Space is limited so please sign up on the RWC’s website under Group Exercise classes, http://rwc.sdes.ucf.edu/programs/fitness/group-exercise
]]>Dr. Kirsten Howley
This talk will be followed by a lunch discussion on student and career opportunities at LLNL.
We live in a world subject to threats, and for more than 65 years Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has worked to strengthen our national security to make the world a safer place. LLNL applies world-class science, technology and engineering that enhances the nation’s defense, reduces the global threat from terrorism and weapons of mass destruction, and responds with vision, quality, integrity and technical excellence to scientific issues of national importance.
As a physicist at LLNL, I’ve had an opportunity to work on a number of projects that aim to keep our nation safe. These projects range from post-detonation forensics to provide answers if a nuclear detonation in the United States were to occur, to the development and testing of a technology to prevent another industrial disaster such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, to asteroid hazard mitigation that prepares us for low probability but potentially high consequence threats from asteroid impacts. These projects share the commonality that all focus on issues related to national security. Each project requires a unique application of a variety of physics and engineering skills that include, but are not limited to, computational/simulation physics, experimental design and execution, and theoretical and analytic model development. In this talk, I discuss this subset of projects, and give an overview of the technological challenges and achievements involved in their successful execution.
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is actively looking to grow and expand its pool of scientific experts. We have positions available ranging from summer internships, to graduate student scholars, to postdoctoral fellowships, to staff appointments.
Following this talk, there will be an open discussion with the current acting Design Physics division leader, Benjamin Grover, on the qualifications and experience we look for in our recruits. During this discussion we will provide feedback on preparing a CV and for interviewing at LLNL. Pizza will be provided.
]]>For an RSVP to be honored you must arrive promptly by the start of the event. Career Services may be unable to honor the RSVP of late arrivals.
]]>Arrive up to 15 minutes prior to start time to sign up at front desk.
* No musical experience necessary. Drums will be provided.
]]>This four-module program is designed as an introductory overview series of workshops to provoke thought with respect to diversity in general, and more specifically, with respect to several important dimensions of diversity. Participants must attend all four modules to receive completion certificate.
Module 1
Course number: DIV285
Thursday, June 6 from 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Facilitator: Rachel Luce-Hitt
Location: Barbara Ying Center, Room 140
Module 2
Course number: DIV286
Thursday, June 13 from 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Facilitator: Rachel Luce-Hitt
Location: Barbara Ying Center, Room 140
Module 3
Course number: DIV287
Thursday, June 20 from 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Facilitator: Rachel Luce-Hitt
Location: Barbara Ying Center, Room 140
Module 4
Course number: DIV288
Thursday, June 27 from 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.
Facilitator: Rachel Luce-Hitt
Location: Barbara Ying Center, Room 140
Modules
UCF’s BSN Information Sessions are designed to help prospective BSN students understand the process and steps for applying to UCF's limited-access, upper-division BSN programs which include the Traditional, Second Degree, and Concurrent options. The online RN to BSN option will also be discussed. Attendees will learn about unique application requirements to practice and learn in clinical sites, prerequisite courses and grade requirements, and other helpful information. This information session is open to anyone interested in applying to UCF College of Nursing's BSN program.
Attendance is not required of applicants, but it is encouraged. Attendees should plan to arrive early and stay for the entire presentation which will last about one hour followed by a question and answer session. There will be limited availability for one-on-one advising after the session. Please Note: Children are not permitted to attend these information sessions. Please plan accordingly.
Thank you and we look forward to meeting you.
]]>Learn more and register at eventbrite.com/e/ucf-south-lake-summer-reading-and-storytelling-camp-2019-registration-53643394838.
]]>“God punishes the wicked and rewards the good. #repentorperish”
Having attended her first picket at five years old, Laurel is proud of the good work she has done in the name of the Lord. While being groomed to be the next leader of her radical church (a fictional church similar to Westboro Baptist), Laurel takes to Twitter to spread the Word. When her tweets are responded to by an agnostic college student, a rabbi and a few Twitter trolls, Laurel struggles to determine the true meaning of her faith and define her relationship with God.
Purchase Tickets Online:
Be part of creating the next great play! At the second annual Pegasus PlayLab, a festival dedicated to developing plays by emerging playwrights, you’re invited to hear three staged readings and experience a full production of a new play first introduced at Orlando Shakes’ PlayFest 2018. Follow these plays into the next stage of development and be part of the creative process with the playwrights, casts and directors! Learn more at theatre.ucf.edu
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