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\begin{center}
  SPECIAL YEAR IN MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY  \\
  University of Utah   \\
  Fall Quarter, 1995   \\
\end{center}

The Department of Mathematics at the University of Utah is pleased to
announce a Special Year in Mathematical Biology.  The object of the 
Special Year is to train scientists in mathematical modeling applied 
to biological problems.  The educational program will comprise a full 
year course `Mathematical Modeling in Biology', a weekly seminar series, 
one two day minisymposium per quarter and an informal student/post-doc 
seminar.  Visitors will include principal lecturers, post-doctoral fellows, 
visiting graduate students, short-term visitors and minisymposium 
participants.  The Special Year will be run in cooperation with Departments 
of Biology, Bioengineering, and Human Genetics, and the Cardiovascular 
Research and Training Institute at the University of Utah.  

\begin{center}
  Schedule of Lecturers for Mathematical Modeling in Biology  \\
  Fall Quarter, 1995
\end{center}
Steve Ellner, North Carolina State University \\
October 2 - October 13 \\
LIFE HISTORY EVOLUTION IN FLUCTUATING ENVIRONMENTS \\ \\
Robert D. Holt and Richard Gomulkiewicz, University of Kansas \\
October 16  - October 27   \\
THE EVOLUTION OF SPECIES NICHES: POPULATION DYNAMIC PERSPECTIVES \\ \\
Odo Diekmann, C.W.I. \\
October 30 - November 3 \\
MATHEMATICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: A BIRD'S EYE VIEW \\ \\
Simon Tavare, University of Southern California \\
November 6 - November 17 \\
ANCESTRAL INFERENCE IN POPULATION GENETICS \\ \\
Simon Levin, Princeton University \\
November 20 - November 22 \\
ECOSYSTEM RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE \\ \\
Roger Nisbet, University of California at Santa Barbara \\
November 27 - December 8 \\
INDIVIDUAL-BASED POPULATION MODELS (IBMs) \\ \\

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\begin{center}
  Minisymposium: Competition for space and territoriality  \\
  Organized by Deborah Gordon, Stanford University         \\
  November 17-18, 1995
\end{center}

Most theoretical work on competition for space has been about plants.
There is a vast body of empirical work on territorial behavior in animals,
but few spatially explicit models and few attempts to use data to test
existing models of competition for space.  The symposium will address this
gap.  Talks  and discussion will attempt to bring together theoretical and
empirical work.  The final discussion will ask, What new directions are
needed for theoretical work in this field?  What data would resolve the
outstanding theoretical questions?

The speakers (in alphabetical order) will be:
Fred Adler, Deborah Gordon, Simon Levin, Mark Lewis,
Judy Stamps, Jonathan Roughgarden, Peter Waser, and Ken Yasukawa.

\begin{center}
  Schedule of Talks
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\begin{tabbing}
Oct. 1611 \= Friday131313 \= Stephen Ellner, North Carolina State \kill
Mathematical Biology Seminar \\ \\
Oct. 6  \>  Friday  \> Stephen Ellner, North Carolina State \\
Oct. 13 \>  Friday  \> Brian Maurer, Brigham Young University \\
Oct. 20 \>  Friday  \> Richard Gomulkiewicz, University of Kansas \\
Oct. 27 \>  Friday  \> Robert Holt, University of Kansas \\
Nov. 3  \>  Friday  \> David Stephens, University of Nebraska \\
Nov. 7  \>  Tuesday \> Peter Chesson, Australian National University \\
Nov. 21 \>  Tuesday \> Simon Levin, Princeton \\
Dec. 1  \>  Friday  \> Peter Kareiva, University of Washington \\
Dec. 8  \>  Friday  \> Roger Nisbet, U.C. Santa Barbara \\ \\
Mathematics Colloquium \\ \\
Nov. 2  \> Thursday \> Odo Diekmann, CWI \\
Nov  9  \> Thursday \> Simon Tavare, University of Southern California \\ \\
Biology Department Seminar \\ \\
Nov. 2  \> Thursday \> David Stephens, University of Nebraska \\
Nov  16 \> Thursday \> Jonathan Roughgarden, Stanford \\
\end{tabbing}

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