IN MEMORIUM
DR. SCOTT SEREGNY
Dr. Scott Seregny, professor of Russian history at IUPUI, died early in the morning of June 16, 2003 at Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis. He had been battling cancer for three years. Dr. Seregny was born in Detroit on November 20, 1950. He said his interest in Russian history had been kindled by the discovery of John Gunther's "Inside Russia Today" on his father's bookshelf. In 1972 Dr. Seregny received a bachelor's degree with honors in Russian Studies at the University of Michigan, where he went on to receive a doctorate in Russian history in 1982. He was highly regarded in his field as an expert on the educational system, peasant life and culture, and rural society of czarist Russia before the 1917 Revolution. An active scholar, Dr. Seregny spent two years at the Russian Research Center at Harvard and was the recipient of many prestigious awards and fellowships, including several from the Fulbright Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. He wrote a seminal study, "Russian Teachers and Peasant Revolution" (1989), co-edited a study of politics and society in rural Russia, and produced over forty articles, book chapters, conference papers, reviews, and translations. At his death he was working on a study of rural politics in pre-revolutionary Russia and an article on post-Communist education.

Dr. Seregny's significant achievements as a scholar were matched by his accomplishments in the classroom. He felt teaching to be his main vocation and his popular classes were filled with students attracted by his reputation for high standards, engaging lectures, imaginative course design, and cutting-edge scholarship. He inspired many to pursue careers in education and during his illness his former students made sure he knew how deeply he had touched their lives.

Dr. Seregny's friends in Indianapolis and colleagues at IUPUI mourn the loss of a great friend -- a gentle and courageous man whose advice, help, and encouraging words they could always count on. He was one of the pillars of the History Department. His collegiality, sense of humor, and reassuring presence "down the hall" will be sorely missed.

Dr. Seregny is survived by his wife, Katie (Bruggeman) Seregny, his sister, Julie Mahoney, Macomb, IL, and his mother, Dolores, and brother, Jeffrey, of suburban Detroit. Funeral services for Dr. Seregny were held in Troy, Michigan, on Friday, June 20. A memorial service will be held for Indianapolis friends and colleagues in early fall when IUPUI classes resume. The family asks that memorial tributes be made in Dr. Seregny's name to the National Cancer Institute, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20892.

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