American Reverberations of Mary Wollstonecraft's Writings," appeared in Reverberations of Revolution, ed. Elizabeth Amann and Michael Boyden (Edinburgh University Press 2021), pp. 36-55. Another article, "Austen's Persuasion," will appear in Persuasion After Rhetoric, ed. Yasmin Solomonescu and Stefan Uhlig, published by Oxford University Press later this year. And she has co-edited the Handbook of the British Novel in the Long Eighteenth Century, which will be distributed by De Gruyter in July 2022.

Karl

Zender

In 2019, Karl Zender presented "Function and Surmise: Reflections on Macbeth" at a conference in Poznan, Poland. The talk later became the third chapter of Zender's Shakespeare and Faulkner: Selves and Others (2021). Organizers of the Poznan conference have submitted the talk/chapter for republicaton in a journal, Literature Compass. Zender has two essays nearing completion, both on William Faulkner's fiction.

 

Lecturers and Visiting Faculty




 

Chip

Badley

Chip Badley published two articles: "Crayon, Looking: Washington Irving and the Queer Sublime" in J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists and "What Maisie Heard: Sound, Sexuality, and the Subjective Camera" in the Henry James Review. He received a postdoctoral fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities to conduct archival research related to his book project, “Kangaroos among the Beauty: Painting and Queer Sexuality in Nineteenth-Century American Literature,” at the Library Company of Philadelphia.

Iris Jamahl

Dunkle

A chapter from Iris Jamahl Dunkle’s biography on the author Sanora Babb was published by Catamaran, Winter 2021: "Sanora Babb: Challenging the Single Story of the Dust Bowl" 
Annette HulbertAnnette Hulbert accepted a Visiting Assistant Professor position in the English department at Willamette University.

Ashley

Sarpong

This past December Ashley Sarpong graduated with her PhD in English from UC Davis, where she worked as a lecturer this past academic year. In August she will be starting a 1-year position as a Presidential Visiting Fellow at Yale University before starting a tenure-track position at California State University-Stanislaus in 2023. 
 

 

End-of-the-Year English Department Awards

 

Celeste Turner Wright Poetry Prize 2022

  • 1st Place:  Bailey Harrison, “member that tulsa twilight”
  • 2nd Place:  Kayleigh Norgord, “Ocean City”
  • Honorable Mention:  Chloe Gambill, “In the Kitchen”

Pamela Maus Contest in Creative Writing

Fiction

  • 1st Place: Keerthi Lakshmanan, “Her Rani”
  • 2nd Place: Rafael Viscarra, “Flight of 1000 Doves”
  • 3rd Place: Hope Koonin, “Dead Stretch”

Poetry

  • 1st Place:  Anna Kristina Moseidjord, “on my grandmother’s suicidal tendencies” “lover” “brookpark road” “On Europe” “egg” and “how it looks from everywhere else”
  • 2nd Place: Cami Rothmuller, “Magicicada (Periodical Cicada)” “Idolatry” “Groundwater” “Chrysina Woodii (Wood’s Jewel Scarab)” “Nightwalk” and “The Composer”
  • 3rd Place: Jesse Saldivar, “July 4th Vacation” “ Where the Walls Meet” “Psyche Word” “Edifice of Nature” “Terrible Song” and “The Drop of Water in Red Light, by Shiva Ahmadi

Honorable Mentions

  • Josephine Clay, “Love Song (Hibernation)
  • Kiley Egan, “Forever Monsoon”
  • Candela Graciarena, “Mi Tesoro”
  • Jill Kraus, “Because we’re family”
  • Spencer Rico, “Things to Remember when Working”

Diana Lynn Bogart Prize for Fiction

  • 1st Place:  Faith Arnett, “Like Sleeping Dogs,” “Gold Turkey,” “Gen Z Guernica”
  • 2nd Place:  Jacob Anderson, “Miss Blanchard’s House”
  • 3rd Place:  Cyan McMillan, “Counterrelational” and “The Young Man’s Taste”

Elliot Gilbert Award for the Best Creative Writing Honors Project

  • Anna Kristina Moseidjord, “The Odd Survival”

Peter Hays Writing Prize

  • Emilie Sung, “To Love, or not to Love (the chicken)”

Elliot Gilbert Award for the Best Honors Undergraduate Critical Thesis

  • Anna Hayden, “Hester Pulter and Domestic Alchemy: Women’s Imagined Political Autonomy in 17th Century England”

Lois Ann Lattin Rosenberg English Department Essay Prize

  • 1st Place:  Eli Martin, “Bloom as ‘Collector’ in James Joyce’s Ulysses” – ENL 189, Dobbins
  • Honorable Mentions:
    • Emma Tolliver, “Bittersweet Battlegrounds: The Conflict of Consuming the Other in a Transnational World” – ENL 189, Dolan
    • Claire Volkmann, “The Angelic Ideal in Paradise Lost” – ENL 122, Werth

Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research

  • Mimi McMillan, “’Like Footsteps Upon Wool’: Philology, Ecology, and Tennyson’s Early Lyrics"; Faculty Director:  Elizabeth Miller

Lois Ann Lattin Rosenberg Outstanding Graduating Senior Award

  • Fiona Davis
  • Eli Elster

Undergraduate Citations



 

Athena AghighiAthena Aghighi was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Andres Rafael ArciniegaAndres Rafael Arciniega was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Kayleigh Olivia BaldwinKayleigh Olivia Baldwin was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Gabriel BellueGabriel Bellue was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Hanna M. BollingerHanna M. Bollinger was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Annie Sybil BregerAnnie Sybil Breger was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Sasha B. ChavezSasha B. Chavez was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Katie Jiayin ChenKatie Jiayin Chen was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Josephine ClayJosephine Clay was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Martha Ashley CortezMartha Ashley Cortez was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Kylie L Crisostomo-RickmanKylie L Crisostomo-Rickman was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Rose Emily CurfmanRose Emily Curfman was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Patrice Andria Domingo DelaraPatrice Andria Domingo Delara was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Jacob Raviv DerinJacob Raviv Derin was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Teja Shiva DusanapudiTeja Shiva Dusanapudi was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Eli Stark ElsterEli Stark Elster was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Kaitlyn Evelyn EnriciKaitlyn Evelyn Enrici was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Liv Kristin EricksonLiv Kristin Erickson was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Travin FeramiscoTravin Feramisco was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Anne Elise FeyAnne Elise Fey was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Angela FigueroaAngela Figueroa was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Mehdi Hassan HajarMehdi Hassan Hajar was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Alexis (Lexi) Marie HansenAlexis (Lexi) Marie Hansen was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Anna Prudence Teoxon HaydenAnna Prudence Teoxon Hayden was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Micah Immanuel JamiesonMicah Immanuel Jamieson was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Jill Ann KrausJill Ann Kraus was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Mariann LactaoenMariann Lactaoen was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Lisa LaiLisa Lai was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Manqi (Macy) LuManqi (Macy) Lu was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Mary Elise LudlowMary Elise Ludlow was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Matthew Ray ManusMatthew Ray Manus was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Eli Christian MartinEli Christian Martin was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Rebecca Sophie MartinRebecca Sophie Martin was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Adaline Katherine MccawAdaline Katherine Mccaw was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Ladonna Nicole McCraneyLadonna Nicole McCraney was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Mary (Mimi) Katherine McmillanMary (Mimi) Katherine Mcmillan was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Jacqueline Margaret MooreJacqueline Margaret Moore was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Hayley Susan MorrisHayley Susan Morris was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Anna Kristina Pollock MoseidjordAnna Kristina Pollock Moseidjord was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Tyler Boothe MowryTyler Boothe Mowry was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Eva Rebecca Alexand NemirovskyEva Rebecca Alexand Nemirovsky was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Jacob OlmosJacob Olmos was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Sarah Magdalena OsegueraSarah Magdalena Oseguera was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Megan Michelle PowersMegan Michelle Powers was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Jordan C. RidgeJordan C. Ridge was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Brianna Celeste RodriguezBrianna Celeste Rodriguez was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Kelsey Morgan Scaife PuckettKelsey Morgan Scaife Puckett was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Christine Joyce SolivaChristine Joyce Soliva was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Felicia SongFelicia Song was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Kevin TanKevin Tan was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Katrina Alysse TorrealbaKatrina Alysse Torrealba was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Samuel C. Van BlaricomSamuel C. Van Blaricom was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Catalina Celine VelascoCatalina Celine Velasco was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Iviana Flor VillanuevaIviana Flor Villanueva was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Claire Sun Hee VolkmannClaire Sun Hee Volkmann was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Samuel Joseph VotrianSamuel Joseph Votrian was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Tori Brianna Wailes DavisTori Brianna Wailes Davis was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Betty WangBetty Wang was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Indra WatersIndra Waters was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Maya Gabrielle WhiteMaya Gabrielle White was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Sorcha WyldeSorcha Wylde was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
May Augusta WyntonMay Augusta Wynton was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Victoria Kang-Li XuVictoria Kang-Li Xu was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Xin YeXin Ye was cited for outstanding performance in the major.
Rain YekikianRain Yekikian was cited for outstanding performance in the major.

 

 

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