Wednesday, December 16, 2009
This time, paper rejection
I received this in my mail (postal mail, not email) a few days ago from the American Water Works Association (AWWA):
Dear Mr. Vedachalam:
Thank you for submitting your abstract entitled (sic) "Designing an Automated Delivery Device for Chlorine Dioxide Disinfection" to the International Symposium on Waterborne Pathogens Planning Committee for consideration for a presentation at the 2010 symposium.
On behalf of the technical committee, I'm sorry to inform you that your abstract was not chosen for a technical session. The planning committee reviews all the submitted abstracts, taking into consideration the timeliness of the abstract topic, the number of abstracts submitted on a specific topic, and the limitation on the number of sessions.
...
And the letter talks about how my abstract was good, but didn't have a place in the program, yada, yada. I am sad, not for getting this paper rejected, but because I missed a chance to visit Manhattan Beach, California, the venue of the symposium. If you didn't know, the median price of a single family dwelling with an ocean view is close to 2.1 million dollars in that town. Wow!
Dear Mr. Vedachalam:
Thank you for submitting your abstract entitled (sic) "Designing an Automated Delivery Device for Chlorine Dioxide Disinfection" to the International Symposium on Waterborne Pathogens Planning Committee for consideration for a presentation at the 2010 symposium.
On behalf of the technical committee, I'm sorry to inform you that your abstract was not chosen for a technical session. The planning committee reviews all the submitted abstracts, taking into consideration the timeliness of the abstract topic, the number of abstracts submitted on a specific topic, and the limitation on the number of sessions.
...
And the letter talks about how my abstract was good, but didn't have a place in the program, yada, yada. I am sad, not for getting this paper rejected, but because I missed a chance to visit Manhattan Beach, California, the venue of the symposium. If you didn't know, the median price of a single family dwelling with an ocean view is close to 2.1 million dollars in that town. Wow!
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1 comment:
Brim over I to but I dream the post should prepare more info then it has.
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