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4-6-1966

Nobel Prize winner, Harold C. Urey, to speak here

University of Montana--Missoula. Office of University Relations

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FROM INFORMATION SERVICES MISSOULA. MONTANA 59801 PHONE 243-2522 AREA CODE 406

DR RELEASE IMMEDIATELY

stewart NOBEL PRIZE WINNER 4-6-66 UREY TO SPEAK HERE

Dr. Harold C. Urey, Nobel Laureate, will explore the "Origin of Life" in his

featured talk to the joint scientific meetings in Missoula, Friday, April 15, Dr.

LeRoy H. Harvey, executive secretary of the Montana Academy of Sciences reports.

Dr. Urey's address, which is open to the interested public, is slated for

8 p.m. in the Florence Hotel Bitterroot Room. It will follow a 6 p.m. banquet,

for which reservations are necessary, and a 7*30 p.m. annual business meeting of

the Northwest Scientific Association.

Holding meetings concurrently with the Association are the Montana Academy and

its affiliated Montana Psychological Association and the Northern Rocky Mountain

Section of the Society of American Foresters. Sessions are to begin on Thursday

and conclude at 5 p.m. Saturday.

Dr. Urey, holder of the distinguished Order of the Grizzly, is associated

with the University of California. He won his B.S. degree from the UM in 1917, and

his Ph.D. from UC in 1923. He is a former UM chemistry instructor, 1919-1921.

He won the Nobel prize in chemistry for his discovery of heavy water, one

of the keys that unlocked the secret of atomic energy. With Dr. and

Dr. Edward Teller, he worked with the team that played a

major role in developing the atom bomb.

Dr. Urey is now professor-at-large on the faculty of the University of California

in San Diego. He still specializes in studies of the structure of atoms and mole­

cules, the thermodynamic properties of gases and the separation of .

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