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<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><font size=4><b>Special
Seminar--All welcome </b></font><br>
Jointly sponsored by the History of the Life Sciences and Environmental
Sciences Working Group, Department of the History of Science and the
Museum of Comparative Zoology, and Department of Organismic and
Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University <br>
<font size=4 color="#0000FF"><b><br>
Matt Ridley<br>
Author of <i>Francis Crick: Discoverer of the Genetic Code</i> <br><br>
'Francis Crick's place in history'<br><br>
9 May 2007, 4.00 pm</b></font><br>
Biological Laboratories Lecture Hall (Enter from the courtyard
between the rhinoceroses and the Lecture Hall is straight ahead on the
ground floor)<br><br>
Matt Ridley is the well-known author of <i>The Red Queen: Sex and
the Evolution of Human Nature</i>; <i>The Agile Gene: How Nature turns on
Nurture</i> and <i>Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23
Chapters.</i> He was founding chairman of the International Centre for
Life, a £70 million science park and education project in the UK.
<br><br>
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For more information: Janet Browne
<a href="mailto:jbrowne@fas.harvard.edu">browne@fas.harvard.edu</a> or
Ellen Guarente
<a href="mailto:guarente@fas.harvard.edu">guarente@fas.harvard.edu<br><br>
<br><br>
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Debbie Meinbresse<br>
STS Program, MIT<br>
617-452-2390<br>
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