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Douglas Adams Entries
{February 11, 2007} The Fifth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture
{February 17, 2006} The Fourth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture
{March 01, 2005} Last Chance to See… …Just a bit more
{June 18, 2001} The Sunday Times: A Response
{May 18, 2001} Douglas Adams: 1952 – 2001
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February 11, 2007

The Fifth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture

Categories: Douglas Adams Events News News

"Wildlife Management in East Africa – Is There a Future?" by Dr Richard Leakey

Date: Thursday 15 March 2007, 7:30pm
Venue: The Royal Geographic Society, 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR
Price: £12.00 - You'll find more information and ticket information here.

Richard Leakey is a paleontologist, archaeologist, conservationist an author of several books including the acclaimed wildlife management book Wildlife Wars: My Battle to Save Kenya's Elephants. In this talk Dr Leakey will draw on his own experiences in Kenya as founder and Director of the Kenya Wildlife Service and as the Head of Kenya's Civil Service to reflect on the successes, current problems and future challenges facing wildlife management in East Africa.

Douglas Adams, author of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, was a Founder Patron of Save the Rhino International, actively involved in conservation and interested in exploration, science, comedy and music. Douglas developed his deep-seated interest in wildlife conservation during a 1985 visit to Madagascar, which eventually resulted in a book (Last Chance to See) about the plight of species facing extinction. Douglas Adams died unexpectedly in 2001 at the age of 49. These Memorial Lectures continue to explore the themes in which Douglas was so interested.

The proceeds of the evening will be split between Save the Rhino International and the Environmental Investigation Agency, two charities supported by Douglas Adams.

Posted by Richard at 10:59 PM

February 17, 2006

The Fourth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture

Categories: Douglas Adams Events News News

"Is the Human an Endangered Species?" by Professor Robert Winston

Date: Thursday 23 March 2006, 7:30pm
Venue: The Royal Geographic Society, 1 Kensington Gore, London SW7 2AR
Price: £10.00 - Purchase tickets here.

Save the Rhino International and the Environmental Investigation Agency are co-hosting the Fourth Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture with a talk by Professor Robert Winston, on Thursday 23 March at the Royal Geographic Society in London SW7. In this talk, he will combine some of the apparently threatening aspects of technology and the trust, or lack of it, in science.

Posted by Richard at 10:23 AM

March 01, 2005

Last Chance to See… …Just a bit more

Categories: Douglas Adams Events News News

The Third Douglas Adams Memorial Lecture, in celebration of the life and universe of Douglas Adams.

Date: Thursday 10 March 2005
Venue: The Royal Institution, Albemarle Street, London W1
Time: Lecture begins at 7.30pm
Speaker: Mark Carwardine
Price: £20 for main auditorium with a drink beforehand £12 for gallery seating without a drink

For information including how to buy tickets please see www.savetherhino.org.

Lecture synopsis: Zoologist Mark Carwardine (co-author of Last Chance to See with Douglas Adams) spends more than half the year travelling the world in search of wildlife and exploring wild places.

In this highly entertaining lecture Mark describes some of his experiences and encounters with wild animals and even wilder people around the world - including some hilarious behind-the-scenes stories from Last Chance to See. And, inevitably, he has a thing or two to say about the state of the world.

The lecture will be followed by a fundraising auction, lots will include signed film memorabilia, VIP tickets to the film premier and signed copies of the Quintessential Phase: Mostly Harmless radio script.

Posted by Richard at 11:44 PM

June 18, 2001

The Sunday Times: A Response

Categories: Douglas Adams Hitchhiker's Guide

From: Richard Harris <**@two–worlds.com>
Date: Mon, 18 Jun 2001 19:07:14 +0100
To: <nicholas.hellen@sunday–times.co.uk>
Subject: Your ST article on Douglas Adams

Nicholas

Your article in Sunday's ST on Douglas Adams was as striking an example of sloppy, ill–informed and assumptive journalism as I have come across, painting as it does an entirely erroneous picture through a combination of inaccurate, partial and unattributed information and unfounded speculation.

Your avoidance of verifiable source through the use of terms such as 'a close friend' and 'sources close to' is indicative of very poor or undiscriminating journalism – any genuine friend of his would be more than happy to go on record with anything they had to say about him.

As a friend and colleague of Douglas and a co–founder of The Digital Village/h2g2, please allow me to correct, with facts and direct information, a few of your more basic errors and misassumptions. I am happy to have these comments attributed to me. Rather than an impassioned rant (however justified), let's try this point by point – please bear with me:

"FRIENDS of Douglas Adams have revealed how the author of The Hitch–Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy was blighted before his premature death by a malign "Midas touch". The pressure of justifying a £2m advance for his final novel preyed on his mind until he became incapable of writing, even when he had flashes of his old inspiration."

Blighted? – I can think of few people to whom the term is less applicable – you make a cheerful and gentle man sound like some tortured latter–day Vanderdecken, forever attempting to round the Cape of his writers block. Douglas's inspiration rarely deserted him – part of his problem was not merely being interested in too many things, but actually being capable of driving people's perception of what the future could be. In recent years, he's been at least as much respected for his ability to articulate a shared vision of the future of society, technology and the environment as for his original fiction. It's in this area and the inspiration he's provided through his work with scientists, engineers and philosophers that may in fact prove to be his most important legacy – many of the world's greatest thinkers and innovators will cheerfully acknowledge the inspiration and challenge that a discussion with Douglas could provide.

Continue reading "The Sunday Times: A Response"
Posted by Richard at 07:07 PM

May 18, 2001

Douglas Adams: 1952 – 2001

Categories: Douglas Adams Hitchhiker's Guide

I lost a friend and colleague last week. Like all the best friends, he was an inspiration, an irritation – the grit in the oyster of thought – and an endless source of provocation, ideas and damn good lunches. He had a unique ability to make the inexplicable obvious. And vice versa. Most of us, if we're lucky, manage perhaps a little of each of these during our lives, with family, friends and colleagues. Douglas managed to do it over more than twenty years and for millions of people around the world. The many thousands of messages on his web site all express a shared feeling of shock and incomprehension.

Continue reading "Douglas Adams: 1952 – 2001"
Posted by Richard at 02:16 PM
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