Queen Mary Events Autumn 2010
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Introduction
Queen Mary, University of London is one of London and the UK's leading research-focused higher education institutions. Amongst the three largest of the colleges of the University of London, Queen Mary's 3,000 staff deliver world class degree programmes and research across a wide range of subjects in the Humanities, Social Sciences and Laws, in Medicine and Dentistry and in Science and Engineering. Queen Mary's distinctiveness arises from its commitment to an engagement with international excellence in education and research and a twin commitment to bring that engagement to bear on its London and Thames Gateway environment. We invite you to join the events programme described in this leaflet, through which Queen Mary leads academic and public debate on a wide range of issues. For the latest information on all Queen Mary events, including up-to-date venue and booking information, please visit www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Produced by:
Events Office Queen Mary, University of London Mile End Road London E1 4NS Tel: +44 (0)20 7882 5148/5147 email: events@qmul.ac.uk Further information is available online at www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Contents
Humanities, Social Sciences and Laws Science and Engineering Medicine and Dentistry College events Alumni Events Campus map
04 08 12 16 18 22
The information given in this leaflet is correct at the time of going to press. The College reserves the right to modify or cancel any statement in it and accepts no responsibility for the consequences of any such changes.
Queen Mary, University of London 03
Humanities, Social Sciences and Laws
“Wealth became a problem for idealistic men and women committed to living as they believed Jesus had lived.� Professor Professor Seth Seth Koven Koven
Humanities, Social Sciences and Laws
21 October 2010, 5pm 25th Annual Lecture of the School of International Arbitration – Sponsored by Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP Consent to Arbitration: Do we Share a Common Vision? Professor Bernard Hanotiau, Louvain University, Belgium Venue: Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP, 65 Fleet Street, London EC4Y 1HT Event contact: ccls-events@qmul.ac.uk
most people in cities interact only fleetingly or rarely with strangers. There must be a far broader approach based around building on the shared experiences of people living in an urban environment and making interventions in a city’s public infrastructure and its cultures of shared concerns and attachments. However, little progress will be made unless a new public aversion in the West towards the stranger can be overcome. Venue: Clinical Medical Lecture Theatre, Francis Bancroft Building, Mile End campus Event contact: a.moison@qmul.ac.uk
3 November 2010, 9am 30th Anniversary of CCLS Conference The Supreme Court: An Assessment of the First Year This all-day event will focus on the role of the court with comparative perspectives from Europe and the United States. It will also explore private and commercial law developments, examining both specific judgements delivered by the Supreme Court and more general themes on the evolution of private law. The conference will close with a drinks’ reception at the offices of Farrer & Co, Lincoln's Inn Fields.
28 October 2010, 6pm School of Geography Public Lecture Cities and the Ethic of Care Among Strangers Professor Ash Amin, University of Durham Thinking on the politics of integration in plural and diverse societies has just begun to recognise how everyday habits of encounter shape feelings of affinity or distance among strangers. This lecture will consider the balance between bodily experience of the other and habits of urban dwelling in shaping relations between a city’s diverse communities. Although worthy, attempts to break down community barriers through initiatives to bring people from different backgrounds together can only have a limited effect since
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Venue: The Royal College of Surgeons, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PE Event contact: ccls-events@qmul.ac.uk
Queen Mary, University of London 05
Humanities, Social Sciences and Laws (cont)
6 November 2010, 9am A New Renaissance: Transforming Science, Spirit and Society Panel discussions with twenty contributors to associated book This meeting marks the publication of a new book, A New Renaissance, which diagnoses an urgent need for change and renewal in a period of crisis for philosophy, science and society. Reductionist science with its materialist values seems to be losing credibility. Its objectives of growth and acquisition, and its guiding principles asserting that there is no intrinsic meaning to life or purpose in the cosmos are now widely seen as creating an unsustainable world. The book is a cultural response to the failings of the materialist worldview. The event will feature four panel discussions, diagnosing the sources of the crisis in the current worldview, searching for a new understanding of consciousness and mind, looking to a renewal of spirituality beyond religion, and examining possible reforms in politics, economics and education, to help bring forth a society that can sustain the flourishing of human beings in a globally interconnected world.
11 and 12 November 2010, 9am Cybercrime Conference Venue: Council Chamber, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies,Charles Clore House, 17 Russell Square, London, WC1B 5DR Event contact: ccls-events@qmul.ac.uk
16 November 2010, 5.30pm MEM Forum Medicine and Community on the Edge of Empire: Health and Disease in Portugal, 1320-1520 Dr Iona McCleery, University of Leeds In 1443, the surgeon Lançarote of Porto, in Northern Portugal, was denounced for sleeping with his mother-in-law and exiled to Ceuta in North Africa for two years. The bland tone of the royal chancery record, that tells us of this incident, opens up a medical world unique in Europe
and extraordinarily poorly-known to modern scholarship: a world where a surgeon with an Arthurian name could end up in what was effectively Europe’s first penal colony! Although Portuguese medicine was fairly similar to that available in the rest of Europe, the presence of large, stable Jewish communities providing around 80 per cent of physicians, and the factors that led to the creation of the first global empire brought about significant differences in the healthcare system. This lecture will focus on three types of Portuguese community between the 14th and the 16th centuries: the royal court, the town and the colony, exploring how experiences of illness and healthcare played a key role in shaping perceptions of the individual, the community and the state, and how these perceptions in their turn influenced ideas about public health and medicine itself. Venue: Room 602, G O Jones Building, Mile End campus Event contact: j.boffey@qmul.ac.uk
Venue: Skeel Lecture Theatre, People's Palace, Mile End campus Event contact: info@scimednet.org
06 Queen Mary, University of London
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
18 November 2010, 6pm 26 November 2010, all day Seventh David M. Smith Lecture The Dialectics of Social Change Professor David Harvey, City University of New York David Harvey is a Distinguished Professor at the City University of New York and the Director of The Center for Place, Culture and Politics. He is a geographer whose interpretations of the workings of economies, politics and societies have had great influence on other disciplines. His numerous books include The Limits to Capital (1982), Consciousness and the Urban Experience (1985), The Condition of Postmodernity (1989), Justice, Nature and the Geography of Difference (1996), Spaces of Hope (2000), The New Imperialism (2003), A Brief History of Neoliberalism (2005) and The Enigma of Capital (2010). Venue: Skeel Lecture Theatre, People's Palace, Mile End campus Event contact: a.moison@qmul.ac.uk
Second Conference on International Law The Permanent Court and Modern International Law - Reflections on the PCIJ's Lasting Legacy Conference organised by Queen Mary, University of London, the University of Glasgow and the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in London, in co-operation with the British Institute of International and Comparative Law. Venue: Grange Holborn Hotel, 50-60 Southampton Row, London, WC1B 4AR Event contact: j.a.monk@qmul.ac.uk
30 November 2010, 6.30pm Inaugural Lecture Maxine Robertson, Professor of Innovation and Organisation Venue: Skeel Lecture Theatre, People’s Palace, Mile End campus Event contact: events@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 07
Science and Engineering
“More than meets the eye: Casual knowledge in apes and infants� Dr Amanda Seed
Science and Engineering
23 September 2010, 11am Physics Lecture Dislocation Nucleation and Dynamics in Silicon: Size Effects Professor Bill Gerberich, University of Minnesota Recently discovered behaviour of dependent flow characteristics of initially defect free single nanocrystals allows heretofore unavailable insight. The study involves in-situ transmission electron microscopy of singlecrystal silicon nanopillars and nanospheres. First, surface mediated dislocation nucleation can be identified. Second, we demonstrate an experimental dislocation dynamics relationship from direct measurements of dislocation velocities. With both molecular dynamics and experimental measurements of activation volumes, these lead to a phenomenological relationship for both yield strength and work hardening. While this may be mostly applicable to initially low density crystal structures, it is suggested as a route for more multi-scale modeling approaches to follow utilising discretised dislocation density analysis. From the dislocation nucleaton and their velocities, key parameters are measured. With these, the modeling ensues. The implication is that both strain-rate and length scale effects on flow characteristics www.qmul.ac.uk/events
can be accounted for in a model with testable parameters. Venue: Arts Lecture Theatre, Arts Building, Mile End campus Event contact: d.dunstan@qmul.ac.uk
6 October 2010, 12 noon School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme Kevin N Laland, University of St Andrews Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre. G O Jones Building, Mile End campus Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
12 October 2010, 12 noon Bevan Lecture Who taught Darwin? The origin of the Origin considered Professor John S Parker, University of Cambridge Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre. G O Jones Building, Mile End campus Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
20 October 2010, 3pm Seventh Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series Professor David Howard, University of York Seventh Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series on computer science and electronic engineering topics of general interest given by leaders in their fields from industry and academia. Venue: Mile End campus Event contact: txiang@eecs.qmul.ac.uk
27 October 2010, 10.30am School of Engineering and Materials Science - Industrial Liaison Forum This is an opportunity for external sponsors and other interested parties to examine the wide range of research that is being undertaken in the School of Engineering and Materials Science. Every established research project is showcased with sponsored prizes for the best work. Venue: The Octagon, Queens' Building, Mile End campus Event contact: j.busfield@qmul.ac.uk Queen Mary, University of London 09
Science and Engineering
27 October 2010, 1pm
27 October 2010, 6pm
School of Engineering and Materials Science - Prize Day
Fifth Drapers' Lecture in Learning and Teaching Higher Education and the Question of Conscience
Open to all, this annual event recognises academic excellence amongst all the students in the School of Engineering and Materials Science. Venue: The Octagon, Queens' Building, Mile End campus Event contact: j.busfield@qmul.ac.uk
Professor Sir David Watson In his lecture, David Watson will examine the origins, nature, development and plausibility of the claims made by higher education institutions to transform the lives of their student participants, not least in the sphere of personal responsibility.
This annual lecture series gives new and challenging perspectives on learning and teaching from a variety of viewpoints, institutions and organisations and provides a forum for the presentation of national strategy and policy issues within Higher Education. Previous lectures have been given by Professor Marcus du Sautoy, Baroness Morris and Professor Peter McPhee and Professor Steve Smith. Venue: Skeel Lecture Theatre, People's Palace, Mile End campus Event contact: drapers-lecture@qmul.ac.uk
3 November 2010, 12 noon School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme Neuronal coding of reward value and risk Professor Wolfram Schultz, University of Cambridge Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre, G O Jones Building, Mile End campus Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
10 Queen Mary, University of London
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
10 November 2010, 6.30pm
1 December 2010, 12 noon
8 December 2010, 12 noon
Inaugural Lecture Pat Healey, Professor in Cognitive Science
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme Generating functional diversity in the nervous system
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme Wills Lecture
Venue: Drapers’ Lecture Theatre, Geography Building, Mile End campus
Professor Richard Baines, University of Manchester
Professor David Barford, Institute of Cancer Research, Chester Beatty Laboratories
Event contact: events@qmul.ac.uk
Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre, G O Jones Building, Mile End campus
Venue: Room G23, G E Fogg Building, Mile End campus
Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
17 November 2010, 12 noon School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme Metalloproteins and the Cell Biology of Metals
24 November 2010, 3pm
15 December 2010, 12 noon
Seventh Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme
Professor Nigel J Robinson, University of Newcastle
Professor Sadie Creese, University of Warwick
Professor Jeremy Kilburn, Queen Mary, University of London
Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre, G O Jones Building, Mile End campus
Seventh Distinguished Lecturer Seminar Series on computer science and electronic engineering topics of general interest given by leaders in their fields from industry and academia.
Venue: Room G23, G E Fogg Building, Mile End campus
Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
24 November 2010, 12 noon
Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk
Venue: Mile End campus Event contact: txiang@eecs.qmul.ac.uk
School of Biological and Chemical Sciences Seminar Programme The Evolution of Mobile DNAs Professor John Brookfield, University of Nottingham Venue: G O Jones Lecture Theatre, G O Jones Building, Mile End campus Event contact: l.chittka@qmul.ac.uk www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 11
School of Medicine and Dentistry
“We hope to bring together all those working in the HIV field in the UK for a day of exciting talks and exchange of ideas� Professor Simon Wain-Hobson, Professor Sarah Rowland-Jones and Professor Mike Malim
Medicine and Dentistry
22 September 2010 Opening of Exhibition of Pathology Watercolours To be opened by the Warden, Professor Sir Nicholas Wright The display will be available for viewing each Tuesday from 9am 5pm, until the end of October 2010. Venue: Pathology Museum, St Bartholomew's Hosptial, West Smithfield Event contact: s.moore@qmul.ac.uk
6 October 2010, 12.30pm
26 October 2010, 8.30am-5.30pm William Harvey Day William Harvey Day will showcase some of the best cutting edge research currently underway in Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry and in our partner NHS Trusts. There will be nine presentations by School researchers, as well as three science “hot topics” presented by leading researchers who have recently joined the School, and three guest lectures. The full programme is available at www.smd.qmul.ac.uk/research/ williamharveyday
The day will conclude with the Barts and The London NHS Trust’s traditional annual St Luke’s-tide Service in the church of St Bartholomew the Great. All the lectures and presentations will be in the Morris Lecture Theatre in the Robin Brook Centre. The poster display, lunch, coffee and tea will be in the Great Hall of St Bartholomew’s Hospital and the Pathology Museum. Venue: Robin Brook Centre and Great Hall, St Bartholomew's Hospital, West Smithfield campus Event contact: events@qmul.ac.uk
RIME sessions Dr Andy Grant, Cardiff University Venue: Room 1.28, Garrod Building, Whitechapel campus Event contact: o.westwood@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 17
Medicine and Dentistry
11 November 2010, all day Clinical Teachers Day 2010 Professor Anthony Warrens, Queen Mary, University of London, Dr Jon Fuller, Queen Mary, University of London Venue: Whitechapel campus Event contact: rowan.harris@qmul.ac.uk
24 November 2010, 12.30pm RIME sessions Dr Karen Leslie, University of Toronto Venue: Room 1.28, Garrod Building, Whitechapel campus Event contact: o.westwood@qmul.ac.uk
1 December 2010, 12.30pm RIME sessions Paul McIntosh, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry Venue: Room 1.28, Garrod Building, Whitechapel campus Event contact: o.westwood@qmul.ac.uk
14 Queen Mary, University of London
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
3 December 2010, 1.30pm Pathology Open Afternoon Discovering the Cause and Effect of Life-threatening Disease This is the third such event, aimed at unravelling some of the mysteries surrounding pathology, the hidden science at the heart of modern medicine. You will have the opportunity to learn about: • What happens to your appendix once removed by the surgeon and sent to the Pathology Laboratory • What you need to know about skin cancer and how to prevent it • The perils of smoking and its effects on the lungs • Breast and testicular lumps and bumps • Dangerous blood and how to avoid wound and blood infections that can kill - Other related pathological specimens will be exhibited and plenty of health educational material will be available. Experts from all levels, including pathologists, laboratory scientists and medical students, will be on hand to answer any questions you may have. Venue: Whitechapel campus Event contact: l.singer@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 15
Queen Mary
“Schumann, one of the Anniversary composers of 2010, is a creator of profound musical poetry” www.qmul.ac.uk/alumni/formerstaff
Queen Mary
Every Thursday starting from 23 September 2010, 9am - 2pm
11 November 2010, 10.50am - two minutes' silence at 11am
London Farmers' Market
Act of Remembrance Remembrance Day Commemoration
Fresh food direct from the farm, including hot food for lunch. Open to both students and academic staff - look out for weekly special offers and seasonal specials. There will be a selection of fruit, vegetables, meats and cheeses, all produced by local growers. There will also be hot food at lunchtime and fresh bread and cakes, as well as other food made with local ingredients such as curry sauces and hot pies. Venue: Outside The Curve, Westfield Way, Mile End campus Event contact: info@lfm.org.uk
A short Act of Remembrance and Wreath Laying in the Queens’ Building courtyard. An opportunity for the College community to gather in honour of former students and staff who died in wartime. Venue: Courtyard, Queens' Building, Mile End campus Event contact: j.e.petersen@qmul.ac.uk
3 December 2010, 7.30pm Concert and Reception College Music Society’s Christmas Concert: Robert Schumann (18101856) “Schumann, one of the Anniversary composers of 2010, is a creator of profound musical poetry”. The programme features some of his greatest works, plus a few neglected ones, in the context of an enigmatic and complex life. To comply with tradition, this concert ends with Christmas carols for audience and performers, with particular reference to the evening’s host composer. Admission is strictly by ticket, available from the Events Office. Venue: The Octagon, Queens' Building, Mile End campus Event contact: events@qmul.ac.uk
13 December 2010, 1pm Traditional Carol Service A traditional Christmas service with carols, readings and prayers. Venue: The Octagon, Queens' Building, Mile End campus Event contact: j.e.petersen@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 17
Alumni
“Particle Physics aims to contribute to the fundamental questions of where we come from through an innovative and detailed study of nature.� Professor Steve Lloyd and Dr Francesca Di Lodovico
Alumni
Women to Fight for an Education (2009, Penguin), the Kirkaldy Society AGM for Geologists and interested alumni, departmental and campus tours, as well as lunch in the Octagon and afternoon tea. The weekend will close with the 2010 Alumni Lecture to be given by Professor Colin Jones from the Department of History, on Kissing
and the History of Paris. For full and up-to-date information about the Weekend, visit www.qmul.ac.uk/ alumni/alumniweekend2010 Image courtesy of David (q The London, 1966) and Elizabeth Wise (q The London, 1966)
1 October - 2 October 2010, all day Alumni Reunion Weekend Alumni from Queen Mary, Westfield, Barts and The London are invited to our second Alumni Reunion Weekend. This is an ideal opportunity to meet up with your contemporaries and visit Queen Mary’s campuses at West Smithfield, Charterhouse Square, Whitechapel and Mile End. All alumni and their guests are welcome to attend activities across this two-day event. Friday’s programme includes visits to the Barts and The London Institute of Cancer and the Heart Centre, a guided tour of St Bartholomew-the-Great, visits to www.qmul.ac.uk/events
the Centre of the Cell and Blizard Institute of Cell and Molecular Science, a tour of the pathology specimens at The London and a guided visit to the new Royal London Hospital, as well as a buffet lunch and afternoon tea.
Booking fee: Please visit our website as above for information or telephone +44 (0)20 7882 7790 Venue: Friday: West Smithfield, Charterhouse Square and Whitechapel campuses; Saturday: Mile End campus Event contact: alumni@qmul.ac.uk
Saturday’s programme includes a coach tour of the Olympic site at Stratford, a guided walking tour of Bow, a talk by Jane Robinson, author of Bluestockings: The Remarkable Story of the First Queen Mary, University of London 19
Alumni
2 October 2010, all day Department of Physics Alumni Day Contemporary Particle Physics Particle Physics aims to contribute to the fundamental questions of where we come from through an innovative and detailed study of nature. Such a study requires a careful meticulous examination of what matter is made of, which necessitates precision experiments capable of testing with high accuracy theories attempting to describe matter.
20 Queen Mary, University of London
The status of the biggest ever experiment, ATLAS, at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN in Geneva, will be presented together with an overview on neutrinos, that brought the first evidence of physics beyond predictions from the Standard Model of particle physics. In particular, the experiments T2K that have recently started, and SNO+, currently under construction, will be described. Join Professor Steve Lloyd and Dr Francesca Di Lodovico, from the Particle Physics Research Centre (PPRC) at Queen Mary, University
of London’s Department of Physics, for a relaxed programme of lectures, conversation and lunch. Booking fee: £35 per person, inclusive of the lecture programme, lunch and afternoon tea Book online at www.qmul.ac.uk/alumni Venue: Clinical Lecture Theatre, Francis Bancroft Building, Mile End campus Event contact: alumni@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
19 November 2010, 7.15pm for 8pm BATLAA Dinner and Dance Barts and The London Alumni Association invite alumni, current and former staff of the School of Medicine and Dentistry, former Medical Colleges, Institute of Dentistry and the Hospitals of the Trust and their guests to the biennial Dinner and Dance. For further information, including help with getting your friends together, please contact +44 (0)20 7882 7790 Dress code: Black tie Booking fee: £110 (includes champagne reception, four-course dinner with wine, after-dinner drinks and dancing until late) Book online www.qmul.ac.uk/ alumni/alumninetwork/batlaa/events Venue: Drapers’ Hall, Throgmorton Street, London, EC2N 2DQ, Event contact: batlaa@qmul.ac.uk
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
Queen Mary, University of London 21
Campus map Mile End campus
1
21
1 7
22
27
31 19
11
14
30 16
41
13
32
35 34 15
23
42 39 4 24 20 9 12 18
10
1
2 3 4
Albert Stern House and Cottages (Student Residences) Arts Research Centre Beaumont Court (Student Residences) Catering Building - The Hive - Ground - Bank
5 6 7 8
22 Queen Mary, University of London
- Book shop - Conference and Hospitality Office Chapman House (Student Residences) Chesney House (Student Residences) Computer Science Creed Court (Student Residences)
9
School of Law (also at Lincoln’s Inn Fields site) 10 East Gate 11 Engineering Building - School of Engineering and Materials Sciences - Department of Electronic Engineering
2
12 Faculty of Arts 13 Francis Bancroft Building - Mason Lecture Theatre - Clinical Medical Lecture Theatre - School of Business and Management
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
26 33 28 8
3
38
40 36 41 37 25
29 6 5 17
- Education and Staff Development - Turnbull Centre - Biophysics in Dentistry - Biomaterials - Disability and Dyslexia Service - Audio Visual Services
www.qmul.ac.uk/events
- Language Lab - Bar Med 14 G E Fogg Building - School of Biological and Chemical Sciences 15 G O Jones Building - Department of Physics
- Learning Resource Centre - Lecture Theatre 16 Geography Building - Drapers’ Lecture Theatre - Advice and Counselling - Health Centre - Department of Geography - Occupational Health Service - Joint Research Development Office - Professionals Complimentary to Dentistry 17 Graduate Centre for Humanities and Social Science (Lock-keeper’s Cottage) 18 Hatton House (Student Residences) 19 Qmotion (Health and Fitness Centre) Students’ Union shop 20 Humanities Building (under construction 2010) 21 Ifor Evans Place (Student Residences) 22 Informatics Teaching Laboratory (ITL) 23 Library 24 Lindop House (Student Residences) 25 Lodge House (Student Residences) 26 Lynden House (Student Residences) 27 Mathematical Sciences 28 Maurice Court (Student Residences) 29 Maynard House (Student Residences) 30 Multi-Faith Centre
31 Nursery 32 People’s Palace - Great Hall - Skeel Lecture Theatre 33 Pooley House (Student Residences) 35 Principal’s Office 34 Queens’ Building - Main Reception/Enquiries - College Administration - Admissions Office - Residences Office - Security Lodge - The Octagon - Department of Economics 36 Richard Feilden House - Blomeley Centre (Student Union Offices) - The Curve - Student Residences 37 Selincourt House (Student Residences) 38 Sir Christopher France House (Student Residences) 39 St Benet’s Chaplaincy 40 Student Village Shop 41 Varey House (Student Residences) 42 Joseph Priestley Building - Engineering and Materials Science (Nanoforce) - School of Biological and Chemical Sciences
Queen Mary, University of London 23
This leaflet has been produced by the Publications and Web Office for the Events Office - Pub6918 For further information contact: Events Office Queen Mary, University of London Mile End Road London E1 4NS Tel: +44 (0)20 7882 5148 Fax: +44 (0)20 7882 3706 email: events@qmul.ac.uk www.qmul.ac.uk/events
This publication has been printed on environmentally friendly material from well-managed sources