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Jane Goodall and the dance of life
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Jane Goodall and the dance of life
By JACKIE LOOHAUIS
of the Journal Sentinel staff
Sunday, April 9, 2000
In Africa's Kakombe valley, there is a magnificent waterfall where
the chimpanzees come.
They approach in slow, rhythmic motion along the river bed and
then they leap up, grabbing vines to swing out into the spray and
throwing rocks and branches into the air.
The chimps are doing something amazing for non-humans. They are
"dancing." Perhaps in awe ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Goodall's current goal is to spread message about the environment.(Neighbor)(Kids ink)
Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL)
; Byline: J. Hope Babowice You wanted to know Megan Cencula of Libertyville wanted to know: How old is Jane Goodall? If you have a question you'd like Kids Ink to answer, write Kids Ink, care of the Daily Herald, 1795 N. Butterfield Road, Suite 100, Libertyville, IL 60048 or send an e-mail to
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A WALK ON THE WILD SIDE/ Denver exhibit explores world of Jane Goodall
The Gazette
; Little girls were simply not given toy chimpanzees for their second birthdays in 1936. Not in proper English families, anyway. "It'll give the child nightmares," said the carriers of conventional wisdom. "And besides, it's not a very ladylike toy." Jane Goodall's parents gave her a stuffed toy
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Goodall: Take care of your planet
The Topeka Capital-Journal
; Scott D. Weaver/The Capital-Journal By CHRIS GRENZ The Capital-Journal MANHATTAN Dr. Jane Goodall brought a message for the next millennium from the chimpanzee-filled trees of Africa to the children- filled Sunset Zoo on Friday. The Earth is our only home, and it is up to each of us to work
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The woman who talked with chimps; Jane Goodall is a hero to many. This admiring biography reminds us why.(FEATURES)(BOOKS)(Book review)
The Christian Science Monitor
; Byline: Marjorie Kehe About a decade ago, I was invited to hear Jane Goodall speak. I was eager to hear her, but also a little impatient. The ceremony was being held over breakfast and my main concern was getting to work on time. But as Dr. Goodall took the stage, impatience fell away. She spoke of
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FAMILY TREE Museum of Science exhibit celebrates Jane Goodall
The Patriot Ledger Quincy, MA
; More than 40 years ago, a young Tanzanian chimpanzee named Fifi reached out to touch the nose of 26-year-old Jane Goodall and started a friendship that lasted four decades. Much of what we know about our closest relatives comes from the thousands of hours Goodall spent observing them, an effort
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JANE GOODALL TO SPEAK HERE.(Living)
The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH)
; Byline: Post staff report The story of one of the most influential scientists of the 20th Century comes to Cincinnati this week - in person and in the form of an exhibit and film. Jane Goodall's intensive study of an entire society of animals and her unyielding efforts to protect them is the
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Goodall: Out of Africa, into corporate America.(NEWS)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN)
; For more than a decade, primatologist Jane Goodall has traveled the world, preaching her unique gospel about the chimpanzees of Gombe, in Tanzania. Because of her grace and perseverance in trying to stop the destruction of the jungles and to save her chimps, she has become, to many, larger than
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Chimpanzee activist's warnings come with inspirational message "Our lives do make a difference. That's the most important message of hope for the future." Jane Goodall speaking before a crowd at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum
Chicago Sun-Times
; Since 1986, renowned chimpanzee researcher and activist Jane Goodall has traveled an average of 300 days a year, never resting in one place more than three weeks. What prompted her whirlwind tour of lectures and public events? At a conference 17 years ago, she learned her beloved chimpanzees,
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In a new biography, primatologist Jane Goodall is painted as more intuitive than academic
The Boston Globe
; BOOK REVIEW Jane Goodall: The Woman Who Redefined Man By Dale Peterson Houghton Mifflin, 740 pp., illustrated, $35 Jane Goodall was the perfect hero for those of us growing up in the 1970s who had any sort of bent for science. She was in the jungle with the chimps, on the shores of an African lake
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GOODALL PREACHES A LINK BETWEEN PRIMATES, PEACE
The Boston Globe
; Jane Goodall talks about striving for world harmony and shifting human attitudes toward chimpanzees in the same breath. For the renowned British scientist and conservationist, who will speak at Salem State College tomorrow night, the two goals are connected, and she's hopeful that time won't run
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