| Looking
back, amazing developments have been made in the variety and production
of food crops through extensive plant breeding, mechanization, irrigation,
fertilization and other changes. Looking forward, St. Edward’s
University School of Natural Sciences presents “Harvest of
the Future: Exploring Genetic Alteration of Food.” The symposium
— organized as a scholarly exchange — will focus on
the increasingly common practice of genetic modification of plants.
Speakers will address the potential benefits of and concerns about
such endeavors and the role of consumers in decisions about science
and food.
The symposium will be held from 10 a.m. – 12:30 p.m., Friday,
April 1 in the Mabee Ballrooms in the Robert & Pearle Ragsdale
Center on the St. Edward’s campus. The event is free and open
to the public, though attendees should RSVP online by March 25 at
www.stedwards.edu/science/events/lucian/2005. The agenda and guest
speakers are as follows:
• 10:00 a.m. Introductions
• 10:15 a.m. Agricultural Biotechnology: Locally Relevant
Around the World
Robert B. Horsch, PhD, Vice President, International Development
Partnerships, Monsanto Company
• 11:05 a.m. The Wages of Hype: Agricultural Biotechnology
After 25 Years
Margaret Mellon, PhD, Food and Environment Program Director, Union
of Concerned Scientists.
• 11:55 a.m. Open discussion
• 2–7:30 p.m. Senior Seminar Symposium
Organized
by the St. Edward’s University School of Natural Sciences,
the symposium honors Brother Lucian Blersch, CSC, a longtime professor
of engineering who died in 1986 and in whose name a professorship
in the School of Natural Sciences was endowed.
Founded by the Congregation of Holy Cross, St. Edward’s University
has been named as one of America’s Best Colleges for 2005
by U.S. News & World Report and was selected by The
Princeton Review for inclusion in the guide Colleges with a
Conscience. St. Edward’s is a private, Catholic, liberal
arts university of approximately 4,650 students located in Austin,
Texas.
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