A formal maze; click where ever found to return here. Dr. Brower's Biography & C.V.

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   So, what's a C.V? A C.V. is a "Curriculum Vitae," the academic equivalent of a resume. Why don't academics use resumes like the rest of humanity? Because we're fussy about the words we use.
    A "resume" is a brief outline of the highlights that describe someone or qualify him or her for a position. A "Curriculum Vitae" is a living description of everything a person has done since high school that has anything to do with academic life. Graduate school, publications, presentations, interviews, courses taught, committee memberships, journal reviewing and editing, community service, honors, .... It never ends. Information about topics related to teaching, service, and scholarship can be found by clicking the buttons here or on the navigation bar.
    Aren't you glad you asked?
    Here's a brief time line:
bulletMoravian College, Bethlehem, PA since 1989. It's a great day to be a 'Hound!
bulletThe University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT (1982-1989) Go, Huskies! (UConn, heh, heh)
bulletThe University at Buffalo, SUNY (1975- 1982) Graduate school - what an experience!
bulletLaurens, NY (1972-1975) Beth & I built and lived in a geodesic dome!
bulletSUNY College at Oneonta, NY (1966-1972) Go, Red Dragons!
bulletDeposit, NY (1953-1966) Go, Lumberjacks! Beat Hancock!
bulletRichmond Hill, Queens, New York, NY (1949-1953)
bulletSouth Ozone Park, Queens, New York, NY (1948-1949)
  
For more detail, click one of these buttons:
   Education Employment Genealogy Woodworking
  

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    This personal page is maintained by me, George Brower. The views expressed are my responsibility only. They do not necessarily reflect views held by other persons or institutions, including specifically Moravian College and Moravian Theological Seminary.
    Copyright © 2000. All rights reserved, inclucing but not limited to downloading, reposting, and duplication. Readers are authorized to print a single copy for personal use. As Jan Adkins (1973) put it:
"We have gone to considerable difficulty and expense to assemble a staff of necromancers, sorcerers, shamans, conjurers and lawyers to visit nettlesome and mystifying discomforts on any ninny who endeavors to reproduce or transmit this book in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including information storage and retrieval systems without permission from the publisher. Watch yourself."
Adkins, Jan (1973), Toolchest: A Primer of Woodcraft,
New York: Walker and Company, p.4.

    As far as I know, all images and quotations are used within the fair use limits established by law and their distributors' licenses. Please email me if that assumption is incorrect so I can remove any offending material.

Last updated July 10, 2000
Ver. 4 created June 26, 2000; Ver. 3 June 12, 1999; Ver. 2 Spring 1996; Ver. 1 Fall 1994