Thursday, December 4th at 7:00pm in the Roger E. Hedgepeth Chambers located in the Blacksburg Municipal Building, 300 South Main Street. This event offers a chance for students and community members to join the dialogue about alcohol-influenced behavior on campus and in the local community. There will be presentations by representatives from the Blacksburg Police Department, Virginia Tech Police Department, Virginia ABC, Judicial Affairs, Fraternity & Sorority Life, and the College Alcohol Abuse Prevention Center.
Following the presentations, there will be time for questions and comments. Students, faculty, staff, neighborhood association members, landlords, property managers, and interested members of the community are encouraged to attend.
This activity is presented by the Town Gown Community Relations Committee. Information about that group is available by calling the Town of Blacksburg Housing and Neighborhood Services Office at 540-951-4347.
Mary Alice Barksdale, associate professor in Virginia Tech's College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences' Department of Teaching and Learning, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholar grant for educational research in South Africa.
Virginia Tech University Distinguished Professor Emeritus J. Michael Duncan, of the Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, will receive the 2009 Outstanding Projects and Leaders (OPAL) Lifetime Achievement Award for Education from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) on April 23.
Metal or plastic? Water pipes, that is. When it comes to drinking water, the choice is important because it will help determine whether your water will be free of foreign smells.
Devi R. Gnyawali, associate professor of management in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Tech, recently received the university's 2008 Alumni Award for Excellence in International Education.
Richard E. Sorensen, dean of Virginia Tech's Pamplin College of Business, will help lead a workshop for business school deans at an upcoming international conference to address the possible financial impacts of the global recession on business schools.
Paul M. Herr, professor of marketing and chair of the marketing division of the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado, Boulder, has been named the Virginia-Carolinas Professor of Purchasing in the Pamplin College of Business at Virginia Tech by the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors during the board's quarterly meeting on Nov 3.
Mary Alice Barksdale, associate professor in Virginia Tech's College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences' Department of Teaching and Learning, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholar grant for educational research in South Africa.
Metal or plastic? Water pipes, that is. When it comes to drinking water, the choice is important because it will help determine whether your water will be free of foreign smells.
Dwellings in colonies on the moon one day may be built with new, highly durable bricks developed by students from the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech.
Connie Lowe of Christiansburg, Va., student program coordinator and advisor in the Department of Geosciences in the College of Science at Virginia Tech, was recently honored with the university's Provost Award for Excellence in Advising.
Jill C. Sible, associate professor of molecular and cellular biology and associate dean for curriculum, instruction and advising in the College of Science at Virginia Tech, recently received the university's 2008 Alumni Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Jeannine Eddleton, an instructor in the Department of Chemistry in the College of Science at Virginia Tech, received the university's 2008 W.E. Wine Award for Excellence in Teaching.
University Distinguished Professor Emeritus J. Michael Duncan, of Virginia Tech's Via Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, will receive the 2009 Outstanding Projects and Leaders (OPAL) Lifetime Achievement Award for Education from the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) on April 23.
Metal or plastic? Water pipes, that is. When it comes to drinking water, the choice is important because it will help determine whether your water will be free of foreign smells.
Dwellings in colonies on the moon one day may be built with new, highly durable bricks developed by students from the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech.