I think that 9PM is a bit optimistic :)
Anyone who wants to improve their understanding of the nuts and bolts of
X-ray crystallography; the who, what, where, when and why things work
the way they do AND learn from a selection of THE BEST CRYSTALLOGRAPHERS
in the field should take this course! I am a graduate of the 2009
course, and it was two of the hardest, yet most satisfying weeks of my
professional career. The instructors take significant time to prepare
and design the course so that the student is brought to a supersaturated
state, and held there for the entire course of instruction. You leave
the course with confidence that you can solve structures, or know where
to look and who to ask when you have a problem you can't solve. I highly
recommend this course!
Good luck to all!
Bryan Prince
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-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Jim Pflugrath
Sent: Saturday, June 04, 2011 1:48 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ccp4bb] CSHL X-ray Methods in Structural Biology Course late
Oct 2011: Application deadline June 15th
I wanted to draw everyone's attention to the Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory
2011 X-ray Methods in Structural Biology course which will take place
October 17 through November 1, 2011.
The official course announcement is here:
http://meetings.cshl.edu/courses/c-crys11.shtml Astute viewers of that
link
will also note that "A Special Symposium Celebrating the 40th
Anniversary of
the Protein Data Bank" will be included this year's course.
I think the course is an outstanding place to learn both the theoretical
and
practical aspects of Macromolecular Crystallography because of the
extensive
lectures from world-renowned teachers and the hands-on experiments.
A good description of the course is found at the web link above as well
as
in the 3rd edition of Gales Rhodes "Crystallography Made Crystal Clear"
where he writes on page xvii:
"... the Cold Spring Harbor course who, for sixteen years, have offered
what
many crystallographers tout as the best classroom and hands-on
diffraction
training session on the planet -- 2.5 weeks, 9 AM to 9 PM, packed with
labs,
lectures, and computer tutorials, with homework for your spare time."
If any former participants in the course want to add to that
description,
please feel free to respond to this thread.
Thanks! Jim
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