AMS/SMT Indianapolis 2010 Announcements
This is the feed page for the AMS/SMT Indianapolis Annual Meeting. Subscribe via your feed reader for regular updates on the meeting. Send announcements you would like to appear on this page to Bob Judd at the AMS.
| 11/04/2010 |
| Toast for Wendy Allanbrook Sat night at the Berkeley party, Marriott: Indiana E, 10 p.m. |
| We will be celebrating Wendy's memory at the Berkeley party with a brief toast. Please come to the Indiana E room in the Marriott at 10 PM on Saturday to share memories and a drink in Wendy's honor. I look forward to seeing many of you this weekend. |
|
|
| 11/03/2010 |
| Alternate Career Paths (CRI Session): Fri 5 Nov, 6:45 pm, Marriott, Marriott 3/4 |
| The Committee on Career-Related Issues will hold a panel session on Friday from 6:45 to 7:45 in Marriott Ballroom 3/4. The topic Alternate Career Paths for Musicology PhDs will be discussed by four professionals who use their musicology training in professorial and other roles: Sarah Adams Keeper of the Isham Memorial Library, Harvard University Theodor Dumitrescu Professor of Musicology, Utrecht University Project Director, The C.M.M.E. Project Christopher Gibbs James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Music, Bard College Co-Artistic Director, Bard Music Festival Jason B. Grant Editor-in-Residence, Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach: The Complete Works, Packard Humanities Institute Organist |
|
|
| 11/03/2010 |
| Nearest discount pharmacy to the meeting hotels |
| The closest discount pharmacy to the meeting site is the CVS at 175 N. Illionois St., about half a mile away. Hours: Mo-Fr: 6:30 AM - 7:30 PM Sa: 8:00 AM - 6:30 PM Su: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
|
|
| 11/03/2010 |
| Busell-Wallarab Jazz Ensemble, Thu 4 Nov., 7:30 p.m. |
| The Buselli-Wallarab Septet will feature classic jazz works of Ellington, cabaret-style, in a room adjacent to the opening reception. Free! 7:30 to 9 pm. |
|
|
| 11/02/2010 |
| AMS Jewish Studies and Music Study Group, Thu 4 Nov., 8 p.m. |
| Inaugural Meeting: Jewish Studies in Musicology Thursday, November 4th 2010, 8:00-11:00 PM Chairs: Klara Moricz, Ronit Seter Panelists: Halina Goldberg (Indiana University, Bloomington) Researching Jews and Jewishness in 19th-Century Polish Music Steven Cahn (University of Cincinnati) Not a Love Story: On Contending with a Historiographic Stumbling Block Florian Scheding (University of Southampton) Ideological Battles in Exile and Beyond: Avant-garde Music and Anti-Semitism in the Free German League of Culture Jeremy Leong (West Whately, MA) Honoring the Past: Jewish Exiles and Their Musical Contribution in Republican China (1911-49) Rebecca Cypess (New England Conservatory) The Anxiety of Specificity, or What Musicologists Can Learn from the Orthodox Jewish Diaspora Eleanor Selfridge-Field (Stanford University) Marcello’s Orientalism Alexander Knapp (University of London) Jewish Art Music while Standing on One Leg: a Scholar's Dilemma Respondents: Judah Cohen (Indiana University, Bloomington) Ralph Locke (Eastman School of Music) |
|
|
| 11/02/2010 |
| Morales Requiem Open Rehearsal Sat 6 Nov., 9 a.m. |
| As noted in an earlier post, the Christ Church Cathedral will sing a Morales Requiem Sunday evening; an open rehearsal will be held at the cathedral Saturday 6 Nov., 9 a.m. |
|
|
| 11/01/2010 |
| Handouts for papers now available! |
| We've received about twenty handouts-- follow the link (above) to see them. |
|
|
| 11/01/2010 |
| SMT Queer Resource Group, Fri 5 Nov., noon, Marriott, Indiana B |
| Please join the Queer Resource Group of the Society for Music Theory for a session on music and sexuality, featuring two presentations: Vic Szabo (University of Virginia), "Performing Abjection, Performing Shame in the Music of Xiu Xiu." Des Harmon (UCLA), "But What Are You Going to Do with That?: Moving LGBT Scholarship into the Classroom." It will be exciting to hear a theoretical/interpretive paper and a pedagogical paper together, and there will be plenty of time for discussion. The meeting is from noon to 2 PM on Friday, in the Indiana B room of the Marriott. If you plan to attend, you may wish to make a note of this on your calendar. The session itself, but not the content, appears in the conference program. |
|
|
| 11/01/2010 |
| SMT Music Informatics Group: Thu 4 Nov., 2 pm, Marriott, Santa Fe Room / Sat 6 Nov., 5:30 pm, Marriott Denver Room |
| Thursday, November 4, 2010, 2-5 p.m. Marriott, Santa Fe Room Poster Session: Music Informatics: Research, Representations, and Tools Sponsored by the SMT Music Informatics Interest Group The presenters will give a short (30-second) "blast" presentation on their project on the half hour and will be available to discuss their research the rest of the time. You're free to come and go as you wish. Eric Isaacson (Indiana University), Moderator * Robert T. Kelley and Gilliean Lee (Lander University), “Ptolemaic: A Computer Application for Music Visualization and Analysis” * Christopher Ariza and Michael Scott Cuthbert (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), “Modeling Musical Structures as Objects in Music21” * Justin Lundberg (Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester), “Visualizing Voice-Leading Spaces” * Leigh VanHandel (Michigan State University), “National Metrical Types in Nineteenth-Century Art Song” * Johanna Devaney (McGill University), “AMPACT: Automated Music Performance Analysis and Comparison Toolkit” * Jordan B. L. Smith (University of Southern California), “A Survey of Approaches to the Automatic Formal Analysis of Musical Audio” * John Ashley Burgoyne (McGill University), “Alternative Statistical Models for Musical Data” Saturday, November 6, 5:30-7:30, Marriott Denver Room Regular meeting of the SMT Music Informatics Interest Group The Music Informatics Group is pleased to welcome Prof. Chris Raphael, head of the Music Informatics program in the Indiana University School of Informatics and Computing, for an informal presentation titled "Music Informatics and Music Theory." A former professional oboist, Chris won the San Francisco Young Artist competition and soloed with the San Francisco Symphony at the age of 17, played principal oboe in the Santa Cruz Symphony, and was a fellow at Tanglewood. After receiving his PhD in Applied Mathematics from Brown University in 1991, he worked on a wide range of problems in both industry and academia including Arabic character recognition, magnetic resonance spectroscopy and mine detection before coming to focus on music. His musical research includes accompaniment systems, computer generated musical analysis, musical signal processing, and modeling of musical interpretation. Prof. Raphael will provide a wide-ranging survey of music informatics research and applications that touch on areas of particular interest to music theorists. Abstract: Music Informatics is a new field that addresses musical questions from a scientific vantage point, using methodology from diverse areas such as Computer Science, Cognitive Science, Statistics, Psychology, and Engineering. Without making any attempt to define Music Informatics, we will show a number of examples and ideas from this field making contributions of interest to the music theorist. For instance, we will discuss score alignment programs, which construct a correspondence between a symbolic score and an audio file, and form the basis for quantitive analysis of music performance. We'll also discuss latent variable models, which view the musical surface as the "observable" part of a statistical model containing hidden variables corresponding to, for example, harmony, structure, musical prosody, and style aspects. Applications of latent variable analysis include harmonic analysis, pitch spelling, and expressive synthesis. Perhaps the greatest barrier to large scale computational musicology is the lack of large libraries of symbolically-represented music. We will describe ongoing efforts to harvest such data from the rapidly growing International Music Score Library Project using optical music recognition, as well as other music recognition examples, such as audio transcription or MIDI steam transcription. |
|
|
| 11/01/2010 |
| University of Minnesota Reception, Sat 6 Nov., 8 pm |
| University of Minnesota Reception, Saturday, Nov. 6, 8-11 PM (suite number TBA--posters will be up on bulletin boards Thursday evening) |
|
|
| 10/29/2010 |
| SMT Mathematics Interest Group, Fri, 5 p.m., Marriott (Denver Room) |
| At the upcoming conference in Indianapolis, the Mathematics Interest Group of SMT will be having a discussion that may be of interest to some AMS members as well. We will be talking about the history of mathematics in music theory, using the work of Catherine Nolan as a springboard. First her 2003 article in Music Theory Spectrum (25:2), "Combinatorial Space in Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Music Theory" (205-241), which raises interesting questions about the history that gave rise to the conceptual background for much of current mathematical music theory. Nolan's work also introduced us to figures in the history of mathematical music theory that were previously little known. We will also consider Nolan's article in the Cambridge History of Western Music Theory (ed. Christensen, 2002/2006), "Music Theory and Mathematics" (272-304). I imagine that the later sections of this article, on combinatorics, set theory, group theory, transformational theory, and prescriptive applications, will be the most interesting for our group, but the discussion will be open ended, so anyone interested in discussing Classical and Medieval theory addressed in the article is welcome to bring that to the table as well. The group will be meeting on Friday, 5:00-7:00 in the Denver room. We will begin the meeting at 5:00 with some business of the group, and thereafter proceed to the discussion with Catherine Nolan. |
|
|
| 10/28/2010 |
| Music at Christ Church Cathedral during the meeting |
| Thursday 4 Nov., 5:15 p.m.: Evensong (music of Tallis and Stanford) Friday 5 Nov., 12:30 p.m.: lunchtime organ recital (Peter Rogahn, precentor, Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Indianapolis, Ind.) program TBA Sunday 7 Nov., 7 p.m.: All Souls Requiem with music by Morales (Requiem a5 [1544]) Cathedral web site: http://www.cccindy.org/ |
|
|
| 10/27/2010 |
| Library of Congress Internship Possibilities, Friday 5 November, 12:30, Westin, Grand 1 |
| Students and faculty members are cordially invited to an informational session on volunteer opportunities in the collections of the Music Division of the Library of Congress. This year, in addition to projects in the division's unique archival collections, volunteers will have the possibility of working in the general collections. Denise Gallo, head of Acquisitions and Processing, and Daniel Boomhower, head of Reader Services, will discuss the program, and former volunteers and their faculty sponsors will be on hand to speak about their experiences and the training they received from the Music Division staff. The session will be held on Friday from 12:30 to 1:30 in the Westin Grand. We look forward to seeing you in Indianapolis. |
|
|
| 10/25/2010 |
| AMS Committee on Career-Related Issues/ Graduate Education Committee: Sat 6 Nov., "Realities of the Job Market" Open session |
| On Saturday, November 6, there will be a joint meeting of the Committee on Career-Related Issues and the Graduate Education Committee which is an open session on the realities of today's job market. The session is scheduled for 7:00 - 8:45am in the Marriott Ballroom 3/4. As a way of focusing the discussion of this topic, the moderators (Ruth DeFord and Jim Cassaro) would like attendees to look at the following articles: "We Need to Acknowledge the Realities of Employment in the Humanities" (http://chronicle.com/article/We-Need-to-Acknowledge-the-/64885/) "Graduate Education in the Humanities Faces a Crisis. Let's Not Waste It" (http://chronicle.com/article/A-Useful-Crisis/64886/) "Clueless: were tenured professors to blame for your career prospects?" (http://chronicle.com/article/Clueless/64884/) An Open Letter from a Director of Graduate Admissions" (http://chronicle.com/article/An-Open-Letter-From-a-Direc/64882/) "Graduate Humanities Education: What Should Be Done?" (http://chronicle.com/article/Forum-The-Need-for-Reform-/64887/) The issues raised in these articles are pertinent to the work of these two committees as well as to the AMS as a whole. We encourage all interested to attend this session. |
|
|
| 10/25/2010 |
| AMS Committee on Women and Gender, Thu 4 Nov., 8 p.m. |
| We are pleased to invite the membership to the Opening Meeting for the Committee on Women and Gender on Thursday, November 4 at 8 pm. This year's program is dedicated to the memory of Adrienne Fried Block, and will feature a performance of songs and piano music of Amy Beach in honor of Adrienne's work, presented by Carolyn McClimon, piano (Indiana University); Shin Yeong Noh, soprano (Indiana University), Natasha Nelson, soprano (Indiana University), and William Lim, (Indiana University (tenor), accompanied by Dana Gooley (Brown University). The performance will be followed by a panel discussion on the topic "Beyond Women and Music," featuring Laurie Blunsom (Minnesota State University Moorhead), Nancy Newman (SUNY Albany), Nancy Rao (Rutgers Uiversity), and Judith Tick (Northeastern University). We look forward to seeing you there! |
|
|
| 10/21/2010 |
| Amusicology No-host Reception at AMS Indianapolis |
| Ryan Banagale and Drew Massey, editors of amusicology, invite you to join them at the second annual amusicology AMS no-host reception! Please consider taking a moment out of your Thursday evening to stop by. When: Thursday November 4, 2010, 8-10pm Where: Alcatraz Brewing Company 49 Maryland St., Indianapolis, IN. Link: http://amusicology.wordpress.com/2010/10/19/ams-indianapolis-amusicology-no-host-reception/ |
|
|
| 10/20/2010 |
| AMS CV/Cover Letter Workshop, Sat 6 Nov., 9 a.m. |
| The AMS Committee on Career-Related Issues (CCRI) will again this year host a CV / Cover Letter Workshop, scheduled for Saturday, November 6 from 9:00am to 12:00pm at Booth 104 in the Exhibit Hall. Please sign up for a consultation slot at the following link: http://www1.mysignup.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?datafile=ccri_cv_clw. Please bring along with you a copy of your current CV and cover letter, or a draft of these documents. Consultations are 15-minutes in length, although more time may be given if there is an open slot following your session. Two counselors will be available to assist you in each time slot. Walk-ins will be accommodated as time is available, but priority will be given to those who have signed up in advance. Any questions about the workshop can be sent to Jim Cassaro, cassaro@pitt.edu. |
|
|
| 10/20/2010 |
| Upcoming Music and Philosophy Events at AMS/SMT Indianapolis 2010 |
| The AMS and SMT Music and Philosophy Interest/Study Groups will hold a joint meeting at the upcoming AMS/SMT Indianapolis conference on Friday, November 5, from 5-7pm. Everyone with an interest in music and philosophy is invited to attend, participate, and meet colleagues with similar interests. We will be discussing Adriana Cavarero's For More Than One Voice (SUP 2005) and hearing position papers from Ryan Dohoney and Allie Kieffer. Selected chapters from Caverero are posted at the following address: http://www.browsebriankane.com/Cavarero/Cavarero_FMTOV.pdf We would also like to remind you of not one but two special sessions on the program sponsored by the two groups: Thursday evening, 8-11: Perception in the Flesh: What Can Merleau-Ponty Contribute to Music? Papers by Amy Cimini (NYU), Eugene Montague (George Washington), Violane Anger (Université d'Evry Val d'Essonne / École Polytechnique) and Richard H. Brown (USC). Chair: Jairo Moreno (Penn). Saturday evening, 8-11: Vladimir Jankélévitch's Philosophy of Music. A round table discussion with panelists: Michael Gallope (NYU), James Hepokoski (Yale), Judy Lochhead (Stony Brook), Michael Puri (U of Virginia), Steven Rings (U of Chicago), James Currie (Buffalo). Respondent: Carolyn Abbate (Penn). Chair: Brian Kane (Yale). |
|
|
| 10/19/2010 |
| A-R Editions: Online Music Anthology discussion Fri 5 Nov, 7:00 p.m. |
| We are pleased to host a discussion about A-R Editions' Online Music Anthology (www.armusicanthology.com) at the AMS/SMT meeting on Friday, November 5, between 7:00 and 9:00 p.m. (Location: Marriott: Indiana C/D). For those not yet familiar with the online music anthology, we will provide an introduction. If you are not yet familiar with the online music anthology and would like complimentary access to the online anthology, please register with us at: https://www1.areditions.com/SubscribeInstructor.aspx. This reception is by invitation—please contact Jim Zychowicz (James.Zychowicz@areditions.com) by Friday, October 29 if you plan to attend. Also, if you are interested, but cannot attend on Friday evening, please contact me to set up a time to meet. You are always welcome to contact me with any questions about the online music anthology for classroom adoption or a site license. We look forward to seeing you in Indianapolis! Best, James L. Zychowicz James.Zychowicz@areditions.com |
|
|
| 10/18/2010 |
| AMS Ecocriticism Study Group session, "A Changing Climate: Ecomusicology and the Crisis of Global Warming" |
| The panelists for the AMS ESG session in Indianapolis (Thursday, 8pm in the Marriott Lincoln Room) are looking forward to what promises to be an engaging and wide-ranging session. The format will be an open discussion (the abstract is at http://www.ams-esg.org/events/upcoming-events/2010-ams-annual-meeting ). Panel members will provide short statements but mostly will discuss issues with each other and the audience; meeting attendees are welcome to participate (as well as observe). We are also privileged to have a live version of "Requiem for the Mountains," a multimedia and solo Gregorian chant performance by Dr. Hunter Hensley. To increase the level of dialogue among panelists and public, we recommend advance consideration of three readings, listed on the website below and in the official abstract. Furthermore, a brief bio about each discussant along with his/her recommended supplementary readings is available at http://www.ams-esg.org/events/upcoming-events/2010-ams-annual-meeting/a-changing-climate Please let us know if you have any questions, and we look forward to the dialogue in Indianapolis! Aaron Allen ESG Chair |
|
|
| 10/15/2010 |
| Alexander Street Press Breakfast Friday 5 Nov. 7:30 a.m. |
| If you're heading to the annual meeting of the American Musicological Society and the Society for Music Theory in Indianapolis, we'd love to have you join us at Alexander Street's Annual Breakfast. Come learn about the exciting new enhancements to Music Online, including mobile streaming of audio and video, recently added content from EMI and its sub-labels, and improved streaming rates for all of our classical recordings—hear the difference that 320 kbps makes when listening to streaming audio! And, of course, you'll get a delicious, hot breakfast courtesy of Alexander Street Press. WHAT: Alexander Street's Annual AMS/SMT Breakfast WHEN: Friday, November 5 at 7:30 AM WHERE: The Westin Indianapolis - Capitol Ballroom 3 50 South Capital Avenue Directly across the street from the Marriott Click here to RSVP now! All breakfast attendees will also be entered in our drawing for a free one-year subscription to Classical Scores Library, part of the Music Online suite of recordings, scores, videos, and full-text reference works. Space is limited, so be sure to RSVP today. If you can't join us for breakfast, be sure to stop by booth # 403 in the exhibit hall to learn more about our entire line of online music collections, and pick up your Scholar's Pass for free access. We hope to see you in Indianapolis next month. Sincerely, Liz Dutton Music Editor Alexander Street Press http://alexanderstreet.com |
|
|
| 10/15/2010 |
| SMT Disability and Music Interest Group Saturday 6 Nov. |
| If you are interested in issues that this interest group works on, please join us at our annual organizational meeting at the AMS/SMT conference in Indianapolis: Saturday morning, November 6, at 7:30AM. And please attend a session we are sponsoring at 9AM the same morning: "Visual Impairment in the Music Theory Classroom." |
|
|
| 10/14/2010 |
| SMT Jazz Interest Group Jam Session |
| The SMT Jazz Interest group will host our usual jam session at this year's conference in Indianapolis on Friday night (Nov. 5th), from 8-10pm. Although we have no budget for the event, we plan to hire a local student bass player and drummer for $100 each to fill out our rhythm section (we have at least one guitarist, and lots of pianists). In order to pay the ringers, we are asking for $20 contributions from anyone who wants to sit in and play. Contributions in any amount from those who just want to listen are also enthusiastically welcomed. At the last joint conference in Nashville, a fair number of AMS members participated. With this message, I'd like to elicit responses (not necessarily pledges) to see if there is enough interest in the session to go ahead and hire the musicians. Please reply to me at the address below. Thanks and hope to see you there! Nicole Biamonte Assistant Professor of Music Theory McGill University nicole.biamonte@mcgill.ca |
|
|
| 10/13/2010 |
| Mozart Society of America at the meeting |
| The Mozart Society of America will present "The Art of Nancy Storace and Francesco Benucci" during its meeting on Friday, 5 November at 12:15 PM. After a brief business meeting, Dorothea Link will chair a lecture-recital by Jennifer Goode Cooper, soprano; Sean Cooper, bass; and Kevin Bylsma, piano. The program will consist of arias and ensembles from operas by Stephen Storace, Salieri, Paisiello, Sarti, Martín y Soler, and Mozart, introduced and discussed by the performers. |
|
|
| 10/12/2010 |
| SMT Conference Guides Program - Indianapolis 2010 |
| The SMT annual meeting is coming soon! Whether you'll be attending for your first time, your fifth, or your thirtieth, please consider taking part in the conference guides program hosted by the SMT Professional Development Committee. We would like to extend a hearty welcome to newer SMT members or members attending a national meeting for the first time by pairing them with members of the society who know their way around the meeting. This helps to break some of the formal ice and to demystify the conference in both the social and professional realms. The conference guides program offers a simple and informal means for longer-term SMT members to welcome and connect with newer members while opening a door for additional social and professional interaction for less-experienced conference participants. How might a conference guide assist a newer SMT member? It needn't be much different from what you would normally do unaccompanied at the conference. One or two get-togethers should be enough. Here a few of the many possibilities: * finding a session to attend together and debriefing afterwards; * getting together over coffee to answer questions about the structure of SMT, the purposes of the conference, and how these purposes are carried out in the various forums (paper sessions, panel sessions, meetings, job interviews, etc.); * attending the opening reception, the exhibit room, a concert, a meal, or another social event and making introductions; * just being a friendly and supportive contact throughout the meeting (and shortly before and after, if possible); There will be a very brief meeting for introductions right after the afternoon sessions on Thursday, November 4. The conference guides program is not intended to provide detailed career advice or academic mentorship. Any attendees wishing to be paired with a guide and any SMT members wishing to serve as guides (please volunteer!) are invited to contact Alfred Cramer directly < acramer@pomona.edu > by October 20. If you have already indicated your interest through the SMT website or by checking the box on your registration form, I would appreciate it if you could confirm directly with Alfred as well. All involved should plan to meet on Thursday, November 4, from 5:00 to 5:30 pm. Thank you for your support of this program. |
|
|
| 10/07/2010 |
| AMS Conference Buddy program: mentors wanted! |
| Calling all experienced musicologists! The CCRI's Buddy Program is seeking more mentors for first-time attendees at the conference in Indianapolis. If you recall being overwhelmed at your first AMS meeting, this is a chance for you to help ease that same confusion and stress for a young person in our field--to demystify the meeting, and to extend a welcoming hand. Some ways the conference buddy might assist the newer AMS member include the following: being a friendly and supportive contact shortly before, during, and perhaps after the meeting; answering questions about the structure of the AMS or the purposes of the conference; visiting the exhibits together; or attending the opening reception together and/or another social event or concert. The CCRI purposefully chose a rather light-hearted name for this program to emphasize the informality, and, we hope, fun, of the conference buddy connection and the terms mentor/mentee relationship – its purpose is not for detailed career advice, academic mentorship, intense discussions of research, or for getting inside scoops on other institutions. The time commitment is minimal, and your efforts will go a long way! If you'd like to help, please visit the web site. All the details: http://www.ams-net.org/indianapolis/buddy/ Straight to sign-up form: http://www.ams-net.org/indianapolis/buddy/buddy-form-2010.php Questions? Contact Rebecca Cypess directly: rebecca.cypess@gmail.com. |
|
|
| 10/05/2010 |
| The National Endowment for the Humanities wants to talk about your project |
| Elizabeth Arndt is planning to attend the AMS meeting in Indianapolis. She writes: "I will be available to provide information about the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and to discuss ideas for proposed projects. I will set aside Friday morning from 8:00am to noon. To help me prepare to discuss your ideas, please send a short (up to one page) description of your project via e-mail (earndt@neh.gov). Please also suggest a time you would like to meet. Below are the times I'll be available on Friday morning. "8:00am, 8:20am, 8:40am, 9:00am, 9:20am, 9:40am, 10:20am, 10:40am, 11:00am, 11:20am, 11:40am. "One of the reasons I attend the meeting is to identify potential evaluators to serve on NEH panels. If you would like to assist in this capacity, please let me know. I look forward to meeting some of you in Indianapolis." Elizabeth Arndt Senior Program Officer National Endowment for the Humanities Washington DC, 20506 earndt@neh.gov 202/606-8276 www.neh.gov |
|
|
| 09/22/2010 |
| Final Program and Abstracts now at the web site |
| The final program and abstracts book is available at the web site. |
|
|
| 07/09/2010 |
| Preliminary Program Now Available |
| See pp. 11 to 22 for the Preliminary Program! |
|
|
| 07/09/2010 |
| Welcome to the AMS/SMT Indianapolis News Feed |
| This page will be the site for news and information about the meeting. Please subscribe to the RSS feed! |
|
|