Blackboard: Blackboard Collaborate

G-604

Date: Monday, October 19, 2015 Time: 11am-12pm Location: G-604 Online videoconferencing is available to all professors and their students using Blackboard. Use a video and voice chat tool to have

Introduction to PIVOT: A dynamic funding search engine

N-227 NY

Dates: Monday, October 19, 2015 Time: 2:00 – 3:00 PM Room: Faculty Commons Conference Room in N227 The Office of Sponsored Programs will be hosting several open hour sessions about COS PIVOT, a comprehensive source of funding opportunities that allow you to track and receive alerts about funding related to your research interests. Other Dates:

iTEC: Instructional Videos Made Simple

G-604

Date: Tuesday, October 20, 2015 Time: 11am - 12pm Location: G-604 Shoot an instructional video for your class on something as simple as your smart phone. Learn how to use

Library: Open Scholarship Matters!

A-632

Date: Wednesday, October 20, 2015 Time: 4:00pm - 6:00pm Room: A632 How can your scholarship be more visible and meaningful? Reach new readers and make a difference in the world

iTEC: MS Office Excel 2013

G-604

Date: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 Time: 3pm - 4:30pm Location: G-604 This is not an eFolders workshop. However, this workshop will cover how to use Microsoft Excel 2013 for eFolders,

CST Colloquium: Pharmacology Powered by Computational Analysis: Predicting Cardiotoxicity of Chemotherapeutics

N-923

Date: October 22nd, 2015 at 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm  Location: Namm 923 Speaker: Jaehee Shim Abstract: Cardiotoxicity is unfortunately a common side effect of many modern chemotherapeutic agents. The mechanisms that underlie these detrimental effects on heart muscle, however, remain unclear. The Drug Toxicity Signature Generation Center at ISMMS aims to address this unresolved

Mathematics and Physics Colloquium: Symmetric Class-0 Subgraphs and Forbidden Subgraphs

N-720

Place: Namm 720 Date: Thursday October 22, 2015 Time: 12:45 p.m. Presented by Prof. Eugene Fiorini Faculty and students are welcome, light refreshments will be served. Abstract: Competition graphs and graph pebbling are two examples of graph theoretical-type games played on a graph under well-defined conditions. In the case of graph pebbling, the pebbling number pi(G)