Department of Science Hosts Robert Lang

I just got this email from the computer science mailing list:

This Friday, the College of Science is hosting Dr. Robert Lang, who
will be visiting USU to talk about the connections between
mathematics, science and art through origami folding.  Robert is a graduate of Caltech in engineering and applied physics, and  the recipient of their Distinguished Alumni Award.

While he is here on campus, we’ve arranged for some informal time for students and faculty to visit with Robert and talk about his career and current activities.  It  should be of interest to students and faculty alike.  Please join us:

—> Dr. Robert J. Lang
—> FRIDAY, 2 April 2010
—> 3:00 – 4:30pm
—> College of Science Conference Room, ESLC 245D

Additionally, Robert will be giving the Science Unwrapped Lecture that evening:

—> “Math’s Paper Trail: The Origins of Mathematics and Origami”
—> Dr. Robert J. Lang
—> FRIDAY, 2 April 2010
—> 7:00pm
—> ESLC 130
—> www.usu.edu/science/unwrapped/

You can see some of Robert’s origami creations (some of the most complex ever folded) on his website:  langorigami.com

You can also see a short 20 minute presentation on Math and Origami Robert gave at TED in 2008: www.ted.com/talks/robert_lang_folds_way_new_origami.html

Totally go to this, everybody. Make sure to check his site here, it’s amazing. Look out, an Allosaurus!

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About James Patton

I'm a computer science senior at Utah State, graduating in December 2010, becoming a first-generation university graduate. I'm a co-founder of SHAFT and am off-again on-again active in USU's Linux Club and the ACM (Association of Computing Machinery, a professional organization for computer science). I'm getting increasingly nervous about what to do after graduation, but I'd like to start a software company, and my dream job is making video games for my own studio. I suppose I could say I was "raised atheist", but it honestly never occurred to me until around high school. I grew up in Cache Valley and so am of course familiar with the Mormon church, but my mom never took me to a church, and encouraged me to explore different ideas and make up my own mind. What ended up happening was that I discovered Asimov and Clarke and Sagan, and that was that. My hobbies include voracious reading, gaming (digital, tabletop, whatever), programming, and at one point playing jazz and rock tenor sax (buying a new sax is one of the biggest reasons I need to finish college).

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