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Monday, March 15, 2004 Lacey - Recent public attraction to complementary and alternative health practices has kindled interest in the use of plants for treating a variety of human ailments. In an upcoming Minds on the Millennium lecture series, join Saint Martin’s biology faculty member Alfredo Gomez-Beloz, Ph.D., in a discussion about the field of ethnobotany, which studies the connections between people and plants, and how it can contribute to human health and well-being.
Gomez-Beloz, a Fulbright Scholar, did his doctoral research among the Warao Indians of Venezuela and is currently studying plants used by Native Americans - notably the Squaxin Island Tribe - in the Pacific Northwest. Gomez-Beloz, a member of the Saint Martin’s faculty since 2002, completed his doctorate in biology with a specialty in enthobotany through City University of New York and The New York Bontanical Garden. He earned his master’s degree in community health science at the University of Illinois at Chicago's School of Public Health and has an expertise in complementary and alternative medicine. The Minds on the Millennium lecture series was launched in 2000 by Saint Martin’s College and Panorama City to promote intellectual conversation and the exchange of ideas based on historical, philosophical and literary topics. For more information on Minds on the Millennium V, please call the college at (360) 491-4700. FOR MORE INFORMATION: Veronica Kessler, Minds on the Millennium
co-director Deanna Partlow, media relations
coordinator
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