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A Pennsylvania College of Technology professor recently published an essay and assumed the presidency of an international literature organization. Mark D. Noe, professor of English-composition, published an essay in the Summer 2009 issue of ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews.

Expanding upon his assistance to American Indian tribes preparing for agricultural terrorism, a faculty member at Pennsylvania College of Technology recently trained the local County Animal Response Team in how to deal with an intentional livestock infection. Steven R. Parker, certified by the U.S.

Bonnie R. Taylor, who retired from Pennsylvania College of Technology's School of Business and Computer Technologies at the end of the Spring 2009 semester, recently edited and/or reviewed four business-related textbooks. Taylor was integral in preparing the fourth edition of "Business Communication, Building Critical Skills," by the late Kitty O.

Bonnie R. Taylor, who retired from Pennsylvania College of Technology's School of Business and Computer Technologies at the end of the Spring 2009 semester, recently edited and/or reviewed four business-related textbooks. Taylor was integral in preparing the fourth edition of "Business Communication, Building Critical Skills," by the late Kitty O.

A student in Pennsylvania College of Technology's two-year health information technology major has been awarded a merit scholarship from the AHIMA Foundation, the philanthropic and charitable arm of the American Health Information Management Association. Carol E.

A graduate of Pennsylvania College of Technology's four-year accounting major has been included among the Pennsylvania Institute of Certified Public Accountants' "Outstanding Seniors" for the year. Gina M.

Penn College has been honored by the Internal Revenue Service for its participation in the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, which uses agency-certified business students to provide free tax help to qualified area residents. The college again collaborated this past tax season with the Salvation Army, where a brief ceremony was held Monday in recognition of that longtime involvement.

She has an associate degree from a well-respected institution and a rewarding job with one of the region's top employers, so what could be more attractive to Kathryn M. Barbera? How about a front-row seat for future advancement in one of the nation's fastest-growing fields without compromising her current position?

Pennsylvania College of Technology students helped hundreds of taxpayers file 2008 federal returns during two months of free tax assistance at area sites, resulting in refunds of more than twice the amount disbursed during the previous season. According to statistics provided by Phillip D.

Two Pennsylvania College of Technology graduates are in the midst of storybook lives, if you consider that the "story" is one of the biggest to hit Pennsylvania in the 150 years since Edwin Drake struck oil at Titusville: development of the Marcellus Shale, a geological swath that runs beneath a half-dozen states and could hold enough natural gas to slake a nation thirsty for a homegrown energy s