Cesar Chavez Celebration Day
To celebrate this day, we will be showing the film "A Class Apart."
Se mostrará la película "A Class Apart."
To celebrate this day, we will be showing the film "A Class Apart."
Se mostrará la película "A Class Apart."
CATalyst has teamed up with six other organizations to build a multicultural museum for students to explore and learn about oppression.
The National Conference on Undergraduate Research is an annual student conference dedicated to promoting undergraduate research, scholarship, and creative activity in all fields of study. Unlike meetings of academic professional organizations, this gathering of young scholars welcomes presenters from institutions of higher learning from all corners of the academic curriculum. This annual conference creates a unique environment for the celebration and promotion of undergraduate student achievement, provides models of exemplary research and scholarship, and helps to improve the state of undergraduate education.
Learn more here.
Linda Arnold, professor emerita of history at Virginia Tech University, will speak on the topic at 2 p.m. Wednesday, March 26, in the Niles Gallery of the Lucille Little Fine Arts Library.
Jana Morgan, Ph.D, comes from the University of Tennessee as WIPS' featured speaker this spring semester. Her research involves issues of inequality, exclusion and representation. Mainly, she focuses on exploring how economic, social and political inequalities affect marginalized groups and undermine democratic institutions and outcomes. She will be presenting her latest work titled: "Patterns of Inequality and Latin American Support for Redistribution."
Guest Lecture by Dr. Santa Arias, entitled Creole's Topophilia: Francisco Javier Clavijero's Thick Places of History
Friday April 4th, 3:30-4:30pm
Sponsored by Passport to the World Viva Mexico, Department of Hispanic Studies, and the University of Kentucky Graduate School
Abstract: "Linguists have been teaching the general public for several decades now that traditional conceptions of "bad" versus "good" grammar are not based on scientific argumentation, but certain fashions laid down by assorted thinkers mostly in the eighteenth century. However, the public remains convinced that most speakers of English go about speaking it "wrong." In this talk, I try to present the linguist's perspective in a new way, showing that while all people must learn standard grammar for public purposes, nonstandard grammar is distinct, but not logically mistaken."
Title: Sub-Exponential Decay Estimates on Trace Norms of Localized Functions of Schrodinger Operators
Abstract: In 1973, Combes and Thomas discovered a general technique for showing exponential decay of eigenfunctions. The technique involved proving the exponential decay of the resolvent of the Schrodinger operator localized between two distant regions. Since then, the technique has been applied to several types of Schrodinger operators. Recent work has also shown the Combes–Thomas method works well with trace class and Hilbert–Schmidt type operators. In this talk, we build on those results by applying the Combes–Thomas method in the trace, Hilbert–Schmidt, and other trace-type norms to prove sub-exponential decay estimates on functions of Schrodinger operators localized between two distant regions.
Mexican Folklore Exhibition in Willy T.
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9:00-9:30 |
Welcome Tea & Coffee |
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9:30-10:30 |
Is the Creole Prototype Hypothesis a mistake? John McWhorter, Columbia University |
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10:30-11:15 |
The left periphery and topic hierarchy in Santiaguense: complexity in a creole pronominal system. Marlyse Baptista and Rachel Bayer, University of Michigan |
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11:15-11:30 |
Coffee Break |
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11:30-12:15 |
The complexity of definites in French based creoles Viviane Déprez, Rutgers University |
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12:15-1:00 |
Language ecology and form selection in some Iberian creole languages Clency Clements, Indiana University |
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1:00-2:00 |
Lunch |
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2:00-2:45 |
If you look closer : Inflectional morphology in Louisiana Creole Fabiola Henri (Univesity of Kentucky) & Thomas Klingler (Tulane University) |
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2:45-3:30 |
On Decreolization, Creole Simplicity Metrics, and the Tales of Brer Rabbit Kevin Rottet & Jamie Root, Indiana University |
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3:30-3:45 |
Coffee Break |
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3:45-4:30 |
Implicative relations and morphological complexity: The case of Mauritian Raphael Finkel, Fabiola Henri & Greg Stump, University of Kentucky |
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4:30-5:00 |
Open discussion |
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5:00-5:30 |
Business Meeting |
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Conference Dinner |