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Welcome to the Calendar page of the Ph.D. Students' Website. See notes below. Calendar ADDED EVENT. Tuesday, February 20, 3:30 - 5 PM, SZB104, Tapan Parikh, Designing Appropriate Computing Technologies for the Rural Developing World. Globalization has seen an increase in disparity between developed and undeveloped regions. Disproportionate access to information technology is a symptom and a factor contributing to this disparity. In particular, people living in the rural developing world have many information needs that could be met by IT, but are not. Technology for this context must be low-cost, accessible, and appropriate given the local infrastructure, including conditions of intermittent power and connectivity. The speaker will describe his experiences developing CAM, a toolkit for mobile phone data collection in the rural developing world. If you are interested in appropriate technologies, digital divide issues, rural access to communication, and literacy and information. This iForum presentation will be of interest. Tapan Parikh is from the University of Washington. For more information, please contact Dr. Galloway. Tuesday, February 20, 6:30-8:30 PM, GEO2.216, Microsoft, Microsoft Softgrid Application Virtualization—the Next Great Shift in Computing. A tech talk, sponsored by the UT ACM Student Chapter. Application Virtualization is a new paradigm in computing that is rocketing to the forefront of the overall virtualization landscape. Microsoft is leading the way with the Microsoft SoftGrid Application Virtualization platform. This evolutionary platform simplifies application management by abstracting the application and it’s dependencies from the operating system, where even though the application is running on the local computer, the operating system remains unchanged. Coupled with a dynamic delivery protocol, Microsoft SoftGrid transforms any Windows application into a network available service, delivered when the user needs it with the guarantee that application conflicts are a thing of the past. We hope you will join us to learn more about this exciting innovation at Microsoft. Come and see where the largest computer software company is looking for the future Bring your résumé to be entered to win a Free Portable Media Center!!! Tons of software and other great prizes, along with FREE PIZZA, will be provided! For more information. Fore information, please visit the temporary UT ACM Website or contact UT ACM. Tuesday, February 7, 7-9 PM, UNB 3.202 (Ballroom),
David Gergen. Author & Former Presidential Adviser David Gergen
to Speak at UT. For 30 years, David Gergen has been an active participant
in American
national life. He served as director of communications for President
Reagan and held positions in the administrations of Presidents Nixon
and Ford. In 1993, he put his country before politics when he agreed
to first serve as counselor to President Clinton on both foreign policy
and domestic affairs, then as special international adviser to
the president and to Secretary of State Warren Christopher. David
Gergen is a professor of public service and the director of the
Center for Public Leadership at the John F. Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard University. He is also editor-at-large at U.S.
News & World Report. Mr. Gergen also regularly serves as an analyst
on various news shows, and he is a frequent lecturer at venues around
the world. In the fall of 2000 he published a best-selling book titled,
Eyewitness to Power: The Essence of Leadership, Nixon to Clinton.
From 1984 to 1993, Mr. Gergen worked mostly as a journalist. For some
two-and-a-half years, he was editor of U.S. News. Working with the
owner and editor-in-chief Mortimer Zuckerman and a revived staff,
he helped to guide the magazine to record gains in circulation and
advertising. During that period, he also teamed up with Mark Shields
for political commentary every Friday night for five years on the
MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. The two were a popular political team and
won numerous accolades for their political coverage. FREE passes are
available NOW to UT students, faculty and staff, from
the Texas Union Student Events Center Ticket Office weekdays 8 am-5
pm with a UT ID. A pass is required for admission but does not guarantee
admission to the event. This event is not open to the general public.
This event is sponsored by the Center for Ethical Leadership at the
Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs and the Texas Union
Student Events Center Distinguished Speakers Committee (DSC). The
Distinguished Speakers Committee is an organization that is funded
primarily by the Texas Union Fee paid by all students. For
more information please visit the Student Event Center's website or
contact Crystal King, Assistant Director for Student Programs via
email or phone 475-6645. ADDED EVENT. Wednesday, February 21, 4-6 PM, SZB 556, Ron Pollock, Interview Workshop. This workshop focuses on preparing for interviews (phone and personal) and communicating your value and interest to employers. You will work on preparing statements for introductions, answering questions like "Tell me about yourself" or "What is your greatest strength?", how to dress, questions to ask the interviewer, what to do in a telephone interview, and how to handle the delicate salary "question". The workshop will prepare you for the basics of interviewing so that we can easily help you prepare for specific job interviews in a one-on-one setting. For more information, please contact Ron Pollock, via email or phone, 471-2623. ADDED EVENT. Wednesday, February 21, 6-7 PM, WEL1.316, Student Senate, Integrity Week Activity. Clare Reviello of GSA writes, "This Wednesday, February 21st Brian Gatten and I will be performing in a short skit as part of Senate's Integrity UT Week. You should come cheer for us because if we win, GSA gets $250! (And winning is based on applause.) The event is from 6-7pm in Welch 1.316. There will be free pizza and a performance by Gigglepants, UT's improv group. Also, in case you need more incentive to attend, the event is likely to include Brian wearing a kilt and me burning a bra. You won't want to miss this!" For more information please contact Clare Reviello. Thursday, February 22, deadline for early bird registration for the TLA Conference April 11-14, at San Antonio. See below for details.) For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Thursday, February 22, 11 AM - 1 PM, SSB G1.310, 2007 Graduate Student Tax Seminar. UT representatives from the International Office, Payroll Office, and Office of Accounting discuss specific UT student tax issues; representatives from the IRS will be available to answer your questions about student educational tax benefits and processes; and the Community Tax Centers will be on site to advise where you can go for free tax filing assistance. Come early for light breakfast snacks. The event sponsored by the Graduate Coordinator Network. Refreshments courtesy of The Office of Graduate Studies. For more information, please visit the event Website or contact Nichole Evans or Carol Carreón. ADDED EVENT. Thursday, February 22, 4:30 - 6 PM, WMB 3.112, Frances Gale, The Role of the Architectural Conservator. In this Kilgarlin Center forum, Frances Gale, Director of the Architectural Conservation Laboratory in the UT Austin School of Architecture, will speak on the role of the architectural conservator from the perspective of the School of Architecture. After her talk, attendees will have the opportunity to tour the Conservation Laboratory. We look forward to seeing you! For more information, please contact Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa, Director, The Kilgarlin Center, via email or phone, 471.8287. ADDED EVENT. Thursday, February 22, 7-9 PM, HRC , Daniel Posnansky, Arthur Conan Doyle on America: British-American Foreign Policy in the New Millennium. Daniel Posnansky, retired faculty of Harvard University, presents the Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Lecture. Posnansky will discuss the ways in which Arthur Conan Doyle and Sherlock Holmes influenced American foreign policy for decades after Doyle’s death, and continue to do so. He will bring samples of original materials from his personal collection, including letters of Harry S. Truman and Franklin D. Roosevelt, that quote Holmes and discuss his strategies for pressing foreign concerns. The Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Lecture was established to honor the Ransom Center’s Carl and Lily Pforzheimer Library, one of the world’s most important collections of English literature. Acquired in 1986, the collection, compiled by New York investment banker and bibliophile Carl H. Pforzheimer, comprises over 1,100 volumes and nearly 250 groups of letters and manuscripts that represent the foundations of English culture. Seating is free, but limited. For more information please contact gregory3236@yahoo.com Friday, February 23, Cedar Door, GSA, Happy Hour. Free appetizers and drinks while supplies last! Cedar Door is located at 201 Brazos St. For more information, please contact Anthony Matteo, GSA Administrator Director. ADDED EVENT. Friday, February 23, 6:30-9 PM, UNB- Underground, SASI Bowling. Join your student association in fun and frolic at the bowling alley. Free for iSchoolers food, bowling, shoes, and fun. For more information please contact Lea Susan Engle.
Future Events Monday, February 26, deadline for submitting a proposal for Drexel, Connections 2007, May 18-20. See details below. Tuesday-Wednesday, February 27-28, Campus wide Student Government Elections. The University of Texas Graduate Student Assembly is pleased to announce the 2007-2008 officer elections to be held in conjunction with campus-wide elections on February 27th and 28th. All candidates who have applied meet the eligibility requirements as outlined in the Graduate Student Assembly Constitution, Bylaws, and Election Code. The duties of these offices as outlined by the GSA Bylaws may be found on the GSA web site. Running unopposed for the office of President is Brian Gatten, a doctoral student in English. His personal statement may be found at . The two candidates for the office of Vice-President for External Affairs include Bradley Carpenter, a doctoral student in Education Policy and Planning, and Travis Witherspoon, a master’s student in Energy and Earth Resources. No candidates filed to run for the office of Vice-President for Internal Affairs. That position will be filled in accordance with the Constitution and Bylaws of the GSA. In addition to the offices of President and Vice-Presidents for Internal and External Affairs, the following Executive and Administrative officer appointments are also available. Executive Offices include a Financial Director, Programs Director, Communications Director and an Administrative Director. Administrative Offices include a Membership Director, a Legislative Relations Director, and a Student Affairs Director. Candidates for appointed offices must submit an application by March 7. The UT Graduate Student Assembly is the principal body for the representation of graduate student interests at the University of Texas at Austin. The Graduate Student Assembly reports to the Vice-Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies, and is considered an official element of the UT structure as one of the three student governance organizations at UT, including the Student Government and the Senate of College Councils. The general objectives of the GSA are to represent the views of graduate students to the university community and the community at large and to facilitate graduate student communication and interaction. The GSA strives to gather and disseminate information pertinent to graduate students, to conduct activities that promote the general welfare of graduate students, and to improve the financial expectations and access to financial information for graduate students. Vote Here. Tuesday, February 27, 4-6 PM, SZB 556, SAA UT meeting. The 2007 agenda for SAA-UT is very open at this time. The board will welcome suggestions for activities, events, speakers, etc. The theme for Archives Week 2007 will be decided in the near future, and we want your input on that topic as well. Snacks and drinks will be provided, and there will be time to meet informally with others. For more information and to provide suggestions, please contact Adam Knowles, SAA-UT President. Wednesday, February 28, deadline for $1000 Student Scholarship to attend the SAA meeting in Chicago, Aug 29-Sep 2. For more information, please visit the Scholarship Website, read the application form, or contact Dennis Harrison or Dr. Gracy. Wednesday, February 28, 1-2:30 PM, UNB 2.228 (Texas Union Theater), Allison Supancic, Alternative Strategies for Getting Small Grants. PDCE offers graduate students another opportunity to learn how to apply for and receive small grants. For more information and details on how to register please visit the event Website or contact Liz Alexander via email or phone, 232-3613. Friday, March 2, deadline for $85 Early Bird student member registration for the ALA Annual Conference, in Washington, D.C., June 21-27. See dates below for conference details and links. For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Friday, March 2, 3-7 PM, Tarlton Law Library, SLA, Tour of Tarlton Law Library and Happy Hour. Please join SLA for a tour of UT's own Tarlton Law Library. The library is a really unique place to visit, not only for the law library itself, but also for the rare books collection and the Hyder Collection. We will be meeting in the lobby of the Law School starting at about a quarter to 3. The tour will last about an hour and afterwards we will head the Crown & Anchor for a Happy Hour at 2911 San Jacinto Blvd. Please join us for one or both of the events! For more information please visit the library Website or contact Heather Karbal. Saturday, March 3, 11 AM - 5 PM, UT Campus, Explore
UT. Texans of all ages are invited
to EXPLORE UT, "the biggest open house in Texas." You're encouraged
to
attend, volunteer to help and invite friends and family to enjoy 400
free
events. These and more adventures await explorers of all ages. Programs
will
allow participants to: Volunteers help create a welcoming environment that contributes to a memorable Explore UT experience for university guests. This year, volunteers are needed to assist with activities throughout the day on Saturday, March 3. You can sign up to volunteer at the volunteer Webpage. Saturday, March 3, 4-6 PM, Whole Foods, 6th and Lamar, Chili Cookoff. Chili-vs-Chili w/ beans-whatever you like, it all goes down good with cold Texas beers! For more information please contact Frank Mancuso via email of phone, 916-4565. Wednesday, March 7, ALA/TLA Speaker Event on Cataloguing (tentative). For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Monday-Saturday, March 12-17, Spring Break. Hooray--let's party. (Or study ??) Wednesday, March 14, deadline for pre-registration for the TLA Conference April 11-14, at San Antonio. See below for details.) For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Tuesday, March 20, 7:45 AM - 5:PM, JJ Pickle Conference Center, ARMA-Austin Spring Workshop, Back to the Basics: Implementing an Electronic Document System. This all day workshop begins with the morning session with Bruce Miller, fonder and president of RIMtech, Inc, with 20 years experience developing Records Management Software. Hi will be leading the discussion, e-Records Implementation. The workshop concludes with Bob Gutz, City of Austin, who is an expert in electronic records management. The Conference Center is located on the Pickle Research Campus at Burnet Rd. and Braker Ln. You may drive and park in the conference parking lot or take the UT PRB bus or the Austin bus No. 3 (be sure to get off at the Burnet stop before Braker--ask the bus driver to let you know when). Before March 5, Registration includes breakfast and lunch and is $150 for ARMA members, $175 for others, and a special $35 for students. Please see the announcement for more information on registration, the content of the workshop, and speaker biographies. For more information, you may also visit the ARMA-Austin Website, visit the event Website, or contact Scott Willrich. If you are at all interested in records management or archives, the spring and fall ARMA-Austin workshops are important events to attend both from their content and the contacts you will make. Wednesday, March 21, 4-6 PM, SZB 556, Ron Pollock, Placement Prep Workshop. Ron will be conducting one of this famous p charm workshops to help interested students prepare for job interviews at the TLA Conference, April 11-14, in San Antonio. For more information, please contact Ron Pollock by email or phone, 471-2623. Thursday-Monday, March 22-26, Las Vegas, Enriching IA. The Information Architecture Summit is a premier gathering place for information architects and for discussion about information architecture. Everyone who touches on IA is welcome to share and learn. Last year's IA Summit attracted over 500 attendees, including beginners, experienced IAs, and people in a range of related fields. The 2007 conference is the 8th IA Summit and will be held in Las Vegas, Nevada at Flamingo Las Vegas. For more information, please visit the event Website. Friday, March 23, deadline for $1500 scholarship to attend SLA. For more information please contact Dean Dillon. Friday-Saturday , March 30-31, TCC, Second Annual Lonestar Graduate Diversity Colloquium. The colloquium is a collective effort by all colleges and universities in Texas to expand the pool of prospective graduate students that all graduate programs can recruit from. The primary purpose of this event is to encourage more under-represented minorities and women currently enrolled at Texas colleges and universities to stay in Texas to complete their graduate education. Our target group is sophomore and junior undergraduate students. To facilitate student exploration of graduate school options, and due to space limitations, ONLY masters and doctoral degree granting Texas institutions of higher education will be accepted to recruit at the colloquium. President William Powers and the Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School, Victoria Rodriguez, will host this year's conference at UT. The
colloquium will begin with check-in at the Thompson Conference Center
at 3:30 p.m. on Friday, March 30. The colloquium will include informational
sessions on the graduate school experience, a graduate school recruitment
fair, and end with a closing ceremony at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, March
31. We encourage you to hold these dates open.
We are looking for volunteers for many parts of the colloquium especially the breakout sessions to be held on Saturday. Graduate coordinators, graduate students, and faculty are all invited to offer presentations that address subjects such as applying to graduate school, financial assistance, exam preparation, etc. We also plan to offer sessions that are intended for staff, faculty, and administrators interested in graduate recruitment issues. The titles below are subject to change; please consider them a guide as to the subjects that would best address the needs of the prospective students attending the colloquium. For more information or if you or your colleagues are interested in making a presentation at the Second Annual Lone Star Graduate Diversity Colloquium, or if you are interested in volunteering your time in any part of the colloquium, please visit the event Website and contact Luis Guevara, Graduate Program Coordinator, via email or phone, 475-6769. Friday, March 30, 7-9 PM, SZB 556, Jamie Kamph. Mim Watson, Book Arts Lecture. Jamie is a AIC Professional Associate in private practice as a book conservator, and also an exhibiting book artist. Jamie Kamph came to bookbinding from a career as an editor/publisher in 1971 when she met and began studying with Hope G. Weil. Since 1973 she has worked as a designer bookbinder and book conservator at Stonehouse Bindery in Lambertville, NJ. She has lectured and taught at Mount Holyoke College, Princeton University, the New York Public Library, Anderson Ranch, the Princeton Public Library, and in the Princeton and Pennington, NJ school districts. Her design bindings are held in private and public collections including the New York Public Library, the Pierpont Morgan Library, Princeton University Graphic Arts Department, the University of Texas, and Southern Methodist University's Bridwell Library. She has exhibited her work widely with the Guild and at Yale University Library, the Aspen Art Institute, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Grolier. In 2003, she was awarded the Helen Ward DeGolyer Award for American Bookbinding, sponsored by Bridwell Library. Her writings on bookbinding have been published in magazines and she is the author of A Collectors Guide to Bookbinding. She has work in the recent Guild of Bookworkers 100 the Anniversary Exhibition: (for the whole exhibition) (for a photo of her work in the retrospective portion of the exhibition) (images of her work at the Bridwell library in Dallas). For more information, please contact Chela Metzger. Saturday, March 31, 2-4 PM, CDL, iSchool/Kilgarlin Center Edible Book Festival. Join the fun--and the puns--at the 2007 Austin Edible Book Festival, the 5th annual event in Austin! It will take place at the Collections Deposit Library (CDL) on the southwest corner of MLK Blvd and Red River St. Prizes will be awarded to winning entries and guests earn a bite of a book or two. The event will be organized by students from the University of Texas iSchool and the Kilgarlin Center for Preservation of the Cultural Record. Paid parking is available in the UT parking garage (TRG) at MLK Blvd and Trinity St. The 4 Montopolis/ 18 Martin Luther King AND 15 Red River/16 S. 5th St - Westgate have bus stops right at the corner of MLK and Red River. Additional bus routes and information on prizes will be added to the soon-to-be-updated Kilgarlin Program Edible Book Festival Website. Photos of amazing and amusing entries (and potential inspiration) from years past are already displayed on the web site. Austin sources for hard to find edible materials include - All in One bake Shop for potato starch paper, Michael's craft stores for edible ink pens, and Whole Foods Market for pre-made crepes. For more information folks can contact the organizing committee by email - or Ellen Cunningham-Kruppa via email or phone, 471-8287. Wednesday - Friday, April 11-14, San Antonio, Strong Libraries, Strong Communities. TLA Annual Conference. Hundreds of programs, speakers and exhibits by vendors, meet prospective employers, find a job, and have a great San Antonio experience. Placement Service for May/August/December 2007 graduates. (Ron Pollock of Career Services is giving a workshop on March 21(see above) to prepare you for this Placement experience.) Special rate for IS student members. Dr. Immroth reminds us, "Includes the famous I School Reception on Thursday evening at Rosario's (remember we're the party school of UT, America's #1 party school) Don't miss this one!!!" For more information, please visit the event Webpages or contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Monday, April 16, Summer and Fall registration begins. See UT course schedule time details for summer, fall, when they are posted.) Monday, April 23, final submission due for Drexel, Connections 2007, May 18-20. See details below. Friday, May 4, last day of spring classes. Wednesday - Tuesday, May 9-15, exams. Tuesday, May 15, ALA Annual Conference Advance registration deadline Friday, May 18, deadline for $100 advance student member registration for the ALA Annual Conference, in Washington, D.C., June 21-27. See dates below for conference details and links. For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Friday-Sunday, May 18-20, Drexel iSchool, Philadelphia, Connections
2007. For over a decade the Connections conference has given doctoral
students
in information studies the opportunity to network, share ideas, present
research, and receive feedback from an audience of fellow students.
Doctoral students working in all areas of information studies are
invited to submit proposals. In an effort to provide all doctoral
students with an opportunity to present their work we encourage students
to submit proposals to present research at various stages of completion.
Important dates:
Submission Deadline February 26th, 2007;
Acceptance Notification March 19th, 2007;
Final Submission Deadline April 23rd, 2007Proposals
should outline research in the fields of: Saturday, May 19, 9-11 AM, Bass Concert Hall, Graduate School Convocation. Saturday, Man 19, 1-2 PM, TBD, iSchool Convocation. Saturday, May 19, 2-3 PM, TBD, iSchool Reception. Saturday, May 19, 7-10 PM, South Mall, UT Commencement. Monday-Saturday, May 20-25, College Station, Texas A&M Book History
Workshop. Taking
place in the Cushing Memorial Library and Archives at Texas A&M
University, this five-day workshop provides an intensive, hands-on introduction
to the history of books and printing with an emphasis on hand press era
printing and its allied technologies--typecasting, papermaking, bookbinding,
illustration, and
ink-making. The combination of labs with seminars will provide students
with practical experience as well as a broad historical survey of the
field. Students will have the opportunity to cast type
in a hand mould, set lines of type, impose formes, make paper, produce
relief and intaglio illustrations and print on a replica common press.
The workshop is intended for librarians, archivists, students, teachers,
book collectors and private individuals who work in areas related to
or who have an interest in book history. Past workshops have also included
a series of evening lectures by scholars active in the field of book
history. If you are interested in taking
the workshop,
please register soon as the workshop is filling up very quickly. To register,
or see photographs from previous workshops, please visit
the event Website. For more
information, please visit the event Website or contact Christopher
L. Morrow, Ph.D., Curator
for Outreach,Cushing Memorial Library and Archives Texas A&M
University, via email or phone, 979-845-1951. Saturday- Wednesday, June 3-6, Denver, SLA Conference. Thursday-Wednesday, June 21-27, ALA Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. The ALA Annual Conference is a great place to advance your career and connect with a wide variety of new colleagues from around the world. ALA is focused on making your conference experience rewarding. In addition to the hundreds of programs and networking opportunities at Annual, special events and programs for first-time conference attendees have been set up to help you 'do' conference right. First time attendees will be matched up with an ALA Ambassador to help you personally make connections to programs, people and places before conference. Get expert advice on programs to attend, exhibitors to visit, parties to frequent, and ways to get the most out of conference. ALA Divisions and Round Tables will be sponsoring 101 programs throughout the conference to help you navigate programs, meetings and exhibits based on the kind of work you want do, or the type of library where you plan to work. First-time attendees will also receive special invitations to receptions sponsored by exhibitors and library vendors .Special events this year include the World Premier of "The Hollywood Librarian: Librarians in Cinema and Society". Get involved in "The Insider's Guide to Capitol Hill", "Library Day on the Hill", and volunteer projects as part of "Librarians Build Communities". Hundreds of programs on nearly every topic in library services are offered. Student members of ALA receive significantly discounted rates for the conference. ALA Student Members can register before March 2nd, 2007 for only $85.00! If you are not currently a member of ALA, Student Membership only costs $28.00 per year. Save nearly $100.00 by joining. Registration rates: Early Bird (until 3/2/07): $85; Advance (until 5/18): $110; Onsite: $120. Dorm housing will be available in D.C. Hostels and other less expensive housing options are available as well. Please visit these two sites for more information or to register: Conference website (membership and registration, hotel maps, travel info, etc.); Annual Conference Wiki (info from local people and long timers). For job seekers, the New Members Round Table (NMRT) offers free resume review services at the Placement Center. Pre-register for the Placement Center to review the list of libraries that are hiring, and come prepared to meet prospective employers. Connect with your future career today at ALA Annual Conference. For more information, please contact Angelica Delgado, UT ALA/TLA Coordinator. Wednesday, August 29 - Sunday, September 2, Chicago, SAA Conference. For more information, please contact Dr. Gracy.
This Website was created by senior Ph.D. students for all Ph.D. students (and anyone else interested) by providing informal information to fill the gap between official information and word of mouth interchanges. It provided the informal information desired by many Ph.D. students when it was created. This Homepage provides announcements (if any) and summaries of current and future activities that might specifically be of interest to Ph.D. students in the iSchool. The links on the left sidebar provide access to other information that Ph.D. might find interesting and useful. If you are a new Ph.D. student, we suggest you read the orientation page (link on the left sidebar) for things you need or might like to know. More senior Ph.D. students might also want to review this page occasionally to see how things have changed. Items on this Webpage are normally updated weekly during the long semesters and monthly during the summer semester. Additions and changes to the current week or month as well as special announcements are noted in red (or other appropriate color) . Significant future calendar events are posted as they are received and time permits. Suggested additions, calendar entries, corrections, and other comments to any of the Webpages on this Website are always appreciated. Email me or grab me in the hall. This Website is a work-in-progress, you may expect to see some omissions and items to be provided; however, all links should work. We would appreciate an email with any suggestions, comments, or corrections relating to content and any links that do not work as you might expect them to. Content Manager: Don Drumtra . Updated, 2007 February 21 |
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