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	<description>Back issues of Bob Draper&#039;s weekly email bulletin</description>
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		<title>6th May</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/05/06/6th-may/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/05/06/6th-may/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 May 2011 09:12:33 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=197</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 1HZ TEL: 01225 312084 ************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org Here are the meetings for the week: MONDAY MAY 9th ******************************************** UNITED NATIONS ASSOCIATION, BATH BRANCH: 7.30pm &#8220;The Role of Women in Peacemaking&#8221; TUESDAY MAY 10th *************** WORDS &#038; MUSIC: 7.30pm Members/Students £2.00, Visitors £4.00 &#8220;Folk song and British composers&#8221; A ramble [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 1HZ	TEL: 01225 312084<br />
**************************************************<br />
WEB: www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>Here are the meetings for the week:</p>
<p>MONDAY MAY 9th<br />
********************************************<br />
UNITED NATIONS ASSOCIATION, BATH BRANCH: 7.30pm</p>
<p>&#8220;The Role of Women in Peacemaking&#8221;</p>
<p>TUESDAY MAY 10th<br />
***************<br />
WORDS &#038; MUSIC: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students  £2.00, Visitors  £4.00</p>
<p>&#8220;Folk song and British composers&#8221;<br />
    A ramble through bushes and briars&#8230;</p>
<p>Introduced by Richard Carder<br />
Chairman, English Poetry &#038; Song Society</p>
<p>Live songs from:</p>
<p>Paul Feldwick (baritone)<br />
Robert Blackburn (piano)<br />
&#038; &#8216;Good Company&#8217; Male Voice Choir of Bathford</p>
<p>Featuring music by Vaughan Williams, Arnold Bax, Jack Moeran &#038; Delius<br />
Folk songs arranged by Cecil Sharp</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MAY 11th<br />
******************<br />
UNI-VERSE: 13.00<br />
Members/Students  £2.00, Visitors  £4.00</p>
<p>&#8220;Contemporary Polish poetry &#8211; Wislawa Szymborska&#8221;<br />
    Ewa Marcinkowska<br />
    (MA in Polish Philology)</p>
<p>Ewa introduces Szymborska&#8217;s poetry and reads from her own work.</p>
<p>Wislawa Szymborska &#8211; poet, essayist and Nobel Prize winner for<br />
Literature in 1996 &#8211; electrifies her readers despite being modest,<br />
introverted and discreet.</p>
<p>She has created her own craft of writing and her own language that<br />
keeps its distance from great historical events, the conditioning of<br />
human existence and the social role of the poet; a simple language of<br />
delight in human life with its beauty, illogicality and tragedy. She<br />
is an artistic genius accessible to everyone.</p>
<p>THURSDAY MAY 12th<br />
***********************************************<br />
BATH SPA UNIVERSITY STAND UP POETRY: 7.30 FOR 8.00pm</p>
<p>Meeting</p>
<p>FRIDAY MAY 13th<br />
*********************<br />
HERSCHEL GROUP:7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2.00, Visitors £4.00</p>
<p>&#8220;The SKYLON Spaceplane&#8221;<br />
 Mark Hempsell<br />
 Future Programme Director<br />
 Reaction Engines Limited</p>
<p>SKYLON is a British spaceplane project that takes off from a runway like an<br />
aircraft can fly into space with 15 tonnes cargo and then return for a<br />
runway landing.  With the major technology development programmes almost<br />
completed it is now posed to start full development ready for service in 2020.</p>
<p>SATURDAY MAY 14th<br />
*****************</p>
<p>COFFEE MORNING 11.00-12.30 visitors welcome</p>
<p>MONDAY MAY 16th<br />
***************<br />
WORLD AFFAIRS GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2.00, Visitors £4.00</p>
<p>&#8220;Europe &#038; modern wars &#8211; from Bosnia to Benghazi&#8221;<br />
 Prof. Adrian Hyde-Price<br />
 Chair of International Politics, Department of European Studies &#038; Modern<br />
 Languages, University of Bath.</p>
<p>With the end of the Cold War, many people expected Europe to enjoy a new age of<br />
peace and disarmament. </p>
<p>But Europe&#8217;s democracies have found themselves in a wide range of wars and<br />
armed conflict from the Balkans and Africa, to the Middle East and Central<br />
Asia. </p>
<p>This talk examines how, when and why Europeans use military force, and<br />
considers the implications for this military activism on European politics,<br />
society and institutions.</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Tu 17	Lit &#038; Hum  The Bauhaus in America: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy in Chicago,<br />
			     1937-1946<br />
			     Dr Harry Charrington University of Bath</p>
<p>We 18	IoP	     Heating &#038; the safety of Medical Ultrasound, MRI &#038; Mobile<br />
			     Phones<br />
			     Prof. Francis Duck</p>
<p>Sa 21	Cercle Fr.  Paris romantique (et assemblée générale)<br />
			     Thirza Valloi</p>
<p>Sa 21  An.Netwk   Meeting</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleages who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>1st May</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/05/01/1st-may/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/05/01/1st-may/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 01 May 2011 09:10:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=195</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA12HN TEL: 01225 312084 ************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org NEW EXHIBITION ************** Admission free A Photographic Exhibition of the Dec 2004 Tsunami&#8217;s devastation of the coastlines of Tamil Nadu and Kerala in southern India. Photographer: Sohrab Hura. Presented by Tourism Concern. Open Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm. TUESDAY MAY 3rd ************************ PHILOSOPHY GROUP: 7.30pm Members/Students [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA12HN   TEL: 01225 312084<br />
**************************************************<br />
WEB: www.brlsi.org </p>
<p>NEW EXHIBITION<br />
**************<br />
Admission free</p>
<p>A Photographic Exhibition of the Dec 2004 Tsunami&#8217;s devastation of the<br />
coastlines of Tamil Nadu and Kerala in southern India.<br />
Photographer: Sohrab Hura. Presented by Tourism Concern.<br />
Open Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm.</p>
<p><http://www.tourismconcern.org.uk/index.php?mact=Search%2Ccntnt01%2Cdosearch%2C<br />
0&#038;cntnt01returnid=79&#038;cntnt01searchinput=tsunami&#038;cntnt01origreturnid=51></p>
<p>TUESDAY MAY 3rd<br />
************************<br />
PHILOSOPHY GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8220;Are Evolutionary Biologists Essentialists After All?&#8221;<br />
 Dr Stephen Boulter<br />
 Oxford Brookes University</p>
<p>Since the 1950&#8242;s it has been commonplace in biological and philosophical<br />
circles to assert that the metaphysical doctrines of essentialism is<br />
incompatible with evolutionary biology. Since essentialism was out of fashion<br />
for much of the twentieth century, few philosophers cared to challenge this<br />
orthodoxy. Times have changed. Essentialism is now being expressed openly in<br />
many quarters. For biologically informed essentialists it is now necessary to<br />
revisit the incompatibility claim. In this talk the speaker will suggest that<br />
evolutionay biology is notnonly compatible with essentialism, its ability to<br />
discharge its self-imposed explanatory duties requires the truth of<br />
essentialism.<br />
Evolutionary Biologists are Essentialists after all. </p>
<p>WENESDAY MAY 4th<br />
****************<br />
Two events:<br />
SPEAKING OF RESEARCH SERIES: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8220;Illuminating the Future Could LEDs provide cheap &#038; lasting light for all?&#8221;<br />
 Simon O&#8217;Kane<br />
 Physics Dept, University of Bath</p>
<p>Everywhere you look, LED lights can be found increasingly often. A research<br />
student talks about the science behind the latest LED lighting technology and<br />
discusses the benefits and challenges involved. Could LED&#8217;s soon make other<br />
light sources obsolete?</p>
<p>TOURISM CONCERN: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8220;Destination Tsunami&#8221;<br />
A lecture on this month&#8217;s photographic exhibition<br />
Peter Bishop<br />
India Project Manager<br />
Tourism Concern</p>
<p>Tourism Concern fights exploitation in tourism. It is an independent,<br />
non-industry based, UK charity.  It has a membership of almost 900 and works<br />
with partners in over 20 destination countries to ensure that tourism always<br />
benefits local people.</p>
<p>It is the only organisation in Europe actively campaigning on tourism and human<br />
rights issues. It works to to expose and challenge tourism&#8217;s exploitative<br />
practices.  Tourism Concern takes a solution driven approach and has played a<br />
crucial role in promoting forms of tourism that provide meaningful benefits to<br />
people in destination communities. Funds meant for rebuilding the lives and<br />
livelihoods of tsunami-affected communities in the southern Indian state of<br />
Kerala are being used to develop tourism, prompting angry protests by local<br />
people. The tourism developments will bring them little benefit and will place<br />
their land, livelihoods and traditional way of life under renewed threat. </p>
<p>THURSDAY MAY 5th, 7.30pm<br />
***************************************<br />
BATH GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: Visitors welcome:£4</p>
<p>&#8220;OpenGeoscience &#8211; why you may never need to buy another geological<br />
 map&#8221;<br />
 Dr David Bailey<br />
 Head of Outreach, British Geological Survey</p>
<p>The British Geological Survey is opening up all sorts of geological materials<br />
free-of-charge for non-commercial private study, research and educational<br />
activities and encouraging users to combine BGS information with their own data<br />
to create new and innovative products for the benefit of others. Find out why<br />
BGS is doing this, what information is available, how to access it and how it<br />
is being used. </p>
<p>FRIDAY MAY 6th, 7.30pm<br />
***************************************************<br />
INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS &#8211; VISITORS WELCOME &#8211; ADMISSION FREE!</p>
<p>&#8220;100 Years of Superconductivity&#8221;<br />
  Professor James Annett<br />
  University of Bristol</p>
<p>In 1911 one of the most remarkable physical properties of matter was<br />
discovered: &#8216;superconductivity&#8217;. Since then many new superconducting materials<br />
have been discovered, and more are still being found every year.</p>
<p>Some of these materials have been commercially very important and are now being<br />
used in large scale projects, for example the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at<br />
CERN, and in MRI scanners in hospitals. Other applications in wind turbines,<br />
the electrical power grid and magentic levitating ( MAGLEV) trains are quite<br />
possible for the future. Prof Annett will review the state of our understanding<br />
of the fundamental physics of superconductros as well as the current and future<br />
applications of superconducting technology.</p>
<p>Admission free, visitors welcome, coffee available from 7pm</p>
<p>ffi: v.adams@sky.com</p>
<p>SATURDAY MAY 7th<br />
****************<br />
Two events:</p>
<p>COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30 Visitors welcome</p>
<p>CERCLE FRANCAIS: 2.15<br />
Visitors Welcome</p>
<p>&#8220;Faits et Gestes&#8221;<br />
An overview of typical French gestures and expressions (En Francais)</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Mo 9  P O&#8217;Brian  &#8216;The Commodore&#8217; &#8211; Discussion</p>
<p>Mo 9  Bath UNA	 The Role of Women in Peacemaking</p>
<p>Tu 10 W &#038; Music  The Influence of Folksong on British Music<br />
			    Richard Carder </p>
<p>We 11 Universe	 The Contemorary Polish Poetry of Wislawa Szymbarska<br />
			    Eva Marcinkowska</p>
<p>Th 12 S/U Poetry  Robert Minhinnick and Tony Williams</p>
<p>Fr 13 Herschel	    tba</p>
<p>Mo 16 WAG	   Europe &#038; Modern Wars &#8211; from Bosnia to Benghazi<br />
			    Prof. Adrian Hyde-Price</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS&#8230;<br />
**************<br />
As you editor is in a hotel room on the other side of the globe pertinent news<br />
is a bit sparse here. He is also just recovering from a windy crossing on a<br />
suspension bridge spanning the Yellow River, which gave a passable imitation of<br />
the Tacomoa Narrows Bridge just before things all fell apart! You might be<br />
reassured to know however, that coverage on the Royal Wedding has been frequent<br />
on Chinese TV news in English.	 </p>
<p>Please forward This Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>April 24th</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/24/april-24th/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/24/april-24th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 24 Apr 2011 07:05:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=192</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 1HZ TEL: 01225 312084 ************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org TUESDAY 26th APRIL, 7.30pm *************************** Members/Students £2, Visitors £4 &#8216;La Regle du jeu&#8217; (rules of the game) &#8216;Jean Renoir&#8217;s 1939 masterpiece&#8217; Dr Steve Wharton, of the University of Bath, introduces Jean Renoir&#8217;s 1939 masterpiece, arguably the best film ever made, explaining its [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 1HZ TEL: 01225 312084<br />
**************************************************<br />
WEB: www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>TUESDAY 26th APRIL, 7.30pm<br />
***************************<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8216;La Regle du jeu&#8217; (rules of the game)</p>
<p>&#8216;Jean Renoir&#8217;s 1939 masterpiece&#8217;</p>
<p>Dr Steve Wharton, of the University of Bath, introduces Jean Renoir&#8217;s 1939<br />
masterpiece, arguably the best film ever made, explaining its importance and<br />
impact.</p>
<p>A celebrated aviator in love with a marquise whose own husband is having an<br />
affair with a poacher&#8230;</p>
<p>Misunderstandings and misconceptions abound when a weekend house party brings<br />
them all together &#8211; with devastating results.</p>
<p>Film with sub-titles.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY 27th APRIL, 7.30pm<br />
***************************<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8220;William Pulteney &#8211; Greatest English Stockholder in America in the<br />
Eighteenth Century&#8221;</p>
<p>Dr Michael Rowe<br />
Chair, History of Bath Research Group</p>
<p>William Johnstone married the heiress Frances Pulteney. Known in Bath as &#8216;Mr<br />
Pulteney&#8217;, he had an absolute right to his wife&#8217;s income and invested an<br />
immense sum in America to become England&#8217;s largest US stockholder in the 18th<br />
Century.</p>
<p>The talk will outline the sources of the money, the history of the American<br />
purchase after the American Revolution, its development by Pulteney&#8217;s highly<br />
adventurous agent and then the dispersal of the estates.</p>
<p>Michael Rowe has been researching the Pulteney family for nearly thirty years.<br />
He organised the exhibtion &#8216;Beyond Mr Pulteney&#8217;s Bridge&#8217;.</p>
<p>EXHIBITION<br />
**********<br />
April 28th &#8211; May 14th</p>
<p>Destination Tsunami: Stories and Struggles from India&#8217;s southern coast</p>
<p>A Photographic Exhibition of the Dec 2004 Tsunami&#8217;s devastation of the<br />
coastlines of<br />
Tamil Nadu and Kerala in southern India.<br />
Photographer: Sohrab Hura. Presented by Tourism Concern. Details</p>
<p>Open Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm.<br />
Admission Free</p>
<p>THURSDAY 28th APRIL:1.00pm<br />
**************************************<br />
BATH SHAKESPEARE SOCIETY &#8211; Visitors welcome</p>
<p>Shakespeare&#8217;s birthday celebration 2011</p>
<p>&#8220;Holding the Mirror up to Theatre &#8211; Shakespeare and the play within a<br />
play&#8221;<br />
Stephen Curtis<br />
Author &amp; playwright</p>
<p>Advance tickets £12, to include buffet lunch, must be bought in advance by 19<br />
April from:<br />
Tony Ryan: 01225 319 554<br />
e-mail: a.ryanl757@btinternet.com</p>
<p>For lecture only, pay at the door:<br />
Students/Members £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>SATURDAY 30th APRIL<br />
*****************<br />
Two events:<br />
COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30pm</p>
<p>ECONOMICSAMERICA &#8211; AFTERNOON MEETING: 2.00pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>&#8220;The Special Relationhip&#8221;<br />
Jacob Rees-Mogg MP<br />
Recently elected MP for North-East Somerset</p>
<p>Ever since Winston Churchill coined the phrase in 1946 &#8216;The Special<br />
Relationship&#8217;, the closeness of cooperation between the US and the UK has been<br />
debated.</p>
<p>The speaker will address how this relationship may be working, primarily in the<br />
area of economic activity, trade and commerce.</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Tu 3 Phil Are Evolutionary Biologists Essentialists After All?<br />
Dr Stepehn Boulter, Oxford Brookes</p>
<p>We 4 SoR Illuminating the Future. Could LED&#8217;s provide cheap and<br />
lasting light for all?<br />
Simon O&#8217;Kane, Physics, Bath University</p>
<p>Th 5 BGSoc Open GeoScience &#8211; why you may never need to buy another<br />
geological map.<br />
Dr David Bailey, British Geological Survey</p>
<p>Fr 6 IoP 100 Years of Superconductivity<br />
Prof. James Annett, Physics Dept, Univ. Bristol</p>
<p>Sa7 C.Fran Faits et Gestes &#8211; an overview of typical French gestures and<br />
expressions. ( talk in French)</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
A bit of excitement for your editor when a crib sheet for the Bulletin didn&#8217;t<br />
show up (he&#8217;s in Beijing at the moment) and he was faced with a computer<br />
determindly coming up with Chinese characters. Thank heavens<br />
for a recognisable Google search box! The rest was managable. One couldn&#8217;t help<br />
noticing that the lucky Chinese don&#8217;t have to suffer the absurdities of the<br />
&#8220;Auto complete function&#8217; with Google when searching. Herschelites might like to<br />
know that their chairman, Dr Peter Ford, also here, took full advantage and did<br />
a tour of the &#8216;Ancient Observatory&#8217;. If you&#8217;re into astronomy here are a few<br />
pics to show you what it was like:</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues how might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>April 16th</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/16/april-16th/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/16/april-16th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Apr 2011 15:32:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=190</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>SUNDAY APRIL 17th<br />
*********************************<br />
HERBAL WALK: 1.00pm to 3.30pm approx.</p>
<p>“A Guided tour Through Nature’s Kitchen Garden”<br />
  Anna Gann Christensen &#038; Friends</p>
<p>A walk through herbs we often see without noticing, to discover many<br />
unsuspecting useful treasures in our towns, meadows and hedgerows.</p>
<p>Please assemble at 1pm at BRLSI, wear walking shoes and bring something to<br />
drink.</p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 18th<br />
****************<br />
Two events:<br />
WORLD AFFAIRS GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“America’s Relationship with the United Nations”<br />
  Declan Walton<br />
  Former Deputy Director United Nations FAO</p>
<p>The US is the United Nations&#8217; principal founder, host and paymaster. Despite<br />
recurring tensions it continues to provide the basic support without which the<br />
Organisation could not function. The very public ups and downs in the<br />
relationship generally arise from conflicts between American objectives and<br />
those of UN inter-governmental bodies. The speaker will address what the future<br />
may hold&#8230;</p>
<p>BATH FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY: 7.30pm</p>
<p>A Plague of Blue Locusts? &#8211; The Police in Victorian Bath<br />
Professor Graham Davis</p>
<p>TUESDAY APRIL 19th<br />
***********************<br />
PHILOSOPHY GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“The Rationality in the belief in God – No Argument Needed”<br />
  Dr Oliver Crisp<br />
  University of Bristol</p>
<p>There has been much written in the last few years by the so-called &#8216;New<br />
Atheists&#8217; about the irrationality of religious faith and the notion that there<br />
are no good reasons for believing in God (and some supposedly good reasons for<br />
rejecting such belief). </p>
<p>In his lecture, Dr Crisp shall explore some of the recent work in the<br />
philosophy of religion in order to show that belief in God can be perfectly<br />
respectable even in the absence of sound reasoned arguments.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY APRIL 20th<br />
*******************<br />
UNI-VERSE: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Speaking with the stars and horses – Modern Native American Poetry”<br />
  Rose Flint<br />
  Poet &#038; Art Therapist</p>
<p>The animate and shamanic vision of the Native American world view contains an<br />
understanding of the connectedness of all life and the dangers of<br />
dis-connection. The poetry award-winning speaker will address how the lyrical<br />
or raw, modern native American poetry speaks of the tragedy of a disintegrating<br />
nation, and a deep spiritual and ecological understanding of the Universe.</p>
<p>SATURDAY  APRIL 23rd<br />
******************<br />
Please note NO coffee morning. We’re giving our Berristas a well-earned<br />
Easter break</p>
<p>TUESDAY APRIL 26th<br />
**********************************<br />
FRENCH CIVILISATION &#038; CULTURE: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>Film:&#8221;La Regle du Jeu&#8217; Jean Renoir&#8217;s Masterpiece</p>
<p>Introduced by Dr Steve Wharton from the University of Bath. Dr Wharton will be<br />
giving an introduction to this famous film from 1939 and explaining it<br />
importance and impact. As usual after the film you are very welcome to join us<br />
for a glass of wine and a chat afterwards&#8230;</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY APRIL 27th<br />
*********************<br />
AMERICAN SERIES: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“William Pulteney – Greatest English Stockholder in America”<br />
  Dr Michael Rowe<br />
  Chair, History of Bath Research Group</p>
<p>William Johnstone married the heiress Frances Pulteney. Known in Bath as &#8216;Mr<br />
Pulteney&#8217;, he had an absolute right to his wife&#8217;s income and invested an<br />
immense sum in America to become England&#8217;s largest US stockholder in the 18th<br />
Century.</p>
<p>The talk will outline the sources of the money, the history of the American<br />
purchase after the American Revolution, its development by Pulteney&#8217;s highly<br />
adventurous agent and then the dispersal of the estates.</p>
<p>Michael Rowe has been researching the Pulteney family for nearly thirty years.<br />
He organised the exhibition &#8216;Beyond Mr Pulteney&#8217;s Bridge&#8217;.</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
****************<br />
Th 28	Shakespeare Soc.	Holding the Mirror up to Theatre:<br />
	    &#038; Poetry Group	      Shakespeare &#038; the play within the play</p>
<p>Sa 30	America 		The Special Relationship<br />
			Jacob Rees-Mogg MP</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
Apologies to any of you whose time clocks may be disrupted by the early arrival<br />
of this Bulletin. Your Editor is off to China and just needed to get it off his<br />
check list. Hopefully, in his absence, &#038; seamlessly, the Bulletin will appear<br />
as normal  but being produced by Gill Silversides and her able body of helpers<br />
on the front desk. If it all goes wrong you can always check our website for<br />
the Diary: </p>
<p>http://www.brlsi.org/diary.htm</p>
<p>Your Editor will be interesting to see, while over there, whether there are any<br />
similar Institutions to ours, over in China.</p>
<p>From what we could ascertain the Holburne had a successful auction at BRLSI<br />
this weekend, several items going for four figure sums.</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>April 11th</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/11/april-11th/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/11/april-11th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 11 Apr 2011 15:30:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=186</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 11th<br />
*********************************************<br />
BATH SPA UNIVERSITY STAND UP POETRY, 7.30 for 8.00pm<br />
Entrance<br />
 £7.50 (£5 concs)</p>
<p>“Pascale Petit”</p>
<p>Pascale Petit was born in Paris, grew up in France and Wales and lives in<br />
London. She has published five poetry collections. Her latest, ‘What the<br />
Water Gave Me: Poems after Frida Kahlo’, published by Seren in May 2010, was<br />
shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize and was a Book of the Year in the<br />
Observer. Two of her previous books, ‘The Zoo Father’ (Seren, 2001) and<br />
‘The Huntress’ (Seren, 2005), were also shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot<br />
Prize and were Books of the Year in the Times Literary Supplement and<br />
Independent. In 2004 the Poetry Book Society selected her as one of the Next<br />
Generation Poets.<br />
She has received three major awards from Arts Council England. ‘The Zoo<br />
Father’ was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. It won an Arts Council of<br />
England Writers’ Award, a New London Writers’ Award and a poem from the<br />
book, &#8216;The Strait-Jackets&#8217;, was shortlisted for a Forward Prize. A<br />
Spanish/English edition is published in Mexico and Spain. A prizewinning<br />
pamphlet ‘The Wounded Deer: Fourteen poems after Frida Kahlo’ (Smith<br />
Doorstop) appeared in 2005. Her debut collection, ‘Heart of a Deer’, was<br />
published by Enitharmon in 1998. In 2004 she was selected as one of the ten<br />
best new women poets of the decade by Mslexia magazine.</p>
<p>TUESDAY APRIL 12th<br />
****************</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH: 2.00pm</p>
<p>SPEAKING OF RESEARCH: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Making Sense of the Financial Crisis”<br />
 The Evolution of Finance &#038; Causes of the Crisis<br />
  James Beadle<br />
  Postgraduate Research, University of Bath</p>
<p>Since the invention of the computer, finance and economics have evolved into<br />
near-esoteric mathematical disciplines. As a result the financial crisis is<br />
poorly understood, but we all can and should understand the most important<br />
economics event in generations.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY APRIL 13th<br />
*******************<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:	2.00 &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>UNIVERSE – LUNCHTIME: 13.00<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Poets from Cornwall”</p>
<p>Helen Jagger, poet, reads from her first collection:</p>
<p>‘The Turned heart’<br />
And introduces readings by:</p>
<p>Camelford Poetry Stanza  and The Indian King Poets</p>
<p>Helen co-ordinates the Indian King Poets (a group that survived the closure of<br />
The Indian King, North Cornwall&#8217;s only community arts centre) and the Camelford<br />
Poetry Stanza. Published in Australia, the US and the UK, she runs regular<br />
poetry-writing workshops in Cornwall, and is poet in residence at Pencarrow<br />
House, Bodmin.</p>
<p>PERSPECTIVES ON AMERICA &#8211; VISUAL ARTS: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Arshile Gorky – Pathfinder to Abstract Expressionism”<br />
 Roger Whelan</p>
<p>Arshile Gorky was a pivotal painter in the development of American painting in<br />
the mid 20th century, bridging the years between Surrealism and Abstract<br />
Expressionism. He was the key figure in repositioning American painting at the<br />
centre of world attention. This talk will examine his life and the influence he<br />
had    on 20th Century American painting.</p>
<p>THURSDAY APRIL 14th<br />
*****************************<br />
PUBLIC MEETING – ADMISSION FREE</p>
<p>Queen Square, Bath: Celebration and Commemoration in 2012</p>
<p>Public meeting chaired by Dr Alexander Sturgis, Director, Holburne Museum</p>
<p>Be part of a creative and interactive evening to help decide how we should<br />
celebrate Queen Square and commemorate the Diamond Jubilee</p>
<p>Introduction to the workshop by Vaughan Thompson of Place Studio Ltd.</p>
<p>Here are some ideas:<br />
1. Re-establish railing lanterns<br />
2. Lighting up the Square<br />
3. Recreating the Obelisk Pool<br />
4. Inscribed Obelisk Stone Circle<br />
5. Improved Accessible Crossings<br />
6. Additional Entrance Gateways<br />
7. Restored Internal Paths</p>
<p>FRIDAY APRIL 15th<br />
*********************************************<br />
HOLBURNE MUSEUM FRIENDS AUCTION AT BRLSI: 6.30pm</p>
<p>Auction of Antiques &#038; Collectables Including Paintings &#038; Decorative Objects</p>
<p>In aid of the Friends Appeal for the Museum’s Development Scheme</p>
<p>Silver, glassware, porcelain prints, paintings, needlework doll’s house,<br />
curiosities and many other fascinating items, paintings from the 18th – 21st<br />
Century.</p>
<p>Open for public viewing from noon.</p>
<p>Ffi: Tel: 01985 213195	sydney.blackmore@btinternet.com</p>
<p>SATURDAY APRIL 16th<br />
*****************<br />
Two events:</p>
<p>COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30  Visitors welcome. Your host: Elissa Kelley</p>
<p>ECONOMICS GROUP: 2.00pm<br />
Members/students £2, visitors welcome £4</p>
<p>DEBATE on the 5th May Referendum<br />
The alternative vote: ‘Yes’ or ‘No’?</p>
<p>For a YES vote:  Ken Ritchie (Electoral Reform Society)</p>
<p>For a NO vote:	  Nick Thomas-Symonds (Lecturer in Politics, St Edmund<br />
			   Hall  University of Oxford</p>
<p>A Referendum on the Alternative Vote was part of the compromise arrangement<br />
agreed at the start of the Coalition. Whatever positions the politicians may<br />
take, it is up to the public to understand the arguments and to make their own<br />
choices in the referendum. This is a rare opportunity to have a say in how the<br />
government is elected.</p>
<p>SUNDAY APRIL 17th<br />
*********************************<br />
HERBAL WALK: 1.00pm to 3.30pm approx.</p>
<p>“A Guided tour Through Nature’s Kitchen Garden”<br />
  Anna Gann Christensen &#038; Friends</p>
<p>A walk through herbs we often see without noticing, to discover many<br />
unsuspecting useful treasures in our towns, meadows and hedgerows.</p>
<p>Please assemble at 1pm at BRLSI, wear walking shoes and bring something to<br />
drink.</p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 18th<br />
************************************************<br />
PERSPECTIVES ON AMERICA/WORLD/AFFAIRS GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“America’s Relationship with the United Nations”<br />
  Declan Walton<br />
  Former United Nations Official</p>
<p>The US is the United Nations&#8217; principal founder, host and paymaster. Despite<br />
recurring tensions it continues to provide the basic support without which the<br />
Organisation could not function. The very public ups and downs in the<br />
relationship generally arise from conflicts between American objectives and<br />
those of UN inter-governmental bodies. The speaker will address what the future<br />
may hold&#8230;</p>
<p>BATH FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY: 7.30pm</p>
<p>“A Plague of Blue Locusts? &#8211; The Police in Victorian Bath”<br />
 Professor Graham Davis</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Tu 19	Philosophy	The Rationality of the belief in God<br />
		 No Argument Needed<br />
		 Dr Oliver Crisp, Bristol University</p>
<p>We 20  America	Speaking with Stars<br />
		Modern Native American Poetry<br />
		Rose Flint, Poet &#038; Art Therapist</p>
<p>We 27	America William Pulteney –Greatest English Stockholder<br />
				in America in the 18th Century.<br />
		Dr Michael Rowe, Chair of History of Bath Research<br />
				Group</p>
<p>Th 28 Poetry Grp/    Holding the Mirror up to Theatre: Shakespeare and the<br />
	  Bath		     play within the play.<br />
	  Shakesp. S.	 Stephen Curtis, Author &#038; Playwright</p>
<p>Sa 30 America	The Special Relationship<br />
		Jacob Rees-Mogg MP</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
Betty Suchar has just returned from a Health and Safety course and with great<br />
topicality the subject was also brought up by Patrick Stokes on Sunday<br />
afternoon at the Jane Austen event. He is a descendant of Jane Austen’s<br />
brother and, having journeyed through life via being an Organic Chemist, an MBA<br />
and on to management, as a finale to his talk showed he had picked up thespian<br />
skills en route &#038; gave a wonderfully spirited rendition of this:<br />
<http://www.circlecity.co.uk/text_jokes/nelson-at-trafalgar.php><br />
We are seeking tenders for some work related to our website, internal computing<br />
systems and data management. If it would be of interest contact Jonathan Taylor<br />
in the office:<br />
01225 312084  , e-mail: admin@brlsi.org</p>
<p>On Thursday there is the discussion evening about Queen Square and some<br />
possible projects to celebrate the Queen’s Jubilee. There is some background<br />
here:</p>
<p><http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Square_(Bath)></p>
<p><http://www.bath360.co.uk/movies-of-bath/queen-square-bath.htm></p>
<p><http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dcpO5w6NsKk></p>
<p><http://www.bathintime.co.uk/search.php?page=1&#038;numperpage=&#038;idx=0&#038;keywords=queen<br />
+square></p>
<p><http://www.google.co.uk/images?q=queen+square+bath&#038;hl=en&#038;prmd=ivnsm&#038;wrapid=tli<br />
f130248644167110&#038;um=1&#038;ie=UTF-8&#038;source=og&#038;sa=N&#038;tab=vi&#038;biw=1276&#038;bih=819></p>
<p>Come along and air your views!</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
<p>Tuesday April 12th, Poetry. Christopher Ricks, Boston University, recently<br />
Professor of Poetry at Oxford. One of the most distinguished speakers to come<br />
and talk to the<br />
the Poetry Group: </p>
<p>	       &#8220;In T S Eliot&#8217;s Hearing&#8221;</p>
<p>The lecture will focus on Eliot&#8217;s evocation of the auditory imagination: the<br />
feeling for syllable and rhythm, penetrating far below the conscious levels of<br />
thought and feeling, invigorating every word; sinking tothe most primitive and<br />
forgotten, returning to the origin and bringing something back, seeking the<br />
beginning and the end.</p>
<p>&#8220;Ricks is the kind of critic every poet dreams of finding&#8221; W H Auden</p>
<p>Tuesday April 12th (tomorrow), 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students 2 pounds, Visitors 4 pounds</p>
<p>Apologies for the omission </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>April 4th</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/04/march-4th/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/04/04/march-4th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 2011 15:28:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=183</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 4th<br />
***************<br />
Three events:</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:<br />
Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>PATRICK O’BRIAN ENTHUSIASTS: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £4, Visitors £6<br />
Advance Tickets – Bath Box Office – 01225 463362</p>
<p>“Wine in 18th Century England – and how it got here”<br />
  Simon Smallwood<br />
  Master of Wine</p>
<p>Correspondence between two brothers in the wine trade and the provisioning of<br />
HMS Rattlesnake in 1782 are some of the fascinating sources that shed light on<br />
the eighteenth century wine trade.</p>
<p>Taste some modern examples of the late eighteenth century wines that were<br />
legally imported into England.</p>
<p>TUESDAY APRIL 5th<br />
***************<br />
Two events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOLOF BATH: 2.30pm</p>
<p>BATH NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY: 7.30pm<br />
Bath Nats Members £1, visitors welcome £3</p>
<p>“The Great Crane Project (RSPB) “<br />
  Damon Bridge</p>
<p>Cranes are wonderful, iconic birds that are sadly missing from many of their<br />
former wetland haunts in the UK.  They were lost as a breeding bird around 400<br />
years ago as a result of the draining of their wetland nesting sites, and<br />
hunting for food.<br />
Over the next five years, the project will focus on the reintroduction of<br />
cranes into the Somerset Levels and Moors &#8211; 60,000ha of floodplain in the South<br />
West of the UK, dominated by extensive mixed pastures, meadows and wetlands.<br />
To get these birds back, where they rightfully belong, requires the careful<br />
hand-rearing of young birds from wild-sourced eggs &#8211; undertaken in a purpose<br />
built ‘school’ at the WWT Slimbridge Wetland Centre.<br />
At around five months old the birds are then transported to Somerset and<br />
released where they will be very closely monitored as they learn to adapt to<br />
the rigours of life in the wild.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY APRIL 6th<br />
******************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOLOF BATH:<br />
Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>LITERATURE &#038; HUMANITIES:7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Frank Lloyd Wright”<br />
 One man’s view<br />
 Robert Marshall</p>
<p>The flamboyant individualist who drew inspiration from multiple sources and<br />
whose influence continues to proclaim the relationship between architect and<br />
the environment.</p>
<p>THURSDAY APRIL 7th<br />
*****************<br />
Three events:</p>
<p>LUNCHTIME TALK – AMERICAN SERIES:1.00pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Living with the 21st Century Shakers”<br />
  Janet &#038; Allan Parrott<br />
  American Museum in Britain</p>
<p>For ten years the Parrotts have been making regular visits to the last<br />
remaining Shaker Community in Sabbath Day Lake, Maine and became part of the<br />
Shaker existence as these 21st century Shakers carried on the traditions going<br />
back to the original migrations from England in 1774 under the Order’s<br />
founder, Ann Lee.</p>
<p>ASTRONOMY GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>”Viewing the dark side of the Universe with X-ray eyes”<br />
  Dr Ben Maughan<br />
  Bristol University</p>
<p>Dr Maughan’s work involves using the recently launched Chandra and XMM-Newton<br />
satellites to study the X-rays emitted by high redshift (very distant) galaxy<br />
clusters. A cluster of galaxies contains hundreds or thousands of galaxies<br />
(many very much like our own) and a similar mass of hot, ionised gas which<br />
emits strongly in the X-rays, but a cluster is dominated by invisible &#8216;dark<br />
matter&#8217;, the nature of which is unknown, but the subject of intense study!<br />
Galaxy clusters are the most massive gravitationally bound objects in the<br />
universe, and as such their properties are predicted by cosmological models<br />
(models describing the way the universe began and evolved). We can investigate<br />
these properties by observing the galaxies and the hot gas in clusters, and<br />
when compared with cosmological predictions, this gives us a very useful method<br />
with which to test cosmological models &#8211; a method which is particularly<br />
powerful when applied to high redshift clusters. </p>
<p>BATH GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: 7.30pm<br />
Visitors welcome: £4</p>
<p>“Caves and Cannibals: A Mendip Perspective”<br />
  Professor Danielle Schreve, Royal Holloway, University of London,<br />
  Reader in Physical Geography, Director of Centre for Quaternary Science</p>
<p>The area of the Mendip Hills in Somerset contains some of the most important<br />
Pleistocene cave sites in western Europe in terms of their vertebrate<br />
assemblages, Palaeolithic archaeological finds and early human remains. These<br />
sites span the period from c. 500 000 years ago until the end of the<br />
Pleistocene, c.10 000 years ago and provide a unique insight into changing<br />
climates and patterns of animal and human movement and behaviour. This lecture<br />
reviews some of the classic localities, such as Westbury-sub-Mendip and<br />
Gough’s Cave, focussing on the inferred age and palaeoenvironmental<br />
signatures of the fossil faunas, the taphonomic origins of the deposits and the<br />
significance of the archaeological assemblages. In addition, new research from<br />
a previously unexplored cave containing a rich terminal Pleistocene fauna will<br />
also be presented.</p>
<p>FRIDAY APRIL  8th<br />
**************<br />
Two events:<br />
BATH FILM SOCIETY: 7.45pm<br />
BFS Members &#038; their guests only.</p>
<p>“I Am Love” (2009), Dir: Luca Guadagnino<br />
(Io sono l&#8217;amore)<br />
A tragic love story set at the turn of the millennium in Milan. The film<br />
follows the fall of the haute bourgeoisie due to the forces of passion and<br />
unconditional love. </p>
<p>ALLIANCE FRANCAISE DE BATH: 7.30pm<br />
Adm. £6.00 inc. glass of wine</p>
<p>Cineclub</p>
<p>SATURDAY APRIL 9th<br />
*****************<br />
Three events:</p>
<p>COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30 Visitors welcome<br />
Your host: Rosemary Marshall</p>
<p>BRSLI/GASKELL SOCIETY: 2.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors welcome £4</p>
<p>“Elizabeth Gaskell in Germany”<br />
  ‘We are so comfortable, and the place is so lovely’<br />
  Prof. Peter Skrine<br />
  President, Gaskell Society SW</p>
<p>LE CERCLE FRANCAIS DE BATH: 14.15<br />
Visiteurs £4, BRLSI £2, Etudients £2</p>
<p>“La Vie des Artistes au Temps de Louis XIV”<br />
  Elisabeth Le Doze</p>
<p>Qu’ils soient musiciens, orfevres, tapissiers, jardiniers, cuisiniers et<br />
organisateurs de grandes fetes, acteurs, ecrivains, les artistes de l’epoque<br />
de Louis XIV<br />
FFI: 07814 454520</p>
<p>SUNDAY APRIL 10th<br />
****************<br />
JANE AUSTEN SOCIETY: Talk, 3.00pm  Tickets £10 including afternoon tea.<br />
Optional walking tour led by a Mayor of Bath’s honorary Guide, 10.30am,<br />
‘The Bath Jane Austen Knew’. Meet outside 4 Sydney Place, BA2 6NF (next to<br />
Holburne Museum, Sydney Gardens).</p>
<p>Talk at BRLSI, 3.00pm</p>
<p>“Chapters in the Austen Family&#8217;s Life”<br />
  Patrick Stokes</p>
<p>Patrick is the ex-chairman of the Jane Austen Society, and a direct descendant<br />
of Rear-Admiral Charles Austen, Jane Austen&#8217;s brother.</p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 11th<br />
****************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:<br />
Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>BATH SPA UNIVERSITY – STAND UP  POETRY: 8.00pm</p>
<p>“Pascale Petit”</p>
<p>Pascale Petit was born in Paris, grew up in France and Wales and lives in<br />
London. She has published five poetry collections. Her latest, What the Water<br />
Gave Me: Poems after Frida Kahlo, published by Seren in May 2010, was<br />
shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize and was a Book of the Year in the<br />
Observer. Two of her previous books, The Zoo Father (Seren, 2001) and The<br />
Huntress (Seren, 2005), were also shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize and<br />
were Books of the Year in the Times Literary Supplement and Independent. In<br />
2004 the Poetry Book Society selected her as one of the Next Generation Poets.<br />
She has received three major awards from Arts Council England. The Zoo Father<br />
was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. It won an Arts Council of England<br />
Writers’ Award, a New London Writers’ Award and a poem from the book, &#8216;The<br />
Strait-Jackets&#8217;, was shortlisted for a Forward Prize. A Spanish/English edition<br />
is published in Mexico and Spain. A prizewinning pamphlet The Wounded Deer:<br />
Fourteen poems after Frida Kahlo (Smith Doorstop) appeared in 2005. Her debut<br />
collection, Heart of a Deer, was published by Enitharmon in 1998. In 2004 she<br />
was selected as one of the ten best new women poets of the decade by Mslexia<br />
magazine.</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Tu 12  Poetry	     In T.S.Eliots Hearing<br />
		     Christopher Ricks Boston, recent Prof. Poetry,<br />
				     Oxford Univ.</p>
<p>Tu 12 Sp.of Research	The Evolution of Finance &#038; Causes of the Crisis<br />
			      James Beadle,  Postgraduate Research, Univ. of<br />
				      Bath</p>
<p>We 13  America		   Arshile Gorky – Pathfinder to Abstract<br />
Expressionism<br />
			      Roger Whelan</p>
<p>We 13  Uni-verse	 Poets from Cornwall<br />
		    Helen Jagger</p>
<p>Th 14  Public Meeting	Jubilee in the Square<br />
		    Planning for the Queens Diamond Jubilee in 2012<br />
			    Dr Alexander Sturgis, Dir, Holburne Museum</p>
<p>Fr 15  Holburne 	   Charity Auction</p>
<p>Sa 16  Economics Grp  DEBATE: The alternative vote: Yes or No?</p>
<p>Su17   Walk	    Herbal Walk in Bath<br />
		    Led by Anna Gann Christensen</p>
<p>Mo 18 America		  America’s Relationship with the United Nations<br />
		    Declan Walton, Former UN Official.</p>
<p>Mo 18  Family History	A Plague of Blue Locusts? &#8211; The Police in Victorian<br />
				    Bath<br />
		    Professor Graham Davis, Bath Spa University</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
Guy Whitmarsh tells us he has updated the Antiquity section on our website and<br />
this includes preliminary details of the John Coates memorial lecture later<br />
this year:</p>
<p>http://www.brlsi.org/admin/group.cfm?group=an</p>
<p>This Monday’s talk by Simon Smallwood seems to be bringing all the oenophiles<br />
out of the woodwork. In the basement of our original home in Terrace Walk, next<br />
to the Parade Gardens, we gained some income by renting out cellars to a local<br />
wine merchant. Something that could be worth re-visiting at Queen Square?.. We<br />
have six cellars under the road here. We don’t have a hoard of fine wine<br />
stashed away unfortunately! The nearest thing we have is a souvenir bottle of<br />
liquor that Nelson’s body was pickled in after the Battle of Trafalgar.<br />
(Though it is believed many more souvenir bottles were sold than could have<br />
come from the original pickling!..)</p>
<p>http://www.twogreens.co.uk/wakeup/nelson/body_back.htm</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>28th March</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/28/28th-march-2/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/28/28th-march-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Mar 2011 17:37:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=180</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDA Y MARCH 28th<br />
*****************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:</p>
<p>Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>ECONOMICS: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Helping Good Causes”<br />
  Cllr Lorraine Brinkhurst, recent chair B&#038;NES Council, Chair Bath NSPCC,<br />
  an active fund raiser, Major Andrews, Salvation Army: Gerald Fitzgerald,<br />
  &#8216;Facing Africa&#8217;.</p>
<p>* If local services are cut back which Bath Charities or voluntary groups<br />
   may be expected to fill the gap?</p>
<p>* How will they seek more support?</p>
<p>* Might BRLSI have an additional role?..</p>
<p>TUESDAY MARCH 29th<br />
*****************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH: 2.00pm</p>
<p>AMERICA SERIES/JOHN WOOD LECTURE: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2.00, visitors £4.00</p>
<p>“British &#038; European Influences on American Architecture”<br />
  Chris Glass, Architect, Camden, Maine</p>
<p>Professor Glass will give the John Wood Architectural Lecture for the third<br />
time, based on his recently published &#8216;Historic Maine Homes: 300 years of great<br />
houses&#8217; illustrating the cultural sources for changing design ideas.</p>
<p>After their success with the 2004 Down East book &#8216;At Home in Maine: Houses<br />
Designed to Fit the Land&#8217;, architectural historian Christopher Glass and<br />
renowned architectural photographer Brian Vanden Brink now bring their skills<br />
and perspectives to bear on celebrating Historic Maine Homes. </p>
<p>Prof Glass focuses upon fascinating architectural history, Vanden Brink<br />
demonstrates his eye for finding the perfectly lit moment and the most<br />
enlightening angles to bring the homes alive, inside and out.</p>
<p>FRENCH CIVILISATION &#038; CULTURE: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2.00, Visitors £4.00</p>
<p>“Fashioning La Parisienne”<br />
  Dr Agnes Rocamora<br />
  London College of Fashion</p>
<p>This talk interrogates the myth of &#8216;la Parisienne&#8217; &#8211; the Parisian woman &#8211; by<br />
way of an analysis of its representation in the contemporary  French fashion<br />
media. Drawing on a range of images and texts and moving across the fields of<br />
art, literature and cinema, it discusses the way French glossy magazines<br />
reproduce stereotypical visions of the French capital and its female<br />
inhabitants.</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MARCH 30th<br />
********************<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH<br />
Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>SATURDAY APRIL 2nd<br />
*****************<br />
Two events:<br />
COFFEE MORNING 11.00-12.30pm  visitors welcome</p>
<p>THE JANE AUSTEN CENTRE – at BRLSI : 2.30pm<br />
Tickets £7.00 at door or in advance from Jane Austen Centre, 40 Gay Street, or<br />
online:<br />
<http://www.janeaustengiftshop.co.uk/acatalog/wedding_dress_tickets.html></p>
<p>“Very little satin, very few lace veils&#8230;!”<br />
  Dressing for your wedding in Georgian England<br />
  Talk by: ‘Dressing History’</p>
<p>The climax of every Austen novel, weddings were important not just socially but<br />
fashionably. In Georgian England getting married meant, not just buying a<br />
wedding dress but a complete wardrobe for your new life as somebody&#8217;s wife.<br />
Using reproduction items, this special talk from Dressing History will explore<br />
the traditions of the wedding dress itself, from favoured colours to choosing a<br />
style, as well as the effect that marriage would have on how a lady was<br />
expected to dress. Tickets £7 online follow the link below, or from The Jane<br />
Austen Centre, </p>
<p>MONDAY APRIL 4th<br />
***************************<br />
PATRICK O’’BRIAN GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £4, Visitors £6<br />
Advance tickets available from Bath Box Office: 01225 463362</p>
<p>“Wine in 18th Century England (and how it got here)”<br />
  Simon Smallwood<br />
  Master of Wine</p>
<p>Correspondence between two brothers in the wine trade and the provisioning of<br />
HMS Rattlesnake in 1782 are some of the fascinating sources that shed light on<br />
the late eighteenth century  wine trade.</p>
<p>Taste some of the modern examples of the late 18th Century wines that were<br />
legally imported into England..</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Wed 6	America Frank Lloyd Wright – One Man’s View<br />
		Robert Marshall</p>
<p>Thu 7	Herschel	Cosmology from Clusters of Galaxies<br />
		Dr Ben Maughan<br />
		University of Bristol</p>
<p>Thu 7	America Living with the 21st Century Shakers<br />
	(1pm)	Janet &#038; Allan Parrott<br />
		American Museum in Britain</p>
<p>Thu 7	B.Geol Soc	Caves &#038; Cannibals: A Mendip Perpective<br />
		Dr Danielle Schreve<br />
		University of London  </p>
<p>Sat 9  BRLSI/Gask.	“We are so comfortable and the place is so lovely”:</p>
<p>	   (2.30pm)	  Elizabeth Gaskell in Germany<br />
		  Prof. Peter Skrine</p>
<p>Su 10 Jane Austen	 Chapters in the Austen Family’s Life<br />
	(3pm)	 Patrick Stokes<br />
		 Patrick is a descendant of Jane Austen’s brother</p>
<p>Tue 12	Poetry	In T.S.Eliots Hearing<br />
		Christopher Ricks Boston<br />
		recent Professor of Poetry, Oxford</p>
<p>Tue 12	Spk.of Res.	The Evolution of Finance &#038; Causes of the Crisis<br />
		James Beadle<br />
		Postgraduate Research, University of Bath		       </p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
It had to happen sooner or later. Having had a period when every other person<br />
entering our portals seemed to be a relative of Darwin, your Editor notes that,<br />
on Sunday the 10th April, we have the first (?) member of the Austen clan to<br />
grace our premises&#8230;.</p>
<p>We have remarked previously that our Web Editor, Paul Stephens, was pining<br />
after the death of the late Captain Beefheart. Just in case his music was<br />
unfamiliar we sought advice from Michael Godwin, of the Patrick O’Brian<br />
Group, as to what might be appropriate. He came up with these:</p>
<p>“Loads of videos here, most of which I found at</p>
<p>http://www.beefheart.com/filtered/index.html</p>
<p>In chronological order<br />
1968:<br />
Electricity and Sure ?Nuff N Yes I Do</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/1MnQx80nS9U?version=3"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/1MnQx80nS9U?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Cannes Beach: Jerry Handley ? bass, Alex St Clair Snouffer guitar, Jeff Cotton<br />
guitar, John French drums</p>
<p>1971:<br />
Capain Beefheart &#038; His Magic Band &#8211; Detroit &#8217;71</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/eFMjztFBSzM?version=3"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/eFMjztFBSzM?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>When Big Joan Sets Up;	Woe Is A Me Bop; Bellerin Plain<br />
Poor quality, but the only video I know from the immediate post-Trout Mask<br />
period. Genuinely weird! John French on drums, Art Tripp on Marimba, Mark<br />
Boston on double neck bass and 6-string gtr, Bill Harkleroad on guitar.</p>
<p>1972:<br />
I&#8217;m Gonna Booglarize Ya Baby on YouTube<br />
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nu9fOcIzYNQRecorded live for German TV&#8217;s Beat<br />
Club.</p>
<p>1972 (possibly 1973): Click Clack from Paris Bataclan Club:<br />
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2ZMOKLsiuY   &#8221;</p>
<p>Unfortunately his own musical offerings with ‘Rocky Ricketts &#038; the Jet Pilots<br />
of Jive’ are pre- ‘You-Tube’ but there is an honourable mention here from<br />
the days when Bath used to ‘swing’:</p>
<p>http://www.ukrockfestivals.com/bath-free-fest-72.html</p>
<p>The Patrick O’Brian Group is up to its gunnels with talent and here is<br />
probably the nearest the BRLSI Bulletin will get to ‘A Book at Bedtime’<br />
with a short recitation  by member Ric Jerrom flexing his vocal chords:</p>
<p><http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xhakmt_happy-birthday-turk_shortfilms></p>
<p>On Friday evening there is a convivial evening with a jazz flavour for those of<br />
you who would like to come, just bring some food and wine to share. There will<br />
be a small band also, we have a piano, can anyone out there do this as a party<br />
piece?.. </p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cAAcqeXcEfk?version=3"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cAAcqeXcEfk?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>You should grasp every opportunity to make music:</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/qtx7l9aVuA8?version=3"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/qtx7l9aVuA8?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested..</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>21st March</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/21/21st-march/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/21/21st-march/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Mar 2011 10:34:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=178</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDA Y MARCH 21st<br />
*****************<br />
Four events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH<br />
Sessions: 2.00 &#038; 7.00</p>
<p>WORLD AFFAIRS GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Racism in Western Europe”<br />
  Prof Roger Eatwell<br />
  Professor of Comparative European Politics, Bath University</p>
<p>When did racism first appear in Europe? Why have different forms of racist<br />
politics revived in recent years in countries such as France and Switzerland?</p>
<p>This talk will provide a framework to allow an interactive opportunity to<br />
explore a wide set of historical and contemporary questions concerning the<br />
centrality of race to European culture.</p>
<p>BATH FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY: 7.30pm</p>
<p>&#8216;Wandering and Begging: vagrant children in Victorian times&#8217;<br />
Shirley Hodgson, past chairman of Bristol &#038; Avon FHSoc..</p>
<p>TUESDAY MARCH 22nd<br />
 *****************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:<br />
Session: 2.00pm </p>
<p>PERSPECTIVES ON AMERICA SERIES: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Claire Mc Cardell and American Fashion”<br />
  Rosemary Harden<br />
  Bath Fashion Museum Manager</p>
<p>Claire McCardell, who worked in fashion in the mid-twentieth century, has been<br />
described as the mother of American sportswear, and the precursor of designers<br />
like Calvin Klein and Donna Karan. </p>
<p>However, her name is not that well known in this country; this lecture will aim<br />
to redress that imbalance by showing how the easy wearable styles of this<br />
American designer were so influential in forming the basis of much of modern<br />
dressing.</p>
<p>CHARLES RENNIE MACKINTOSH SOCIETY: 7.30pm<br />
Adm: £7.00 (including a glass of wine or soft drink)</p>
<p>&#8220;Exploring Mackintosh&#8217;s Architecture&#8221;<br />
 Dr Nicky Imrie<br />
 Hunterian Gallery, Glasgow</p>
<p>Dr Imrie talks about a three year project to catalogue, for the first time<br />
ever, all of Mackintosh&#8217;s architecture; there will be a sneak preview of a new<br />
online catalogue of his work.</p>
<p>ffi: 01225 443356 or: crmbath@hotmail.com</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MARCH 23rd<br />
********************<br />
Three events:<br />
BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:<br />
Sessions:  2.00 &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>POETRY GROUP:  7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“ ‘The Human Chain’ Seamus Heaney”</p>
<p>Readings and discussion of Seamus Heaney’s latest collection of poetry,<br />
&#8216;Human Chain&#8217;.<br />
led by Dr David Skidmore, University of Bath.</p>
<p>Explore and discuss Heaney’s latest collection, which has been very well<br />
reviewed.</p>
<p>THURSDAY MARCH 24th<br />
***************************<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Adelard of Bath – Translations from the Arabic”<br />
  Prof. Charles Burnett<br />
  Warburg Institute, University of London</p>
<p>Adelard of Bath, &#8216;England&#8217;s first scientist&#8217;, flourished in the early 12th<br />
century. He was a mathematician, astronomer, philosopher, astrologer,<br />
alchemist, musician and medic. He spent seven years in the Middle East, where<br />
he translated important Arabic texts into Latin.</p>
<p>Prof Burnett, the leading expert on &#8216;England&#8217;s First Scientist&#8217;, has translated<br />
Adelards works &#8211; including &#8216;Conversations with his nephew&#8217; &#8211; from the Latin -<br />
making Adelard accessible to us for the first time.</p>
<p>FRIDAY MARCH 25th<br />
**********************<br />
BATH FILM SOCIETY: 7.45pm<br />
BFS Members &#038; their guests only</p>
<p>“Mua he chieu thang dung”, Vietnam, Dir: Anh Hung Tran<br />
(Vertical Ray of the Sun)<br />
Starring Do Thi Hai Yen, Tran Nu Yên-Khê, Nhu Quynh Nguyen</p>
<p>SATURDAY MARCH 26th<br />
******************<br />
COFFEE MORNING – 11.00-12.30 – Visitors welcome<br />
Your host: Janet Cunliffe-Jones</p>
<p>MONDAY MARCH 28th<br />
***********************<br />
ECONOMICS GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students  £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Helping Good Causes”<br />
  Cllr. Loraine Brinkhurst MBE<br />
  Recent Chair BANES Council, Chair Bath Branch NSPCC and active fund-<br />
  raiser</p>
<p>If local services are cut back which Bath charities or voluntary groups may be<br />
expected to fill the gap?<br />
How will they seek more support? Might BRLSI have an additional role?..</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Tue 29	 America	British and European Influences on American<br />
				Architecture<br />
				Chris Glass, Architect, Camden, Maine</p>
<p>Tue 29	 French Fashioning La Parisienne<br />
		Dr Agnes Rocamora, London College of Fashion</p>
<p>Sat  2	Jane A Fest	Very Little Satin – Wedding Attire<br />
		Dressing History</p>
<p>Mon 4	P O’Brian	Wine in 18th Century England – And How it Got Here<br />
		Simon Smallwood,  Master of Wine</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
Can we thank all those people who helped with ‘Bath Taps into Science’ . We<br />
had several thousand pass through over the two days, up at the University and<br />
down at Green Park Station. The feedback has been very positive and it was very<br />
gratifying to see kids, who might have been brought by schools on the Friday,<br />
dragging their parents along for more on the Saturday!	Our thanks also go to<br />
our friends at Green Park Brasserie and Ethical Property in the vaults at Green<br />
Park station. One aspect that did come up while preparing for the science fair<br />
was that we have lost our contact which gave us access to a small workshop. So,<br />
if in your garage you happen to have anything like these gathering dust, or you<br />
are feeling particularly munificent, we could do with something like these for<br />
helping with constructing science demonstrations (and which would also be<br />
useful for small maintainance jobs, collections curation and exhibitions):<br />
<http://www.axminster.co.uk/axminster-sieg-sx0-micro-mill-prod827992/><br />
<http://www.axminster.co.uk/axminster-sieg-c2a-300mm-mini-lathe-prod564883/><br />
<http://www.axminster.co.uk/axminster-305mm-sheet-metal-worker-prod23311/></p>
<p>Your editor keeps getting asked to keep up the musical links in this end-piece.<br />
Here is something Jonathan in the office bought to our attention which is up at<br />
the University next Saturday. Tuvan overtone singing may not be something a lot<br />
of you may have come across so there are four songs here:</p>
<p>http://www.alashensemble.com/</p>
<p>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overtone_singing</p>
<p>and ignoring all warnings for ‘Don’t do this at home’:</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/a940YFaRI50?version=3"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/a940YFaRI50?version=3" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested..</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>14th March</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/14/14th-march-2/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/14/14th-march-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Mar 2011 07:09:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=176</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE</p>
<p> “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDAY MARCH 14th<br />
*****************<br />
Bridge School of Bath: Sessions: 2.00pm &#038; 7.00pm</p>
<p>TUESDAY MARCH 16th<br />
************************<br />
Bridge School of Bath: 2.00pm</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MARCH 16th<br />
********************<br />
Four events:</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH:~<br />
Sessions; 2.00pm, 7.00pm</p>
<p>BATH POETRY CAFE: 7.00 for 7.30pm<br />
All tickets £5.00</p>
<p>For the third year, Cafe Poets share their thoughts on the universally engaging<br />
theme of Love.</p>
<p>Linda Snell, Michael Scott<br />
Dawn Gorman, Katherine T Owen<br />
Marie-Claire Oliver, Leanda Senior<br />
Teresa Davey, Sarah Wheeler<br />
Gillie Harries, Lesley Saunders<br />
Rose Flint, Deborah Harvey<br />
John Terry, Sue Boyle<br />
Jill Sharp, John Richardson<br />
Pameli Benham, Cathy Wilson<br />
Pat Simmons, Shirley Wright<br />
Nikki Bennett, Linda Saunders<br />
June Hall, Frances-Anne King<br />
David Skidmore</p>
<p>INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS /WEMMA/RSC  Joint Meeting<br />
VISITORS WELCOME &#8211; ADMISSION FREE: 7.30pm<br />
Coffee from 7.00pm</p>
<p>“Watts New with Clean Energy Materials – Batteries Included”<br />
  Prof. Saiful Islam<br />
  Dept. of Chemistry<br />
  University of Bath</p>
<p>Cleaner energy conversion and storage technologies are essential to help kick<br />
the fossil fuel habit and cut carbon emissions. For major advances in such<br />
technologies (including fuel cells and lithium batteries) the development of<br />
new materials is crucial. This talk will highlight (with the aid of 3D<br />
spectacles for everyone!) the use of computer modelling and structural<br />
techniques to help understand new crystalline materials for fuel cells and<br />
lithium batteries on the atomic scale. </p>
<p>THURSDAY MARCH 17th<br />
*****************************<br />
PERSPECTIVES ON AMERICA: 7.30pm</p>
<p>“A Theory on the Creation of American Policy Agendas”<br />
 Bill Roesing<br />
 Political Strategist</p>
<p>American policy agendas are created by a process the speaker calls &#8216;The<br />
American Spiral&#8217;. Bill Roesing, who worked in Washington DC for many years,<br />
will elaborate on how this process works with particular emphasis on the<br />
agendas led by Abraham Lincoln, Theodore &#038; Franklin Roosevelt and Ronalld<br />
Regan.</p>
<p>FRIDAY MARCH 18th<br />
********************<br />
SCIENCE GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Reception from 6.45pm</p>
<p>“Seeing Beneath the Waves – Mapping the Ocean Floor”<br />
 Dr Philippe Blondel<br />
 Physics Department, University of Bath</p>
<p>Oceans make up most of the Earth and can only be mapped using sound. The last<br />
decades have seen tremendous improvements in both our knowledge of the ‘Blue<br />
Planet’ and in our capabilities to explore it. </p>
<p>This talk will present the latest sensors and their main discoveries around the<br />
world, in particular at underwater volcanoes, shipwrecks and fragile marine<br />
habitats.</p>
<p>SATURDAY MARCH 19th<br />
***************************<br />
Two events:<br />
COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30pm</p>
<p>ANALYTIC NETWORK:10.30am<br />
Tickets £8.00 on door, refreshments included</p>
<p>“Teaching mindfulness &#038; mindfulness in the therapeutic process”<br />
  Nigel Wellings<br />
  Psychoanalytic Therapist</p>
<p>Mindfullness is flavour of the month with &#8216;Mindfullness Cognitive Therapy&#8217;<br />
being recognised as a treatment of choice by NICE. However, in the speaker&#8217;s<br />
experience of assisting on the widely taught &#8216;Eight Week Mindfulness Course&#8217; it<br />
has become clear that often some good therapy is first necessary to take full<br />
advantage. When this is indicated and also the opposite &#8211; when therapy could do<br />
with some mindfulness.</p>
<p>Nigel Wellings is a psychoanalytic therapist working within a contemplative<br />
perspective. He is a founder member of the &#8220;Forum for Contemplative Studies&#8221; &#038;<br />
author (with Elizabeth Wilde McCormick) of &#8216;Nothing to Lose: Psychotherapy,<br />
Buddhism &#038; Living Life&#8217;</p>
<p>MONDAY MARCH 21st: 7.30pm<br />
**************************************<br />
World Affairs: Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Racism in Western Europe”<br />
  Roger Eatwell<br />
  Professor of Comparative European Politics, Bath University</p>
<p>When did racism first appear in Europe? Why have different forms of racist<br />
politics revived in recent years in countries such as France and Switzerland?</p>
<p>This talk will provide a framework to allow an interactive opportunity to<br />
explore a wide set of historical and contemporary questions concerning the<br />
centrlity of race to European culture.</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
The havoc wreaked by the Japanese Tsunami is a reminder of the previous one in<br />
2005. After that one we had a fundraising afternoon of talks which went very<br />
well and was very informative. Should we do another in this case, if we can get<br />
the speakers? Let us know your opinion&#8230; We didn’t have much success with<br />
our event for the Pakistan floods, but there was not so much telegenic drama<br />
and it was August and a lot of people were away. If we can, we like to be<br />
topical and, purely coincidentally, Dr Philippe Blondel, one of our members<br />
from the Physics Dept, Bath University, (who spoke at the first event) is<br />
giving a talk on Friday 18th March on “Seeing beneath the waves – Mapping<br />
the Ocean Floor”. His talk on Tsunami’s has obviously found its way into<br />
the media press cuttings file as over the last few days he has done numerous<br />
interviews with various BBC channels and ITV.	</p>
<p>If you missed Simon Tyler&#8217;s &#8220;Fosse Way and Myth&#8221; lecture in last year&#8217;s<br />
&#8220;Romans in Bath&#8221; series, you can catch it again at the Methodist Hall on the<br />
A4 in Box on Tuesday 15th March. Simon will be speaking to the Box<br />
Archaeological and Natural History Society. In tracing this Roman road from<br />
Devon to Lincolnshire, there are many layers of story and history.  As with so<br />
much of history and archaeology, the story depends upon the teller, and upon<br />
the simplifications in his account and the reasons for them. 7:30pm, £1 for<br />
visitors. Parking on the Devizes road.</p>
<p>Your Editor has been slipping in a few musical items at the end of our Bulletin<br />
but, before he gets his knuckles wrapped by our chairman, he thought he ought<br />
to include a few items such as:</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/e/0HXYdGGKV2k"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/e/0HXYdGGKV2k" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Less frenetic and with a cute ending!:</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/e/kko1uYyqJ_o"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/e/kko1uYyqJ_o" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>no comment:</p>
<p>http://www.celestialmonochord.org/2005/03/worlds_largest_.html</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested&#8230;</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
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		<title>7th March</title>
		<link>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/07/march-7th/</link>
		<comments>http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/2011/03/07/march-7th/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Mar 2011 08:41:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bulletin.brlsi2.org/blogs/?p=169</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH, BA1 2HN TEL: 01225 312084 *************************************************** WEB: www.brlsi.org EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH: ************************************** DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00 ADMISSION FREE “American Wilderness’ . In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in partnership with the American Museum in Britain, take a contemplative view of the history of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BRLSI: 16 QUEEN SQUARE, BATH,  BA1 2HN	 TEL: 01225 312084<br />
***************************************************<br />
WEB:  www.brlsi.org</p>
<p>EXHIBITION: MARCH 5th – APRIL 25TH:<br />
**************************************<br />
DAILY: MON-SAT 10.00-16.00   ADMISSION	FREE<br />
 “American Wilderness’ . </p>
<p>In this exhibition, through evocative objects and Audubon prints, BRLSI in<br />
partnership with the American Museum  in Britain, take a contemplative view of<br />
the history of the American wilderness.</p>
<p>MONDAY MARCH 7th<br />
****************<br />
Five events:</p>
<p>THE SUFFRAGETTES’ TREE: CENTENNIAL EVENTS IN CELEBRATION OF INTERNATIONAL<br />
WOMENS DAY<br />
LUNCHTIME MEETING: 13.00</p>
<p>“Annie’s Arboretum: Suffrage Activism &#038; a Memorial Landscape in<br />
 Edwardian  Bath”<br />
 Dr Cynthia Hammond, Concordia University, Montreal</p>
<p>Annie’s Arboretum was the work of Col. Linley Blathwayt and his wife Emily at<br />
Eagle House Batheaston. A three acre field was planted out with 300 trees, each<br />
planted  for a particular suffragette with a lead plaque for each of them. It<br />
was planted in 1909 paying particular tribute to the women who had been<br />
imprisoned and force fed for their activism. </p>
<p>PHILOSOPHY GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“Buddha, Brain, Book”<br />
 John Bulman</p>
<p>The essence of the Buddhist message is very simple, but contradicts one of our<br />
deepest intuitions but ourselves. Contemporary science and the dawning<br />
understanding that all our thoughts and feelings derive from our material<br />
brains, support that Buddhist assertion. In turn, we can find the same<br />
essential message in the literature of our Christian tradition, if we translate<br />
some of its words and phrases sympathetically.</p>
<p>PATRICK O’BRIAN ENTHUSIASTS: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Tying &#038; Tatting”<br />
  A practical demonstration into the ancient art of creating with knots.<br />
  Europa Chang Dawson<br />
  Member of the Guild of Knot Tyers &#038; Lacemakers</p>
<p>Man had been tying knots ever since he made his first arrow, fashioned his<br />
clothing and set sail.</p>
<p>An Oxford graduate in mathematics, Europa&#8217;s interest in geometry and topology<br />
led her into the world of knots and navigation. Europa will give us a practical<br />
demonstration of this fascinating craft which ranges from nautical knots,<br />
braidng and macrame and the more delicate art of lace-making.</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH: Sessions 14.00 &#038; 19.00</p>
<p>TUESDAY MARCH 8th<br />
****************<br />
Two events:<br />
LITERATURE &#038; HUMANITIES GROUP: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“Elliot Carter – Eurocentric composer American Modernist?”<br />
 Prof Roger Heaton<br />
 School of Music &#038; Performing Arts, Bath Spa University</p>
<p>Elliot Carter will be 103 in 2011, and is still active as a composer. He has<br />
always considered himself an American composer writing American music, despite<br />
recent criticism of what has been called Eurocentrism. Tonight&#8217;s talk will<br />
discuss these two aspects of Carter&#8217;s music.</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH: 14.00</p>
<p>WEDNESDAY MARCH 9th<br />
*******************<br />
Four events:</p>
<p>UNIVERSE: 13.00<br />
Members/Students £2, visitors £4</p>
<p>“On Thin Ice”<br />
  Will Stone<br />
  Will reads from his award winning book ‘Glaciation’ &#038; discusses the art<br />
of<br />
  translating poetry.</p>
<p> Poet, essayist,&#038; literary translator, Will Stone&#8217;s first poetry collection<br />
&#8216;Glaciation&#8217; (2007) won the Internatiional Glen Dimplex Award for poetry in<br />
2008. His collection &#8216;Drawing in Ash&#8217; will appear from Salt Publishing in April<br />
2011. His published translations include the poems of Georg Trakl and Belgian<br />
symbolists Emile Verhaerer and Georges Rodenbach as well as essays by Stefan<br />
Zweig.</p>
<p>SPEAKING OF RESEARCH: 7.30pm<br />
Members/Students £2, Visitors £4</p>
<p>“The Protection of Palestinian Children”<br />
  Dr Jason Hart<br />
  Department of Social &#038; Policy Sciences, University of Bath</p>
<p>For decades, and in many ways, the lives of Palestinian children have been<br />
systematically violated. This has occurred in full view of the United Nations<br />
and international relief organisations charged with their protection from<br />
political violence. How might we account for such failure on the part of the<br />
international community and what are the implications for efforts to bring<br />
about long-term peace?</p>
<p>BRIDGE SCHOOL OF BATH: Sessions 14.00 &#038; 19.00</p>
<p>THURSDAY MARCH 10th<br />
******************<br />
Two events:<br />
BATH &#038; CAMERTON ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY: 7.30pm<br />
Visitors welcome £4, BACAS members £2</p>
<p>“Domustepe”<br />
  Neolithic site in Southern Turkey<br />
  Dr Alexander Fletcher<br />
  Curator, Middle East, British Museum</p>
<p>Domuztepe is the largest known example of a settlement from the late Neolithic<br />
(around 6,500-5,500BC). It was a key period of change in the Middle East after<br />
the development of farming and prior to the emergence of the earliest cities.</p>
<p>Alexandra‘s research interests encompass social information contained within<br />
material culture assemblages, particularly pottery. She also has research<br />
interests in the broader prehistory of the Near East and the social impact of<br />
stylistic and technological change.</p>
<p>BATH SPA UNIVERSITY  &#8211; STAND UP POETRY: 8.00pm<br />
Tickets at the door:£7.50,concessionary rate for BSU students of £5.00,</p>
<p>Anne Marie Fyfe and Hilary Menos </p>
<p>Anne-Marie Fyfe, poet, creative-writing teacher, arts-organiser &#038; former Chair<br />
of the Poetry Society, (2006-2009), was born in Cushendall in the Glens of<br />
Antrim and now lives in West London.<br />
Anne-Marie Fyfe has: published four volumes of poetry, including Understudies:<br />
New and Selected Poems (Seren Books, 2010); won the Academi Cardiff<br />
International Poetry Competition (2004) with her poem Curaçao Dusk;been<br />
Aldeburgh’s Poetry Trust Writer-in-Residence (2003); established Coffee-House<br />
Poetry at the Troubadour in 1997.</p>
<p>Hilary Menos has won or been placed in numerous competitions including the<br />
Mslexia Poetry Competition, BBC Wildlife Magazine Poet of the Year, the Buxton<br />
Poetry Competition and the Envoi Poetry Competition. She was one of five first<br />
stage winners of The Poetry Business Book and Pamphlet Competition 2004 and her<br />
pamphlet, Extra Maths, is published by Smith/Doorstop Books. She was one of 17<br />
poets featured in the Oxford Poets 2007 Anthology published by Carcanet.</p>
<p>Her first collection, Berg, was published by Seren Books in 2009 and has been<br />
shortlisted for the Forward Poetry Best First Collection 2010 and the London<br />
Festival Fringe New Poetry Prize 2010. Her pamphlet, Wheelbarrow Farm, was one<br />
of four winners of the Templar Poetry Pamphlet and Collection Competition 2010.<br />
Hilary lives in Devon renovating a Domesday Manor &#038; runs Beenleigh Manor<br />
Organics, a 100 acre organic farm near Totnes, with her husband, actor and<br />
musician Andy Brodie.</p>
<p>FRIDAY MARCH 11th<br />
****************<br />
BATH FILM SOCIETY<br />
Members &#038; their guests only</p>
<p>“Broken Embraces”<br />
 Spain, 2009, Dir: Pedro Almodovar</p>
<p>SATURDAY MARCH 12th<br />
******************<br />
Three events:<br />
COFFEE MORNING: 11.00-12.30pm</p>
<p>CERCLE FRANCAIS: 14.15</p>
<p>“Cible Emouvante”<br />
  Un film francais comique</p>
<p>http://filmsdefrance.com/FDF_Cible_emouvante_rev.html</p>
<p>WILLIAM HERSCHEL SOCIETY:<br />
2011 Annual Lecture of the William Herschel Society &#8211; At BRLSI<br />
Students £4, Visitors £5</p>
<p>“Exploring the Dynamic Universe”<br />
 Dr Andrew Newsam<br />
 Liverpool John Moores University</p>
<p>Introduced by Dr Alan Chapman, Wadham College, Oxford</p>
<p>The Liverpool Telescope, or &#8220;LT&#8221;, is a fully robotic astronomical telescope<br />
owned and operated by the Astrophysics Research Institute of Liverpool John<br />
Moores University in north west England. It was designed and built by Telescope<br />
Technologies Limited, a spin-off company of the University, as the prototype of<br />
their production-line range of two-metre class telescopes</p>
<p>Optical Design:<br />
The telescope itself is a two-metre Cassegrain reflector, with Ritchey-Cretien<br />
hyperbolic optics, on an altazimuth mount. Up to nine different instruments can<br />
be mounted at the Cassegrain focus, one in the &#8220;straight through&#8221; position and<br />
eight more on side ports accessible by a rotating &#8220;science fold&#8221; tertiary<br />
mirror. </p>
<p>Instrumentation:<br />
Current instruments on the telescope are an optical camera, an optical<br />
polarimeter, a dual-beam integral-field input spectrograph, a fast-readout<br />
optical camera. A replacement for the decommissioned SupIRCam infra-red imager<br />
is in development.</p>
<p>Also in use are the wide-field Skycams: 20° and 1° FOV optical cameras<br />
parallel-pointing with the LT, and an all-sky 180° camera mounted in the<br />
telescope enclosure. </p>
<p>(Advance tickets available from Wm Herschel Museum, 12 New King St, BA1 2BL -<br />
enc SAE)</p>
<p>COMING SOON:<br />
************<br />
Wed 16	Poetry Caf	Triumphant Return of the Famous Love Cafe<br />
Thu 17	 America	A theory on the Creation of American Policy Agendas<br />
		Bill Roesing – Political Strategist</p>
<p>Fri 18	Science Seeing Beneath the Waves – Mapping the Ocean Floor<br />
		Philippe Blondel – University of Bath</p>
<p>Sat 19	 Analyt Ntw	Talking &#038; Being Present<br />
		Nigel Willings</p>
<p>Mon 21 World Affrs	Racism in Western Europe<br />
		Prof Roger Eatwell, University of Bath</p>
<p>Mon 21	Fam Hist	Meeting</p>
<p>OTHER NEWS:<br />
***********<br />
Some of the musical clips in the latest Bulletins seem to have struck a chord<br />
with you so here’re some more, moving to north Africa this time, to a place<br />
currently in a state of turmoil Libya. So take yourself off to the desert for a<br />
minute or two with these. Arabic speakers are scarce in the early hours on the<br />
west side of Queen Square so your editor is hoping none of the lyrics are<br />
offensive.<br />
Words fail me for the last clip though!</p>
<p>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5qpIl5_sPE&#038;feature=related</p>
<p><object width="500" height="400"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/e/AF10U-ewmQo"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/e/AF10U-ewmQo" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="400" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hemZMthSYeU&#038;feature=fvwrel</p>
<p>Please forward this Bulletin on to any of your colleagues who might be<br />
interested.</p>
<p>Bob Draper</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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