alumna — ϲ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 16:17:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Newhouse Alumna Serves Hometown Community Through Work With the Buffalo Bills Foundation /blog/2024/10/22/newhouse-alumna-serves-hometown-community-through-work-with-the-buffalo-bills-foundation/ Tue, 22 Oct 2024 16:17:32 +0000 /?p=204472 A woman in a white suit and blue top stands on a football field near the end zone. She wears sunglasses and sneakers. The stadium is filled with fans, and a big screen is visible in the background under a partly cloudy sky.

Morgan Foss

Growing up on a cattle farm in Alden, New York, a rural community 30 minutes east of Buffalo, gave Morgan Foss G’20 an understanding of agriculture, food production and life on a farm.

The master’s degree in public relations Foss graduated with from the gave her a strong foundation of communication, writing, relationship-building and strategic thinking.

Today, she puts it all together as program manager for the Buffalo Bills Foundation, the nonprofit arm of her hometown football franchise. The foundation supports a wide breadth of initiatives dedicated to improving the quality of life in the Western New York region, but its primary focus is addressing child hunger, food access and supporting healthy eating.

“Buffalo is the sixth most segregated metropolitan region in the country and 1 in 5 children—1 in 8 people overall—are food insecure,” Foss says, illuminating the importance of her work with the foundation. “There are many food deserts within the city and in surrounding communities, despite there being many agricultural areas, like where I grew up.”

The supports several nonprofit organizations and programs that uplift the food system and provide healthy foods to underserved families. Foss is one of three employees who liaise with the foundation’s board of directors to respond to funding requests and direct resources to the many hunger-fighting organizations doing the work.

“The Bills organization has such a large platform and influence in the Western New York region. So in this position, I can connect the community’s needs with resources and bring awareness to specific causes.”

A Pandemic-Inspired Pivot

While Foss was always drawn to nonprofit and community-based work, she went to Newhouse intent on entering entertainment public relations after completing an undergraduate degree from the University of Alabama.

In the spring of 2020, she was planning to visit Los Angeles for the entertainment immersion experience and was pursuing an internship in Nashville with Sony Music Entertainment, and then … we all know what happened next.

Two individuals standing in front of a colorful Providence Farm Collective trailer. The trailer features a Buffalo Bills Foundation logo and corn graphics. Both people are smiling and dressed in casual clothing.

Foss (left) and Buffalo Bills Foundation president Thomasina Stenhouse, Ph.D., visit the Providence Farm Collective, an Orchard Park-based organization that cultivates farmer-led and community-rooted agriculture and food systems.

“All of a sudden I was finishing up my master’s degree, teaching undergraduate courses online and doing a virtual internship all from my childhood bedroom while simultaneously working on my family farm,” Foss says.

Not only were her personal plans put on hold, but the entire PR and entertainment industry was a question mark as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold. With so much uncertainty, Foss began looking for opportunities closer to home, ultimately leading to her dream career with the Bills.

“It was a crazy time and while many businesses closed, my family farm and the agriculture industry trudged forward to ensure food was produced and stocked on shelves,” says Foss. “The pandemic certainly changed the trajectory of my career, but I’m grateful for it.” She emphasizes that her experience in 2020 built life skills that have wildly benefited her career—including adaptability, organization, being innovative with her time and space and the ability to build relationships through a screen.

Giving Back and Living the Dream

Foss was named community relations coordinator with the Bills in 2022. Now in her third season with the organization, she has been promoted to Bills Foundation program manager, overseeing the distribution of foundation grants to nonprofits across the community.

Foss has also worked on initiatives promoting cancer awareness, military appreciation and social justice (in partnership with the National Football League’s Crucial Catch, Salute to Service and Inspire Change initiatives), as well as CPR education and AED awareness, youth sports and physical fitness and numerous other causes championed by players.

The Bills recently wrapped up their annual Huddle of Hunger Initiative, which collected over 31,000 pounds of food and raised more than $150,000 to support 20 local charities, including FeedMore WNY and its 400 hunger-relief agencies serving the four counties surrounding Highmark Stadium. “For this year’s food drive, we had 16 rookie players and six veteran players participate and a massive turnout,” Foss says. “The Buffalo Bills players are amazing and very dedicated to the community where they play.”

A smiling family stands on a football field. A woman holds a baby, and a tall man wearing a "BILLS" shirt has an arm around her. Trees and bleachers are visible in the background.

Foss with her partner, Tre, and son, Tino, at Bills training camp this summer

Besides the technical and interpersonal skills she developed at Newhouse, Foss says one of the best takeaways has been the group of friends and fellow alumni she connected with during the master’s program.

“I have a group chat with my best friends from the program,” Foss says. “Going through this experience together of graduating during the pandemic was unique, and we know we can count on each other to discuss our careers—areas we might want to grow in and navigating challenges or transitions. I love having peers who are on the same wavelength and seeing my friends growing and doing amazing work in their industries and their fields.”

Earlier this year, Foss had her first baby, a son named Valentino—Tino for short—and returned to her role part-time for the 2024 season. She is thrilled to be back in the business of connecting the foundation’s resources and the Bills players with the people and organizations in her community doing incredible work.

“Just so far this season [in addition to Huddle for Hunger], we’ve brought players to Dave and Buster’s to hang out with families affected by cancer, we’ve made sandwiches and handed out food with players at St. Luke’s Missionary Church, we’re getting ready for Veterans and Native Heritage Month celebrations in November. We do a lot with different youth organizations and that’s probably my favorite part of the job—just seeing kids light up after meeting their idol,” Foss says.

To learn more about the work of Foss and the Buffalo Bills Foundation, visit .

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100 Together: Alumna Rosalind ‘Roz’ Rudolph Shares a Special Birthday With the Maxwell School /blog/2024/06/28/100-together-alumna-rosalind-roz-rudolph-shares-a-special-birthday-with-the-maxwell-school/ Fri, 28 Jun 2024 14:17:42 +0000 /?p=201079 Woman sitting down smiling holding an Otto the Orange stuffed animal.

Rosalind “Roz” Rudolph

The Maxwell School is proud to share its 100th birthday with alumna Rosalind “Roz” Rudolph ’44 of Los Angeles, California.

Born on July 30, 1924, she was just three months old when the school was founded by entrepreneur George H. Maxwell. Some 18 years later, Rudolph—whose maiden name is Millinger—left her home in New York to attend the school, which fostered her lifelong interest in world affairs, politics and government.

A few years after earning a bachelor’s degree, she returned to ϲ for a homecoming weekend, where she met her future husband, Seymour Rudolph. They married six months later and remained in ϲ for 60 years. The couple had three children: Andrea, Alan and Ellen. Seymour, known to loved ones as “Si,” died in 1987.

Ellen Rudolph says her mom was always “a curious and adventurous person at heart,” who was eager to explore the world with her family. One of their first excursions, in the mid-1950s, was a trip to South Africa, which included a safari. In 1972, the Rudolphs celebrated their 25th anniversary with a trip around the world, first picking up Ellen from a year abroad as a high school exchange student in Japan. They made stops in China, Thailand, India, Nepal, Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, Italy and Greece. In the 1980s, they visited Russia, China and South America. Over the years, they also visited Scandinavia and New Zealand and hosted several foreign exchange students.

Rudolph was passionate about keeping active and loved outdoor sports, especially golf and tennis. She won at least one club championship at Lafayette Country Club, Ellen says, and continued to play regularly well into her 90s—often with friends who were 20 years her junior.

A tireless volunteer and a member of several boards, she helped run the ϲ Community Nursery School and supported the Everson Museum as a gift shop promoter and buyer. She was also an avid patron of the arts in ϲ and Rochester, where she resided for seven years prior to moving to join Ellen and her family in California in 2018.

Rudolph is exceedingly well looked after in an assisted living residence, says Ellen. She is known for her humor and warm nature and is proud to be a grandmother to three and a great-grandmother to two.

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Undergraduate Spearheads Study Using Physics to Understand How Cells Self-Sort /blog/2024/04/21/undergraduate-spearheads-study-using-physics-to-understand-how-cells-self-sort/ Sun, 21 Apr 2024 20:38:19 +0000 /?p=199135
two people standing in front of research poster

Physics alumna Erin McCarthy ’23, right, was lead author on a study published in Physical Review Letters, which uncovered mechanisms that cause particles to sort spontaneously into different groups. Professor M. Lisa Manning, left, was a co-author.

Erin McCarthy ’23, physics summa cum laude, is a rarity among young scientists. As an undergraduate researcher in the College of Arts and Sciences’ , she guided a study that appeared in March 2024 in . It is the most-cited physics letters journal and the eighth-most cited journal in science overall.

McCarthy and postdoctoral associates Raj Kumar Manna and Ojan Damavandi developed a model that identified an unexpected collective behavior among computational particles with implications for future basic medical research and bioengineering.

“It’s very difficult to get a paper into Physical Review Letters,” says , co-author and the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Physics, as well as founding director of the . “Your scientific peers must judge it as exceptional.”

McCarthy, a New Jersey native, chose ϲ because of its “tremendous energy,” she says. “The educational and the research side of things was amazing. I came planning to be a physics major who was premed. I loved physics and biology, and I wanted to be involved in healthcare and medicine. And I got lucky in that I met Dr. Manning as a freshman, and she introduced me to computational biophysics. I started in research during my freshman year, which is extremely unusual.”

“Erin learned coding from scratch, and then did hours and hours of simulations, which took a lot of perseverance,” says Manning. “It’s just a fantastic testament to her work ethic and brilliance that this paper appeared in such a prestigious journal.”

person standing outside Physics Building

Erin McCarthy standing in front of the Physics Building during 2023 graduation weekend.

The research team used computational physics modeling to figure out the underlying mechanisms that cause particles to sort spontaneously into different groups.

Learning how particles behave in physics models could provide insight into how living biological particles—cells, proteins and enzymes—remix themselves in development.

In the early stages of an embryo, for example, cells start out in heterogeneous mixtures. Cells must self-sort into different compartments to form distinct homogenous tissues. This is one of the major collective cell behaviors at work during development of tissues and organs and organ regeneration.

“Cells need to be able to organize themselves properly, segregating themselves to do their jobs,” says McCarthy. “We wanted to understand, if you remove chemistry and look strictly at physics, what are the mechanisms by which this reorganization can happen spontaneously?”

Previous physics investigations found that particles separate when some receive a jolt of higher temperature. As one population of particles becomes injected with energy at a small scale, it turns active—or “hot”—while the other population is left inactive, or “cold.” This difference in heat causes a reorganization among the two populations. These models are simplified versions of biological systems, using temperature to approximate cellular energy and movement.

“Hot particles push the cold particles aside so they can take over a larger space,” says co-author Manna. “But that only happens when a gap exists between particles.”

Previous modeling identified self-sorting particle behavior at less-packed, intermediate densities.

But the ϲ team found something surprising. After injecting energy into a population of high-density particles, the hot particles did not shove cold ones around. The hot particles lacked space to do so.

That is important because biological particles—proteins in cells and cells in tissue—typically live in tight, crowded spaces.

“Your skin, for instance, is a very dense environment,” says McCarthy. “Cells are packed so closely together, there’s no space between them. If we want to apply these physics findings to biology, we must look at high densities for our models to be applicable. But at very high densities, the difference in activity between two populations does not cause them to sort.”

There must be some other self-sorting mechanism at play in biology. “Temperature or active injection of energy does not always separate things, so you can’t use it in biology,” says Manning. “You must search for some other mechanism.”

To Manning, this study illustrates the strengths of ϲ. “The fact that an undergraduate spearheaded this research speaks to the awesome quality of students we have at ϲ, who are as good as those anywhere in the world, and to the exceptionalness of Erin herself,” says Manning.

Manna, the postdoctoral mentor for the last part of McCarthy’s project, was essential in driving it to conclusion.

“The study wouldn’t have happened without him,” says Manning. “This demonstrates that we are able to recruit outstanding postdoctoral associates to ϲ because we are such a great research university.” Manna is now a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Physics at Northeastern University.

McCarthy, a research technologist in a biological lab at the Northwestern University School of Medicine, plans to start applying for graduate school.

“At ϲ,” says McCarthy, “I learned how much I love research and want it to be a part of my future.”

Story by John H. Tibbetts

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