Wednesday, March 31, 2010

RED STICK International Animation Festival - 2010

CALLING ALL ENTRIES!!

Red Stick is seeking work from students, amateurs and professionals to consider for the 2010 “Best of the Fest” competition. Red Stick will take place Nov. 10-13, 2010, and will accept Best of the Fest entries through July 1, 2010.

Red Stick International Animation Festival is seeking work in eight categories for the Best of the Fest competition:

• Animated Short Film (student and professional categories)
• Music Video
• Scientific Visualization
• Animation for Commercials
• Animation for Games
• Animation for Young Audiences
• Experimental Animation/Visual Music (student and professional categories)
• Storyboard Competition

There is no entry fee for the competition. Animations should be no longer than nine minutes, and the work must have been created within the past two years. The festival accepts 2-D, 3-D and hand-drawn animation, and participants must submit work in DVD or DV (NTSC only) format. Further details about the submission process are available at http://redstickfestival.org/entries.asp.

Participants must register their work online using the registration form available at http://redstickfestival.org/entries.asp. Participants can send materials and inquiries to Red Stick International Animation Festival – LSU, 216 Johnston Hall, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803.

The “Best of the Fest” competition is an annual part of festival events, and Red Stick jurists award a “Red Baton” to the top work in each category, announcing winners on-site during the festival. Top Best of the Fest entries will be screened throughout Red Stick for audiences to enjoy.

For more information on Red Stick, please contact the festival office at 225-389-7182 or visit www.redstickfestival.org.

Red Stick International Animation Festival
Phone: +1 225-578-8904 or +1 225-389-7182
E-mail: rsiaf@cct.lsu.edu
Web site: www.redstickfestival.org
Twitter @ RedStickFest

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

DIGITAL MEDIA MINOR

DIGITAL MEDIA MINOR CURRICULUM (Total 21 hours):

Two digital media minors have been approved: Digital Media-Arts (DMART) and Digital Media-Technology (DMTEC). Both are effective with the beginning of the 2010 fall semester. The DMART will be housed in the College of Art and Design and the DMTEC will be housed in the College of Engineering.

The following will be printed on the student’s transcript:

Digital Media AVATAR Arts
Digital Media AVATAR Technology

Faculty with the University’s Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research, or AVATAR, Initiative, are debuting a new academic program that will allow students to obtain an interdisciplinary minor in digital media, preparing them for careers in emerging fields such as animation, video games, electronic music and digital art.

The University approved the AVATAR Initiative in Spring 2008 as one of its multidisciplinary hiring initiatives, bringing together faculty, researchers and professionals to create a concentrated academic research program in digital media.

Faculty with the AVATAR Initiative have spent the past two years developing a program that would allow students to minor in digital media. The University approved this academic program in Fall 2009, and students will be able to declare the minor and take classes toward the degree in the Fall 2010 semester.

“Students regularly express to us an interest in working as a video game developer, animator, or other profession involving interactive digital media. We crafted the AVATAR minor to address the needs of these students as well as the needs of the digital media industry,” said Stephen David Beck, Derryl & Helen Haymon Professor in the LSU School of Music and AVATAR Initiative lead. “The faculty who are part of AVATAR Initiative have developed an interdisciplinary curricula that we feel prepares students to work in these fields and provides them with an enriching educational experience during their time at LSU.”

Students can enroll in the minor through one of two thematic tracks: an arts-oriented track through the College of Art & Design, or a technology-oriented track through the College of Engineering. Courses from computer science, electrical and computer engineering, music, art, English and mass communication are part of the curriculum, along with a new capstone course, where students from both tracks will work collaboratively on group projects.

Interested students can learn more about the program and see a list of required courses at http://avatar.lsu.edu. Students who are interested in obtaining the digital media minor should contact AVATAR Initiative Coordinator Lea Anne Couvillion at 225-578-5433 or leaanne@cct.lsu.edu.

To officially kick off the minor, AVATAR Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, bringing distinguished leaders from the field of digital media to campus, who will discuss the latest developments and help students understand the skills they need for careers in these disciplines.

Friday, March 26, 2010

AVATAR Lecture Series Information

LSU's Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research (AVATAR)
Initiative will launch the University's first minor degree program in digital media in
the Fall 2010 semester.

To help students learn what skills they need for careers in this exciting and
emerging field, AVATAR Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall
semesters, bringing professionals from various areas of digital media to campus.

The AVATAR Lecture Series speakers will discuss their own career paths in areas
such as video game design, electronic music composition, animation, digital art,
scientific visualization, and more, and advise students on what they need to learn
to get jobs in digital industries.

AVATAR Lecture Series

Spring 2010 Semester

March 25, 2010 Daryl Holt
Chief Operating Office, EA Sports Tiburon
Atchafalaya Room in LSU Student Union, 3 p.m.

April 19, 2010 John Worthington
Worthington Designz
CCT Training Room (Johnston 338), 3 p.m.

April 30, 2010 Tom Defanti
California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology (Calit2) at the University of California, San Diego
CCT Training Room (Johnston 338), 1 p.m.

* Lectures are open to any interested faculty, staff or students who wish to attend.
Seating is limited, so guests are advised to arrive early.

If you are interested in minoring in digital media through AVATAR, please contact
Lea Anne Couvillion at 225-578-5433 or leaanne@cct.lsu.edu to arrange a
meeting.

More information about the minor and the AVATAR Lecture Series is available at:
http://avatar.lsu.edu.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

LSU Day * Saturday, April 24 * 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.

Save the Date: LSU Day * Saturday, April 24 * 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.

Experience Your University

This year, LSU is marking its 150th anniversary. As part of that commemoration, we are proud to invite students, alumni, faculty and staff, and citizens and representatives of Louisiana to explore and experience first-hand the benefits of Louisiana’s flagship, public, research university—your university.



Join us for a free, fun-filled day of interactive exploration and discovery throughout campus, highlighted by performing arts showcases, tours, and exhibitions showing off LSU's history and achievements in athletics, research, the arts, academics, and community engagement.





Take a walk through the human body; learn the art of stage combat or improvisation; visit a petting zoo; try your hand at firefighting; meet your favorite local authors; learn how to spell your name in Chinese; plant a tree for coastal restoration; and more than 150 other experiences!



Events are subject to change. Check out www.LSUDAY.com for the most up-to-date information and plan to spend Saturday, April 24, with us!



LSU Day is part of the LSU sesquicentennial celebration and is made possible through donations from: AT&T, BlueCross BlueShield of Louisiana, Campus Federal, Raising Cane’s, Coca-Cola, Entergy, and ExxonMobil.



Interested in volunteering?

Hosting such a large event means that a lot of volunteers are needed and, as a member of the LSU community, your expertise is just what we are looking for. Volunteer opportunities include, but are not limited to: providing directions and information to guests, assisting LSU Day staff, and various other tasks. For a full list of volunteer opportunities on this exciting day, visit http://www.lsu.edu/lsu150/lsuday/volunteer.shtml for more information and to sign up.





LSU Communications & University Relations

3960 W. Lakeshore Drive

Baton Rouge, LA 70808

225-578-8654

225-578-3860 FAX

AVATAR's Stacey Simmons is awarded the 2010 Technology Award

Corridor firms dominate technology awards

The 10/12 corridor dominated the Governor's Technology Awards honoring individuals and companies in Louisiana for their innovation and progress in the past year. The winners, from 42 nominations statewide, were announced at a recent ceremony in Baton Rouge. Technology Company of the Year is NiFTv of Ruston, which brings television-style broadcasting to the Internet by developing a distributed broadcast technology that allows its viewers to broadcast to other viewers. Innovator of the Year is Louisiana Immersive Technology Enterprise of Lafayette, which helps diversify Louisiana's economy by application and technology development, testing, training and research for industry, education and government. Rising Star of the Year is obdEdge of Baton Rouge, a tech start-up that is leading the industry in the development of innovative and effective solutions to deter the deadly habit of distracted driving. Technology Leader of the Year is Stacey Simmons, Director for Economic Development at the Center for Computation & Technology at LSU, who helped bring the digital media industry to Louisiana by co-founding the Red Stick International Animation Festival and serving as its director since its inception. University Leader of the Year is Steven Ceulemans of Louisiana State University in New Orleans, who has taken a leadership role in the commercialization of local universities' world-class research.

Laptop Orchestra of Louisiana Debut Concert - April 14th

The LOLs will present their debut concert April 14, 2010 at 8 PM in the Shaver Theatre, in the Music & Dramatic Arts building on LSU's campus. This unique ensemble will present new music by Jeff Albert, Stephen David Beck, Nick Hwang, and Jeff Lipscomb, along with new realizations of music by John Cage and Thea Musgrave.

The ensemble is a project of the LSU School of Music, the CCT Lab for Creative Arts & Technologies and the AVATAR Initiative in Digital Media at LSU.

Tickets are $10, $5 for students.


Making music five laptops at a time

Date:
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Time:
8:00pm - 10:00pm
Location:
Shaver Theatre - LSU
Street:
Music & Dramatic Arts Building
City/Town:
Baton Rouge, LA


Daryl Holt, COO of EA Sports Tiburon, to Speak with LSU Students March 25

LSU's Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research (AVATAR) Initiative, part of the LSU Center for Computation & Technology, will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, bringing professionals from various areas of digital media to campus to talk with students about what skills they need for careers in video game design, electronic music composition, animation, digital art, scientific visualization, and more.

The first AVATAR lecture will take place Thursday, March 25, featuring Daryl Holt, chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Florida. Holt will discuss his own career path in the video game industry and will advise students on what skills potential employers will expect them to have to work as game designers or developers.

Holt’s lecture will take place at 3 p.m. in the Atchafalaya Room of the LSU Student Union, and is free and open to the public. Seating is limited, so guests are advised to arrive early.

A reception will follow Holt’s lecture at 4 p.m., and faculty members with the AVATAR Initiative will be available to discuss how students can take classes toward a minor in digital media.

WHAT: AVATAR Lecture Series
WHO: Daryl Holt, COO of EA Sports Tiburon Studios
WHEN: Thursday, March 25 at 3 p.m.; reception following at 4 p.m.
WHERE: LSU Student Union, Atchafalaya Room
Free and open to the public

For more information: www.cct.lsu.edu or http://avatar.lsu.edu.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

LSU Day * Saturday, April 24 * 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.

Save the Date: LSU Day * Saturday, April 24 * 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.

Experience Your University

This year, LSU is marking its 150th anniversary. As part of that commemoration, we are proud to invite students, alumni, faculty and staff, and citizens and representatives of Louisiana to explore and experience first-hand the benefits of Louisiana’s flagship, public, research university—your university.



Join us for a free, fun-filled day of interactive exploration and discovery throughout campus, highlighted by performing arts showcases, tours, and exhibitions showing off LSU's history and achievements in athletics, research, the arts, academics, and community engagement.





Take a walk through the human body; learn the art of stage combat or improvisation; visit a petting zoo; try your hand at firefighting; meet your favorite local authors; learn how to spell your name in Chinese; plant a tree for coastal restoration; and more than 150 other experiences!



Events are subject to change. Check out www.LSUDAY.com for the most up-to-date information and plan to spend Saturday, April 24, with us!



LSU Day is part of the LSU sesquicentennial celebration and is made possible through donations from: AT&T, BlueCross BlueShield of Louisiana, Campus Federal, Raising Cane’s, Coca-Cola, Entergy, and ExxonMobil.



Interested in volunteering?

Hosting such a large event means that a lot of volunteers are needed and, as a member of the LSU community, your expertise is just what we are looking for. Volunteer opportunities include, but are not limited to: providing directions and information to guests, assisting LSU Day staff, and various other tasks. For a full list of volunteer opportunities on this exciting day, visit http://www.lsu.edu/lsu150/lsuday/volunteer.shtml for more information and to sign up.

AVATAR debuts new digital program

http://www.1012corridor.com/archives/1012-corridor-weekly/latest/

AVATAR debuts new digital program

LSU students who are studying the arts or technology can now get in on the digital media revolution. The AVATAR Initiative is debuting a new academic program that allows students to earn a minor in digital media, preparing them for careers in emerging fields such as animation, video games, electronic music and digital art. LSU approved the AVATAR Initiative in 2008, and AVATAR faculty have spent the past two years developing the program. Students will be able to declare the minor and take classes toward the degree in the Fall 2010 semester. "Students regularly express to us an interest in working as a video game developer, animator, or other profession involving interactive digital media," says Professor Stephen David Beck. "We crafted the AVATAR minor to address the needs of these students as well as the needs of the digital media industry." Students can enroll in the minor through one of two tracks: an arts-oriented track through the College of Art & Design, or a technology-oriented track through the College of Engineering. Courses from computer science, electrical and computer engineering, music, art, English and mass communication are part of the curriculum, along with a new capstone course, where students from both tracks will work collaboratively on group projects. For more information, go to http://avatar.lsu.edu/.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

University to offer digital media minor in fall semester

http://www.lsureveille.com/news/university-to-offer-digital-media-minor-in-fall-semester-1.2192280


University to offer digital media minor in fall semester

By Grace Montgomery

Staff Writer

|

Published: Monday, March 15, 2010

Updated: Monday, March 15, 2010

Students will soon be able to obtain an interdisciplinary minor in digital media through the University’s Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research Initiative.

A digital media minor will educate students in digital art such as video games, electronic music and animation, according to a University press release.

To promote the new minor, the AVATAR initiative will host a series of lectures throughout the upcoming fall and spring semesters given by professionals in the digital media field.

Daryl Holt, chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Fla., will speak at the first AVATAR lecture March 25.

Holt will discuss his experiences in the video game industry and give advice to students interested in game development and design.

The lecture will be held at 3 p.m. in the Atchafalaya Room of the Student Union and will be followed by a reception at 4 p.m. The event is open to the public.

The developers of the AVATAR initiative will attend the lecture to provide more information about the minor, according to the release.

Students will be able to declare and take classes for the minor beginning in the fall 2010 semester, according to the release.

Students will choose between two tracks within the minor. One will feature an art-oriented curriculum through the College of Art and Design, and the other will focus on technology through the College of Engineering.

Music, art, computer science, electrical and computer engineering, English and mass communication courses are all parts of the curriculum, according to the release.

Students from each track will be required to work together on a capstone project as part of the minor.

The AVATAR initiative was approved in spring 2008. The initiative brings together faculty and researchers in multiple fields to develop a program in digital media.

The University approved the academic program in fall 2009, according to the release.



-----
Contact Grace Montgomery at gmontgomery@lsureveille.com

Digital Program to Begin at LSU

Digital Program to Begin at LSU: http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/87735042.html

  • By CHAD CALDER
  • Advocate business writer
  • Published: Mar 16, 2010 - Page: 4B

LSU students will be able to minor in digital media beginning with the fall semester, the result of a two-year effort by the university to prepare students for careers in emerging fields such as animation, video games, electronic music and digital art.

LSU approved the Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research Initiative in spring 2008 as one of its multidisciplinary hiring initiatives, bringing together faculty, researchers and professionals to create a concentrated academic research program in digital media.

Stephen David Beck, a professor in the LSU School of Music and leader of the AVATAR Initiative, said a week hasn’t gone by over the years the group has been working on the initiative that a student hasn’t asked if there was a gaming curriculum at the school. Also, he said, the game design class LSU has been doing with the University of Illinois at Chicago for two years and a beginning computer music course have always filled up.

“I have absolutely no doubt that this will be a very popular program,” he said.

With the exception of the capstone course at the end of the program, the classes that make up the minor are all already taught across five or six departments, including digital arts, computer programming and engineering, digital signal processing and screenwriting. The initiative even resurrected a few computer graphics courses that haven’t been taught in a while.

Beck said the curriculum will be valuable to the economy and make LSU more competitive as well, with digital media becoming more and more a part of business activity in general. He noted it is one of the top sectors pegged for development in the state’s “blue ocean” economic development strategy of targeting industries with greater potential.

Also important, he said, is that when he and others involved in the effort interviewed people in the gaming industry, they said one of the most important things is finding people who can work together with other people.

“Digital media is all about the interdisciplinary approach to solving problems,” he said, noting the classes often have computer science students, musicians, artists and computer engineers, for example, all working together on a project.

He said that while the goal is to have students join the industry, preferably at a company in-state, much of what they learn has benefits beyond the confines of the gaming world.

Students can enroll in the minor through one of two thematic tracks: an arts-oriented track through the College of Art & Design or a technology-oriented track through the College of Engineering. Courses from computer science, electrical and computer engineering, music, art, English and mass communication are part of the curriculum, along with a new capstone course, where students from both tracks will work collaboratively on group projects.

Information about the program and a list of required courses are at http://avatar.lsu.edu. Students who are interested in obtaining the digital media minor should contact AVATAR Initiative Coordinator Lea Anne Couvillion at (225) 578-5433 or leaanne@cct.lsu.edu to arrange a meeting.

To officially kick off the minor, AVATAR Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, the first taking place March 25 featuring Daryl Holt, the chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Fla.

Holt will discuss his own career path in the video game industry, and will advise students on what they need to learn if they want to pursue jobs as game developers or designers.

Monday, March 15, 2010

LSU starts AVATAR DM minor

LSU starts AVATAR digital media minor: http://www.2theadvocate.com/news/87677507.html?showAll=y&c=y

LSU students will be able to minor in digital media beginning with the fall semester of 2010, the result of a two-year effort by the university to prepare students for careers in emerging fields such as animation, video games, electronic music and digital art.

LSU approved the Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research Initiative in spring of 2008 as one of its multidisciplinary hiring initiatives, bringing together faculty, researchers and professionals to create a concentrated academic research program in digital media.

“Students regularly express to us an interest in working as a video game developer, animator, or other profession involving interactive digital media,” said Stephen David Beck, a professor in the LSU School of Music and leader of the AVATAR Initiative. “We crafted the AVATAR minor to address the needs of these students as well as the needs of the digital media industry.”

Information about the program and a list of required courses are at http://avatar.lsu.edu. Students who are interested in obtaining the digital media minor should contact AVATAR Initiative Coordinator Lea Anne Couvillion at (225) 578-5433 or leaanne@cct.lsu.edu to arrange a meeting.

To officially kick off the minor, AVATAR Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, the first taking place March 25, featuring Daryl Holt, the chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Fla.

Holt will discuss his own career path in the video game industry, and will advise students on what they need to learn if they want to pursue jobs as game developers or designers.

LSU launches digital media minor through AVATAR

LSU launches digital media minor through AVATAR

A lecture series that kicks off next week will inaugurate LSU’s AVATAR Initiative, a minor in digital media that is open to students in any major program starting in the fall. In the first lecture, COO Daryl Holt of EA Sports Tiburon in Florida will discuss his career in the video-game industry at 3 p.m., March 25, in the Atchafalaya Room of the LSU Student Union. Holt will advise students on what they need to learn in order to enter careers as game developers or designers, one of the aims the AVATAR program is designed to address. Short for Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research, the university’s program will provide two tracks for students: an arts-oriented one through the College of Art and Design and a technology-oriented one through the College of Engineering. “Students regularly express to us an interest in working as a video-game developer, animator, or other profession involving interactive digital media. We crafted the AVATAR minor to address the needs of these students as well as the needs of the digital media industry,” says Stephen David Beck, a professor in the LSU School of Music and AVATAR Initiative lead. —Todd R. Brown

Daryl Holt, COO of EA Sports Tiburon, to Speak with LSU Students March 25

Daryl Holt, COO of EA Sports Tiburon, to Speak with LSU Students March 25

BATON ROUGE – LSU's Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research (AVATAR) Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, bringing professionals from various areas of digital media to campus to talk with students about what skills they need for careers in video game design, electronic music composition, animation, digital art, scientific visualization, and more.

The first AVATAR lecture will take place Thursday, March 25, featuring Daryl Holt, chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Florida. Holt will discuss his own career path in the video game industry and will advise students on what skills potential employers will expect them to have to work as game designers or developers.

Holt’s lecture will take place at 3 p.m. in the Atchafalaya Room of the LSU Student Union, and is free and open to the public. Seating is limited, so guests are advised to arrive early.

A reception will follow Holt’s lecture at 4 p.m., and faculty members with the AVATAR Initiative will be available to discuss how students can take classes toward a minor in digital media.

WHAT: AVATAR Lecture Series
WHO: Daryl Holt, COO of EA Sports Tiburon Studios
WHEN: Thursday, March 25 at 3 p.m.; reception following at 4 p.m.
WHERE: LSU Student Union, Atchafalaya Room
Free and open to the public

For more information: www.cct.lsu.edu or http://avatar.lsu.edu.

AVATAR Initiative Launches Digital Media Minor at LSU

AVATAR Initiative Launches Digital Media Minor at LSU

Daryl Holt, EA Sports Tiburon, to speak with student about careers in gaming March 25

BATON ROUGE – Faculty with the University’s Arts, Visualization, Advanced Technologies and Research, or AVATAR , Initiative, are debuting a new academic program that will allow students to obtain an interdisciplinary minor in digital media, preparing them for careers in emerging fields such as animation, video games, electronic music and digital art.

The University approved the AVATAR Initiative in Spring 2008 as one of its multidisciplinary hiring initiatives, bringing together faculty, researchers and professionals to create a concentrated academic research program in digital media.

Faculty with the AVATAR Initiative have spent the past two years developing a program that would allow students to minor in digital media. The University approved this academic program in Fall 2009, and students will be able to declare the minor and take classes toward the degree in the Fall 2010 semester.

“Students regularly express to us an interest in working as a video game developer, animator, or other profession involving interactive digital media. We crafted the AVATAR minor to address the needs of these students as well as the needs of the digital media industry,” said Stephen David Beck, Derryl & Helen Haymon Professor in the LSU School of Music and AVATAR Initiative lead. “The faculty who are part of AVATAR Initiative have developed an interdisciplinary curricula that we feel prepares students to work in these fields and provides them with an enriching educational experience during their time at LSU.”

Students can enroll in the minor through one of two thematic tracks: an arts-oriented track through the College of Art & Design , or a technology-oriented track through the College of Engineering. Courses from computer science, electrical and computer engineering, music, art, English and mass communication are part of the curriculum, along with a new capstone course, where students from both tracks will work collaboratively on group projects.

Interested students can learn more about the program and see a list of required courses at http://avatar.lsu.edu. Students who are interested in obtaining the digital media minor should contact AVATAR Initiative Coordinator Lea Anne Couvillion at 225-578-5433 to arrange a meeting.

To officially kick off the minor, AVATAR Initiative will host a series of lectures in the spring and fall semesters, bringing distinguished leaders from the field of digital media to campus, who will discuss the latest developments and help students understand the skills they need for careers in these disciplines.

The first AVATAR lecture will take place Thursday, March 25, featuring Daryl Holt, the chief operating officer of EA Sports Tiburon Studios in Orlando, Florida. Holt will discuss his own career path in the video game industry, and will advise students on what they need to learn if they want to pursue jobs as game developers or designers.

Holt’s lecture will take place at 3 p.m. in the Atchafalaya Room of the LSU Student Union, with a reception following at 4 p.m. This event is open to any students, faculty or staff who wish to attend. Seating is limited, so guests are advised to arrive early.

AVATAR Initiative faculty and staff will be available at Holt’s lecture to speak with interested students and provide more information about how they can enroll for the digital media minor.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

AVATAR Lecture Series - John Worthington, Worthington Designz

AVATAR Lecture Series

Digital Media and the Personal Computer - 30 Years and Counting

Speaker: John Worthington

Date: 2010-04-19 15:00:00

Place: 338 Johnston Hall

There will be a reception with refreshments at 4:00 pm.

More Info: http://www.cct.lsu.edu/events/talks/511

CxC accepting entries for Digital Media Festival

CxC accepting entries for Digital Media Festival

http://www.lsureveille.com/news/cxc-accepting-entries-for-digital-media-festival-1.2188072

Friday, March 5, 2010

EA Games Events at LSU

* Living Expo @ LSU Union Ballroom - Wednesday, 3/10
* Battlefield 2 tournament @ LSU Student Union - Thursday, 3/11 - 6pm - 9pm
* LSU baseball game - Friday march 19th @ 6pm

AVATAR Lecture Series - Daryl Holt COO of EA Games

AVATAR Lecture Series

From Concept to Reality: Making Past, Present, and Future Video Games for EA Sports

Speaker: Daryl Holt, Chief Operating Officer

Date: 2010-03-25 15:00:00

Place: Atchafalaya Room Union

There will be a reception with refreshments at 4:00 pm.

More Info: http://www.cct.lsu.edu/events/talks/510