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KONRAD LORENZ, 85; NOBEL LAUREATE PIONEERED STUDY OF HUMAN BEHAVIOR

About 1 pages (428 words)

The Boston Globe, March 1st, 1989

VIENNA - Konrad Lorenz, the Austrian scientist who won a Nobel Prize in 1973 for his pioneering studies of human and animal behavior, died of kidney failure Monday in his home in Altenburg, 30 miles northeast of Vienna. He was 85. Dr. Lorenz, Austria's most famous scientist, held doctorates in medicine, zoology and psychology. His studies on the organization of individual and group behavior patterns won him the Nobel Prize in medicine together with Karl von Frisch and Nikolaas Tinbergen. Dr. Lorenz turned to research in animal behavior shortly after obtaining his medical degree. He had become ...

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Associated Press. The Boston Globe, March 1st, 1989. KONRAD LORENZ, 85; NOBEL LAUREATE PIONEERED STUDY OF HUMAN BEHAVIOR. Content provided by HighBeam Research.



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