Research
Award to Help Prof Build a Better Microscope
A UT Dallas researcher has received a $1.2 million award from the National Institutes of Health to further develop a new technology for the three-dimensional microscopic imaging of living cells. read more
Students
UT Dallas Starts Infrared Technology Program
Responding to requests from local industry, The University of Texas at Dallas is offering a graduate certificate in infrared technology starting this fall. read more
Public Affairs Classes Give Cities a Boost
Seventeen city employees from Plano, Garland, Richardson and Dallas represent UT Dallas' first cohort in its "Master of Public Affairs in City Hall" program. read more
Campus
Callier Visitors Learn About Screening Program
The UT Dallas Callier Center for Communication Disorders recently hosted an official from Mexico's National Council for Persons with Disabilities, who visited to learn more about the Texas Early Hearing Detection and Intervention Program. read more
- Construction to Limit Parking on Lot H and Lot I
- Saturday, August 30
- Comet Cruiser is Back on Regular Schedule
- Monday, August 18
| Welcome Week Events: | |
| Aug. 29 | Art Exhibit Reception: Jana Miller and Manuel Pecina, 6:30 p.m. |
| Meteor Theatre: Transformers, 10 p.m. | |
| Aug. 30 | Service Learning: The Big Event Service Project, 8 a.m. |
| Aug. 30 | Scientist to Describe Mars H20 Discovery |
| Sept. 27 | Family Day at UT Dallas |
“It's very important to get past this bad-guy mentality and realize that there is a way to get to everyone, and usually it has to do with producing a mutually beneficial situation - situations were both parties feel that they're gaining. Economics and economic relationships have a lot to do with this.”
Dr. Lloyd J. Dumas, School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences
— KERA-TV (Channel 13)
“China and India are not that similar to one another, and they're both very different from the United States. The tendency is just to overreact to little pieces of information and not have much perspective about the two countries.”
Kevin Finneran,
editor of Issues in Science and Technology
— National Academies podcast

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