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Nearly 6,000 people came to Beasley Coliseum the evening of
March 8 to hear Jane Goodall speak about chimpanzees, conservation,
and her own growth from shy child to scientific celebrity. In the
early 1960s, she became the first person to observe chimps using
sticks to dig up termites to eat. That finding demolished the
notion that tool use is a distinctively human activity and led to
other studies showing that chimps have high mental abilities and a
rich emotional life that includes joy, anger, grief, and
embarrassment. What remains uniquely human is our complex speech
and the ability to share ideas, said Goodall; no one will ever see
several thousand chimps sitting still and listening to another
chimp talk.
--Cherie Winner
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