Free tickets available starting
August 18
With people calling from as far away as the U.S.-Canada border, Long Island, Florida and everywhere in between about Jane Goodall’s lecture, the University of Rhode Island has moved her talk from Edwards Hall to its largest event venue, the Ryan Center.
The renowned animal behavior expert, conservationist,
founder of the Jane Goodall Institute and United Nations Messenger of Peace
will speak Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. as part of the University’s premier
lecture series, the Honors Colloquium: Origins: Life, the Universe and
Everything.
The event remains free and open to the public, but because of
the interest in the lecture, the program now requires a ticket for admission.
You can obtain your free tickets (maximum of six) Friday, Aug. 18 starting 10
a.m. online at theryancenter.com.
The other nine public lectures will be held at Edwards Hall
and do not require a ticket. URI’s premier lecture series, now in its 54th
year, will open Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. with an address by Hakeem Oluseyi, titled
“The Birth of Being: From the Big Bang to Babies.”
Oluseyi is an astrophysicist, cosmologist, inventor, TV host and educator. He is space sciences education manager for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate and Distinguished Researcher Professor of Physics and Space Sciences at Florida Institute of Technology.
Oluseyi is an astrophysicist, cosmologist, inventor, TV host and educator. He is space sciences education manager for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate and Distinguished Researcher Professor of Physics and Space Sciences at Florida Institute of Technology.
“The Honors Program has offered a wide array of timely, compelling, and enlightening lectures during the past 53 years of the Honors Colloquium,” said URI Professor and Honors Program Director Lynne Derbyshire. “We are delighted to present this extraordinary set of speakers that will address such topics as the origins of the universe and its continuing expansion, the beginning of life, our connections to other primates, the conscious and unconscious mind and the potential for life elsewhere in the universe. Please join us for all of our exciting lectures, including our opening night with Dr. Oluseyi, who will take us on a journey across the millennia as he provides an overview for the entire series.
“With Dr. Goodall, the Honors Colloquium has experienced a
first, a lecture being moved from its original venue to the Ryan Center,”
Derbyshire said. “Since we announced Dr. Goodall’s lecture July 18, many of us
at the University have received calls and emails from people up and down the
East Coast seeking tickets. “To my knowledge, we have never had tickets for an
Honors Colloquium, but we wanted to make sure people didn’t show up, only to be
turned away at the door.”
Goodall’s discovery that chimpanzees make and use tools revolutionized
the world of primatology and redefined the relationship between humans and
animals. At the invitation of famed anthropologist and paleontologist Louis
Leakey, she began her research in 1960 at what was then called the Gombe Stream
Chimpanzee Reserve in Tanzania.
In 1977, Goodall established the Jane Goodall Institute,
which continues the work of the Gombe Stream Research Center and is a global
leader in the effort to protect chimpanzees and their habitats. It is widely
recognized for building on Goodall’s groundbreaking, community-centered
approach to conservation and development programs in Africa and for its Roots
& Shoots program, the global environmental and humanitarian youth
initiative she founded in 1991 with a group of Tanzanian students. The youth
program connects more than 15,000 young people in nearly 100 countries,
equipping them to make the world a better place for people, animals and the
environment. This year marks the 40th anniversary of the organization and the
125th anniversary of the University.
Today, Goodall travels an average of 300 days per year,
speaking about the threats facing chimpanzees, other environmental crises and
her reasons for hope. In her speeches and books she emphasizes the
interconnectedness of all living things and the collective power of individual
action, urging her audiences to recognize their personal responsibility and
ability to effect change.