Location: Room 2246, Auditorium, Space Research Building
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
AOSS March Major Madness
4:30 — 6:00 p.m.
Room 2246, Auditorium, Space Research Building
Food! Fun! Facts!
The AOSS undergraduate BSE in Earth System Science & Engineering, a joint program with the Department of Geological Sciences, is about the science driven engineering world of Earth system components. You’ll learn and work with faculty who recognize that Earth’s components cannot be considered in isolation.
AOSS also offers two SGUS programs. One in Atmospheric/Space Science, if you’re interested in the phenomena that occurs in the Earth’s atmosphere or deeper in space, and one in Space Engineering, if you’re interested in the scientific, engineering and management aspects of space engineering.
Whether you’re Earth-bound or space-bound, AOSS is the place to be. Come visit, ask questions and learn more about AOSS.
For more information: aoss-mmm@umich.edu
Location: Kerrytown Concert Hall (415 N. Fourth Ave, Ann Arbor)
We've been busy here at Think Local First.
All are welcome at these events - business members, individual members, and community members. Please join us!
* March 13th. Meeting - Munchies, Mingling, and Learning. 6:30-8pm, Kerrytown Concert Hall (415 N. Fourth Ave, Ann Arbor). The topic will be 'Marketing on a Shoe-String', presented by member Bauer, Dunham, and Barr.
Location: 340 West Hall
Tuesday, March 13th
3:30pm
340 West Hall
Mark Newman
Department of Physics & Complex Systems, University of Michigan
"The Internet, Epidemics, and Kevin Bacon: The Science fo Social Networks"
Reception to follow!
Location: SSWB (McGregor Commons)
Teach-In on the Decision to Ban Domestic Partner Healthcare Benefits
When: Tuesday 03/13/07, 5:00 PM to Tuesday 03/13/07, 6:30 PM
Where: SSWB (McGregor Commons)
Description: Members of the School of Social Work and the University of Michigan communities will come together to discuss the implications of the recent court ruling to eliminate all healthcare benefits provided to domestic partners of state employees. Central to discussion will be the implications of the decision on the University and local communities, as well as planning next steps and ways for concerned community members to get involved in this social justice issue. The event will be Tuesday, March 13, 2007 from 5:00 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. in the McGregor Commons, Main Floor of the School of Social Work Building. All are welcome and encouraged to attend.
Food and refreshments will be provided.
Location: Ross Business School, E1530
March 13, 2007
Peter Fusaro: Energy & the Environment: the New Financial Game. 4:30 -6:00pm; Ross, E1530.
Refreshments will be served.
Location: 3512 Haven Hall
Tuesday, March 13, at 3:30 pm, in 3512 Haven Hall
Latino/Latina Studies, LACS, and the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations cosponsor a campus visit by Onesimo Hidalgo, co-director of CIEPAC (Center for Economic Research and Social Action, San Cristobal de Las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico www.ciepac.org).
Onesimo Hidalgo will speak with the public about the social forces currently affecting the south of Mexico, including the impact of free trade and the Plan Puebla Panama, immigration, the militarization of the zone, strategies of the EZLN, and the activities of CIEPAC in Chiapas.
Refreshments will follow.
Location: School of Social Work Building, Room 1636
Lecture: Center for European Studies (CES) European Union Center (EUC) Conversations on Europe
Cover-up: French Gender Equality and the Islamic Headscarf
Speaker/Performer: Joan Wallach Scott, Harold Linder Professor, Princeton University
Date: March 12, 2007, 4-5:30 p.m.
Cost: Free
Location: School of Social Work Building, Room 1636 (more info)
Location: 1311 EECS
Sponsor: Society of Women Engineers
Date: 6:00pm-8:00pm on Monday, Mar 12th
Location: 1311 EECS
Come to this CIS- learn about a company, eat Pizza
Location: 250 Hutchins Hall
The Market Series: Chicago
Time: Monday, March 12, 12:20 - 1:20 p.m.
Location: 250 Hutchins Hall
Frank Kimball '77, a renowned consultant on the Chicago legal market, will provide information useful to students.
Location: 170 Dennison
Saturday Morning Physics
Weapons of Mass Destruction: Nuclear Weapons
3/10/2007; 10:30am to 11:30am
Speaker: Mike Sanders, Professor Emeritus of Physics
We will survey the history of the proliferation of nuclear weapons since the end of World War II, emphasizing recent events. One important technical change has been the development of the ultra-centrifuge as a (relatively) inexpensive route to the production of fissionable material.