k***@kk.org
2003-11-05 00:44:46 UTC
Friends,
We've just announced the following good news. Feel free to post and
forward this invitation.
Musician/producer BRIAN ENO will be giving a rare free public lecture
next week at Fort Mason in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 14, in the
Herbst Pavillion. Coffee bar opens at 7pm, lecture at 8pm. Directions
to Herbst Pavillion are here
http://www.fortmason.org/directions/index.html.
This is not a concert. Brian Eno will be speaking about "The Long
Now." His talk will be the first of a monthly series of Seminars
About Long-term Thinking, sponsored by The Long Now Foundation
(http://www.longnow.org). Eno's talks are usually as amazing as his
music.
The on-going lectures in this new monthly series will be every second
Friday at Fort Mason. Future speakers include Peter Schwartz, George
Dyson, Laurie Anderson, Rusty Schweickart, Paul Hawken, Daniel Janzen,
and Danny Hillis.
Admission to the lectures is free (a $10 donation is welcome but NOT
required). The hall holds about 700 people. For unticketed lectures
like this it's a good idea to come early for a good seat.
We've just announced the following good news. Feel free to post and
forward this invitation.
Musician/producer BRIAN ENO will be giving a rare free public lecture
next week at Fort Mason in San Francisco on Friday, Nov. 14, in the
Herbst Pavillion. Coffee bar opens at 7pm, lecture at 8pm. Directions
to Herbst Pavillion are here
http://www.fortmason.org/directions/index.html.
This is not a concert. Brian Eno will be speaking about "The Long
Now." His talk will be the first of a monthly series of Seminars
About Long-term Thinking, sponsored by The Long Now Foundation
(http://www.longnow.org). Eno's talks are usually as amazing as his
music.
The on-going lectures in this new monthly series will be every second
Friday at Fort Mason. Future speakers include Peter Schwartz, George
Dyson, Laurie Anderson, Rusty Schweickart, Paul Hawken, Daniel Janzen,
and Danny Hillis.
Admission to the lectures is free (a $10 donation is welcome but NOT
required). The hall holds about 700 people. For unticketed lectures
like this it's a good idea to come early for a good seat.