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The following lectures and seminars, etc., will be open to members of the University and others who are interested:
Computer Laboratory. Seminars will be held at 4.15 p.m. on Wednesdays in Lecture Theatre 1, William Gates Building, J. J. Thomson Avenue, off Madingley Road.
22 May | CHARISMATIC: Cultural Heritage Attractions featuring Real-time, Interactive Scenes, and Multi-functional Avatars as Theatrical Intelligent Characters, by David Arnold, of the University of East Anglia. |
29 May | Where did your data come from, and where will it go? Some issues in data provenance, by Peter Buneman, of the University of Edinburgh. |
12 June | Electromagnetic eavesdropping on computers, by Markus Kuhn, of the Computer Laboratory. |
Criminology. The Launch Programme of the Economic and Social Research Council Cambridge Network for the Study of the Social Contexts of Pathways in Crime is to be held on Monday, 20 May. The Programme will run from 2 p.m. to 6.20 p.m. in Room LG19 of the Faculty of Law, West Road. As well as three speakers from the University of Cambridge, there will also be invited speakers from the Universities of Chicago and Huddersfield plus a speaker from King's College, London.
Lorraine Waterhouse, of the University of Edinburgh, will give a public lecture in Room B16, Faculty of Law, West Road, on Thursday, 23 May, at 5.30 p.m. The lecture is entitled The Scottish children's hearings in perspective.
Centre for History and Economics. History and Economics Seminar. Meetings will be held at 5 p.m. on Wednesdays in the Allhusen Room, Trinity College.
22 May | Attention and the creation of value in Enlightenment natural history, by Lorraine Daston, of the Max Planck Institute, Berlin. |
12 June | Antiquarianism, the Scottish science of man, and the emergence of modern disciplinarity, by Susan Manning, of the University of Edinburgh. |
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Cambridge University Reporter, 15 May 2002
Copyright © 2002 The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge.