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<nettime> Events [16x]



Table of Contents:

   STEPPING FROM THE SHADOWS CLOSING PARTY                                         
     n30mural@speakeasy.net                                                          

   Interface Cultures -- A discussion @jihui- Friday 25th, 2002                    
     z@apiece.net                                                                    

   wolfgang suetzl en cenart.                                                      
     fran ilich <ilich_030@yahoo.com.mx>                                             

   Border Lines : Draft Program up                                                 
     Border Lines <borderlines@media2.org>                                           

   Class Composition in Cognitive Capitalism                                       
     "emmanuel videcoq" <em.videcoq@wanadoo.fr>                                      

   FW: NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools!                                 
     "Sasha Costanza-Chock" <trabalengua@hotmail.com>                                

   Artists & Cosmonauts (announcement)                                             
     geert <geert@xs4all.nl>                                                         

   =?iso-8859-1?Q?Communiqu=E9_de_presse_/_Press_Release?=                         
     Dominique Fontaine <dfontaine@fondation-langlois.org>                           

   Privacy Lecture Series - Ann Cavoukian, Feb. 11, 2002                           
     Ana Viseu <ana.viseu@utoronto.ca>                                               

   CfP NordiCHI 2002 Aesthetic Artefacts                                           
     =?iso-8859-1?Q?S=F8ren_Pold?= <pold@multimedia.au.dk>                           

   Art Interface Device - announcement                                             
     MK <kasprzak@videokill.com>                                                     

   NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC - January 31-February 
     "ricardo dominguez" <rdom@thing.net>                                            

   FW: In The Aftermath of 9-11 - A public forum at the Unitarian Church of Staten 
     <uucsi@aol.com>                                                                 

   info list                                                                       
     arthur <artclay@netsurfer.ch>                                                   

   The IMC Radio Network is Bringing you another Global Broadcast: January 31st - F
     henk@waag.org                                                                   

   FW: Religion Protest and Hunger - Free Trade Solutions After September 11th..htm
     "John Bostrom" <jbostrom@si.rr.com>                                             



------------------------------

Date: Mon, 21 Jan 2002 23:08:28 -0800
From: n30mural@speakeasy.net
Subject: STEPPING FROM THE SHADOWS CLOSING PARTY

If you missed the opening party for the Independent Media Center gallery's most recent art show STEPPING FROM THE SHADOWS be sure to check out the closing party and pass this info on to your peeps! 

When?
January 25th, 7pm -10pm

Where?
The Independent Media Center 
1415 3rd Ave (downtown between Pike and Union) 

Guest DJs on the decks:
D.J. M.I.A, D.J. Daybreak, and D-Tox

And here's why you should check it....

The exhibition features works on canvas by National
graffiti writers, and urban artists from California, Oregon, Washington, Baltimore and  New York. The exhibition also includes found object, installation, sound and video work by emerging and
professional National Artists. The Purpose of this exhibit is to feature these artists in a gallery setting and show how they are influenced and draw from their urban environments and the graffiti
art that surrounds them. Not limited to graffiti and street art, these artists are stepping from the shadows, revealing their artwork on gallery walls.

This exhibit will include works by J.D. Davis, Pars, M. Kelly, Nak, Katsu, Siloette, Mune, Anna Antic, Joker and Cause-B. Also, Baltimorian writer from Iran - exhibiting works in -Farsi- Amir
Fallah and San Francisco writer Space Craft One.

The Independent Media Center Gallery stimulates a diverse and real arts community that draws on the full potential of artists, reflects and responds to civic concerns and aspirations and educates and enriches the lives of all global community members.


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 22 Jan 2002 11:59:52 -0500
From: z@apiece.net
Subject: Interface Cultures -- A discussion @jihui- Friday 25th, 2002

"Interface Cultures"
A discussion with Andruid Kerne (http://www.andruid.com) Golan Levin
moderated by Christiane Paul, Adjunct Curator of New Media Arts, Whitney

Museum of American Art

Since the "digital revolution" of the 1990s, the interfaces with the
virtual
(as well as physical) world have become increasingly sophisticated and
complex. The discussion will focus on the "state of the art" of today's
interfaces as well as the requirements of information environments and
shared social spaces.

"Interfaces are the multidimensional border zones through which the
interdependent relationships of people, activities, codes, components,
and systems are constituted. Interface ecology investigates the
dynamic interactions of media, cultures, and disciplines that
flow through interfaces."
- --Andruid Kerne

@jihui
Parsons Center for New Design
Friday, Jan 25, 2002 7 PM
55 West 13th Street, 9th Fl.
New York, NY 10011
Live Webcast @http://netart-init.org   starts 7pm EST.


jihui (the meeting point) a self-regulated digital salon, invites all
interested people to send ideas for
discussion/performance/etc, jihui is
where your voice is heard and your vision
shared.
jihui is sponsored by Digital Design
Department and Center for New Design @
Parsons School of Design
A project of NETART INITIATIVE
http://netart-init.org




------------------------------

Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2002 02:37:04 -0500
From: fran ilich <ilich_030@yahoo.com.mx>
Subject: wolfgang suetzl en cenart.

Foro / centro multimedia

De la serie Pensamiento Contemporáneo
Imparte: Wolfgang Suetzl
"El arte de la mascara. Orwell vs. Bakhtin en ciberespacio"

Wolfgang Suetzl es académico y hacktivista austriaco. Realizó sus estudios
en Viena (Austria), Bradford (Inglaterra), y Castellón (España).
Investigador del proyecto world-information.org de Public Netbase (Viena);
filósofo y traductor. Imparte sus cátedras en varias universidades de
Austria, España y México. Áreas de concentración: estética y emancipación,
nuevas teorías del pacifismo, teoría de los medios de comunicación. Ha
publicado sobre estética, sociedad de comunicación,  derechos humanos,
guerra y paz.  Actualmente reside en Viena.
http://www.t0.or.at/

Salón de usos múltiples
(Biblioteca de las Artes)
Centro Nacional de las Artes
(Calzada de Tlalpán y Río Churubusco)

Jueves 24 de enero de 2002
18:00 hrs.

ENTRADA LIBRE


_________________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com


------------------------------

Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2002 19:04:32 +1100
From: Border Lines <borderlines@media2.org>
Subject: Border Lines : Draft Program up

The BorderLines event will explore the different modes of media making, and the boundaries and challenges that affect those who want to engage and communicate the complex stories of our world. 
             
BorderLines will be a set of forums, workshops and meetings to be held in Adelaide during March 2002.

Check out the website - http://borderlines.media2.org

Use the automated invitation generator to get yourself an 'official' invite :-)

Adelaide, AU - Forums on March 23-24 2002, followed by Workshops on March 25-26 2002.

Brought to you by the Borderlines Team, SpaceStation Media Lab (Melb) and CIDE Limited
Supported by Australian National Commission for UNESCO, Ngapartji Multimedia Centre and Australian Network for Art and Technology...

After the BorderLines event, you can apply your skills and knowledge by going onwards to make media about Woomera (www.woomera2002.com)


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 19:31:00 +0100
From: "emmanuel videcoq" <em.videcoq@wanadoo.fr>
Subject: Class Composition in Cognitive Capitalism






London

Dear "singularities" of the "multitude"
>>>>Cari/e "singolarita'" della "multitudine"
>>>>>>>>Chers/ères "singularités" de la "multitude"

You are invited to offer a paper to a Seminar on
>>>>Siete invitati/e a presentare una relazione a un Seminario su
>>>>>>>>Vous êtes invités/ées à présenter une intervention à un Séminaire
sur

CLASS COMPOSITION IN COGNITIVE CAPITALISM
>>>>COMPOSIZIONE DI CLASSE NEL CAPITALISMO COGNITIVO
>>>>>>>>COMPOSITION DE CLASSE DANS LE CAPITALISME COGNITIF

The details follow, in English:
>>>>I dettagli seguono, in inglese:
>>>>>>>>Les détails sont les suivants, en anglais:

+++++++++++++++++++++++

You are invited to attend

an International Seminar on

CLASS COMPOSITION IN COGNITIVE CAPITALISM

to be held on Friday 15th to Saturday 16th February 2002
in Lecture Room 6th Floor, Faculty of Economics,
University of Paris 1, Panthéon-Sorbonne
106/122 Boulevard de l'Hôpital, Paris (Metro: Campo Formio)

A LIST OF CONFIRMED SPEAKERS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER:

[Titles are provisional]

RICHARD BARBROOK: Title to be announced

GIUSEPPE COCCO: "Capitalismo cognitivo e movimenti sociali in Brasile. Tra
liberalismo e corporativismo, la mondializzazione come opzione"

ANTONELLA CORSANI: "Sapere e Lavoro nel Capitalismo Cognitivo: l'impasse
dell'economia politica."

ALSO: "Donne, macchine di riproduzione e tempo della creazione" [progetto
realizzato da Ludovic Burel e Luce Libera.]

ED EMERY: "General Intellect and the Intifada: Israel's collocation within
the global knowledge economy"

NICK DYER-WITHEFORD: "The Class Composition of Interactive Gaming and the
Contest for General Intellect"

MAURIZIO LAZZARATO: "Invenzione et lavoro nella cooperazione tra cervelli" /
"Invention et Travail dans la coopération entre cerveaux"

YANN MOULIER-BOUTANG: "What about cast, gender, class and colour under
cognitive capitalism? Some preliminary reflections"

ABDUL-KARIM MUSTAPHA: "Philosophy of Flight: or, mutations of the reserve
army"

++++++++++++

VENUE:

The Sorbonne - The Faculty of Economics
[Maison des Sciences Economiques]
Lecture Room - Sixth Floor
106/122 Boulevard de l'Hôpital
75013 Paris

The tube station is Campo Formio, one minute from the Faculty building.

TIMES:

Friday 15th February - from 2.00pm to 7.00pm
Saturday 16th February - from 10.00am to 6.00pm.

REGISTRATION:

Admission is free, but PRIOR REGISTRATION IS NECESSARY.

If you wish to attend the Seminar, or is you wish to present a Paper, please
e-mail your details and your proposed topic to
ed.emery@++britishlibrary.net [Remove the ++, which is to prevent junk
mailing]

The languages for the Seminar are French, Italian and English. There will be
NO simultaneous translation.

The format for presentation of papers will be:

One speaker for 20 minutes, another speaker for 20 minutes, then 20 minutes
of discussion, followed by a break.


Posted 1.i.02















------------------------------

Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 06:56:23 +0000
From: "Sasha Costanza-Chock" <trabalengua@hotmail.com>
Subject: FW: NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools!

CALL FOR ACTION WORLDWIDE

English/Spanish/Italian/French

Plus A Zapatista Tale - "Another Apple, Another Politics."
(After the Calls to Action)


- ------------------- :: ENGLISH :: ------------------------

NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC,
January 31-February 4, 2002

The WORLD ECONOMIC FOOLS, a who's-who of transnational
corporate reps and CEOs, will be meeting from January 31 to
February 4, 2002 in New York City to plan the continued
erosion of human rights, environmental standards, sustainable
development, and social justice, all in the name of ever-greater
corporate profit margins.

WE PITY THESE FOOLS who blindly believe that corporate
globalization and the worldwide imposition of neoliberal
economic policies can withstand the mounting tide of
grassroots resistance.

WE CALL ON YOU TO:

JOIN Electronic Disturbance Theater and the Federation of
Random Actionin a Netstrike against corporate globalization,
DISTURB the electronic infrastructure of the WEF's corporate
membership, in a collective demand that the FOOLS LISTEN UP
when the people of Earth are speaking, MOVE YOUR DATA-BUTT
and place your data-body alongside the REAL BUTTS of thousands
who will be taking to the streets in NYC, and help advance an
alternative vision where people are more important than profit.

TO PARTICIPATE DOWNLOAD Your Virtual Sit-In Tool,

visit any of the following URLs ON JANUARY 30th, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Your DATA-BUTT can PARTICIPATE in two ways:

One: Download The Intergalactic Screen Saver.
(For PC Only).

Let your Screen Saver do the Netstrike while YOU HIT THE STREETS!

Two: Traditional Virtual Sit-In Tool.
(For both PC and Mac).

ACTION BEGINS: Thursday, January 31, 2002

Join your DATA-BUTT
with protester's REAL-BUTTS in a Hybrid Virtual/Body
ANTICORPORATE BOOGIE-OOGIE-OOOGIE!

ACTION ENDS: Monday, February 4, 2002

LET'S LET THESE FOOLS KNOW WHAT TIME IT IS!

PEACE

Electronic Disturbance Theater
Federation of Random Action
Rtmark

For more information about the e-action contact:
Ricardo Dominguez:
rdom@thing.net

<<<<<<>>>>>>

More Infomation about the WEF "Meet 'em and Greet 'em" Actions.
www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

http://www.anotherworldispossible.com/

www.internationalanswer.org

http://www.indymedia.org

http://www.rtsnyc.org/

<<<<<<>>>>>

Reclaim The Streets NYC!
a cordial invitation:

Saturday, February 2nd, at 12 P.M.

The Waldorf Astoria on Park Avenue will be hosting the
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM

and you're invited!

11:30 A.M. at Columbus Circle (59th and Broadway)

Dress UP! Make MUSIC!! TANGO till you drop!!!

no R.S.V.P. required

http://www.rtsnyc.org/

<<<<>>>>


- ------------------- :: SPANISH :: ------------------------

CONVOCTORIA PARA ACCIONES EN
TODAS PARTES DEL MUNDO

Una acción en linea contra la reunion de
los imbéciles de la Economia Mundial
en Nueva York. 31 de enero - 4 de febrero, 2002

Los IMBECILES DE LA ECONOMIA MUNDIAL, un inventario
de representantes de las corporaciones multinacionales, estarán
reuniendose en Nueva York del 31 de enero hasta el 4 de febrero, 2002,
para planear la continuación de la erosión de los derechos humanos
y el medioambiente, el desarrollo económico sostenible, y la
justicia social -- todo para generar majores ganancias.

ESTOS IMBECILES NOS DAN PENA porque creen ciegamente
que la globalización y la imposición de la política neoliberal en
todas partes del mundo puede resistir la creciente ola de resistencia.

LE LLAMAMOS A USTEDES PARA QUE: Se UNAN
al Teatro de Perturbanción Electrónica y la Federación
de Acción Aleatoria para una acción en linea en
contra de la globalización, PERTURBEN la infraestructura
electrónica del los miembres de la Federación Económica Mundial,
en una petición que exigirá que NOS ESCUCHEN cuando
la gente de esta tierra hablan,

MUEVAN SUS CULOS-VIRTUALES y metan sus cuerpos
digitales juntos a los cuerpos reales de miles de gentes que
tomarán las calles de Nueva York, y ayuden a plantear una
visión alternativa de un mundo en donde la gente valga más que la ganancia.

PARA PARTICIPAR Y BAJAR el program para su manifestación virtual,
visiten cualquier de los URLs siguientes el 30 de enero, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Tu CULO-VIRTUAL puede participar de dos maneras:

1.Bajar el "Screen Saver" intergaláctica (solamente para PC)

Así podrás dejar que tu "Screen Saver" haga la manifestación virtual
mientras

¡TU TE VAYAS A LAS CALLES!

2.Programa tradicional para manifestaciones virtuales (para MacIntosh y PC)

Ajunta tu CULO-VIRTUAL con los CULOS REALES de los manifestatantes
callejeros, en una PACHANGA híbrida virtual/corporal Anti-Imbéciles
de la Economia Mundial.

¡PA-CHAN-GA! LA ACCION TERMINA: lunes, 4 de diciembre, 2002
¡HAREMOS QUE ESTOS IMBECILES SEPAN QUE HORAS SON!

PAZ

Electronic Disturbance
Theater Federation of Random Action
rtmark

<<<<<>>>>>>

Actuando junto con el Foro Social Mundial en Porto Alegre,
conferencias y manifestaciones masivas se estan organizando en Nueva York.
http://www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

<<<<<>>>>>>

Para más información sobre las acciónes en donde se enfrentarán a los
imbeciles
de la Economia Mundial:
http://www.rtsnyc.org/
http://www.anotherworldispossible.com/
http://www.internationalanswer.org
http://www.indymedia.org

<<<<<>>>>>


- ------------------- :: ITALIAN :: ------------------------

NETSTRIKE contro la Follia Economica Mondiale (WEF)
(english version at bottom of this message)
APPELLO PER UNA AZIONE GLOBALE

Netstrike contro l'incontro del 31 gennaio-4 febbraio 2002 a New York
della Follia Economica Mondiale (WEF)

Il WEF (World Economic Fools, Follia Economica Globale), un puot-pourri
di direttori e amministratori delegati delle corporazioni
multinazionali, si riunira' a New York dal 31 gennaio 2002 al 4 febbraio
2002, al fine di pianificare la continua erosione dei diritti umani,
dell'ambiente, dello sviluppo sostenibile e della giustizia sociale, il
tutto in nome di un sempre maggiore margine di profitto per le
corporazioni. ABBIAMO PIETA' DI QUESTA FOLLIA che crede ciecamente che
la globalizzazione corporativa e l'imposizione su scala mondiale di
politiche economiche neoliberiste possa sopravvivere la crescente marea
dell'opposizione dal basso a questo processo. FACCIAMO APPELLO A TUTT*
PER:

UNIRSI all' Electronic Disturbance Theater e alla Federation of Random
Action per un Netstrike contro la globalizzazione corporativa,

DISTURBARE l'infrastruttura elettronica dei membri corporativi del WEF
con una richiesta collettiva di ASCOLTO DA PARTE DI QUESTI FOLLI della
voce dei popoli della Terra,

ALZARE IL VOSTRO CULO TELEMATICO e porre il vostro corpo telematico al
fianco delle migliaia di corpi reali che scenderanno nelle strade di New
York, per aiutare a sostenere una visione del mondo alternativa in cui
le persone sono piu' importanti del profitto.

PER PARTECIPARE visitate uno dei seguenti indirizzi web per maggiori
informazioni:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Il vostro CULO TELEMATICO puo' darsi una mossa in due modi:

* Uno: Scaricate lo Screen Saver Intergalattico -
Lasciate fare il netstrike al vostro screen saver mentre voi SIETE
IN PIAZZA!

* Due: Il tradizionale Virtual Sit-in Tool -

L'AZIONE COMINCIA: giovedi' 31 gennaio 2002

Unite le vostre CHIAPPE DIGITALI con le CHIAPPE REALI dei
manifestanti in un IBRIDO CARNALE/VIRTUALE BOOGIE ANTICORPORATIVO!

L'AZIONE TERMINA: Lunedi' 4 febbraio 2002

FACCIAMO SENTIRE A QUESTI PAZZI LA NOSTRA VOCE!

PACE
Electronic Disturbance Theater
Federation of Random Action
rtmark

<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>

Per maggiori informazioni su questa azione elettronica contattare
Ricardo Dominguez : rdom@thing.net

Per maggiori informazioni sulle azioni "di benvenuto al WEF":
www.rtsnyc.org

Per maggiori informazioni sui corsi autogestiti a NYC:
www.anotherworldispossible.com

Per maggiori informazioni sul Secondo Forum Sociale Mondiale, dal 31
gennaio 2002 al 5 febbaio 2002 a Puerto Alegre in Brasile:
www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

Per una copertura non corporativa minuto per minuto dell'incontro del
WEF e delle azioni di protesta: www.indymedia.org

<<<<<<>>>>>>


- ------------------- :: FRENCH :: ------------------------

Le FORUM ECONOMIQUE MONDIAL (WEF), un who's-who de representants
et de presidents de societes transnationales, tiennent une reunion
du 31 Janvier au 4 Fevrier 2002 a New York pour preparer la suite
de l'erosion des droits de l'Homme, des normes sur l'environnement,
d'un developpement viable, et de la justice sociale,  tout cela au
nom des sempiternelles marges de profits des compagnies.
Quel bande de tristes sires font-ils...

NOUS AVONS PITIE DE CES FOUS qui croient aveuglement
que la globalisation des compagnies et le fait d'imposer
des politiques economiques neo-liberales peut resister
a la vague de contestation croissante que leur oppose
les petites gens.

NOUS VOUS APPELONS A REJOINDRE le Theatre de la Perturbation Electronique
(EDT) et la Federation des Reactions Aleatoires (FRA) dans un raid
electronique contre le mouvement de globalisation des entreprises,
DERANGEZ les infrastructures electroniques des compagnies membres du WEF,
dans une demande collective que ces FOUS ECOUTENT
lorsque les peuples de la Terre parlent.

BOUGEZ VOTRE CUL ELECTRONIQUE et melez votre corps virtuel aux cotes
des corps physiques des milliers de manifestants qui vont defiler
dans les rues de New York, et aidez a faire progresser
une vision alternative ou les gens sont plus imporant que le profit.

POUR PARTICIPER TELECHARCHEZ nos OUTILS DE MANIFESTATION VIRTUELLE,

visitez un des sites liste, a partir du 31 janvier 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

votre CUL ELECTRONIQUE peut participer de deux manieres:

  1- Telechargez l'economiseur d'ecran INTERGALACTIC.
     (Pour PC uniquement).

     LAissez votre economiseur travailer sur la manifestation
     virtuelle pendant que vous manifestez dans les rues !!

  2- Les outils de manifestation virtuelle traditionnels.
     (Pour Mac et PC).


L'ACTION COMMENCE LE JEUDI 31 JANVIER 2002

Joignez votre DERRIERE VIRTUEL aux derrieres charnels des manifestants
dans un BOOGIE ANTIMULTINATIOANLES Hybride Virtuel/Charnel!

FIN DE L'ACTION LE LUNDI 4 FEVRIER 2002


FAISONT SAVOIR A CES FOUS QUELS TEMPS SONT ARRIVES!

Paix,
Electronic Disturbance Theater
Federation of Random Action
Rtmark

Pour plus d'information sur la manif. electronique contactez:
Ricardo Dominguez:
rdom@thing.net

<<<<<<>>>>>>

Plus d'informations sur l'action "Meet 'em and Greet 'em" contre le G8,
et sur le contre-sommet :
www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

http://www.anotherworldispossible.com/

www.internationalanswer.org

http://www.indymedia.org

http://www.rtsnyc.org/

<<<<<<>>>>>>

- ------------------- :: Zapatista Tale :: ------------------------


Another Apple, Another Politics

"Adam ate the apple
of the virgin Eve.
Newton was a second Adam
of Science.
The first knew
beauty.
The second a Pegasus
weighed down with chains.

And they were not to blame.

The two apples were rosy and new, but bitter according to legend.

Both the embarrassed breasts of the child innocence!"

Frederico Garcia Lorca

Scientists, political scientists, opinion leaders, chiefs of great and
small political sects, all have gathered around Newton's fallen apple.  
All of them analyze, discuss, corroborate.  Hours, days, weeks, months,
entire years they take up.  Finally they come to the irrefutable
conclusion:  the apple has fallen because the law of gravity so orders it.  
It is irremediable, the apple must fall, and, by doing so, it has done
nothing other than to subject itself to the law of gravity.  The political
scientists congratulate each other and then begin great essays in order to
show Newton's apple as an example of 'real-politik.' The chiefs of state
talk of erecting a multiple monument in all the palaces of Power.

But, among the persons gathered around the future monument to modern
politics, there is a strange person. He seems to be a shadow, without face
and without name.  If they ask him who he is, the shadow would respond
"zapatista," but no one asks him anything. Everyone is very busy with
their calculations, plans and programs.

But, while the scientists are making complicated calculations concerning
velocity, trajectory, much weight, acceleration, wind resistance, impact
and similar etceteras, and while the political scientists are re-writing
Machiavelli and discussing prices with the modern princes, the zapatista
approaches the apple, he looks at it, he smells it, he touches it, he
listens to it...

The zapatista understands what the apple is whispering in his ear.  He
understands the challenge demanded by its cry.  The apple says that fate
does not order it to fall to the ground, and, since it is a transgressor
of the law who is listening to it, it is about breaking the law of
gravity.

The apple is an apple, but it is, above all, a lady.  The zapatista is
without face or name, but he is, above all, a gentleman.  And the paper
and pencil come out again, and the apple explains and the zapatista feels
and agrees.

This apple that Newton has chained to the ground has another destiny.  
The moon is an apple.  The scales of history need two apples in order to
be able to look out at the morning clearly.

While managing to to work out the reverse flight of Newton's apple, the
zapatista looks at the apple again, smells it, touches it, and, what else,
gives it a tender bite.

The political scientists continue repeating and repeating to each other
the 'real-politik,' and the etceteras that already fill the magazines and
newspapers and the radio and television air time.

The zapatista continues making calculations.

To fall upwards, that is the mystery whose solution has been proposed...

>From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast

Subcomandante insurgente Marcos

Mexico,  May of 1999.AASA

http://www.ezln.org

ZAPATA VIVE!!
EDT

<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>

NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC,
January 31-February 4, 2002

TO PARTICIPATE DOWNLOAD Your Virtual Sit-In Tool,

visit any of the following URLs ON JANUARY 30th, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net
































































































_________________________________________________________________
Join the world’s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. 
http://www.hotmail.com


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 23:18:18 +1100
From: geert <geert@xs4all.nl>
Subject: Artists & Cosmonauts (announcement)

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

- ------=_NextPart_000_0009_01C1A91B.3CA43490
Content-Type: text/plain;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable

From: "The Arts Catalyst" < info@artscatalyst.org
<mailto:info@artscatalyst.org> >
Subject: Artists & Cosmonauts
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 10:46:12 -0000
=20
The Arts Catalyst presents
=20
ARTISTS & COSMONAUTS - The New Futurists
www.artscatalyst.org/htm/russia2001events.htm
<http://www.artscatalyst.org/htm/russia2001events.htm>=20
=20
Fri 1 March 2002
Sat 2 March 2002
Fri 19 April 2002
plus talk by Russian cosmonaut, Sergei Krikalev - date to be announced
=20
Lilian Baylis Theatre, Sadlers Wells, Rosebery Avenue London EC1, UK
=20
In the last two years, an extraordinary mix of artists, dancers,
scientists and=20
musicians have joined forces with Russia's space programme to create
work in a=20
zero gravity world where there is no up or down: a modernist laboratory
for making art=20
for the cosmos.
=20
>From afro-futurism to oriental fantasies of flying carpets, datasuits =
to
dance movement analysis, the Arts Catalyst, the science-art agency, has
rounded
up the best projects for floating in air and transported them to the
Yuri
Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre in Star City, Russia, to turn dreams
of
flying into reality.=20
=20
Now London audiences have a chance to sample the art of weightlessness
as
practised in space conditions - not computer simulations, but in a =
large
jet
aircraft converted into an artists' studio - diving at 25,000 feet.  We
can't take=20
audiences into space - yet - but coming to Sadlers Wells for our
season of zero gravity work will give you an idea of the possibilities
of
the future.
=20
Choreographer Kitsou Dubois, the first artist in zero gravity, and
dancer
Morag Wightman present dance in weightlessness, philosopher Mikhail
Ryklin=20
reflects on Russian cosmism, the Zero Genies - artist-musicians Ansuman
Biswas=20
and Jem Finer - show spectacular real flying carpet sequences, and =
noted
DJ/sampling=20
group Hallucinator play music for the long-distance cosmonaut. Russian
media artists=20
Andrey and Julia Velikanov premiere their film of Arts Catalyst's 2001
expedition to=20
Star City, heart of the Russian space programme. Other zero gravity
pioneers include=20
Kevin Fong, lecturer in medicine in extreme environments and advisor to
NASA, and=20
film-maker Andrew Kotting, whose latest film Filthy Earth was recently
released=20
to critical acclaim.
=20
An additional event will be announced shortly.  Arts Catalyst is
bringing a true cosmonaut hero, Sergei Krikalev, to the UK to share his
experiences on the Mir Space Station and the contrasts of the East and
West's perspectives on space research.  Krikalev was, famously, the =
last
Soviet citizen (stranded on the MIR Space Station during the coup
against Gorbachev) and was recently a member of the first mission to =
the
new International Space Station.=20
=20
Take part in zero gravity workshops to gain a better understanding of
gravity:=20
how it moulds our bodies and the cosmos. Experience moments of "zero
gravity",=20
challenge your balance and orientation, and explore the history of
gravity, with=20
zero gravity dancer Morag Wightman and performance artist Tim Millar.
=20
Fri 1 March 2002
8 pm :
BODIES IN SPACE
The Zero Genies (Ansuman Biswas and Jem Finer), Masha Chuikova, Anthony
Bull,=20
Kevin Fong, Morag Wightman, Louise K Wilson
=20
Sat 2 March 2002
11 am to 4 pm :
ZERO GRAVITY WORKSHOP led by Morag Wightman and Tim Millar. (Minimum =
age
- - 14 years)
8 pm :
ARTISTS & COSMONAUTS
Anna Alchuk, Alexei Blinov, Andrew Kotting, Marko Peljhan, philosopher
Mikhail Ryklin,=20
Andrey & Julia Velikanov, music by Hallucinator
=20
Fri 19 April 2002
8 pm:
A DANCER IN WEIGHTLESSNESS
Kitsou Dubois, Nick Davey and colleagues, Biodynamics Group, Imperial
College
=20
Join the new futurists, book all three Lilian Baylis events for=20
UK =A315 (UK =A312 concessions) or UK =A36 (UK =A35 concessions) each =
night.=20
Sergei Krikalev talk - TO BE ANNOUNCED.=20
Zero gravity workshops UK =A3 8 (UK =A3 6)
=20
Lilian Baylis Theatre, Sadlers Wells, Rosebery Avenue London EC1, UK
Box office tel: 020 7863 8000
Book on-line: www.sadlerswells.com <http://www.sadlerswells.com>=20
=20
The Arts Catalyst
the science-art agency
www.artscatalyst.org <http://www.artscatalyst.org>=20
=20
=20

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Content-Type: text/html;
	charset="iso-8859-1"
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>

<META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2600.0" name=3DGENERATOR>
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV>From: "The Arts Catalyst" &lt;<A=20
href=3D"mailto:info@artscatalyst.org";>info@artscatalyst.org</A>&gt;<BR>S=
ubject:=20
Artists &amp; Cosmonauts<BR>Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 10:46:12 -0000</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>The Arts Catalyst =
presents</FONT></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>ARTISTS &amp; COSMONAUTS - The New=20
Futurists</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><A=20
href=3D"http://www.artscatalyst.org/htm/russia2001events.htm";>www.artsca=
talyst.org/htm/russia2001events.htm</A></FONT></DIV>
<DIV>&nbsp;</DIV></FONT></DIV></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Fri 1 March 2002<BR>Sat 2 March =
2002<BR>Fri 19=20
April 2002</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>plus talk by Russian cosmonaut, Sergei =
Krikalev=20
- -&nbsp;date to be announced</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Lilian Baylis Theatre, Sadlers Wells, =
Rosebery=20
Avenue London EC1, UK</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>In the last two years, an =
extraordinary mix of=20
artists, dancers,&nbsp; scientists and <BR>musicians have joined forces =
with=20
Russia's space programme to create work in a <BR>zero gravity world =
where there=20
is no up or down: a modernist laboratory for making art <BR>for the=20
cosmos.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>From afro-futurism to oriental =
fantasies of flying=20
carpets, datasuits to<BR>dance movement analysis, the Arts Catalyst, =
the=20
science-art agency, has rounded<BR>up the best projects for floating in =
air and=20
transported them to the Yuri<BR>Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre in =
Star City,=20
Russia, to turn dreams of<BR>flying into reality. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT><FONT face=3DArial =
size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Now London audiences have a chance to =
sample the=20
art of weightlessness as<BR>practised in space conditions - not =
computer=20
simulations, but in a large jet<BR>aircraft converted into an artists' =
studio -=20
diving at 25,000 feet.&nbsp; We can't take <BR>audiences into space - =
yet - but=20
coming to Sadlers Wells for our<BR>season of zero gravity work will =
give you an=20
idea of the possibilities of<BR>the future.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Choreographer Kitsou Dubois, the first =
artist in=20
zero gravity, and dancer<BR>Morag Wightman present dance in =
weightlessness,=20
philosopher Mikhail Ryklin <BR>reflects on Russian cosmism, the Zero =
Genies -=20
artist-musicians Ansuman Biswas <BR>and Jem Finer - show spectacular =
real flying=20
carpet sequences, and noted DJ/sampling <BR>group Hallucinator play =
music for=20
the long-distance cosmonaut. Russian media artists <BR>Andrey and Julia =

Velikanov premiere their film of Arts Catalyst's 2001 expedition to =
<BR>Star=20
City, heart of the Russian space programme. Other zero gravity pioneers =
include=20
<BR>Kevin Fong, lecturer in medicine in extreme environments and =
advisor to=20
NASA, and <BR>film-maker Andrew Kotting, whose latest film Filthy Earth =
was=20
recently released <BR>to critical acclaim.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>An additional event will be announced=20
shortly.&nbsp; Arts Catalyst is bringing a true cosmonaut =
hero,&nbsp;Sergei=20
Krikalev, to the UK to share his experiences on the Mir Space Station =
and the=20
contrasts of the East and West's perspectives on space research.&nbsp; =
Krikalev=20
was, famously,&nbsp;the last Soviet citizen (stranded on the MIR Space =
Station=20
during the coup against Gorbachev) and was recently a member of the =
first=20
mission to the new International Space Station. </FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Take part in zero gravity workshops to =
gain a=20
better understanding of gravity: <BR>how it moulds our bodies and the =
cosmos.=20
Experience moments of "zero gravity", <BR>challenge your balance and=20
orientation, and explore the history of gravity, with <BR>zero gravity =
dancer=20
Morag Wightman and performance artist Tim Millar.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Fri 1 March 2002<BR>8 pm :<BR>BODIES =
IN=20
SPACE<BR>The Zero Genies (Ansuman Biswas and Jem Finer), Masha =
Chuikova, Anthony=20
Bull, <BR>Kevin Fong, Morag Wightman, Louise K Wilson</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Sat 2 March 2002<BR>11 am to 4 pm =
:<BR>ZERO GRAVITY=20
WORKSHOP led by Morag Wightman and Tim Millar. (Minimum age - 14 =
years)<BR>8 pm=20
:<BR>ARTISTS &amp; COSMONAUTS<BR>Anna Alchuk, Alexei Blinov, Andrew =
Kotting,=20
Marko Peljhan, philosopher Mikhail Ryklin, <BR>Andrey &amp; Julia =
Velikanov,=20
music by Hallucinator</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Fri 19 April 2002<BR>8 pm:<BR>A DANCER =
IN=20
WEIGHTLESSNESS<BR>Kitsou Dubois, Nick Davey and colleagues, Biodynamics =
Group,=20
Imperial College</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Join the new futurists, book all three =
Lilian=20
Baylis events for <BR>UK =A315 (UK =A312 concessions) or UK =A36 (UK =
=A35 concessions)=20
each night. <BR>Sergei Krikalev talk - TO BE ANNOUNCED. <BR>Zero =
gravity=20
workshops UK =A3 8 (UK =A3 6)</FONT></DIV></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Lilian Baylis Theatre, Sadlers Wells, =
Rosebery=20
Avenue London EC1, UK</FONT></DIV>
<DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Box office tel: 020 7863 8000<BR>Book =
on-line: <A=20
href=3D"http://www.sadlerswells.com";>www.sadlerswells.com</A></FONT></DI=
V>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>The Arts Catalyst<BR>the science-art =
agency<BR><A=20
href=3D"http://www.artscatalyst.org";>www.artscatalyst.org</A></FONT></DI=
V>
<DIV><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV></FONT></DIV></BODY></HTML>

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------------------------------

Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2002 11:36:38 -0500
From: Dominique Fontaine <dfontaine@fondation-langlois.org>
Subject: =?iso-8859-1?Q?Communiqu=E9_de_presse_/_Press_Release?=



(english version follows)

- ------------------------------------------


La fondation Daniel Langlois est heureuse d'annoncer les deux premiers
chercheurs en résidence : 
MM. Gerald O'Grady et Jeff Rothenberg 


Montréal, 30 janvier 2002 - La fondation Daniel Langlois pour l'art, la
science et la technologie a le plaisir de présenter les deux chercheurs
choisis lors d'un concours international tenu cette année pour la première
fois dans le cadre de son Programme de bourses destinées aux chercheurs
résidents. Pour 2002, il s'agit de MM. Gerald O'Grady et Jeff Rothenberg.

M. Gerald O'Grady, D. Ph., poursuivra ses travaux dans le Fonds Steina et
Woody Vasulka, acquis par la fondation en 2000 et conservé au Centre de
recherche et de documentation (CR+D). Dans le cadre de sa recherche, M.
O'Grady se consacrera à un projet provisoirement intitulé Early History of
Electronic and Digital Art in New York State (Les débuts de l'art
électronique et numérique dans l'État de New York), qui place l'oeuvre des
Vasulka dans un contexte historique. À titre d'universitaire, M. O'Grady a
contribué activement aux débuts de l'art électronique, en fondant plusieurs
départements d'études médiatiques, en particulier à la State University of
New York at Buffalo. Le corps professoral de SUNY Buffalo comprenait
d'éminents artistes tels que les Vasulka, Hollis Frampton, Paul Sharits,
Tony Conrad, Peter Weibel et James Blue. M. O'Grady a enseigné dans diverses
universités américaines, parmi lesquelles la Columbia University, New York
et la New School for Social Research. Plus récemment, il a été nommé fellow
du W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research et membre du
Département d'études afro-américaines à Harvard, où il a dirigé des
recherches portant sur les films du Mouvement des droits civiques.
Aujourd'hui à la retraite, M. O'Grady a récemment été le premier professeur
invité (Gastwissenschaftler) du Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie à
Karlsruhe, Allemagne, où il a prononcé des conférences sur le travail de
Marshall McLuhan, à propos de qui il rédige un ouvrage.

Depuis 1979, M. O'Grady a édité, publié à compte d'auteur et contribué des
essais à plus de 30 catalogues dans le cadre de rétrospectives ou de séries
de films, dont The Films of the Civil Rights; Remembering Malcom X; et Czech
Filmaking, 1963-1990 pour The Public Theater de Joseph Papp; des essais sur
le réalisateur brésilien Nelson Pereiros dos Santos pour la Film Society of
Lincoln Center; sur Theo Angelopoulos pour le Museum of Modern Art de New
York; sur Dziga Vertov pour le Collective for Living Cinema (NY); sur Dusan
Mizoguchi pour la Cinématheque Ontario (Toronto); sur David MacDougall pour
Media Study/Buffalo; et Articulate Energy: The Emergence of the Abstract
Film in America pour la Harvard University and Anthropology Film Archives.

À titre de chercheur résident, M. Jeff Rothenberg travaillera à
l'élaboration d'un projet pilote visant la préservation d'oeuvres d'art
faisant appel aux technologies numériques. Il concevra également des
stratégies pour la tenue de tels essais. Aux fins de cette recherche, il
définira des paramètres pour la sélection d'oeuvres tout en tenant compte du
résultat voulu, soit de mieux anticiper les problèmes de la conservation des
oeuvres numériques. Informaticien principal à la RAND Corporation à Santa
Monica, Californie, M. Rothenberg est spécialiste en conservation des
archives et dossiers numériques et conseiller auprès de nombreuses archives
nationales, dont celles des Pays-Bas. Il agira comme chercheur principal
pour le projet et préparera le projet pilote dans le cadre de Variable Media
Network, une collaboration entre la fondation Daniel Langlois et le Musée
Guggenheim de New York.

Le concours international de la fondation a pris fin le 31 août. Les projets
choisis cette année répondent à deux grands objectifs : favoriser la
recherche fondée sur notre documentation et nos collections d'archives ainsi
que la recherche avancée sur la conservation des oeuvres d'art faisant appel
aux technologies numériques. La fondation estime que ces deux projets
contribueront de manière essentielle et exceptionnelle à la recherche dans
le domaine des arts et des nouvelles technologies. Le site Web de la
fondation, <www.fondation-langlois.org>, affichera, au cours des prochains
mois, des mises à jour concernant ces projets et leurs résultats.



Jean Gagnon, Directeur des programmes 
Audrey Navarre, adjointe à la Direction des programmes 
(514) 987-7177
anavarre@fondation-langlois.org 
www.fondation-langlois.org


- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------


The Daniel Langlois Foundation Is Proud to Announce the First Two
Researchers in Residence: 
Gerald O'Grady and Jeff Rothenberg 


Montreal, January 30, 2002 - The Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art,
Science, and Technology is pleased to present the two researchers selected
in the international competition held this year for the first time within
the Program of Grants for Researchers in Residence. The two researchers in
residence for 2002 are Gerald O'Grady and Jeff Rothenberg.

Gerald O'Grady, Ph.D., will continue his work on the Steina and Woody
Vasulka Archives, which were added to the Foundation's collection in 2000
and are kept at the Centre for Research and Documentation (CR+D). In
exploring these archives, Dr. O'Grady will focus on a research project
tentatively titled Early History of Electronic and Digital Art in New York
State, which places the Vasulkas' work in its proper historical context. As
an academic, Dr. O'Grady was actively involved in the early years of
electronic art, founding several departments of media studies, particularly
at the State University of New York at Buffalo. The faculty at SUNY Buffalo
included such eminent artists as the Vasulkas, Hollis Frampton, Paul
Sharits, Tony Conrad, Peter Weibel and James Blue. Dr. O'Grady has taught at
several U.S. universities, including New York, Columbia and the New School
for Social Research. Most recently, he was a fellow of the W.E.B. Du Bois
Institute for Afro-American Research and a member of the Department of
Afro-American Studies at Harvard University, where he conducted research on
the films of the Civil Rights Movement. Now retired, Dr. O'Grady was
recently the first guest professor (Gastwissenschaftler) invited by the
Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie in Karlsruhe, Germany, where he gave
a series of lectures on the work of Marshall McLuhan, on whom he is writing
a book.

Since 1979, Dr. O'Grady has edited, independently published and contributed
essays to over 30 catalogues for film retrospectives or series including The
Films of the Civil Rights; Remembering Malcom X; and Czech Filmaking,
1963-1990 for Joseph Papp's The Public Theater; on the Brazilian filmmaker
Nelson Pereiros dos Santos for the Film Society of the Lincoln Center; on
Theo Angelopoulos for the Museum of Modern Art in New York; on Dziga Vertov
for the Collective for Living Cinema (NY); on Dusan Mizoguchi for the
Cinématheque Ontario (Toronto); on David MacDougall for Media Study/Buffalo;
and Articulate Energy: The Emergence of the Abstract Film in America for
Harvard University and Anthropology Film Archives.

As a researcher in residence, Jeff Rothenberg will work to set up a test
case for the preservation of artworks that use digital technology. He will
also develop strategies for conducting such a test. As part of this
research, he will define parameters for selecting the artwork while keeping
in mind the desired outcome, which is to better anticipate the problems of
preserving digital works. Mr. Rothenberg serves as a senior computer
scientist for the RAND corporation in Santa Monica, California. He has
gained expertise in preserving digital archives and records and advises many
national archives including the National Archives of the Netherlands. Mr.
Rothenberg will act as senior researcher in the project and prepare our
emulation test case as part of the Variable Media Network, a collaboration
between the Daniel Langlois Foundation and the Guggenheim Museum in New
York.

The international competition held by the Foundation closed on August 31.
The projects selected this year meet two basic goals: to favour research
that makes use of our documentation and archive collections and to conduct
advanced research into preserving artworks that rely on digital
technologies. The Foundation believes that these two projects will make an
essential and exceptional contribution to research in the field of arts and
new technologies. Over the coming months, our Web site,
<www.fondation-langlois.org>, will post updates on the two projects and
their findings.

- - 30 -


Jean Gagnon, Director of Programs
Audrey Navarre, Assistant Director of Programs
(514) 987-7177
anavarre@fondation-langlois.org 
www.fondation-langlois.org
	


------------------------------

Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2002 18:58:49 -0500
From: Ana Viseu <ana.viseu@utoronto.ca>
Subject: Privacy Lecture Series - Ann Cavoukian, Feb. 11, 2002



[I am very pleased to announce that our next speaker will be Ann Cavoukian, 
Ontario's Privacy Commissioner and one Canada's most widely respected 
privacy advocates. Over the years Ann has argued for a privacy policy that 
is based on the balance between privacy and other rights, rather than on 
absolutism, and that favours working solutions rather than unattainable 
goals.  The theme of the lecture is "Building Privacy Into Technolog". The 
lecture will be held from 4pm to 5,30pm. I am sure this will be an 
interesting, informative and thought provoking lecture. Best. Ana]


PRIVACY LECTURE SERIES
<http://privacy.openflows.org>

ANN CAVOUKIAN
BUILDING PRIVACY INTO TECHNOLOGY

Monday, February 11, 2002
4pm-5,30:00PM

140 St. George, Room 728
Faculty of Information Studies (building adjacent to Robarts Library)
University of Toronto

The lectures are free of charge and you do NOT have to register.

Abstract

In her talk Ann Cavoukian, Ontario's Privacy Commissioner, will discuss the 
tragic events of September 11 and how that has affected many people's 
perspective on privacy. She will discuss the need for balance between the 
demands of public safety and need to respect the privacy of rights of 
citizens. The talk will also discuss the implications of recent 
anti-terrorism legislation in Canada, the U.S. and elsewhere. The 
presentation will define "privacy", discuss the basis of privacy, which is 
fair information practices, and illustrate where these practices have been 
codified into law around the world. The presentation will then discuss the 
hype and reality of e-commerce and examine reasons why it has fallen short 
of expectations. The last section of the presentation examines the role 
that technology can play in protecting privacy.



Bio

Dr. Ann Cavoukian is recognized as a leading authority on privacy and data 
protection. She was appointed Information and Privacy Commissioner in May 
of 1997. As Commissioner, Ann oversees the operations of Ontario's freedom 
of information and privacy laws, which apply to both provincial and 
municipal governments. She serves as an officer of the legislature, 
independent of the government of the day.

Ann joined the Information and Privacy Commission in 1987, during its 
start- up phase, as its first Director of Compliance. She was appointed 
Assistant Commissioner in 1990. Prior to her work at the Commission, Ann 
headed the Research Services Branch of the Ministry of the Attorney 
General, where she was responsible for conducting research on the 
administration of civil and criminal law. Ann received her M.A. and Ph.D. 
in Psychology from the University of Toronto, where she specialized in 
criminology and law, and lectured on psychology and the criminal justice 
system.

Ann sits on a number of committees involved in privacy and technology, 
including the W3C's committee of experts working on P3P (Platform for 
Privacy Preferences). She also served as a member of the American Task 
Force on Privacy, Technology and Criminal Justice Information. Ann is 
particularly interested in advancing privacy protection through the pursuit 
of privacy-enhancing technologies.


To register for the Privacy Lecture Series announcement email list please 
go to: <http://privacy.openflows.org/>


The Privacy Lecture Series is organized by Ana Viseu, a researcher 
currently working at the University of Toronto on her Ph.D. dissertation 
which focuses on the development and implementation of wearable computers. 
Her research interests include questions of privacy, social dimensions of 
technology, and the mutual adaptation processes between individuals and 
technology. Ana holds a Master's Degree in Interactive Communication from 
the Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona, Spain.
  <http://fcis.oise.utoronto.ca/~aviseu>


The Privacy Lecture Series is co-sponsored by the Knowledge Media Design 
Institute (KMDI) <http://www.kmdi.utoronto.ca/> and the Information Policy 
Research Program (IPRP) <http://www.fis.utoronto.ca/research/iprp/>.


For more info contact Ana Viseu <ana.viseu@utoronto.ca>






[ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ]
Tudo vale a pena se a alma não é pequena.
http://fcis.oise.utoronto.ca/~aviseu

http://privacy.openflows.org
[ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ]


------------------------------

Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2002 11:42:20 +0100
From: =?iso-8859-1?Q?S=F8ren_Pold?= <pold@multimedia.au.dk>
Subject: CfP NordiCHI 2002 Aesthetic Artefacts

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

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	charset="iso-8859-1"
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Please read and redistribute:=20





Call for submissions to NordiCHI 2002 in the new category of:=20



Aesthetic artefacts
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
NordiCHI 2002 introduces "aesthetic artefacts" as a new submission =
category
for experiments into how artistic expression and praxis affect =
perspectives
on interfaces, contexts and design.

The computer interface has developed from merely supporting work into a
broader cultural interface competing with and even replacing the book, =
the
gallery wall, the cinema screen, etc. Traditional functionalism fails in
relation to many new applications. At the same time, traditional
application areas may benefit from the inspiration from how digital =
forms
are articulated in artistic expression. Accordingly, digital arts =
challenge
the way we understand the computer, and the relation between form and
contents at the interface.

Examples of possible artefacts are (not limited to) interactive =
artworks,
computer games, interactive installations, netart, software art, =
artistic
interfaces, aesthetic experiments with HCI-related issues. An important
part of an aesthetic artefact submission is a short paper that =
thoroughly
reflects on CHI related issues affected by the artefact. Accepted =
aesthetic
artefacts will be exhibited at the conference in conjunction with the =
demo
session.

An aesthetic artefact submission is composed of three parts

- - A short paper, conforming to the NordiCHI 2002 short paper guidelines,
describing the artefact and reflecting on its contribution to the HCI
discourse.

- - An exhibition plan, describing how the artefact is going to exhibited,
including spatial requirements (one page).

- - (Optional) a representation of the artefact on video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS =
is
not accepted), CD-ROM or DVD.

The short paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via the
conference web site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be
submitted by ordinary mail in three copies.

Submissions will be reviewed by the programme committee supplemented by =
an
aesthetic artefacts special committee of artists and aesthetics =
scholars.
Aesthetic criteria as well as an assessment of contribution to the =
ongoing
understanding of human-computer interaction are taken into account.

Please observe that the presenters must supply all equipment necessary =
for
the exhibition. Limited Internet accesses will be available.

Please direct questions regarding aesthetic artefacts to =
art@nordichi.org.

Electronic submission deadline for aesthetic artefacts: March 1, 2002 =
(late
breaking results: August 1, 2002).




General Anoncement:

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Second announcement and call for papers
(upcoming deadline March 1, 2002)

The Second Nordic Conference on
Human-Computer Interaction
Aarhus, Denmark, October 19-23, 2002

NordiCHI 2002

Tradition and Transcendence
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NordiCHI is the main Nordic forum for human-computer interaction =
research.
NordiCHI is the meeting place for researchers from academia and =
industry,
designers, practitioners, educators and others from a broad range of
traditions and communities; therefore the conference takes HCI in the
non-limited sense of research and practice addressing the design and use =
of
interactive technology.

NordiCHI is biannual. The first conference, NordiCHI 2000, was organised =
by
STIMDI, and took place in Stockholm, Sweden, October 2000. The =
conference
is a joint effort supported by the Nordic HCI organisations as well as
international partners. NordiCHI 2002 is hosted by Centre for =
Human-Machine
Interaction, University of Aarhus, Denmark, in cooperation with =
SIGCHI.dk.

The backbone of the conference is the technical programme in which a
limited number of quality papers, meeting international standards, will =
be
accepted. NordiCHI 2002 also invites good quality short papers (for
interactive presentations, see below), to generate and sustain =
interactive
cooperation among the conference participants, and to stimulate
dissemination of new results.

Traditionally, Nordic perspectives on HCI emphasise topics such as:
technology in use, integration of design and use, exploratory design
activities, and inter-disciplinary approaches to HCI. This tradition
originates in the Nordic openness to new approaches and divergent ideas =
in
the development of new concepts and practices for the future. =
Architecture,
pedagogy, political action, fine arts, industrial design, dada; the
potential list is endless and ought to be growing when information
technology is diversified and pervades still wider parts of our lives.
NordiCHI is the meeting place for tradition and new directions.

Conference topics include but are not limited to:

   * Co-operative design.
   * Information technology in everyday life.
   * Design and innovation.
   * New interaction techniques and devices.
   * Visualisation.
   * Ubiquitous, pervasive and mobile interfaces.
   * End-user programming.
   * Studies of design-oriented knowledge production.
   * Artistic approaches.
   * Cooperative activities mediated by technology.
   * The aesthetics of HCI.
   * Design Cases.
   * Studies of work and technology.
   * Accessibility.

Important dates
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March 1, 2002: Deadline for submission of papers, workshop, tutorials,
panels, short papers, demonstrations and aesthetic artefacts.

May 1, 2002: Deadline for doctoral colloquium application

August 1, 2002: Deadline for late breaking submission of short papers,
demonstrations and aesthetic artefacts. (Notification of acceptance of =
late
breaking results will not be ready before the early registration =
deadline)

August, 15, 2002: Early registration deadline

October 19-20, 2002: Workshops, tutorials, and Doctoral colloquium in =
Aarhus

October 21-23, 2002: Paper presentations, panels, Interactive
presentations, interactive artefacts, and aesthetic artefacts, in =
Aarhus.


Papers
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
NordiCHI 2002 invites innovative and exploratory papers meeting the =
highest
international standards. We welcome papers attempting to move the field
forward, promoting new techniques, methods, tools and theories. NordiCHI
aims to be multidisciplinary, combining and truly integrating the =
social,
the technical, the aesthetic, etc.

Papers describing original work on HCI related topics are solicited. =
Papers
should make clear the novel aspects of the work they present and their
contribution to the development of the theory and practice of the =
field(s).

Empirical studies of work should stress their relevance to design.
Applications papers should stress their contribution to concepts and
theories in HCI. Papers addressing novel techniques and technologies =
should
clearly identify the relevance and importance to HCI.

Full papers report original work, which has not been previously =
published.
The contribution should be made clear in the paper and in its abstract.
Papers making one clear, significant contribution are more likely to be
accepted than papers making several lesser contributions. The paper must
identify and cite published work relevant to the paper topic. It should
explain how the presented work  has built on previous contributions, and
should indicate where and  why novel approaches have been adopted.

NordiCHI 2002 is an international conference and contributions are =
welcomed
from all parts of the world. However, the official written and spoken
language of the conference is English.

All submissions will be reviewed by an international panel of HCI =
experts.

Submissions must be complete. Papers may be up to 10 pages formatted
according to the ACM template (as available at http://www.nordichi.org).
Submission should be made electronically in PDF format through the =
web-site.

Electronic submission deadline for papers: March 1, 2002.



Panels/sessions
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
The NordiCHI 2002 conference welcomes suggestions for panels and other
plenary sessions contributing to the further development of HCI as a
specifically Nordic field of research and practice.

email suggestions to nordichi2002@nordichi.org

Deadline for panel/session proposals: March 1, 2002.



Workshops
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Workshops offer an informal environment for focused group discussion =
around
work in progress or new areas of research and practice. NordiCHI 2002
invites workshop proposals in old and new topics related to HCI.

If you are interested in organising a full or half-day workshop, please
email a short proposal (up to 1000 words) to workshops@nordichi.org.

The proposal should detail:

- - Title and duration
- - Expected number, balance and selection of participants
- - Workshop theme and goals
- - Outcomes of the workshop
- - Relevance to the field
- - Intended audience
- - Description of activities planned
- - Needed facilities
- - Organisers' names and backgrounds

For further information, please contact the workshops chair
workshops@nordichi.org.

Deadline for workshop proposals: March 1, 2002.



Tutorials
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Tutorials offer a small number of participants the opportunity to learn
about specific concepts, methods and techniques from recognised experts.
Tutorials may be for half-day or full day sessions. NordiCHI 2002 =
invites
tutorials experimenting with new forms of instruction, innovative
perspectives and the use of new disciplines in a HCI context.

Proposals for full or half-day tutorials should detail

- - Title and duration
- - Intended audience
- - Theme and goals
- - Description of activities planned
- - Prior experiences and evaluations of the tutorial.
- - Needed facilities
- - Organisers' names and backgrounds

In general, NordiCHI 2002 will cover reasonable travel and housing =
expenses
and registration fee one instructor per tutorial; provided that enough
participants sign up.

Tutorial proposals should be emailed to tutorials@nordichi.org

Deadline for tutorial proposals: March 1, 2002.



Short papers
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Short papers may address any of the areas identified in the conference
topics. Submissions should report original work which has not been
published previously. Authors are encouraged to demonstrate work in
progress and late-breaking research results that show the latest =
innovative
ideas.

Full literature searches are not expected, although relevant citations
should be included. Summaries of wider findings or reduced versions of
longer papers are not suitable for the short paper submission category.

A short paper is an ideal format for conveying industrial and practical
experience to the community. Accordingly, we invite experiences from
specific design cases, reports on how specific methods are applied and
modified in practice, etc. We also invite presentation of ongoing work =
and
preliminary results, by experienced academics as well as young =
researchers.

Short papers are presented by means of interactive posters during the
conference. NordiCHI 2002's emphasis on direct interaction and =
networking
makes this the general presentations format for design processes, =
products
and other experiences, organisational overviews, and late breaking =
results.
Within this basic form, we encourage experimentation e.g. posters =
evolving
as the audience interact with them.

All submissions will be reviewed by an international panel of HCI =
experts.

Submissions must be complete. Short papers may be up to 4 pages =
formatted
according to the ACM template (as available at http://www.nordichi.org).
Submission should be made electronically in PDF format through the =
web-site.

Electronic submission deadline for short papers: March 1, 2002 (late
breaking results: August 1, 2002).


Demos
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Demonstrations gives participants the possibility of showing and viewing
new, interesting, and novel ideas in human-computer interaction concepts
and technology.

Submitters of papers presenting interactive artefacts are particularly
encouraged to also submit a demonstration proposal. We also encourage =
the
presentation of novel commercial products.

A demonstration proposal is composed of three parts

- - A short description of the system, max 2 pages, conforming to the
NordiCHI 2002 short paper format. To be printed in the proceedings if
accepted.

- - A one page exhibition plan, describing how the working system is going =
to
be demonstrated at the conference, including spatial and other
requirements.

- - (Optionally) a video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS is not accepted), CD-ROM or DVD,
presenting the working system.

The short paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via the
conference web site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be
submitted by ordinary mail in two copies.

Submissions will be reviewed by the programme committee.

Please observe that the presenters must supply all equipment necessary =
for
the exhibition. Limited Internet access will be available.

The working system will be presented during the demo session at the
conference and the short description of the interactive artefact will be
published in the conference proceedings.

Submission deadline for demonstrations: March 1, 2002 (late breaking
results: August 1, 2002).


Aesthetic artefacts
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
NordiCHI 2002 introduces "aesthetic artefacts" as a new submission =
category
for experiments into how artistic expression and praxis affect =
perspectives
on interfaces, contexts and design.

The computer interface has developed from merely supporting work into a
broader cultural interface competing with and even replacing the book, =
the
gallery wall, the cinema screen, etc. Traditional functionalism fails in
relation to many new applications. At the same time, traditional
application areas may benefit from the inspiration from how digital =
forms
are articulated in artistic expression. Accordingly, digital arts =
challenge
the way we understand the computer, and the relation between form and
contents at the interface.

Examples of possible artefacts are (not limited to) interactive =
artworks,
computer games, interactive installations, netart, software art, =
artistic
interfaces, aesthetic experiments with HCI-related issues. An important
part of an aesthetic artefact submission is a short paper that =
thoroughly
reflects on CHI related issues affected by the artefact. Accepted =
aesthetic
artefacts will be exhibited at the conference in conjunction with the =
demo
session.

An aesthetic artefact submission is composed of three parts

- - A short paper, conforming to the NordiCHI 2002 short paper guidelines,
describing the artefact and reflecting on its contribution to the HCI
discourse.

- - An exhibition plan, describing how the artefact is going to exhibited,
including spatial requirements (one page).

- - (Optional) a representation of the artefact on video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS =
is
not accepted), CD-ROM or DVD.

The short paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via the
conference web site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be
submitted by ordinary mail in three copies.

Submissions will be reviewed by the programme committee supplemented by =
an
aesthetic artefacts special committee of artists and aesthetics =
scholars.
Aesthetic criteria as well as an assessment of contribution to the =
ongoing
understanding of human-computer interaction are taken into account.

Please observe that the presenters must supply all equipment necessary =
for
the exhibition. Limited Internet accesses will be available.

Please direct questions regarding aesthetic artefacts to =
art@nordichi.org.

Electronic submission deadline for aesthetic artefacts: March 1, 2002 =
(late
breaking results: August 1, 2002).


Late breaking results
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Short papers, demonstrations and aesthetic artefacts, reporting late
breaking results may be submitted by august 1, 2002. Please note that =
late
submissions should be camera ready, and that notification of acceptance =
may
not be given before the deadline for early registration.


Proceedings
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
Printed proceedings (ACM press) will be available at the conference to
ensure optimal interaction around the presented works.

The proceedings will be included in the ACM digital library to ensure
optimal distribution of the accepted papers.


Electronic submission and Format
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All submissions of papers, short papers, demos and aesthetic artefacts
should be made electronically through the web-site. The submissions =
should
be formatted according to the ACM SIG template (as available at
http://www.nordichi.org).


Doctoral Colloquium (October 20, 2002)
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Graduate students within different areas of human-computer interaction =
are
invited to take part in the Doctoral Colloquium at NordiCHI 2002. This =
will
be the place where lively and useful discussions enable students to =
receive
suggestions about their on-going research and allow more experienced
participants to encounter some fresh ideas and view some of the new =
trends
in the field.

The Doctoral Colloquium provides an opportunity for doctoral students to
discuss their research both with other students and with leading experts
within the field. The colloquium will take the form of a workshop where
established HCI scholars take active part as discussants. The purpose is
for students to receive constructive feedback on their thesis work so =
far,
get advice about future developments, and share ideas and experiences =
with
students in related areas.

Participants should have advanced beyond the introductory stage in their
thesis work, and be actively engaged in the exploration of an HCI topic.
The research areas covered by the DC are the same as the NordiCHI
conference generally. Students may come from different academic subjects =
or
disciplines, such as interaction design, computer science, cognitive
science, and sociology.

To apply, please submit a proposal of at most 3 pages, including =
abstract
and references. Also, a short biographical note describing the =
applicant's
background should be enclosed. The proposal should include a description =
of
the research problem, the theoretical background and approach chosen, =
and
the work performed so far. The proposals will be evaluated by a review
committee.  Approximately 8 participants will be selected to give a =
short
presentation of their research topic, followed by a discussion within =
the
group of students and experts.

Submissions should be sent by email to Kerstin Severinson Eklundh
(doctoral@nordichi.org), preferably in PDF format.

Deadline for applications: May 1, 2002.

Updates on the expert panel on http://www.nordichi.org



Student Volunteers
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
Being a student volunteer is a great way for young researchers to =
establish
a network. Further information on how to sign up to be a student =
volunteer
will be available at http://www.nordichi.org by March 2002.


Programme committee
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
Anders M=F8rch, University of Oslo, Norway.
Ann Lantz, Royal Institote of Tachnology, Sweden.
Annelise Mark-Peitersen, Ris=F8 National Laboratory, Denmark.
Barbara Wasson, University of Bergen, Norway.
Bo Helgesen, Blekinge Institute of Technology.
Dag Svanes, Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, Italy.
Ebba Thora Hvannberg, University of Iceland, Iceland.
Eija Suikola, Teamware Group, Finland.
Frieder Nake, University of Bremen, Germany.
Gillian Crampton-Schmith, Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, Italy.
Horst Oberquelle, University of Hamburg, Germany.
Jan Gulliksen, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Jannie Nielsen, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark.
Jonathan Grudin, Microsoft Research, USA.
J=F6rn Mesetter, Malm=F6 University College, Sweden.
Kaj Gr=F8nb=E6k, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
Kari Hamnes, Telenor R&D, Norway.
Kari Kuutti, University of Oulu, Finland.
Kari-Jouko R=E4ih=E4, University of Tampere, Finland.
Konrad Morgan, University of Bergen, Norway.
Kristina H=F6=F6k, Swedish Institute of Computer Science, Sweden.
Lars-Erik Holmquist, Victoria Institute, Sweden.
Lars-Erik Janlert, Ume=E5 University, Sweden.
Liam Bannon, University of Limerick, Ireland.
Marta Krist=EDn L=E1rusd=F3tt=EDr, Reykjavik University, Iceland.
Michael Herczeg, Medizinische Universit=E4t zu L=FCbeck, Germany.
Morten Borup Harning, Dialogical, Denmark.
Peter B=F8gh Andersen, Aalborg University, Denmark.
Peter Carstensen, IT-University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Roope Raisamo, University of Tampere, Finland.
Susanne B=F8dker, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
Svein Arne Arnesen, EDB4tel AS, Norway.
Timo Jokela, University of Oulu, Finland.
Wendy Mackay, I.N.R.I.A., France.


Conference committee (as of January 2002)
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
* General chair: Olav W. Bertelsen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
* Program co-chairs: Susanne B=F8dker, University of Aarhus, Denmark & =
Kari
Kuutti, University of Oulu, Finland.
* Tutorials chair: Anders M=F8rch, Intermedia, University of Oslo, =
Norway.
* Workshop chair: Jakob Buur, University of Southern Denmark.
* Demo chair: Klaus Marius Hansen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
* Poster chair: Michael Thomsen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
* Aesthetic artefacts co-chairs: Morten Breinbjerg & S=F8ren Pold, =
University
of Aarhus, Denmark.
* Treasurer: Michael Thomsen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
* Electronic submissions chair: Niels Olof Bouvin, University of Aarhus,
Denmark.
* Student volunteers chair: Christina Nielsen, University of Aarhus, =
Denmark.
* Doctoral consortium chair: Kerstin Severinson Eklundh, NADA, KTH, =
Sweden.
* Emeritus NordiCHI 2000 co-chairs: Jan Gulliksen & Ann Lantz, STIMDI.


Call for sponsors
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
The success of NordiCHI 2002 is highly dependent on the support of local
and international sponsors. A sponsorship is an excellent opportunity to
expose your company or organisation as a leading name in HCI and IT. In
addition to general sponsorships NordiCHI 2002 has a limited number of
slots for hospitality receptions and sponsored events.

Companies and organisations interested in sponsoring NordiCHI 2002 are
invited to contact the conference chair (olavb@nordichi.org).


Sponsors
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
SIGCHI/ACM, IFIP TC13 and the Nordic HCI organisations (all pending).

By January 2002, Centre for Human-Machine Interaction, Denmark; STIMDI,
Sweden; and Sigchi.dk have stated their financial support of NordiCHI =
2002.

Conjoined Events
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
Symposium on theory and method in HCI research marking the conclusion of
Centre for Human Machine Interaction is held back to back with NordiCHI,
October 24-25, 2002

Industry day. A one day event, October 24, 2002, focusing on strategic =
use
of HCI in private enterprise is organised by the Alexandra institute.
Further information will be available at http://www.nordichi.org.


Mailing List
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
To receive updates about the NordiCHI conference subscribe to the
conference mailing list, by sending a message containing only the word
"subscribe" (no quotes) to Nordichi-announcements-request@nordichi.org


Contact Information
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
NordiCHI 2002
IT-parken,
Aabogade 34
DK-8200 Aarhus N,
Denmark.

nordichi@nordichi.org
http://www.nordichi.org





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demo<BR>session.<BR><BR>An=20
aesthetic artefact submission is composed of three parts<BR><BR>- A =
short paper,=20
conforming to the NordiCHI 2002 short paper guidelines,<BR>describing =
the=20
artefact and reflecting on its contribution to the =
HCI<BR>discourse.<BR><BR>- An=20
exhibition plan, describing how the artefact is going to =
exhibited,<BR>including=20
spatial requirements (one page).<BR><BR>- (Optional) a representation of =
the=20
artefact on video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS is<BR>not accepted), CD-ROM or =
DVD.<BR><BR>The=20
short paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via =
the<BR>conference=20
web site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be<BR>submitted by =
ordinary=20
mail in three copies.<BR><BR>Submissions will be reviewed by the =
programme=20
committee supplemented by an<BR>aesthetic artefacts special committee of =
artists=20
and aesthetics scholars.<BR>Aesthetic criteria as well as an assessment =
of=20
contribution to the ongoing<BR>understanding of human-computer =
interaction are=20
taken into account.<BR><BR>Please observe that the presenters must =
supply all=20
equipment necessary for<BR>the exhibition. Limited Internet accesses =
will be=20
available.<BR><BR>Please direct questions regarding aesthetic artefacts =
to <A=20
href=3D"mailto:art@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>art@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>.<BR><BR>Electronic submission deadline for aesthetic =
artefacts: March 1,=20
2002 (late<BR>breaking results: August 1,=20
2002).<BR><BR><BR></DIV></FONT></FONT></FONT>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT face=3DArial =
size=3D2></FONT></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>General=20
Anoncement:</FONT></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT face=3DArial =
size=3D2></FONT></FONT>&nbsp;</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D<BR>Second announcement=20
and call for papers<BR>(upcoming deadline March 1, 2002)<BR><BR>The =
Second=20
Nordic Conference on<BR>Human-Computer Interaction<BR>Aarhus, Denmark, =
October=20
19-23, 2002<BR><BR>NordiCHI 2002<BR><BR>Tradition and=20
Transcendence<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR><BR>NordiCHI=20
is the main Nordic forum for human-computer interaction =
research.<BR>NordiCHI is=20
the meeting place for researchers from academia and =
industry,<BR>designers,=20
practitioners, educators and others from a broad range of<BR>traditions =
and=20
communities; therefore the conference takes HCI in the<BR>non-limited =
sense of=20
research and practice addressing the design and use of<BR>interactive=20
technology.<BR><BR>NordiCHI is biannual. The first conference, NordiCHI =
2000,=20
was organised by<BR>STIMDI, and took place in Stockholm, Sweden, October =
2000.=20
The conference<BR>is a joint effort supported by the Nordic HCI =
organisations as=20
well as<BR>international partners. NordiCHI 2002 is hosted by Centre for =

Human-Machine<BR>Interaction, University of Aarhus, Denmark, in =
cooperation with=20
SIGCHI.dk.<BR><BR>The backbone of the conference is the technical =
programme in=20
which a<BR>limited number of quality papers, meeting international =
standards,=20
will be<BR>accepted. NordiCHI 2002 also invites good quality short =
papers=20
(for<BR>interactive presentations, see below), to generate and sustain=20
interactive<BR>cooperation among the conference participants, and to=20
stimulate<BR>dissemination of new results.<BR><BR>Traditionally, Nordic=20
perspectives on HCI emphasise topics such as:<BR>technology in use, =
integration=20
of design and use, exploratory design<BR>activities, and =
inter-disciplinary=20
approaches to HCI. This tradition<BR>originates in the Nordic openness =
to new=20
approaches and divergent ideas in<BR>the development of new concepts and =

practices for the future. Architecture,<BR>pedagogy, political action, =
fine=20
arts, industrial design, dada; the<BR>potential list is endless and =
ought to be=20
growing when information<BR>technology is diversified and pervades still =
wider=20
parts of our lives.<BR>NordiCHI is the meeting place for tradition and =
new=20
directions.<BR><BR>Conference topics include but are not limited=20
to:<BR><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Co-operative design.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * =
Information=20
technology in everyday life.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Design and=20
innovation.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * New interaction techniques and=20
devices.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Visualisation.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Ubiquitous,=20
pervasive and mobile interfaces.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * End-user=20
programming.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Studies of design-oriented knowledge=20
production.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Artistic approaches.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * =
Cooperative=20
activities mediated by technology.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * The aesthetics of=20
HCI.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Design Cases.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Studies of work =
and=20
technology.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp; * Accessibility.<BR><BR>Important=20
dates<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>March 1, 2002: =
Deadline for submission of papers,=20
workshop, tutorials,<BR>panels, short papers, demonstrations and =
aesthetic=20
artefacts.<BR><BR>May 1, 2002: Deadline for doctoral colloquium=20
application<BR><BR>August 1, 2002: Deadline for late breaking submission =
of=20
short papers,<BR>demonstrations and aesthetic artefacts. (Notification =
of=20
acceptance of late<BR>breaking results will not be ready before the =
early=20
registration deadline)<BR><BR>August, 15, 2002: Early registration=20
deadline<BR><BR>October 19-20, 2002: Workshops, tutorials, and Doctoral=20
colloquium in Aarhus<BR><BR>October 21-23, 2002: Paper presentations, =
panels,=20
Interactive<BR>presentations, interactive artefacts, and aesthetic =
artefacts, in=20
Aarhus.<BR><BR><BR>Papers<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>NordiCHI 2002 invites =
innovative and=20
exploratory papers meeting the highest<BR>international standards. We =
welcome=20
papers attempting to move the field<BR>forward, promoting new =
techniques,=20
methods, tools and theories. NordiCHI<BR>aims to be multidisciplinary, =
combining=20
and truly integrating the social,<BR>the technical, the aesthetic,=20
etc.<BR><BR>Papers describing original work on HCI related topics are =
solicited.=20
Papers<BR>should make clear the novel aspects of the work they present =
and=20
their<BR>contribution to the development of the theory and practice of =
the=20
field(s).<BR><BR>Empirical studies of work should stress their relevance =
to=20
design.<BR>Applications papers should stress their contribution to =
concepts=20
and<BR>theories in HCI. Papers addressing novel techniques and =
technologies=20
should<BR>clearly identify the relevance and importance to =
HCI.<BR><BR>Full=20
papers report original work, which has not been previously =
published.<BR>The=20
contribution should be made clear in the paper and in its =
abstract.<BR>Papers=20
making one clear, significant contribution are more likely to =
be<BR>accepted=20
than papers making several lesser contributions. The paper =
must<BR>identify and=20
cite published work relevant to the paper topic. It should<BR>explain =
how the=20
presented work&nbsp; has built on previous contributions, and<BR>should =
indicate=20
where and&nbsp; why novel approaches have been adopted.<BR><BR>NordiCHI =
2002 is=20
an international conference and contributions are welcomed<BR>from all =
parts of=20
the world. However, the official written and spoken<BR>language of the=20
conference is English.<BR><BR>All submissions will be reviewed by an=20
international panel of HCI experts.<BR><BR>Submissions must be complete. =
Papers=20
may be up to 10 pages formatted<BR>according to the ACM template (as =
available=20
at </FONT><A href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New =
Roman"=20
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT face=3D"Times New =
Roman"=20
size=3D3>).<BR>Submission should be made electronically in PDF format =
through the=20
web-site.<BR><BR>Electronic submission deadline for papers: March 1,=20
2002.<BR><BR><BR><BR>Panels/sessions<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>The NordiCHI 2002=20
conference welcomes suggestions for panels and other<BR>plenary sessions =

contributing to the further development of HCI as a<BR>specifically =
Nordic field=20
of research and practice.<BR><BR>email suggestions to </FONT><A=20
href=3D"mailto:nordichi2002@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman" =

size=3D3>nordichi2002@nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><FONT face=3D"Times =
New Roman"=20
size=3D3>Deadline for panel/session proposals: March 1,=20
2002.<BR><BR><BR><BR>Workshops<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Workshop=
s offer an informal=20
environment for focused group discussion around<BR>work in progress or =
new areas=20
of research and practice. NordiCHI 2002<BR>invites workshop proposals in =
old and=20
new topics related to HCI.<BR><BR>If you are interested in organising a =
full or=20
half-day workshop, please<BR>email a short proposal (up to 1000 words) =
to=20
</FONT><A href=3D"mailto:workshops@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New =
Roman"=20
size=3D3>workshops@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman" =

size=3D3>.<BR><BR>The proposal should detail:<BR><BR>- Title and =
duration<BR>-=20
Expected number, balance and selection of participants<BR>- Workshop =
theme and=20
goals<BR>- Outcomes of the workshop<BR>- Relevance to the field<BR>- =
Intended=20
audience<BR>- Description of activities planned<BR>- Needed =
facilities<BR>-=20
Organisers' names and backgrounds<BR><BR>For further information, please =
contact=20
the workshops chair<BR></FONT><A =
href=3D"mailto:workshops@nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>workshops@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT =

face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>.<BR><BR>Deadline for workshop =
proposals: March 1,=20
2002.<BR><BR><BR><BR>Tutorials<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Tutorial=
s offer a small number of=20
participants the opportunity to learn<BR>about specific concepts, =
methods and=20
techniques from recognised experts.<BR>Tutorials may be for half-day or =
full day=20
sessions. NordiCHI 2002 invites<BR>tutorials experimenting with new =
forms of=20
instruction, innovative<BR>perspectives and the use of new disciplines =
in a HCI=20
context.<BR><BR>Proposals for full or half-day tutorials should =
detail<BR><BR>-=20
Title and duration<BR>- Intended audience<BR>- Theme and goals<BR>- =
Description=20
of activities planned<BR>- Prior experiences and evaluations of the=20
tutorial.<BR>- Needed facilities<BR>- Organisers' names and=20
backgrounds<BR><BR>In general, NordiCHI 2002 will cover reasonable =
travel and=20
housing expenses<BR>and registration fee one instructor per tutorial; =
provided=20
that enough<BR>participants sign up.<BR><BR>Tutorial proposals should be =
emailed=20
to </FONT><A href=3D"mailto:tutorials@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times =
New Roman"=20
size=3D3>tutorials@nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><FONT face=3D"Times =
New Roman"=20
size=3D3>Deadline for tutorial proposals: March 1, =
2002.<BR><BR><BR><BR>Short=20
papers<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Short papers may =
address any of the areas identified=20
in the conference<BR>topics. Submissions should report original work =
which has=20
not been<BR>published previously. Authors are encouraged to demonstrate =
work=20
in<BR>progress and late-breaking research results that show the latest=20
innovative<BR>ideas.<BR><BR>Full literature searches are not expected, =
although=20
relevant citations<BR>should be included. Summaries of wider findings or =
reduced=20
versions of<BR>longer papers are not suitable for the short paper =
submission=20
category.<BR><BR>A short paper is an ideal format for conveying =
industrial and=20
practical<BR>experience to the community. Accordingly, we invite =
experiences=20
from<BR>specific design cases, reports on how specific methods are =
applied=20
and<BR>modified in practice, etc. We also invite presentation of ongoing =
work=20
and<BR>preliminary results, by experienced academics as well as young=20
researchers.<BR><BR>Short papers are presented by means of interactive =
posters=20
during the<BR>conference. NordiCHI 2002's emphasis on direct interaction =
and=20
networking<BR>makes this the general presentations format for design =
processes,=20
products<BR>and other experiences, organisational overviews, and late =
breaking=20
results.<BR>Within this basic form, we encourage experimentation e.g. =
posters=20
evolving<BR>as the audience interact with them.<BR><BR>All submissions =
will be=20
reviewed by an international panel of HCI experts.<BR><BR>Submissions =
must be=20
complete. Short papers may be up to 4 pages formatted<BR>according to =
the ACM=20
template (as available at </FONT><A =
href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" =
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>).<BR>Submission should be made =
electronically in=20
PDF format through the web-site.<BR><BR>Electronic submission deadline =
for short=20
papers: March 1, 2002 (late<BR>breaking results: August 1,=20
2002).<BR><BR><BR>Demos<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Demonstrations gives =
participants the=20
possibility of showing and viewing<BR>new, interesting, and novel ideas =
in=20
human-computer interaction concepts<BR>and technology.<BR><BR>Submitters =
of=20
papers presenting interactive artefacts are particularly<BR>encouraged =
to also=20
submit a demonstration proposal. We also encourage the<BR>presentation =
of novel=20
commercial products.<BR><BR>A demonstration proposal is composed of =
three=20
parts<BR><BR>- A short description of the system, max 2 pages, =
conforming to=20
the<BR>NordiCHI 2002 short paper format. To be printed in the =
proceedings=20
if<BR>accepted.<BR><BR>- A one page exhibition plan, describing how the =
working=20
system is going to<BR>be demonstrated at the conference, including =
spatial and=20
other<BR>requirements.<BR><BR>- (Optionally) a video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS is =
not=20
accepted), CD-ROM or DVD,<BR>presenting the working system.<BR><BR>The =
short=20
paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via the<BR>conference =
web=20
site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be<BR>submitted by =
ordinary=20
mail in two copies.<BR><BR>Submissions will be reviewed by the programme =

committee.<BR><BR>Please observe that the presenters must supply all =
equipment=20
necessary for<BR>the exhibition. Limited Internet access will be=20
available.<BR><BR>The working system will be presented during the demo =
session=20
at the<BR>conference and the short description of the interactive =
artefact will=20
be<BR>published in the conference proceedings.<BR><BR>Submission =
deadline for=20
demonstrations: March 1, 2002 (late breaking<BR>results: August 1,=20
2002).<BR><BR><BR>Aesthetic =
artefacts<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR=
>NordiCHI 2002=20
introduces "aesthetic artefacts" as a new submission category<BR>for =
experiments=20
into how artistic expression and praxis affect perspectives<BR>on =
interfaces,=20
contexts and design.<BR><BR>The computer interface has developed from =
merely=20
supporting work into a<BR>broader cultural interface competing with and =
even=20
replacing the book, the<BR>gallery wall, the cinema screen, etc. =
Traditional=20
functionalism fails in<BR>relation to many new applications. At the same =
time,=20
traditional<BR>application areas may benefit from the inspiration from =
how=20
digital forms<BR>are articulated in artistic expression. Accordingly, =
digital=20
arts challenge<BR>the way we understand the computer, and the relation =
between=20
form and<BR>contents at the interface.<BR><BR>Examples of possible =
artefacts are=20
(not limited to) interactive artworks,<BR>computer games, interactive=20
installations, netart, software art, artistic<BR>interfaces, aesthetic=20
experiments with HCI-related issues. An important<BR>part of an =
aesthetic=20
artefact submission is a short paper that thoroughly<BR>reflects on CHI =
related=20
issues affected by the artefact. Accepted aesthetic<BR>artefacts will be =

exhibited at the conference in conjunction with the =
demo<BR>session.<BR><BR>An=20
aesthetic artefact submission is composed of three parts<BR><BR>- A =
short paper,=20
conforming to the NordiCHI 2002 short paper guidelines,<BR>describing =
the=20
artefact and reflecting on its contribution to the =
HCI<BR>discourse.<BR><BR>- An=20
exhibition plan, describing how the artefact is going to =
exhibited,<BR>including=20
spatial requirements (one page).<BR><BR>- (Optional) a representation of =
the=20
artefact on video (VHS/PAL, S-VHS is<BR>not accepted), CD-ROM or =
DVD.<BR><BR>The=20
short paper and the exhibition plan should be submitted via =
the<BR>conference=20
web site, whereas the (optional) video/CD/DVD should be<BR>submitted by =
ordinary=20
mail in three copies.<BR><BR>Submissions will be reviewed by the =
programme=20
committee supplemented by an<BR>aesthetic artefacts special committee of =
artists=20
and aesthetics scholars.<BR>Aesthetic criteria as well as an assessment =
of=20
contribution to the ongoing<BR>understanding of human-computer =
interaction are=20
taken into account.<BR><BR>Please observe that the presenters must =
supply all=20
equipment necessary for<BR>the exhibition. Limited Internet accesses =
will be=20
available.<BR><BR>Please direct questions regarding aesthetic artefacts =
to=20
</FONT><A href=3D"mailto:art@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New =
Roman"=20
size=3D3>art@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>.<BR><BR>Electronic submission deadline for aesthetic =
artefacts: March 1,=20
2002 (late<BR>breaking results: August 1, 2002).<BR><BR><BR>Late =
breaking=20
results<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
<BR>Short papers, demonstrations and aesthetic=20
artefacts, reporting late<BR>breaking results may be submitted by august =
1,=20
2002. Please note that late<BR>submissions should be camera ready, and =
that=20
notification of acceptance may<BR>not be given before the deadline for =
early=20
registration.<BR><BR><BR>Proceedings<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
<BR>Printed proceedings (ACM=20
press) will be available at the conference to<BR>ensure optimal =
interaction=20
around the presented works.<BR><BR>The proceedings will be included in =
the ACM=20
digital library to ensure<BR>optimal distribution of the accepted=20
papers.<BR><BR><BR>Electronic submission and=20
Format<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>All submissions of papers, short=20
papers, demos and aesthetic artefacts<BR>should be made electronically =
through=20
the web-site. The submissions should<BR>be formatted according to the =
ACM SIG=20
template (as available at<BR></FONT><A =
href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" =
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>).<BR><BR><BR>Doctoral Colloquium =
(October 20,=20
2002)<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Gra=
duate students within different areas of=20
human-computer interaction are<BR>invited to take part in the Doctoral=20
Colloquium at NordiCHI 2002. This will<BR>be the place where lively and =
useful=20
discussions enable students to receive<BR>suggestions about their =
on-going=20
research and allow more experienced<BR>participants to encounter some =
fresh=20
ideas and view some of the new trends<BR>in the field.<BR><BR>The =
Doctoral=20
Colloquium provides an opportunity for doctoral students to<BR>discuss =
their=20
research both with other students and with leading experts<BR>within the =
field.=20
The colloquium will take the form of a workshop where<BR>established HCI =

scholars take active part as discussants. The purpose is<BR>for students =
to=20
receive constructive feedback on their thesis work so far,<BR>get advice =
about=20
future developments, and share ideas and experiences with<BR>students in =
related=20
areas.<BR><BR>Participants should have advanced beyond the introductory =
stage in=20
their<BR>thesis work, and be actively engaged in the exploration of an =
HCI=20
topic.<BR>The research areas covered by the DC are the same as the=20
NordiCHI<BR>conference generally. Students may come from different =
academic=20
subjects or<BR>disciplines, such as interaction design, computer =
science,=20
cognitive<BR>science, and sociology.<BR><BR>To apply, please submit a =
proposal=20
of at most 3 pages, including abstract<BR>and references. Also, a short=20
biographical note describing the applicant's<BR>background should be =
enclosed.=20
The proposal should include a description of<BR>the research problem, =
the=20
theoretical background and approach chosen, and<BR>the work performed so =
far.=20
The proposals will be evaluated by a review<BR>committee.&nbsp; =
Approximately 8=20
participants will be selected to give a short<BR>presentation of their =
research=20
topic, followed by a discussion within the<BR>group of students and=20
experts.<BR><BR>Submissions should be sent by email to Kerstin =
Severinson=20
Eklundh<BR>(</FONT><A href=3D"mailto:doctoral@nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>doctoral@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>), preferably in PDF =
format.<BR><BR>Deadline for=20
applications: May 1, 2002.<BR><BR>Updates on the expert panel on =
</FONT><A=20
href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><BR><BR><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>Student =
Volunteers<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>B=
eing=20
a student volunteer is a great way for young researchers to =
establish<BR>a=20
network. Further information on how to sign up to be a student =
volunteer<BR>will=20
be available at </FONT><A href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" =
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3> by March 2002.<BR><BR><BR>Programme=20
committee<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR=
>Anders M=F8rch, University of Oslo,=20
Norway.<BR>Ann Lantz, Royal Institote of Tachnology, Sweden.<BR>Annelise =

Mark-Peitersen, Ris=F8 National Laboratory, Denmark.<BR>Barbara Wasson, =
University=20
of Bergen, Norway.<BR>Bo Helgesen, Blekinge Institute of =
Technology.<BR>Dag=20
Svanes, Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, Italy.<BR>Ebba Thora =
Hvannberg,=20
University of Iceland, Iceland.<BR>Eija Suikola, Teamware Group,=20
Finland.<BR>Frieder Nake, University of Bremen, Germany.<BR>Gillian=20
Crampton-Schmith, Interaction Design Institute Ivrea, Italy.<BR>Horst=20
Oberquelle, University of Hamburg, Germany.<BR>Jan Gulliksen, Uppsala=20
University, Sweden.<BR>Jannie Nielsen, Copenhagen Business School,=20
Denmark.<BR>Jonathan Grudin, Microsoft Research, USA.<BR>J=F6rn =
Mesetter, Malm=F6=20
University College, Sweden.<BR>Kaj Gr=F8nb=E6k, University of Aarhus,=20
Denmark.<BR>Kari Hamnes, Telenor R&amp;D, Norway.<BR>Kari Kuutti, =
University of=20
Oulu, Finland.<BR>Kari-Jouko R=E4ih=E4, University of Tampere, =
Finland.<BR>Konrad=20
Morgan, University of Bergen, Norway.<BR>Kristina H=F6=F6k, Swedish =
Institute of=20
Computer Science, Sweden.<BR>Lars-Erik Holmquist, Victoria Institute,=20
Sweden.<BR>Lars-Erik Janlert, Ume=E5 University, Sweden.<BR>Liam Bannon, =

University of Limerick, Ireland.<BR>Marta Krist=EDn L=E1rusd=F3tt=EDr, =
Reykjavik=20
University, Iceland.<BR>Michael Herczeg, Medizinische Universit=E4t zu =
L=FCbeck,=20
Germany.<BR>Morten Borup Harning, Dialogical, Denmark.<BR>Peter B=F8gh =
Andersen,=20
Aalborg University, Denmark.<BR>Peter Carstensen, IT-University of =
Copenhagen,=20
Denmark.<BR>Roope Raisamo, University of Tampere, Finland.<BR>Susanne =
B=F8dker,=20
University of Aarhus, Denmark.<BR>Svein Arne Arnesen, EDB4tel AS,=20
Norway.<BR>Timo Jokela, University of Oulu, Finland.<BR>Wendy Mackay,=20
I.N.R.I.A., France.<BR><BR><BR>Conference committee (as of January=20
2002)<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>=
* General chair: Olav W. Bertelsen, University=20
of Aarhus, Denmark.<BR>* Program co-chairs: Susanne B=F8dker, University =
of=20
Aarhus, Denmark &amp; Kari<BR>Kuutti, University of Oulu, Finland.<BR>*=20
Tutorials chair: Anders M=F8rch, Intermedia, University of Oslo, =
Norway.<BR>*=20
Workshop chair: Jakob Buur, University of Southern Denmark.<BR>* Demo =
chair:=20
Klaus Marius Hansen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.<BR>* Poster chair: =
Michael=20
Thomsen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.<BR>* Aesthetic artefacts =
co-chairs:=20
Morten Breinbjerg &amp; S=F8ren Pold, University<BR>of Aarhus, =
Denmark.<BR>*=20
Treasurer: Michael Thomsen, University of Aarhus, Denmark.<BR>* =
Electronic=20
submissions chair: Niels Olof Bouvin, University of =
Aarhus,<BR>Denmark.<BR>*=20
Student volunteers chair: Christina Nielsen, University of Aarhus, =
Denmark.<BR>*=20
Doctoral consortium chair: Kerstin Severinson Eklundh, NADA, KTH, =
Sweden.<BR>*=20
Emeritus NordiCHI 2000 co-chairs: Jan Gulliksen &amp; Ann Lantz,=20
STIMDI.<BR><BR><BR>Call for =
sponsors<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>The =
success of=20
NordiCHI 2002 is highly dependent on the support of local<BR>and =
international=20
sponsors. A sponsorship is an excellent opportunity to<BR>expose your =
company or=20
organisation as a leading name in HCI and IT. In<BR>addition to general=20
sponsorships NordiCHI 2002 has a limited number of<BR>slots for =
hospitality=20
receptions and sponsored events.<BR><BR>Companies and organisations =
interested=20
in sponsoring NordiCHI 2002 are<BR>invited to contact the conference =
chair=20
(</FONT><A href=3D"mailto:olavb@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New =
Roman"=20
size=3D3>olavb@nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>).<BR><BR><BR>Sponsors<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>SIGCHI/ACM=
, IFIP TC13 and the=20
Nordic HCI organisations (all pending).<BR><BR>By January 2002, Centre =
for=20
Human-Machine Interaction, Denmark; STIMDI,<BR>Sweden; and Sigchi.dk =
have stated=20
their financial support of NordiCHI 2002.<BR><BR>Conjoined=20
Events<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>Symposium =
on theory and method in HCI research=20
marking the conclusion of<BR>Centre for Human Machine Interaction is =
held back=20
to back with NordiCHI,<BR>October 24-25, 2002<BR><BR>Industry day. A one =
day=20
event, October 24, 2002, focusing on strategic use<BR>of HCI in private=20
enterprise is organised by the Alexandra institute.<BR>Further =
information will=20
be available at </FONT><A href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" =
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>.<BR><BR><BR>Mailing =
List<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<BR>To=20
receive updates about the NordiCHI conference subscribe to =
the<BR>conference=20
mailing list, by sending a message containing only the =
word<BR>"subscribe" (no=20
quotes) to </FONT><A=20
href=3D"mailto:Nordichi-announcements-request@nordichi.org";><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>Nordichi-announcements-request@nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><B=
R><FONT=20
face=3D"Times New Roman" size=3D3>Contact=20
Information<BR>=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D<=
BR>NordiCHI 2002<BR>IT-parken,<BR>Aabogade=20
34<BR>DK-8200 Aarhus N,<BR>Denmark.<BR><BR></FONT><A=20
href=3D"mailto:nordichi@nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>nordichi@nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><A=20
href=3D"http://www.nordichi.org";><FONT face=3D"Times New Roman"=20
size=3D3>http://www.nordichi.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><BR><BR></FONT></FONT>=
</DIV></DIV></BODY></HTML>

- ------=_NextPart_000_023A_01C1AA4C.57454B40--


------------------------------

Date: Mon, 21 Jan 2002 15:20:40 -0500
From: MK <kasprzak@videokill.com>
Subject: Art Interface Device - announcement



Calling all artists, educators, engineers and copyleft interventionists:

The Art Interface Device (AID) is a microprocessor platform for building
electronic installation art. It is a device that allows artists to
process a variety of inputs and outputs for use in interactive
installation and performance artworks.

All are invited to attend the an information session about the Art
Interface Device on Thursday, January 24 2002 at 7 PM, EST.  The meeting
will be held at InterAccess, which is located at 401 Richmond St. W,
Suite 444, Toronto, Canada.  We are very interested in having remote
participants involved in this project. You can join our meeting via
the iVisit conferencing software.  Get the set-up and timezone details at:
http://www.interaccess.org/aid/ivisit.html

The associated AID web site will serve as a library of "worked" solutions
to common electronic sensing, control and interfacing requirements. From
this site the AID user community can download and contribute instructions,
parts lists, circuit diagrams and other information relevant to the
creation of electronic art.

The AID system will be distributed under the General Public License and
developed by the AID user community - that means you!

This information session will present the AID concept, recruit people
interested in creating, developing, and using this tool, and initiate the
projects production cycle.

More detailed information is available at http://www.interaccess.org/aid/

AID is a project of InterAccess - electronic media arts centre, and is
funded by the Canada Council.

- -- 


------------------------------

Date: Fri, 25 Jan 2002 12:15:09 -0500
From: "ricardo dominguez" <rdom@thing.net>
Subject: NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC - January 31-February 4, 2002

CALL FOR ACTION WORLDWIDE

English/Spanish/Italian

Plus a Zapatista Tale - "Another Apple, Another Politics."
(After the Calls to Action)

NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC,
January 31-February 4, 2002

The WORLD ECONOMIC FOOLS, a who's-who of transnational
corporate reps and CEOs, will be meeting from January 31 to
February 4, 2002 in New York City to plan the continued
erosion of human rights, environmental standards, sustainable
development, and social justice, all in the name of ever-greater
corporate profit margins.

WE PITY THESE FOOLS who blindly believe that corporate
globalization and the worldwide imposition of neoliberal
economic policies can withstand the mounting tide of
grassroots resistance.

WE CALL ON YOU TO:

JOIN Electronic Disturbance Theater and the Federation of
Random Actionin a Netstrike against corporate globalization,
DISTURB the electronic infrastructure of the WEF's corporate
membership, in a collective demand that the FOOLS LISTEN UP
when the people of Earth are speaking, MOVE YOUR DATA-BUTT
and place your data-body alongside the REAL BUTTS of thousands
who will be taking to the streets in NYC, and help advance an
alternative vision where people are more important than profit.

TO PARTICIPATE DOWNLOAD Your Virtual Sit-In Tool,

visit any of the following URLs ON JANUARY 30th, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Your DATA-BUTT can PARTICIPATE in two ways:

One: Download The Intergalactic Screen Saver.
(For PC Only).

Let your Screen Saver do the Netstrike while YOU HIT THE STREETS!

Two: Traditional Virtual Sit-In Tool.
(For both PC and Mac).

ACTION BEGINS: Thursday, January 31, 2002

Join your DATA-BUTT
with protester's REAL-BUTTS in a Hybrid Virtual/Body
ANTICORPORATE BOOGIE-OOGIE-OOOGIE!

ACTION ENDS: Monday, February 4, 2002

LET'S LET THESE FOOLS KNOW WHAT TIME IT IS!

PEACE

Electronic Disturbance Theater
Federation of Random Action
Rtmark

For more information about the e-action contact:
Ricardo Dominguez:
rdom@thing.net

<<<<<<>>>>>>

More Infomation about the WEF "Meet 'em and Greet 'em" Actions.
www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

http://www.anotherworldispossible.com/

www.internationalanswer.org

http://www.indymedia.org

http://www.rtsnyc.org/

<<<<<<>>>>>

Reclaim The Streets NYC!
a cordial invitation:

Saturday, February 2nd, at 12 P.M.

The Waldorf Astoria on Park Avenue will be hosting the
WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM

and you're invited!

11:30 A.M. at Columbus Circle (59th and Broadway)

Dress UP! Make MUSIC!! TANGO till you drop!!!

no R.S.V.P. required

http://www.rtsnyc.org/

<<<<>>>>

CONVOCTORIA PARA ACCIONES EN
TODAS PARTES DEL MUNDO

Una acción en linea contra la reunion de
los imbéciles de la Economia Mundial
en Nueva York. 31 de enero - 4 de febrero, 2002

Los IMBECILES DE LA ECONOMIA MUNDIAL, un inventario
de representantes de las corporaciones multinacionales, estarán
reuniendose en Nueva York del 31 de enero hasta el 4 de febrero, 2002,
para planear la continuación de la erosión de los derechos humanos
y el medioambiente, el desarrollo económico sostenible, y la
justicia social -- todo para generar majores ganancias.

ESTOS IMBECILES NOS DAN PENA porque creen ciegamente
que la globalización y la imposición de la política neoliberal en
todas partes del mundo puede resistir la creciente ola de resistencia.

LE LLAMAMOS A USTEDES PARA QUE: Se UNAN
al Teatro de Perturbanción Electrónica y la Federación
de Acción Aleatoria para una acción en linea en
contra de la globalización, PERTURBEN la infraestructura
electrónica del los miembres de la Federación Económica Mundial,
en una petición que exigirá que NOS ESCUCHEN cuando
la gente de esta tierra hablan,

MUEVAN SUS CULOS-VIRTUALES y metan sus cuerpos
digitales juntos a los cuerpos reales de miles de gentes que
tomarán las calles de Nueva York, y ayuden a plantear una
visión alternativa de un mundo en donde la gente valga más que la ganancia.

PARA PARTICIPAR Y BAJAR el program para su manifestación virtual,
visiten cualquier de los URLs siguientes el 30 de enero, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Tu CULO-VIRTUAL puede participar de dos maneras:

1.Bajar el "Screen Saver" intergaláctica (solamente para PC)

Así podrás dejar que tu "Screen Saver" haga la manifestación virtual
mientras

¡TU TE VAYAS A LAS CALLES!

2.Programa tradicional para manifestaciones virtuales (para MacIntosh y PC)

Ajunta tu CULO-VIRTUAL con los CULOS REALES de los manifestatantes
callejeros, en una PACHANGA híbrida virtual/corporal Anti-Imbéciles
de la Economia Mundial.

¡PA-CHAN-GA! LA ACCION TERMINA: lunes, 4 de diciembre, 2002
¡HAREMOS QUE ESTOS IMBECILES SEPAN QUE HORAS SON!

PAZ

Electronic Disturbance
Theater Federation of Random Action
rtmark

<<<<<>>>>>>

Actuando junto con el Foro Social Mundial en Porto Alegre,
conferencias y manifestaciones masivas se estan organizando en Nueva York.
http://www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

<<<<<>>>>>>

Para más información sobre las acciónes en donde se enfrentarán a los
imbeciles
de la Economia Mundial:
http://www.rtsnyc.org/
http://www.anotherworldispossible.com/
http://www.internationalanswer.org
http://www.indymedia.org

<<<<<>>>>>

NETSTRIKE contro la Follia Economica Mondiale (WEF)
(english version at bottom of this message)
APPELLO PER UNA AZIONE GLOBALE

Netstrike contro l'incontro del 31 gennaio-4 febbraio 2002 a New York
della Follia Economica Mondiale (WEF)

Il WEF (World Economic Fools, Follia Economica Globale), un puot-pourri
di direttori e amministratori delegati delle corporazioni
multinazionali, si riunira' a New York dal 31 gennaio 2002 al 4 febbraio
2002, al fine di pianificare la continua erosione dei diritti umani,
dell'ambiente, dello sviluppo sostenibile e della giustizia sociale, il
tutto in nome di un sempre maggiore margine di profitto per le
corporazioni. ABBIAMO PIETA' DI QUESTA FOLLIA che crede ciecamente che
la globalizzazione corporativa e l'imposizione su scala mondiale di
politiche economiche neoliberiste possa sopravvivere la crescente marea
dell'opposizione dal basso a questo processo. FACCIAMO APPELLO A TUTT*
PER:

UNIRSI all' Electronic Disturbance Theater e alla Federation of Random
Action per un Netstrike contro la globalizzazione corporativa,

DISTURBARE l'infrastruttura elettronica dei membri corporativi del WEF
con una richiesta collettiva di ASCOLTO DA PARTE DI QUESTI FOLLI della
voce dei popoli della Terra,

ALZARE IL VOSTRO CULO TELEMATICO e porre il vostro corpo telematico al
fianco delle migliaia di corpi reali che scenderanno nelle strade di New
York, per aiutare a sostenere una visione del mondo alternativa in cui
le persone sono piu' importanti del profitto.

PER PARTECIPARE visitate uno dei seguenti indirizzi web per maggiori
informazioni:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

Il vostro CULO TELEMATICO puo' darsi una mossa in due modi:

* Uno: Scaricate lo Screen Saver Intergalattico -
Lasciate fare il netstrike al vostro screen saver mentre voi SIETE
IN PIAZZA!

* Due: Il tradizionale Virtual Sit-in Tool -

L'AZIONE COMINCIA: giovedi' 31 gennaio 2002

Unite le vostre CHIAPPE DIGITALI con le CHIAPPE REALI dei
manifestanti in un IBRIDO CARNALE/VIRTUALE BOOGIE ANTICORPORATIVO!

L'AZIONE TERMINA: Lunedi' 4 febbraio 2002

FACCIAMO SENTIRE A QUESTI PAZZI LA NOSTRA VOCE!

PACE
Electronic Disturbance Theater
Federation of Random Action
rtmark

<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>

Per maggiori informazioni su questa azione elettronica contattare
Ricardo Dominguez : rdom@thing.net

Per maggiori informazioni sulle azioni "di benvenuto al WEF":
www.rtsnyc.org

Per maggiori informazioni sui corsi autogestiti a NYC:
www.anotherworldispossible.com

Per maggiori informazioni sul Secondo Forum Sociale Mondiale, dal 31
gennaio 2002 al 5 febbaio 2002 a Puerto Alegre in Brasile:
www.forumsocialmundial.org.br

Per una copertura non corporativa minuto per minuto dell'incontro del
WEF e delle azioni di protesta: www.indymedia.org

<<<<<<>>>>>>

Another Apple, Another Politics

"Adam ate the apple
of the virgin Eve.
Newton was a second Adam
of Science.
The first knew
beauty.
The second a Pegasus
weighed down with chains.

And they were not to blame.

The two apples were
rosy
and new,
but bitter according to legend.

Both the embarrassed breasts
of the child innocence!"

Frederico Garcia Lorca

Scientists, political scientists, opinion leaders, chiefs
of great and small political sects, all have gathered
around Newton's fallen apple.  All of them analyze,
discuss, corroborate.  Hours, days, weeks, months, entire
years they take up.  Finally they come to the
irrefutable conclusion:  the apple has fallen because
the law of gravity so orders it.  It is irremediable,
the apple must fall, and, by doing so, it has done
nothing other than to subject itself to the law of
gravity.  The political scientists congratulate each
other and then begin great essays in order to show
Newton's apple as an example of 'real-politik.'  The
chiefs of state talk of erecting a multiple monument
in all the palaces of Power.

But, among the persons gathered around the future
monument to modern politics, there is a strange person.
He seems to be a shadow, without face and without
name.  If they ask him who he is, the shadow would
respond "zapatista," but no one asks him anything.
Everyone is very busy with their calculations, plans
and programs.

But, while the scientists are making complicated
calculations concerning velocity, trajectory, much
weight, acceleration, wind resistance, impact
and similar etceteras, and while the political
scientists are re-writing Machiavelli and
discussing prices with the modern princes,
the zapatista approaches the apple, he looks
at it, he smells it, he touches it, he
listens to it...

The zapatista understands what the apple
is whispering in his ear.  He understands
the challenge demanded by its cry.  The
apple says that fate does not order it to
fall to the ground, and, since it is a transgressor of
the law who is listening to it, it is about
breaking the law of gravity.

The apple is an apple, but it is, above all,
a lady.  The zapatista is without face or name,
but he is, above all, a gentleman.  And the
paper and pencil come out again, and the
apple explains and the zapatista feels and
agrees.

This apple that Newton has chained to the
ground has another destiny.  The moon is an
apple.  The scales of history need two apples
in order to be able to look out at the morning
clearly.

While managing to to work out the reverse
flight of Newton's apple, the zapatista looks
at the apple again, smells it, touches it, and,
what else, gives it a tender bite.

The political scientists continue repeating and
repeating to each other the 'real-politik,' and
the etceteras that already fill the magazines and
newspapers and the radio and television air time.

The zapatista continues making calculations.

To fall upwards, that is the mystery whose solution
has been proposed...

>From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast

Subcomandante insurgente Marcos

Mexico,  May of 1999.AASA

http://www.ezln.org

ZAPATA VIVE!!
EDT

<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>

NETSTRIKE against the World Economic Fools meeting in NYC,
January 31-February 4, 2002

TO PARTICIPATE DOWNLOAD Your Virtual Sit-In Tool,

visit any of the following URLs ON JANUARY 30th, 2002:

http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html

http://www.rtmark.com

http://www.geocities.com/net_strike_net

<<<<<<<>>>>>>



------------------------------

Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2002 00:12:46 -0500
From: <uucsi@aol.com>
Subject: FW: In The Aftermath of 9-11 - A public forum at the Unitarian Church of Staten Isl



In The Aftermath of 9/11 - A public forum at the Unitarian Church of Staten
IslandFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  (maximize e-mail window for best viewing)

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ----
      IN THE AFTERMATH OF 9/11
      A Public Forum Series

      Directions to Church
      via Staten Island Ferry
      via Verrazzano Bridge  Unitarian Church of Staten Island
      312 Fillmore Street, Staten Island NY  Statement on 9/11
     Thursday January 31 2002, 7:00 PM

      RELIGION, PROTEST, AND HUNGER:
      FREE TRADE SOLUTIONS AFTER SEPTEMBER 11TH
      A Special Evening with the World Trade Organization

      Herri Baatasuna, LL.D. Agriculture, International Relations, & Public
Relations Counselor
      Percival Fress, M.D. Agriculture, Pharmaceutics, & Public Relations
Counselor

           Both WTO speakers will be in New York City to attend the World
Economic Forum, Jan 31- Feb 4. Previously, the WEF has been hosted in Davos,
Switzerland. This is the first time it has been held in New York City, and a
significant number of anti-globalization protests are expected. Drs.
Baatasuna and Fress intend both to explain the program of the WTO and to
address the concerns of opposing viewpoints. A lively though civilized
debate is expected at this first Public Forum of the series.
          Herri Baatasuna has served as a legal counsel to the World Trade
Organization for the past five years, where he has been directing a new
program which aims to understand and address faith-based opposition to free
trade. He holds an LL.D. from Stanford Law School, and he previously worked
for the AS Agency for International Development in Nepal and in Washington,
DC.
          Percival Fress is a specialist in the relationship of
international trade to human health. He has been with the press office of
the World Trade Organization for the past three years, fulfilling a mandate
from the WTO to address the relationships of social needs to global trade.
Dr. Fress has an M.D. from Columbia University, and has held previous posts
with Novartis, Cargill-Dow, and Monsanto.
          Following the program, coffee and sandwiches will be served in the
Parish Hall.
      Planning to attend this event? Please RSVP so we can estimate
attendance.

      Additional Forums in this Series

     U.S.FOREIGN POLICY BEFORE AND AFTER SEPTEMBER 11TH
      Sunday February 10, 2002 1:00 PM
      Phyllis Bennis
      Author, editor, journalist, and Fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies, Washington, DC..
           Ms. Bennis has covered Middle East and United Nations issues for
25 years. She led the first US congressional staff delegation to Iraq to
investigate the impact of US-led sanctions on the civilian population. She
has written and and edited numerous books on Palestine, Iraq and the New
World Order, The topic of her presentation comes from the title of her new
book, due to be published in March or April.

     AFGHANISTAN TODAY AND TOMORROW: AN EYE-WITNESS REPORT
      TBA, probably Sunday February 17, 1:00 PM
      Sarah Zaidi, Research Director, or Roger Normand, Director,
      Center for Economic and Social Justice.
          Established in 1993, the Center for Economic and Social Rights is
one of the first organizations to challenge economic injustice as a
violation of international human rights law. Through its projects abroad and
in the United States, CESR has developed an effective strategy that combines
research, advocacy, collaboration, and education. CESR believes that
economic and social rights -- legally binding on all nations -- can provide
a universally accepted framework for strengthening social justice activism.
          Roger Normand and Sarah Zaidi have been visiting Afghanistan
firsthand for some time before September 11th. Their first-hand reports are
certain to be very informative.
     THE WAR AND THE MEDIA
  `  Sunday February 24, 1:00 PM
      Stanley Aronowitz
      Director, Center for Cultural Studies, The Graduate Center, City
University of New York.
          A leading American social critic, Professor Aronowitz has for
decades focused on the relationships between science, technology, education,
labor, art, and culture. Among his books: False Promises (1973); Science as
Power (1988); The Politics of Identity (1992); Education Under Siege (1993);
Roll Over Beethoven (1993); Dead Artists, Live Theories (1994); The Death
and Rebirth of American Radicalism, (1996); (with William DiFazio) The
Jobless Future: Sci-Tech and the Dogma of Work (1995); (editor, with Michael
Menser and Barbara Martinsons) Technoscience and Cyberculture (1996); The
Knowledge Factory (2000.)
          In this presentation Dr. Aronowitz will focus on the relationship
between the media and the government and how this has shaped public
perception of the War on Terrorism.

     PATRIOTISM, PROPHECY, AND PEACE
      Sunday March 3, 2002 1:00 PM
      Rev. Daniel Berrigan
      Poet, author, activist, beater of swords into plowshares, jailbird for
peace and justice.
          In 1968 Rev. Berrigan traveled to Hanoi with professor Howard Zinn
of Boston University to assist in obtaining the release of three American
pilots. Later that year, with his brother Philip Berrigan, he destroyed
draft registration files in Catonsville, MD. For this act of civil
disobedience he was sentenced to three years in prison in 1970. He went
underground for several months until federal authorities arrested him on
Block Island. After serving 18 months in prison, he was paroled in 1972. But
he was not silenced. In 1980 he participated with his brother in the first
Plowshares Action (1980), a protest at the General Electric Plant at King of
Prussia, PA. Living among Jesuits, writing and conducting retreats, and
"speaking truth to power," he has been arrested regularly for his protest
actions at weapons manufacturers and other sites. Rev. Berrigan has written
over 50 books and appeared in at least four films.

        SAME OLD WORLD ORDER: STARVING MILLIONS
      TBA
      Oliver Ulich
      Director, United Nations Office of Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs.
          Mr. Ulich is one of the most knowledgeable sources in the world on
humanitarian relief efforts, not only in Afghanistan but across the globe.

      All Forum presentations will be approximately one hour in length, will
include a period of
      audience questions and participation, and will be followed by coffee
and sandwiches in the Parish Hall.


       If the links at the top of this message do not work, use these
interet browser addresses:
          Directions to the Church:
http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/directions.htm
          Church Statement on 9/11 and its Aftermath:
http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/UUposition.htm
          RSVP to Event: uucsi@aol.com with "RSVP WTO" as subject and #
attending in the body.



------------------------------

Date: Sun, 27 Jan 2002 23:27:12 +0100
From: arthur <artclay@netsurfer.ch>
Subject: info list

dear ____________

if you are in austria, please drop in to see the performance and see the
installation and also to see the projections. everyone welcomed. see
info below for more.

kind regards,

art clay

forgive cross postings, please.

- ------------------------
 ________
 |               |
 |               |
 |_____ __|

warm@home, art clay
installation+performance+vprojection
museum fuer angewandte kunst, (mak) vienna, austria
12 febuary 2002 8 until 12 oclock pm

warm@home embraces a new family type of life one might remember as
having or having lost or having found or having wish(ed). makes
(it) use of human existence, as incorporated by j. beuys,  as extreme
warmth. all concluding and in regarding to that the temperature of
humanity must be somewhere above zero degrees. an attempt (for you my
reader) at persuasion of this: close eyes: dream or/and remember: first
touch?/ first kiss?/ first belief? etc.etc.etc. open eyes: answer
please, your spiritual temperature is/was? the installation (title:
home) regards human warmth as in need of kindle/ firewood/ lovegas/
ignition (and eventual space travel). the performance (title: @) regards
human contact as in need of bodytouch/ eyetouch/ mindtouch and attempts
(we+you) this. the video (title: warm)  regards human growth as to be
fed by warmed thoughts/ warmed goods and even extreme cases in/of
lov(ly)ing. the following words have high human heat value insulated by
each other simultaneously and/or adjacently: soft, lovely, glowing.
these examples describing three letter aspect combinations of the human
alphabet. that we inherit at birthing. please include (in) the personal
pronouns such as: you, me, us, them, him, her. also remember movement
and contact is/are essential to human (our) development. the following
words have low human heat values:  bomb, bombed, bombing etc.etc.etc.
please come, visit, be touched by me/it/us.  we are your gues(t)s?

artclaybaselberlin  yearsandsomanydaysafterthebomb(ing)(ed)


- -------------
art clay
biography

self taught irregardless of the possession of diplomas for music and
languages. educators attempts were often disregarded as only financially
self serving. respect remaining for master flutist teacher john h. solum
+ one or ones. determined goals reached through indeterminate means, or
as necessary or forced. due to contact with the works or persons on the
following list, hopelessly bond to the twentieth  and twentieth first
centuries: leonardo da vinci, buckminster fuller, sun ra, john cage,
marcel duchamp, billy name.  works concerning the use of modern media
including various genre for sound and image such as video, photography,
music and performance.  performance x-perience (in all media of own and
not own compositions) here and there, worldly, international and @ home.
instrumental virtuosity obtained on: flute, computer and the german
language. has a home page: just one klick+klick away:
http://home.sunrise.ch/artclay


------------------------------

Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2002 08:16:12 +0100
From: henk@waag.org
Subject: The IMC Radio Network is Bringing you another Global Broadcast: January 31st - February 4th!

Indymedia's Radio Group - D.R.O.P. project will Produce a Live
Internet Broadcast: Thursday January 31st  - Monday February 4th. 
For Immediate release, Monday, January 28th, 2002
Contact: imc-audio@indymedia.org

http://radio.indymedia.org
1. The World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil
2. The World Economic Forum and protests in New York City
3. The Munich Conference on Security Policy protests in Munich
4. Additional Programming from India, the UK, San Francisco and Seattle,
among others. 

The World Economic Forum
Some very important people are missing from the headlines and the stories of
the world's most influential economic institutions like the
InternationalMonetary Fund, the World Trade Organization (WTO), and the Free
Trade Area
of the Americas.  The real players--corporate representatives--meet for the
World Economic Forum (WEF) this year in New York City with minimal remote
press access.  Teach-ins and protests planned in New York City get to the
heart of corporate globalization and US economic power.

http://www.weforum.org
http://www.anotherworldispossible.com

The World Social Forum
Also missing from the headlines are the alternatives devised by grassroots
organizations and the world's non-elites.  Set to happen at the same time as
the WEF is the World Social Forum in Porto Alegre, Brazil, a conference
exploring such alternatives to an increasingly standard corporate agenda. 

http://www.forumsocialmundial.org.br/eng/index.asp

The Munich Conference on Security Policy
This annual meeting brings together the government officials and the
military of NATO and the EU.  Much of the coalition behind the military
coalitions that brought us the wars in Afghanistan, Kosovo, and Iraq are
forged in conferences like this security conference.  The last few months
have seen military coalition involvement from Japan and Germany
unprecedented since WWII.  European activists are planning to bring their
message held by most of the world: not to expand the "War on Terrorism" to
more countries.

http://www.carneval-against-nato.de/
http://www.anti-nato.de.vu/

During our broadcast, Stations can:
1. Stream the live broadcast any time
2. Download audio highlights from the live stream for broadcast; or
3. Download produced MP3 programs giving background, updates, headlines,
stories and wrap-ups. 

The live internet stream will begin on January 31st and last through
February 4th from stations in Seattle, San Francisco, Vermont, New York,
Munich, Porto Alegre, and  India. 

To View a Schedule of the Broadcast please go to
http://www.Protest.Net/drop/

To broadcast or listen to the Stream link to one of the following url's:

http://freeteam.nl:8000/drop - 24kbps
http://live.waag.org:7800/drop -24kbps
http://xaos.pvl.at:8000/drop - 24kbps
http://radio.uk.solpsists.org:8000/drop - 24kbps
http://www.autistici.org:8000/drop - 24kbps
http://radio.us.solpsists.org:8000/drop - 24 kbps
http://notowar.com/blast.m3u - 16kbps

For archived mp3's of the broadcast go to
+http://radio.indymedia.org/drop/archive.html

Some portions of the stream may be in Portuguese, Spanish, French, or
German. 

If you have any questions about playing the broadcast, please email
imc-audio@indymedia.org
For more details, go to:
http://radio.indymedia.org
- ------------------------------------------
Since the WTO protests in Seattle, 1999, the Independent Media Center (IMC)
has been covering the voices of those critiquing these global
institutions and their impact on democratic structures, then streaming it
over the internet.  Likewise, the IMC will produce live breaking coverage of
the forums and protests in Brazil, New York, and Munich.  Hundreds of media
activists will be calling in reports, conducting phone interviews and
collecting audio on the front lines, in workshops, and at teach-ins. 

For more about the IMC, go to:
http://www.indymedia.org
http://www.indymedia.org/about.php3

See also Microradio.net for more information about live web streaming:
http://www.microradio.net     


------------------------------

Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 12:03:01 -0500
From: "John Bostrom" <jbostrom@si.rr.com>
Subject: FW: Religion Protest and Hunger - Free Trade Solutions After September 11th..htm

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

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Religion Protest and Hunger - Free Trade Solutions After September 11th.FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Yes, Men, this Thursday night "WTO" event is more likely
to turn hilarious than violent.
Press: Link to 1.28.2002 Staten Island Advance article:

http://www.silive.com/news/advance/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_standard.xs
l?/base/news/10122273072680827.xml"
                               maximize e-mail window for best viewing

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ----
      RELIGION, PROTEST, AND HUNGER:
      FREE TRADE SOLUTIONS AFTER SEPTEMBER 11

      Thursday January 31 2002, 7:00 PM
      at the Unitarian Church of Staten Island
      A Very Special Evening with the
      World Trade Organization*
      Herri Baatasuna, LL.D.
      Agriculture, International Relations, & Public Relations Counselor*
      Percival Fress, M.D.
      Agriculture, Pharmaceutics, & Public Relations Counselor*
          The spectre of violent confrontation haunts Manhattan. New York's
Finest have been gearing up with special training and crowd-control
equipment in anticipation of anti-globalization protests near the Waldorf
Astoria, the site of this year's World Economic Forum, beginning this
Thursday, January 31.
          Meanwhile, on the other side of New York Bay, a milder, more
civilized confrontration between the forces of globalization and their
opponents has been scheduled. No helmets, batons, mace, water cannons or
arrests - this battle will be fought with ideas amd humor.
           The Unitarian Church of Staten Island has arranged for two
special speakers connected with the World Trade Organization,* who will hold
forth on the merits of globalization as a solution to world hunger, making
the case, with economic logic and visual aids, that "faith-based opposition
to free trade" is - well, misguided.
          The speakers' main qualifications, and the foundation of their
connection with the WTO, is based on their membership in the internationally
renowned political prank and satire group, the Yes Men. As well as operating
the web site www.gatt.org, the Yes Men have delighted audiences across the
globe with their unique ability to explain visually the economic and
cultural essence of globalization, leading to recent coverage in Harpers and
Fortune and on CNBC Europe and National Public Radio.
          Following the slide presentation by the speakers, a session of
questions and discussion from the audience will be moderated by Professor
Richard Currie of the College of Staten Island, Chairman of the Church's
Social Concerns Committee, which is sponsoring the event. The debate is
expected to be lively though civilized, and probably hilarious.
          Admission is free. Coffee and sandwiches will be served in the
Parish Hall after the event (about 8:00 PM.)
          This event kicks off in the Church's Publc Forum Series titled In
the Aftermath of 9/11. Future events will be held on Sundays at 1;00 PM
beginning February 10 and continuing through March. Future speakers include
Rev. Daniel Berrigan, Phyllis Bennis, Stanley Aronowitz, Norman Siegel, and
others.

          Herri Baatasuna has served as a Yes Man and legal counsel to the
World Trade Organization* for the past five years, where he has been
directing a new program which aims to understand and address faith-based
opposition to free trade. He holds an LL.D. from Stanford Law School, and he
previously worked for the AS Agency for International Development in Nepal
and in Washington, DC.
          Percival Fress is a specialist in the relationship of
international trade to human health. As a Yes Man, he has been with the
press office of the World Trade Organization* for the past three years,
fulfilling a mandate from the WTO* to address the relationships of social
needs to global trade. Dr. Fress has an M.D. from Columbia University, and
has held previous posts with Novartis, Cargill-Dow, and Monsanto.

      * This representation of the "World Trade Organization" is a work of
political theatre and satire.
      For further information on The Yes Men, visit http://www.theyesmen.org

      Seating limited to 200. Admission free. Please RSVP.

          Directions to the Church:
http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/directions.htm
          Church Statement on 9/11 and its Aftermath:
http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/UUposition.htm
          RSVP to Event: (718) 447-2004 or uucsi@aol.com with "RSVP WTO" as
subject and # attending in the body.
          Article from Monday's Staten Island Advance: Unitarian Programs to
Examine Issues Related to Sept. 11
          Further information: jbostrom@si.rr.com
      IN THE AFTERMATH OF 9/11:
      A Public Forum Series
      Unitarian Church of Staten Island
      312 Fillmore Street, Staten Island NY


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<DIV><SPAN class=3D780205116-29012002><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#000000 =

size=3D2><STRONG><EM>FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: </EM>Yes, Men, this Thursday =
night=20
"WTO" event is more likely to turn hilarious than=20
violent.</STRONG></FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=3D780205116-29012002><STRONG><FONT face=3DArial =
color=3D#000000=20
size=3D2>Press: Link to 1.28.2002 <EM>Staten Island Advance=20
</EM>article:</FONT></STRONG></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=3D780205116-29012002><STRONG><FONT face=3DArial =
color=3D#000000=20
size=3D2><EM>&nbsp;</EM><A=20
href=3D"http://www.silive.com/news/advance/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_=
standard.xsl?/base/news/10122273072680827.xml"><EM>http://www.silive.com/=
news/advance/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_standard.xsl?/base/news/101222=
73072680827.xml</EM></A><EM>"</EM></FONT></STRONG></SPAN></DIV>
<DIV><SPAN class=3D780205116-29012002><FONT face=3DArial color=3D#000000 =

size=3D2><EM>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;=
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&=
nbsp;&nbsp;<STRONG>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;=20
maximize e-mail window for best =
viewing</STRONG></EM></FONT></SPAN></DIV>
<HR>

<TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D3 width=3D"98%" align=3Dcenter =
bgColor=3D#efffff=20
border=3D0 valign=3D"top">
  <TBODY>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D60red align=3Dmiddle><B>RELIGION, PROTEST, AND =
HUNGER:</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D48red align=3Dmiddle><B>FREE TRADE SOLUTIONS AFTER =
SEPTEMBER=20
    11</B></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TABLE>
<TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D0 width=3D"98%" align=3Dcenter =
bgColor=3D#efffff=20
border=3D0 valign=3D"top">
  <TBODY>
  <TR>
    <TD align=3Dleft width=3D"30%" rowSpan=3D6><IMG alt=3D""=20
      src=3D"http://home.si.rr.com/jbostrom/UUForum/afghani2.jpg"; =
width=3D195=20
      border=3D0 NOSEND=3D"1"></TD>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D36 align=3Dleft width=3D"70%"><B>Thursday January 31 =
2002, 7:00=20
      PM</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D24 align=3Dleft width=3D"70%"><B>at the Unitarian Church =
of Staten=20
      Island</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D36red align=3Dleft width=3D"70%">A&nbsp;<SPAN=20
      class=3D780205116-29012002>Very </SPAN>Special Evening =
with&nbsp;the<SPAN=20
      class=3D780205116-29012002></SPAN><BR><B>World Trade =
Organization*</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D18 width=3D"70%"><B>Herri Baatasuna, =
LL.D.</B><BR>Agriculture,=20
      International Relations, &amp; Public Relations Counselor* =
<BR><B>Percival=20
      Fress, M.D.</B><BR>Agriculture, Pharmaceutics, &amp; Public =
Relations=20
      Counselor*</I></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D12 width=3D"70%"><FONT size=3D2>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The =
spectre of=20
      violent confrontation haunts Manhattan. New York's Finest have =
been=20
      gearing up with special training and crowd-control equipment in=20
      anticipation of anti-globalization protests near the Waldorf =
Astoria, the=20
      site of this year's <I>World Economic Forum, </I>beginning this =
Thursday,=20
      January 31. <BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Meanwhile, on the other =
side of=20
      New York Bay, a milder, more civilized confrontration between the =
forces=20
      of globalization and their opponents has been scheduled. No =
helmets,=20
      batons, mace, water cannons or arrests - this battle will be =
fought with=20
      ideas amd humor.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The Unitarian Church =
of=20
      Staten Island has arranged for two special speakers connected with =
the=20
      World Trade Organization,* who will hold forth on the merits of=20
      globalization as a solution to world hunger, making the case, with =

      economic logic and visual aids, that "faith-based opposition to =
free=20
      trade" is&nbsp;<SPAN class=3D780205116-29012002>- well, =
</SPAN>misguided.=20
      </FONT></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D0 width=3D"98%" align=3Dcenter =
bgColor=3D#efffff=20
border=3D0 valign=3D"top">
  <TBODY>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D12 width=3D"70%"><FONT =
size=3D2>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The=20
      speakers' main qualifications, and the foundation of their =
connection with=20
      the WTO, is based on their membership in the internationally =
renowned=20
      political prank and satire group, the <B>Yes Men.</B> As well as =
operating=20
      the web site <B><I>www.gatt.org,</I></B> the Yes Men have =
delighted=20
      audiences across the globe with their unique ability to explain =
visually=20
      the economic and cultural essence of globalization, leading to =
recent=20
      coverage in <B>Harpers<B> and </B>Fortune</B> and on <B>CNBC =
Europe=20
      </B>and <B>National Public =
Radio.</B><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Following=20
      the slide presentation by the speakers, a session of questions and =

      discussion from the audience will be moderated by Professor =
Richard Currie=20
      of the College of Staten Island, Chairman of the Church's Social =
Concerns=20
      Committee, which is sponsoring the event. The debate is expected =
to be=20
      lively though civilized, and probably=20
      hilarious.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Admission is free. Coffee =
and=20
      sandwiches will be served in the Parish Hall after the event =
(about 8:00=20
      PM.)<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This event kicks off in the =
Church's Publc=20
      Forum Series titled <B>In the Aftermath of 9/11.</B> Future events =
will be=20
      held on Sundays at 1;00 PM beginning February 10 and continuing =
through=20
      March. Future speakers include <B>Rev. Daniel Berrigan, Phyllis =
Bennis,=20
      Stanley Aronowitz, Norman Siegel,</B> and others.</FONT></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D10>&nbsp;<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Herri Baatasuna =
</B>has=20
      served as a Yes Man and legal counsel to the World Trade =
Organization* for=20
      the past five years, where he has been directing a new program =
which aims=20
      to understand and address faith-based opposition to free trade. He =
holds=20
      an LL.D. from Stanford Law School, and he previously worked for =
the AS=20
      Agency for International Development in Nepal and in Washington,=20
      DC.<BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Percival Fress </B>is a =
specialist in=20
      the relationship of international trade to human health. As a Yes =
Man, he=20
      has been with the press office of the World Trade Organization* =
for the=20
      past three years, fulfilling a mandate from the WTO* to address =
the=20
      relationships of social needs to global trade. Dr. Fress has an =
M.D. from=20
      Columbia University, and has held previous posts with Novartis,=20
      Cargill-Dow, and Monsanto.<BR>&nbsp;<BR><I>* This representation =
of the=20
      "World Trade Organization" is a work of political theatre and=20
      satire.<BR>For further information on The Yes Men, visit <A=20
      =
href=3D"http://www.theyesmen.org";><I>http://www.theyesmen.org</I></A></I>=
</TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D10red align=3Dmiddle>
      <DIV><I><BR><B>Seating limited to 200. Admission free. Please <A=20
      =
href=3D"mailto:uucsi@aol.com?subject=3DRSVP_WTO&amp;body=3DNumber%20of%20=
people%20attending%20WTO%20Forum:">RSVP</A>.=20
      </B></I></DIV>
      =
<DIV><STRONG><EM></EM></STRONG>&nbsp;</DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D3 width=3D"98%" align=3Dcenter =
bgColor=3D#efffff=20
border=3D0 valign=3D"top">
  <TBODY>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D10red align=3Dleft>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Directions =
to the=20
      Church:</B> <A title=3D"by Ferry " name=3D"by Ferry" =
target=3D"resource window"=20
      =
href=3D"directions.htm"><I>http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/directions.=
htm</I></A><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Church=20
      Statement on 9/11 and its Aftermath:</B> <A=20
      title=3D"Statement on 9/11 and its Aftermath"=20
      name=3D"Statement on 9/11 and its Aftermath" target=3Dnew=20
      =
href=3D"UUPosition.htm"><I>http://members.aol.com/uucsi/Forum/UUposition.=
htm</I></A><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>RSVP=20
      to Event: (718) 447-2004 or </B><A=20
      =
href=3D"mailto:uucsi@aol.com?subject=3DRSVP_WTO&amp;body=3DNumber%20of%20=
people%20attending%20WTO%20Forum:">uucsi@aol.com</A>=20
      <CLASS=3D10><I>with "RSVP WTO" as subject and # attending in the=20
      body.</B></I> <BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Article from Monday's =

      <I><B>Staten Island Advance:</I> <A=20
      =
href=3D"http://www.silive.com/news/advance/index.ssf?/xml/story.ssf/html_=
standard.xsl?/base/news/10122273072680827.xml">Unitarian=20
      Programs to Examine Issues Related to Sept. 11=20
      </A><BR>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<B>Further information:</B> <A=20
      =
href=3D"mailto:jbostrom@si.rr.com";>jbostrom@si.rr.com</A></I></I></B></B>=
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE cellSpacing=3D0 cellPadding=3D3 width=3D"98%" align=3Dcenter =
bgColor=3D#efffff=20
border=3D0 valign=3D"top">
  <TBODY>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D60red align=3Dright><B>IN THE AFTERMATH OF =
9/11:</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D48red align=3Dright><B>A Public Forum =
Series</B></TD></TR>
  <TR>
    <TD class=3D36red align=3Dright>Unitarian Church of Staten =
Island<BR>312=20
      Fillmore Street, Staten Island NY =
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></BODY></HTML>

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