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February
2002
Welcome
to the first edition of the SCS Alumni e-Zine. The e-Zine is designed
to help alumni and friends stay connected to the School of Computer
Science and Carnegie Mellon. The SCS e-Zine is published three times
a year by the SCS External Relations office.
[ GREETINGS
FROM THE DIRECTOR | FEATURES
|
NEWS HIGHLIGHTS | RECENT
EVENTS | UPCOMING
EVENTS ]
GREETINGS
FROM THE DIRECTOR
SCS
Alumni Relations Director Tina Carr discusses the future of SCS
alumni relations.
Read her letter to
alumni.
SCS Forms Young
Alumni Advisory Council
Last fall the School invited 15 alumni and two current students to
join the newly formed SCS Young Alumni Advisory Council (YAAC), a
group that would generate ideas and provide feedback to the dean and
director of alumni relations regarding school initiatives. YAAC members
include:
- Jonathan Betz, Engineering Manager, E.piphany
- Phil Bronner, Principal, Novak Biddle Venture Partners
- Tony Chen, Former Head Business Development, Net Sanity
- Eric Daimler, Founder and CEO, Triangle Peak, Inc.
- Marc Ewing, Co-Founder and former CTO, Red Hat, Inc.
- Jonathan Goldick, Co-Founder, Triangle Peak, Inc.
- Dr. Chris Maeda, Chief Technology Officer, Kana Communications;
founder Rubric Software
- Dr. Greg Morrisett, Associate Professor of Computer Science,
Cornell University
- Joseph Parker, Vice President-Customer Applications,
Asera, Inc.
- Dr. Todd Rockoff, Co-founder, Intensys Corporation
- Scott Russell, Principal Managing Director, Mobius Venture
Capital
- Dr. Steven Shafer, Senior Researcher, Manager-Ubiquitous
Computing Group
- Monte Zweben, Founder and CEO, Blue Martini Software
- Leah Miller, senior, computer science undergraduate
- Tiffany Chang, junior, computer science undergraduate
The council
members are expected to attend two meetings per year, meet with
the SCS dean or representative in follow up meetings, host an alumni
event, serve on a subcommittee, and make an annual personal gift
to support SCS. The first meeting took place October 25-26, 2001
in Palo Alto, California. The next meeting will take place in Pittsburgh
in April.
CALL FOR
SCS CLASS NOTES!
Hi everyone -- I'm Jonathan Betz,
CS 1999 alumnus, and a member of the SCS Young Alumni Advisory Council.
One way we can all get more from our new e-zine is to send and share
updates of what's new in our own lives. Think of this as "class
notes" for the new millenium. Please submit your news and updates
to Tina Carr, tcarr@cs.cmu.edu.
To start
the ball rolling: This past summer I became a software development
manager for E.piphany Software (www.epiphany.com).
In more personal news, I am planning my wedding for May 2002 in
Monterey, California. Lastly, in September, I earned my beginner
hang-glider pilot rating. I look forward to seeing updates from
everyone else in upcoming issues!
SCS ALUMNI
DIRECTORY!
A directory of our alumni is available to help you locate all of
your old friends. The new SCS Alumni Directory is available by request.
The directory includes alumni current name as well as additional
personal and professional information for each alumnus. If you would
like of copy of the SCS alumni directory, please
send e-mail to Tina Carr, tcarr@cs.cmu.edu.
NEW SCS
VOLUNTEER NETWORK - REQUESTS FOR VOLUNTEERS
The SCS Alumni Relations Office is looking for enthusiastic volunteers
to serve as a regional contact for prospective SCS students, assist
with regional alumni events, and provide mentorship to current SCS
students and recent graduates. If you would like to become a volunteer,
please contact Tina Carr,
tcarr@cs.cmu.edu.
STAY CONNECTED!
SCS Alumni Web page
Keep in touch with your SCS colleagues by visiting the SCS Alumni
web page at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/alumni.
The SCS alumni web page provides the latest SCS-wide news, alumni
services and events. Read about fellow alumni in the Alumni profiles
section. Is there something you'd like to see on the website? Let
us know.
Update
your information!
Have you moved recently? Changed your e-mail address or changed
employers? Please update your information! You can change your information
two ways. First, you can send your changes by e-mail to Tina Carr
(tcarr@cs.cmu.edu). You can
also update your information by visiting the Carnegie Mellon Alumni
On-line Community. Through the community you can review the on-line
directory of alumni and update your personal and employment information.
Check it out at http://www.cmu.edu/alumni
E-mail
Forwarding for Life
Alumni, have you heard about Carnegie Mellon alumni e-mail forwarding
for life? The Carnegie Mellon Alumni Association is offering all
alumni email forwarding for life. The email address provided for
you by the system is a permanent address. You will be able to give
this address to your friends, family and colleagues and never have
to change it. With Carnegie Mellon University's Lifetime Email Forwarding
Service, you keep your existing email connection to the Internet,
whether it be AOL, CompuServ, a local provider, or an account through
your employer. If you change jobs or Internet providers, you can
simply come to the Carnegie Mellon alumni site and change your "forward
to address." Your email contacts will not be inconvenienced
in the least. To sign up for e-mail forwarding for life visit the
Carnegie Mellon Alumni Online
Community (http://www.cmu.edu/alumni).
[Top]
FEATURES
Dean Jim Morris
provides key research and news highlights
Dean Morris reflects upon some of the significant initiatives, research
and awards in SCS over the past year.
SCS
Graduate Programs: An in-depth summary
Associate Dean
of Academic Affairs Jeannette Wing describes why our graduate programs
are healthy, strong, and the envy of others on campus and beyond.
[Top]
NEWS
HIGHLIGHTS
Research
New Carnegie
Mellon Study Shows Internet Use Less Depressing, But Stressful
The latest word on the social effects of the Internet is that while
it may not cause feelings of depression, loneliness and isolation,
it does increase stress. "The Internet is a better place to
be and live than it was in 1995," said Robert Kraut, professor
of human computer interaction (HCI). (http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/demo/319.html)
Awards and Accolades
Faculty
Mahadev Satyanarayanan named 2002 IEEE Fellow
Carnegie Group Professor of Computer Science Mahadev Satyanarayanan
(Satya) has been named a 2002 Fellow of the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) for his "contributions to
scalable and reliable file access in large distributed systems."
Satyanarayanan is an experimental computer scientist who has pioneered
research in the field of mobile information access and is a recognized
leader in the operating systems research community.
http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/archive/2001-12-04.html
Hans Moravec
named AAAS Fellow
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) has
named Robotics Institute Principal Research Scientist Hans Moravec
an AAAS Fellow. Each year the 150-year-old organization elects AAAS
Fellows in recognition of their efforts "on behalf of the advancement
of science or its applications that are scientifically or socially
distinguished." According to the citation, Moravec is being
honored for the new and important perspective he has provided through
research and writing on the evolution of machine intelligence.
http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/archive/2001-12-04.html
Three Computer
Science professors awarded HP and Intel Grant
Hewlett-Packard Company (HP) and Intel Corporation Equipment Grant
for $153,162 has been awarded to computer science faculty Anastassia
Ailamaki (PI), Todd Mowry and Dave Naglean from its new Itanium-based
Systems Grant program. Carnegie Mellon is one of 40 universities
worldwide whose faculty was selected based on how they would deploy
the Itanium-based systems to strengthen their research.
http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/demo/346.html
Anastassia
Ailamaki recently received an IBM Faculty Partnership Award
and a Carnegie Mellon Berkman Faculty Development Award. She also
was honored with the Best Paper Award in the prestigious Conference
on Very Large Data Bases (VLDB 2001).
Students
Graduate Student receives Intel Foundation Fellowship Award
The Intel Corporation has awarded Michael Mateas a 2001-02 Intel
Foundation Graduate Fellowship Award. Mateas serves in several capacities
at Carnegie Mellon including a faculty member in the Entertainment
Technology Center, a research fellow in the Art Department's Studio
for Creative Inquiry, and a Ph.D. student in computer science.
Fullbright
Scholar research grant awarded to CSD Ph.D. candidate
Belinda Carol Thom, Ph.D. candidate, School of Computer Science,
has been awarded a Fulbright Scholar research grant to the University
of Karlsruhe, Germany, through August 2002.
For a complete
highlight of awards received by our graduate students, read Associate
Dean Jeannette Wing's article on the SCS Graduate Program, http://www.cs.cmu.edu/alumni/ezine/gradhighlights.html.
Four CS
Undergraduates Receive Honorable Mentions in Computer Research Association
Outstanding Undergraduate Award Competition
Four Carnegie Mellon computer science undergraduates received honorable
mentions in the Computer Research Association (CRA) competition
for Outstanding Undergraduates. They include Philip Godfrey, Cory
Williams, Leah Miller, and Ana Ramirez. The CRA Outstanding Undergraduate
Award recognizes those "who show outstanding research potential
in an area of importance to computing research."
http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/archive/2001-12-11.html
Alumni
News
SCS Alumnus Lends Expertise to Help New York After Sept. 11 Attacks
Adam Pennington, a software engineer at Hewlett Packard in
Florham Park, N.J., and recent computer science graduate (B.S. '01),
immediately volunteered as a member of a disaster management team
to help in New York City after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11.
Pennington's expertise in ham radio communications aided the Red
Cross to set up a fast, effective, alternative communication system
that would be fast and effective. According to Foster's Online,
a New England news website, he arrived in New York 36 hours after
the attacks and began working 12- to 18-hour shifts.
While he was
helping to rebuild New York's infrastructure, Pennington intermittently
returned to his job at Hewlett-Packard in Florham Park, N.J. In
October, the company closed its Florham Park office due to the worsening
economy. Pennington will be returning to the Pittsburgh area to
find work or to go to graduate school, according to his mother,
Ellen Pennington.
"Carnegie
Mellon is creating responsible compassionate adults. We are very
proud of our son and very glad he went to Carnegie Mellon,"
said Ellen and Rohe Pennington, Adam's parents. "We thought
you would like to see something positive that came from the tragedy."
CS Alumnus
co-authors new book examining the influences contributing to the
gender gap in computing
Carnegie Mellon and CS alumnus Allan Fisher
(CS 1981, '85) recently co-authored a book with UCLA social
scientist Jane Margolis titled "Unlocking the Clubhouse:
Women in Computing." Unlocking the Clubhouse
examines the many influences contributing to the gender gap in computing.
The book is based on interviews with more than 100 computer science
students of both sexes from Carnegie Mellon University over a period
of four years, as well as classroom observations and conversations
with hundreds of college and high school faculty. The book highlights
the educational programs created at Carnegie Mellon which have contributed
to the increase in the percentage of women enrolling in the School
of Computer Science from 7% in 1995 to 42% in 2000. Dr. Fisher is
the former Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education in the School
of Computer Science and is President and CEO of Carnegie Technology
Education, a Carnegie Mellon education company.
Both Drs. Fisher
and Margolis are currently on tour promoting the book. Recently,
alumni were invited to events in Palo Alto, California and Seattle,
Washington. Stay tuned to the SCS
alumni website for upcoming events in your area! The book is
available at amazon.com.
Research
Awards
Carnegie Mellon Receives $23.3 Million from NASA To Establish
a High Dependability Computing Program
NASA's Ames Research Center has signed an agreement to award $23.3
million to Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science
to develop a multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional High-Dependability
Computing Program (HDCP) to improve NASA's capability to create
dependable software. The incremental, five-year cooperative agreement
is part of a broad strategy for dependable computing that links
Carnegie Mellon, NASA, corporate partners, and other universities.
William L. Scherlis, principal research scientist in the
Institute for Software Research, International and James H. Morris
(MCS '63), professor and dean of the School of Computer Science,
are principal investigators on the High-Dependability Computing
Program.
Read the full press release online http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Releases/demo/88.html.
LTI researchers win $1.7 Million U.S. government contract award
to develop the JAVELIN project
Language Technology Institute researchers won a $1.7 Million U.S.
government contract award to develop the JAVELIN project, which
seeks to answer questions posed in natural language by extracting
and combining information from textual or web-based resources. Eric
Nyberg, LTI associate professor and leader of the JAVELIN team,
Jamie Callan, LTI associate professor, Jaime Carbonell, director
of the LTI and professor of computer science, Bob Frederking, LTI
senior systems scientist, John Lafferty, associate professor in
the Computer Science Department, Alon Lavie, LTI research computer
scientist, and Teruko Mitamura, LTI senior research scientist.
Carnegie
Mellon and University of Pittsburgh computer science and astrophysics
experts among researchers who will share a $10-million, five-year
NSF Information Technology Research (ITR) grant
Experts in computer science and astrophysics from Carnegie Mellon
University and the University of Pittsburgh are among researchers
from 17 institutions nationwide who will share a $10-million, five-year
Information Technology Research (ITR) grant from the National Science
Foundation (NSF) to help "put the universe on line" via
a National Observatory (NVO) - http://us-vo.org.
Andrew W. Moore, Carnegie Mellon's A. Nico Haberman associate professor
of robotics and computer science, along with Carnegie Mellon Assistant
Professor of Physics Robert C. Nichol and Andrew Connolly, assistant
professor of astrophysics at Pitt, comprise the Pittsburgh team.
[Top]
SCS DEPARTMENT
NOTES
Here are just
a few of the interesting department news items and research projects!
Human
Computer Interaction Institute
HCII faculty
license Cognitive Tutor technology to Carnegie Learning
HCII faculty Albert Corbett and Ken Koedinger's PACT Center recently
licensed Cognitive Tutor technology and textbooks for middle school
mathematics courses to the Carnegie Mellon University spin-off,
Carnegie Learning. These courses are based on advanced theories
of student learning and they will double Carnegie Learning's product
line.
NASA Ames
Research Center publication praises five HCII students' work
Ames Astrogram, an official publication of the NASA Ames Research
Center, gives a glowing review of five HCII master's students working
at the Human Performance Lab at NASA-Ames Research Center in Moffett
Field, California. Under the direction of Associate Professor Bonnie
John, Marianne Berkovich, Jack Zaientz, Andy Yang, Elaine Kwong,
and Anne Zahn are helping to develop a new research tool intended
to facilitate cognitive psychology basic research and human factors
engineering projects.
For the complete story read the July 23, 2001 pdf edition of the
Ames
Astrogram
HCI Ph.D.
student co-authors new HCI design book
HCI Ph.D. student Darren Gergle has co-authored a new book on HCI
design titled "Usability for the Web: Designing Web Sites that
Work." His co-authors include Tom Brinck and Scott D. Wood.
The book was published by Morgan Kaufmann Publishers and is available
at amazon.com (http://www.amazon.com)
HCII Pebbles
project develops applications used to extend the uses of hand-held
computers
The Pebbles project in the Human Computer Interaction Institute
is studying how hand-held computers, such as Palm Pilots and PocketPC
devices, can be used in conjunction with PCs, appliances and other
devices. The Pebbles project, under the direction of Dr. Brad A.
Myers along with over 20 B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. students from CSD
and HCII, has developed a wide collection of applications. One,
called Slide Show Commander, allows the handheld to be used as a
"remote control" for PowerPoint presentations. The user
can see a thumbnail picture and the notes for the slide on the handheld,
and can even scribble on the slide using the stylus. SlideShow Commander
was licensed to Synergy Solutions, and is available at CompUSA,
Office Depot and other stores. It is also featured in the "Hot
Wireless Networker Applications" section of the CD shipped
with Symbol Technologies' new 802.11 wireless Compact Flash card.
Other applications from the Pebbles group explore the use of handhelds
in classrooms, offices, homes, meetings, and military command posts.
Current projects include exploring the use of handhelds as remote
controls for home appliances, and using handhelds to help people
with disabilities such as Muscular Dystrophy. For more information,
see http://www.pebbles.hcii.cmu.edu/
Center for Automated Learning and Discovery
(CALD)
Tom Mitchell
will return as CALD Director after two year sabbatical at WhizBang!
Tom Mitchell will be returning as Director, to the Center for Automated
Learning & Discovery (CALD), after a two year sabbatical at
WhizBang! Labs East. WhizBang! is a high tech company based on machine
learning technologies. One of the success stories is flipdog.com,
which was bought by monster.com. Flipdog
is an application of machine learning that grew out of the CALD
Web KB project. WhizBang! is now using this technology on a commercial
basis with companies like Dun & Bradstreet, U.S. Department
of Labor and Monster.com.
Nobuaki
Hoshino, CALD visiting researcher, working on problems of confidentiality
and privacy
Nobuaki Hoshino, a visiting researcher in the Center for Automated
Learning & Discovery (CALD), is working with Stephen Fienberg
on problems of
confidentiality and privacy. Hoshino is an Economics faculty member
at Kanazawa
University in Ishikawa, Japan. He is currently investigating the
applicability of various statistical superpopulation models that
arise in other contexts to the field of disclosure limitation.
Computer
Science Department and Robotics Institute
SCS Professor Publishes Book on Robotic Manipulation
Matthew T. "Matt" Mason, professor of computer science
and robotics, has written a book, "Mechanics of Robotic Manipulation,"
published by MIT Press in August 2001.
The book focuses on the processes involved in moving objects around,
such as grasping, carrying, pushing, and dropping. Mason said that
although there are other books on the subject, his focuses on manipulation
rather than on manipulators. For more information about Mason, see
his Web site at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mason.
See The
MIT Press for more about Mason's book.
IN MEMORIUM
Nobel Laureate
Herbert A. Simon dies at age 84
Carnegie Mellon University Professor Herbert A. Simon, winner of
the 1978 Nobel Prize in Economics and many prestigious international
scientific awards for his work in cognitive psychology and computer
science, died Friday, February 9, 2001 at the age of 84. Simon died
at Pittsburgh's Presbyterian University Hospital (UPMC) of complications
from surgery in January. Carnegie Mellon has established The Herbert
A. Simon Memorial Fund in his memory. For further information visit
http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/demo/367.html.
To learn more about Dr. Simon and his achievements please visit
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/stars/2001/03/hsimon.html.
Former provost,
dean and department head dies at age 59
Paul Christiano, former provost, dean and department head at Carnegie
Mellon, died at his Upper St. Clair home on June 21, 2001 of cancer.
He was 59. A memorial mass was held at St. Thomas More Church on
Saturday, June 30. For the complete story visit http://www.cmu.edu/cmnews/062701/062701_paulc.html
CS alumnus
Bruce Nelson remembered
In memory of the late CS alumnus Bruce J. Nelson, the School of
Computer Science awarded the first Dr. Bruce J. Nelson Chair in
Computer Science to Professor Manual Blum. Funds for the Chair were
donated by the Nelson family. In addition, Pradeep Sindhu (MCS 1983,
'84), founder of Juniper Networks gave the first Nelson Distinguished
Lecture.
Nelson, former
Cisco chief science officer, died suddenly of aortic dissection
in the fall of 1999. Nelson received his Ph.D. in computer science
in 1981. His thesis originated the idea of Remote Procedure Call
(RPC), one of the important breakthroughs in providing programs
access to the resources of remote machines, for which he won the
ACM Software Systems Award for this work in 1995. After graduation,
Nelson maintained close relations with Carnegie Mellon, especially
the Computer Science Department. He frequently gave talks for Ph.D.
students on what to expect out in the working world. To learn
more about the Nelson Fund visit http://www.cs.cmu.edu/aboutscs/development/nelson.html
Software
Engineering Alumnus Roger Wayne Miller Dies
Roger Wayne Miller (MSE 1998) died in a tragic auto accident in
Queretaro, Mexico, northwest of Mexico City, Friday, Sept. 28. He
was 36-years-old.
Miller began
the Master of Software Engineering (MSE) program in August 1997.
Delco Electronics Corp. sponsored Miller in the program. After graduation,
he returned to Delco, which is now Delphi Automotive Systems. In
September, Miller was promoted to head Delphi's software center
and moved his family to Queretaro, Mexico. Miller is survived by
his wife Amie and three children. For the complete story visit http://news.cs.cmu.edu/Scstoday/archive/2001-10-09.html.
[Top]
RECENT EVENTS
Over
240 alumni and students attend Fourth Annual Network Night in Silicon
Valley
The fourth annual Network Night-Silicon Valley took place in Palo
Alto, California, Tuesday, January 8, 2002. This year's event was
co-sponsored by E.piphany and School of Computer Science. Network
Night provides alumni and current students an opportunity to "network"
and to learn about available employment opportunities in the area.
Jeffrey Hunker, Dean, H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy
and Management, welcomed alumni and students followed by a presentation
by Jonathan Betz (CS 1999), Engineering Manger at E.piphany. Local
companies (either owned by CMU alumni or who employ CMU alumni)
are invited to attend, giving them a chance to showcase their business.
Additional Network Night events also took place in Boston and Philadelphia.
RoboCup
2001 Alumni Brunch a rousing success in Seattle!
More than 200 Carnegie Mellon alumni, family and friends attended
the Carnegie Mellon Alumni Brunch in August 2001 in Seattle. The
brunch was held in conjunction with RoboCup2001, which took place
August 2-10 at the Washington State Convention and Trade Center.
RoboCup is a five-year-old international sporting and scientific
event featuring autonomous soccer-playing and rescue robots of all
shapes and sizes. This is the first time the international event
has been held in the United States.
Computer Science
professor and Carnegie Mellon robotics team leader Manuela Veloso
served as guest speaker. Veloso, who also served as RoboCup chairperson,
gave an educational and entertaining speech about the history of
RoboCup and the evolution of the robots. Adjunct Research Scientist
Tucker Balch also played a leading role in RoboCup as Associate
Chair for Robotics Events. Alumni who attended received a RoboCup
2001 t-shirt and also had a chance to win several prizes including
a PalmPilot Robot Kit or LEGO Mindstorm robot kits. Afterwards,
everyone was invited to watch the RoboCup competitions and cheer
the Carnegie Mellon teams to victory.
Carnegie Mellon
has created a four-minute video featuring footage of RoboCup 2001
competitions and interviews with some of the Carnegie Mellon team
members. The video is available at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/buzz/robocup_video.html.
To learn more about RoboCup 2002, please visit the official website:
http://www.robocup2002.org.
[Top]
UPCOMING
EVENTS
Alumni please
join us for the New York City Fine Art Series!
Get reconnected with old classmates and make new friends. Alumni
are invited to attend any of the New York City Fine Art Series events
in New York City. This year's series is sponsored by College of
Fine Arts, School of Computer Science, and the College of Humanities
and Social Science. Registration and fees are required to attend.
For more information contact Christine
File by e-mail (cf2n@andrew.cmu.edu)
or call (412) 268-1047.
April 4,
2002
Rogers and Hammerstein's "Oklahoma!"
Special Guest: Patrick Wilson (A'95) and star of Oklahoma
Join us for dinner and the performance at The Gershwin Theatre.
Alumni will meet its star, Patrick Wilson (A '95), after the performance.
April 27,
2002
Architectural House Tour in the Hamptons with
Bill Diamond
Special Guests: William Diamond and Anthony Baratta
William Diamond
(A'72) and his partner Anthony Baratta of Diamond Baratta Design
will give us a personal tour of three distinctive homes they have
designed and decorated in the Hamptons.
A private bus
will take us on a scenic drive from NYC to the Hamptons. Join us
for a delicious lunch and a tour of three spectacular Hampton homes.
You'll see why Diamond Baratta is one of the hottest design teams
around and why they are regularly featured on the pages of Architectural
Digest, The New York Times, House and Garden, House Beautiful, and
Veranda magazines, to name a few.
May 4, 2002
<35 Bash with Prekop
Special Guest: Sam Prekop
Sam Prekop, lead singer of the hit indie rock band, The Sea and
Cake, joins us for a fun evening of music and mixing specifically
geared for the under 35 age group of alumni and friends in NYC.
You'll hear songs from the Sea and Cake albums as well as from Sam's
solo album.
April 18,
2002
SCS
Distinguished Lecture Series, Carnegie Mellon University
Steve Wozniak, Co-founder, Apple Computer
April 19-20,
2002
Spring Carnival
Mark your calendars
for Spring Carnival! If you haven't been back to campus in awhile
or want to reconnect with old classmates, consider returning for
Spring Carnival! Class reunions will be held for the classes of
1992 and 2001! Alumni who plan on attending please send e-mail to
Tina Carr (tcarr@cs.cmu.edu).
Watch for additional information on the SCS alumni web site (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/alumni).
Saturday,
April 20, 2002
All alumni Spring Carnival picnic!
SCS alumni are invited to attend the Carnegie Mellon all alumni
picnic. Stay tuned to the SCS alumni website (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/alumni)
for additional details.
[Top]
Alumni
- do you have news you'd like to share with us? Are you working
on an interesting project? Please send your news and stories to
Tina Carr, tcarr@cs.cmu.edu.
The SCS
Alumni e-Zine is published three times a year by the SCS External
Relations office. The e-Zine is designed to help alumni and friends
stay connected to the School of Computer Science and Carnegie Mellon.
If you would like to subscribe to scs-alumni, you may sign up using
the web-based form (http://www.cmu.edu/lists).
Contact
Us:
Tina
Carr
Alumni Relations Director
School of Computer Science
Carnegie Mellon University
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890
tcarr@cs.cmu.edu
phone: (412)268-8919
fax: (412)268-5371
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