SCHEDULE
9:00-9:45
 Breakfast and Registration
 Burruss 036
9:45-10:00
 Opening Remarks
  Miller 101
10:00-11:00
Professor Arthur Benjamin, Harvey Mudd College
Proofs That Really Count
(Invited Faculty Talk I)
Miller 101
11:00-11:30
 Coffee Break   
 Burruss 036
11:30-12:30
 Parallel undergraduate talks:
11:30-11:50
Burruss 031 Strongly Regular k-friendly Graphs   
   Kelly Bragan, Birmingham-Southern College
Burruss 044 An Investigation into Statistical Tests for Stochastic Dominance
   David Kahle, University of Richmond  
Burruss 238 The Mathematics of a Tennis Serve
   Jake Bennett, Roanoke College
11:50-12:10
Burruss 031 On the Action of Weight-Preserving Sets   
   Matthew Badger, University of Pittsburgh
Burruss 044 Discovering Human Route-Planning Knowledge from Everyday Location Traces
  John Suarez, James Madison University  
Burruss 132 Using High Performance Computer Visualizations to Describe Complex Algorithms and Theories
   John Magnotti and Karl Ridgeway, James Madison University
12:10-12:30
Burruss 031 Resolving the 6,4 Problem  
   Joshua Link, The College of William and Mary
Burruss 044 Newton's First Great Mathematical Discovery
  
Goldie Regina Darr, Mary Baldwin College
Burruss 132 Using High Performance Computer Visualizations to Describe Complex Algorithms and Theories
   John Magnotti and Karl Ridgeway, James Madison University
12:30-2:00
 Lunch and Poster Session
 Burruss 032 (l),  Burruss 033 (p)
2:00-3:00
 Parallel Sessions of Undergraduate Talks:
2:00-2:20
Burruss 031 Triangle Tessellations of the Hyperbolic Plane
  
Anton Lukyanenko, University of Maryland, College Park   
Burruss 044 On the Counting of Lower Hessenberg Matrices  
   Hakan Seyalioglu and Katie Field, The College of William and Mary
Burruss 238 Building a Research Lab, An Experimental and Theoretical Study of the Aeroacoustics of External-Coanda Gas Flares
   Steven Andrews, James Madison University
2:20-2:40
Burruss 031 Geometric Properties of the Cevian Box
   Shamia Jones and William Rankin, Virginia State University   
Burruss 044 Comparing Ratio Estimators Based on Systematic Samples  
   John Szarka, James Madison University
Burruss 238 From College to a Career: Post-JMU Life at Metron, Inc.
   Chris Carlson, Metron, Inc.(JMU class of  '05)
2:40-3:00
Burruss 031 Automorphisms of the Cevian Line Algebra
  
Jesse Ozbat, (joint work with John Gichuru), Virginia State University   
Burruss 044 A Modified Lotka-Volterra Competition Model with a Non-Linear Relationship Between Species  
   Amy Vess Crizer, James Madison University
Burruss 132 Using High Performance Computer Visualizations to Describe Complex Algorithms and Theories
    John Magnotti and Karl Ridgeway, James Madison University
3:15-4:00
 Grad school and industry careers panel
 Miller 101 
4:00-4:30
 Tea (and a chance to talk informally with panelists) 
 Miller lobby
4:30-5:30  Professor Greg Warrington, Wake Forest University
  Juggling Probabilities
 (Invited Faculty Talk II )
 Miller 101 
5:30-5:45
 Closing Remarks
 Miller 101