Directorate - Events- What's New - Fermilab at Work - Fermilab Home - NALCAL Archives


 

 

Week of March 22 through March 28, 2004

 

 

 

 

MONDAY, March 22

 

 

 

2:30

Theoretical Astrophysics Seminar

Curia II

 

Speaker:    S. Boggs, Space Science Laboratory, University

                       of California, Berkeley

 

 

Title:           The Advanced Compton Telescope:  Witness to the

                       Fires of Creation

 

 

 

3:30

DIRECTOR'S COFFEE BREAK

2nd Flr X-Over

 

 

4:00

All Experimenters' Meeting

Special Topic:    High Field Magnet Development

Curia II

 

 

TUESDAY, March 23

 

 

3:30

DIRECTOR'S COFFEE BREAK

2nd Flr X-Over

 

 

 

THERE WILL BE NO ACCELERATOR PHYSICS AND TECHNOLOGY

SEMINAR TODAY

 

 

 

WEDNESDAY, March 24

 

 

 

12:00

Wellness Works – Brown Bag Seminar

Curia II

 

Speaker:    L. Skinner (Psy. D.)

 

 

Title:           A Jungian Approach to Understanding Dreams

 

 

3:30

DIRECTOR'S COFFEE BREAK

2nd Flr X-Over

 

 

4:00

Fermilab Colloquium

1 West

 

 

Speaker:    L. Lederman, Fermilab/Illinois Institute of Technology

 

 

 

Title:           Progress and the Lack Thereof in the Reform of

                    U.S. Science Education

 

 

 

 

THURSDAY, March 25

 

 

 

2:30

Theoretical Physics Seminar

Curia II

 

Speaker:    H. Collins, Carnegie Mellon University

 

 

Title:           The Fate of the Alpha-Vacuum

 

 

3:30

DIRECTOR'S COFFEE BREAK

2nd Flr X-Over

 

 

THERE WILL BE NO ACCELERATOR PHYSICS AND TECHNOLOGY

SEMINAR TODAY

 

 

 


FRIDAY, March 26

 

 

 

3:30

DIRECTOR'S COFFEE BREAK

2nd Flr X-Over

 

 

4:00

Joint Experimental Theoretical Physics Seminar

1 West

 

Speaker:    A. Nomerotski, Fermilab

 

 

Title:           Recent Dzero Results on B, QCD, and New Phenomena

 

 

 

 

 

***  Fermilab Lecture Series  ***

 

 

 

8:00 P.M.

Friday, March 26

Tickets:  $5

Auditorium

 

B. Bronson, Co-Curator - Field Museum presents:

The Last Golden Age of Imperial China:

The Emperor, The Economy, and The Arts in the 18th Century

 

 

 

 

March 19, 2004

Questions or Comments to M. Dixon:  mdixon@fnal.gov