Join the Association for Computing Machinery chapter at our upcoming A Day in the Life lectures. You don't need to be an ACM member or a Computer Science major to attend. ACM boasts members from a wide variety of disciplines, including advanced mathematics, physics and engineering. Let us know you're coming so we know how much pizza to order. *ACM Meeting with Guest Lecture: A Day in the Life - Corporate R&D* David Etkins is Principal Research Scientist at Battelle Eastern Science & Technology Center (BEST), the world’s largest, independent research and development organization. He has worked on projects including embedded development, sensor integration, radar software, and data informatics, fusion, and analysis, in a wide variety of languages, including Ada, C/C++, C#/.Net, Java, Python, and object oriented MATLAB. Research is not just for academics. Get insight into what it’s like to be a software engineer in private industry. *May 3, 5:30 PM, CSIC 3117* There will be refreshments. RSVP is not necessary, but is appreciated. RSVP at http://acmmay3.eventbrite.com/. *ACM Meeting with Guest Lecture: A day in the Life - The Data Miner* Alan Broder is a proud University of Maryland Computer Science graduate, and the Chairman and Fellow at Novetta Solutions (formerly White Oak Technologies, you might have seen their Ninja ads on METRO). Novetta is a company that specializes in big-data analytics (a.k.a. data mining), cyber security and cloud computing solutions. Their clients include customers from many US Government agencies. One of the company’s major products is called WAREMAN® Pro, a solution to measure, cleanse, organize, and analyze data records stored in disparate and dirty databases. Learn about life at Novetta as a Computer Scientist, working on algorithms, data mining, user interfaces, and Big Data from a leader in the industry. *May 8, 5:30 PM, CSIC 3117* There will be refreshments. RSVP is not necessary, but is appreciated. RSVP at http://acmmay8.eventbrite.com/. *About ACM*: The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) was founded in 1947 as the world's first scientific and educational computing society. ACM sponsors conferences, programming contests and other events (like the famous chess match between Garry Kasparov and the IBM Deep Blue computer.) ACM also has several regular publications. Student members in ACM receive benefits like access to the Microsoft Developer Network and the CA Academic Initiative and access to the ACM library and networking opportunities. *About our chapter:* The ACM chapter at the University of Maryland was founded in 1968 which makes this our 43rd year. We sponsor activities on campus targeted toward Computer Science majors, although many of our events appeal to students in other disciplines. We sponsor events to introduce students to opportunities that they would not usually hear about from other sources, like independent video game developers and commercial R&D, as well as social events.