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05:04 (2007-02-22)

February 22, 2007

Seth Cable Colloquium

Seth Cable
MIT

Friday, February 22, 3:30 pm, Machmer E-37

Seth Cable Special Lecture

Today (February 22), at 4:00 pm, in Machmer E-10, Seth Cable will give a special seminar. It will be aimed at specialists, but all are of course welcome.

Spring Colloquium Schedule

The GLSA is pleased to announce its colloquium schedule for Spring 2007.

March 30 Ioana Chitoran (Dartmouth)
April 6 Paul de Lacy (Rutgers)
May 4 Jane Grimshaw (Rutgers)

[Thanks Andrew!]

Phonology Group

PhG meets next on February 27, at 4:00 pm, in the Partee Room. The group will discuss John McCarthy's new book manuscript.

[Thanks Kathryn P!]

Syntax Reading Group

The Syntax Reading Group meets on Wednesday, February 28, at 8:00 pm, at Amy Rose's place. Aynat Rubinstein and Andrew McKenzie will give practice talks for ECO5, which is on March 3.

[Thanks Cherlon!]

Enter UMOP 32

GLSA is super excited to annouce the recent arrival of Papers in Optimality Theory III, UMOP 32 (edited by Leah Bateman, Michael O'Keefe, Ehren Reilly and Adam Werle).

Look for it on Amazon shortly!

New Node Tradition

Current Node Monster Meg Grant has proposed an excellent new tradition: if a student or faculty member publishes a book, they buy a copy for the Node. Excellent suggestion, Meg! Authors, take note!

Cherlon, Rajesh, and Lyn at WCCFL

Cherlon Ussery's paper 'What It Means to AGREE: the Behavior of Case and Phi Features in Icelandic Control' was accepted to WCCFL 26, UC Berkeley, April 27-29.

Also on the program: Rajesh Bhatt and Shoichi Takahashi (UMass Amherst/Tokyo University). Their talk is called 'Direct comparisons: Resurrecting the direct analysis of phrasal comparatives'.

And Lyn Frazier is an invited speaker!

What's Special About This Number?

0 to 9999

(1084 is the smallest number whose English name contains all five vowels in order.)

(5000 is the largest number whose English name does not repeat any letters.)

...