Directions:
From Manchester and north.
Get onto Rt. 101 West, follow it through Bedford into Amherst. Watch for an exit sign that reads "Rt. 122 Amherst" and take that exit. Turn right at the end of the exit ramp. You'll pass the Police station on your left, continue to a traffic light. Turn right at the light and go to the stop sign two blocks down. Turn left at the stop sign and the library will be on your left about a half block down.
From central Mass.
Head for Rt. 13 North and follow it to Milford, NH. Then get onto Rt. 101 East. Take the next exit (Rt. 101A East). Turn right at the end of the exit ramp and get into the left lane. At the next traffic light turn left onto Rt. 122 North. Follow 122 to the next traffic light (not a blinking light, a real traffic light.) Go straight through the light and turn left at the next stop sign. Library is on your left as noted above.
From Keene, NH.
Take 101 East to Milford. Then follow directions above for Central Mass beginning with the Rt. 101A East exit.
From Nashua, NH and points East.
Take 101A West to the intersection of Rt. 122. Turn right onto 122 North and follow directions as noted above in the Central Mass. block starting with 'Follow 122 to'.
I think that covers everyone except private pilots... :-)
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: June 2 talk - privacy and public policy Date: Mon, 02 Jun 2003 20:59:37 -0400 From: Wendy Rannenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Feel free to forward this to anyone who might be interested. If anyone has questions please send me email.
Barbara Simons. professor of Technology Policy at Stanford University, will give a presentation, Privacy and Public Policy at the Amherst Town Library on June 3rd from 6:30 to 8:30PM. This will be an interactive discussion and attendees are encouraged to come with questions. The talk is free and open to the public.
As we all know privacy is a concern from the mis-use of medical and insurance information to the stealing of another's identity. Yet there is much more to this issue than meets the eye. The new and evolving Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) Total Information Awareness (TIA) program is to be accomplished by the development of new technologies, including systems that would mine large quantities of data in order to identify potential terrorists. The U.S. Public Policy Committee of ACM (USACM) issued a letter that raises concerns about security, privacy, economic, and personal risks of TIA. This seminar will provide an overview of personal privacy issues and how they are affected by not only the TIA program but other changes in federal laws. Join us to learn about your privacy rights, policies, laws, and what you can do to protect those rights and your personal information.
Barbara Simons, past President of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), founded ACM's US Public Policy Committee (USACM), which she currently co-chairs. Recently, Dr. Simons has been teaching technology policy at Stanford University. She is a Fellow of ACM and the American Association for the Advancement of Science and she has received numerous awards including the Outstanding Contribution Award from ACM, and the Pioneer Award from EFF. She was selected by c|net as one of its 26 Internet "Visionaries" and by Open Computing as one of the "Top 100 Women in Computing." Dr. Simons has testified before both the U.S. and the California legislatures and at government-sponsored hearings. She co-founded the Reentry Program for Women and Minorities in Computer Science at U.C. Berkeley.
Simons served on the Presidents Export Councils Subcommittee on Encryption and on the Information Technology-Sector of the President's Council on the Year 2000 Conversion. She is on the Board of Directors of the U.C. Berkeley Engineering Fund, Public Knowledge, the Math/Science Network, and the Electronic Privacy Information Center, as well as the Advisory Boards of the Oxford Internet Institute and Zeroknowledge, and the Public Interest Registrys .ORG Advisory Council. She has testified before both the U.S. and the California legislatures and at government sponsored hearings. She was runner-up in the first election for the North America seat on the ICANN Board. She co-founded the Reentry Program for Women and Minorities in Computer Science at U.C. Berkeley.
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Dan Coutu Managing Director Snowy Owl Internet Consulting, LLC http://www.snowy-owl.com/
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