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  <event:Event rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/event/html/id/210/When-Will-Computers-Understand-Shakespeare-b-font-color-red-CANCELED-9-10-font-b-">
    <rdfs:label><![CDATA[When Will Computers Understand Shakespeare? <b><font color="red">CANCELED 9/10</font></b>]]></rdfs:label>
    <event:title><![CDATA[When Will Computers Understand Shakespeare? <b><font color="red">CANCELED 9/10</font></b>]]></event:title>
    <event:speaker><person:Collaborator rdf:about="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/person/html/Jerry/Hobbs/"><person:name><![CDATA[Jerry  Hobbs]]></person:name><rdfs:label><![CDATA[Jerry  Hobbs]]></rdfs:label></person:Collaborator></event:speaker>
    <event:startDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">2007-09-11T16:30:00-05:00</event:startDate>
    <event:endDate rdf:datatype="&xsd;dateTime">2007-09-11T18:00:00-05:00</event:endDate>
    <event:location><![CDATA[JHU, Shaffer Hall, Room 3]]></event:location>
    <event:abstract><![CDATA[<font color="red">CANCELED 9/10</font> In this talk I will examine problems encountered in coming to some kind of understanding of one sonnet by Shakespeare (his 64th), ask what it would take to solve these problems computationally, and suggests routes to the solution. The general conclusion is that we are closer to this goal as one might think. Or are we? <font color="red">CANCELED 9/10</font>]]></event:abstract>
    <event:uri><![CDATA[http://www.clsp.jhu.edu/seminars/viewabstract.php?sid=9200701]]></event:uri>
    <event:tag><![CDATA[natural language processing]]></event:tag>
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