Make your mark in Milwaukee at NACE 2005!
Make your mark in Milwaukee at NACE 2005!
Keywords: Conferences, Corrosion
From the opening speaker address to the closing keynote address, you will find inspiration and educational value throughout NACE's 2005 National Meeting.
Learn more about leaders, leadership, and education today as former US Secretary of Health and Human Services, Donna Shalala opens the meeting with the keynote address: Lessons Learned, Lessons Shared: Leadership and Education Today. Described by The Washington Post as “one of the most successful government managers of modern times,” Shalala is a professor of political science, epidemiology and public health, and education,and president of the University of Miami.
Closing keynoter John Edward Hasse, curator of American Music at Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Music History, brings the meeting full circle with his closing address: Leadership Lessons from the Jazz Masters. Taking his cue from music greats Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman,Artie Shaw, Lionel Hampton, Herbie Hancock, and others, this music historian,pianist, author, record producer, and expert on 20th century American music will share his insight on the importance of jazz in American culture and the musicians who “who mastered the art of creative collaboration long before it became the buzz in corporate boardrooms”.
Register early for the 2005 National Meeting and save $50 on your registration fee. Attend this year's premier learning event, being held in collaboration with MwACE at the Midwest Airlines Center in Milwaukee.
Topics will include the following:
what the future holds for the new college grad in a new economy;
tips and techniques for streamlining your procedures;
assessment in career services; and
effective branding and marketing in today's global Internet world, and more!
This three-day event is your opportunity to build your professional skills,develop your professional network, and move yourself and your institution into the future.
For further information visit the web site: www.nace.org
