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The following lectures and seminars will be open to members of the University and others who are interested:
Anglo-Saxon, Norse, and Celtic. Professor James Graham-Campbell, of University College London, will deliver the Thirteenth Annual H. M. Chadwick Memorial Lecture, entitled Pictish silver: status and symbol, on Thursday, 14 March, at 5 p.m., in the Winstanley Lecture Room, Trinity College. The lecture will be followed by a reception in the Old Combination Room, Trinity College.
Biology. Biology in Business Company Spotlight Seminar. Dr Gareth Roberts, of Proteom, will give a seminar entitled Proteomics Jim, but not as we know it, on Wednesday, 13 March, at 6 p.m. in the Pharmacology Lecture Theatre, Tennis Court Road. Attendance is free, however, there are a limited number of seats so please register online at http://www.biologyinbusiness.org/ to avoid disappointment.
Geography. Seminars will be held at 4.15 p.m. on Thursdays, in the Seminar Room, Department of Geography, Downing Site, as follows:
25 April | Globalization and the city: deepening the theory, by Professor John Rennie Short, of Syracuse University. |
2 May | Whose nature? Genetic ownership in the 'biotech century', by Dr Noel Castree, of the University of Manchester. |
9 May | Spaces to object - what the BSE crisis can tell us about environmental decision-making, by Dr Steve Hinchliffe, of the Open University. |
16 May | Confronting our worldviews: computer-supported collaborative learning and transdisciplinary approaches to sustainability education, by Dr Leo Elshof, of the Committee for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies. |
23 May | Arctic glaciers and ice caps: past and present form and flow, by Professor Julian Dowdeswell, of the Scott Polar Research Institute. |
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Cambridge University Reporter, 13 March 2002
Copyright © 2001 The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge.