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MA with Thesis Deadline

Last day to submit successfully defended thesis for review by Graduate School Editorial Office Deadline for final exam forms to be posted to GIMS for thesis students

Graduate Professionalism Seminar

Careers in the Private Sector Join UF Alum Chad Maxwell for a discussion on how to turn your academic degree into a career outside the academy. Topics include how to assess your skills and market them to a non-academic audience, how to find the right position and career, and how to plan your course of

Graduate Professionalism Seminar

Careers in the Private Sector Join UF Alum Chad Maxwell for a discussion on how to turn your academic degree into a career outside the academy. Topics include how to assess your skills and market them to a non-academic audience, how to find the right position and career, and how to plan your course of

Seminar in Geological Sciences

100 Williamson Hall

John Smol “Canaries in the Coal Mine:  Northern Lakes as Sentinels of Environmental Change”

Seminar in Geological Sciences

100 Williamson Hall

John Smol “Canaries in the Coal Mine:  Northern Lakes as Sentinels of Environmental Change”

FASA Colloquium

1208A Turlington Hall

2000-Year Maya Odyssey: Tracking Animal Use and Exchange During the Rise and Fall of a Maya State by Ashley Sharpe, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida The site of Ceibal, Guatemala, was one of the oldest and longest-lasting Maya centers, with an occupational sequence spanning over two millennia (1000 BC - AD 1000).

FASA Colloquium

1208A Turlington Hall

2000-Year Maya Odyssey: Tracking Animal Use and Exchange During the Rise and Fall of a Maya State by Ashley Sharpe, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida The site of Ceibal, Guatemala, was one of the oldest and longest-lasting Maya centers, with an occupational sequence spanning over two millennia (1000 BC - AD 1000).

Job Talk with Laurence Ralph

201 Criser Hall

The Politics of Disability in a Chicago Gang Thursday, March 24,   3:30 pm in Criser 201   This talk is an attempt to understand why disabilities are disproportionately visited on low-income, African American communities. More generally, I consider the multifaceted ideas about what injury means among disabled populations. My argument is that, while admirable, the Disability