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Ms office 2007 powerpoint portable torrent • Physics Library Intersession Hours December 21, 2017 – January 15, 2018: Monday – Friday, 7:15 am – 3:45 pm Closed Saturday-Sunday Closed Thursday, December 21, 2017 – Wednesday, December 27, 2017 Closed Monday, January 1, 2018 Closed Monday, January 8 – Monday, January 15, 2018 • On January 9, 2018, the will bring together faculty from all seven schools of Washington University to learn about innovative and evidence-based teaching. The biennial symposium will begin with a plenary by Mary Murphy, PhD (Associate Professor, Psychological and Brain Sciences and Associate Vice Provost for Student Diversity and Inclusion, Indiana University). Sixteen sessions on teaching and research on teaching and learning will follow, with additional opportunities for discussion during the symposium breakfast, lunch, and reception.

ITeach will be held in The Knight Center, on the Danforth Campus. For a full schedule, go to.Registration is required, and seating is limited.

• The WU Research Data Storage project is inviting faculty to an instructional seminar (led by WUIT) to introduce interested faculty to the new service. This is the service that will provide 5TB of storage to each faculty researcher in the university community. There is an opportunity for faculty to become a participant in the pilot program as well.

December 13th – 1pm – 2:30pm DUC 276 •. • The Physics Library will be closed November 23-24, 2017 for the Thanksgiving holiday. • was awarded on October 3 with one half to Rainer Weiss LIGO/VIRGO Collaborationand the other half jointly to Barry C. Barish and Kip S. Thorne LIGO/VIRGO Collaboration “for decisive contributions to the LIGO detector and the observation of gravitational waves.” • EDP Sciences announced the recent launch of, an innovative new open access journal that puts young scientists at its heart. The journal was born out of the 2016 International Physicists’ Tournament (IPT), and is supported by the French Physics Society and the French Academy of Science.

Emergent Scientist offers young scientists at the beginning of their careers the opportunity to discover peer-reviewed publishing and the publication process. The journal will especially serve those junior scientists who may not pursue a career in research, but become engineers, analysts, consultants or the like – as they will rarely get the opportunity to experience the peer review process once they have left their academic studies.The first articles are available at and while Emergent Scientist is currently physics oriented, the intention is for the scope to be broadened to include subjects such as mathematics and the life sciences. • Washington University joined the (OTN), an alliance of hundreds of colleges, universities, and consortia partners working together to advance the use of open textbooks in higher education. Textbook affordability is a major concern on college campuses throughout the United States and this partnership provides tools and services to assist in building sustainable open textbook programs.

OTN manages the –a premier and comprehensive catalog of open textbooks that contains over 350 open textbooks and over 700 faculty reviews of the books. The textbooks are freely available to faculty who wish to adopt them and are licensed under Creative Commons.

• Feynman Lectures on Physics – Richard P. Feynman was a theoretical physicist whose contributions to quantum physics earned him the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics. In 1964, Feynman published a three volume textbook entitled, based on a series of lectures he delivered to his students at the California Institute of Technology between 1961 and 1963. Today, Caltech’s Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy makes all three volumes of this textbook freely available for anyone interested in reading the textbook. Importantly however, the site emphasizes that while readers are welcome to explore the lectures online, they do not have permission to download these texts. Visitors can explore each chapter (or lecture) in this series with ease via each volume’s table of contents. Topics covered include Newton’s laws, the theory of gravitation, and quantum behavior.