The Peter Medawar reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Peter Medawar

People like you are child sponsors
Sir Peter Brian Medawar (February 1915 - 1987) was a British medical scientist who won the 1960 Nobel Prize in Medicine jointly with Sir MacFarlane Burnet.

He was born in Rio de Janeiro, the son of a Lebanese father and an English mother. He was educated at Marlborough College in Wiltshire, and at Magdalen College, Oxford. He was Mason Professor of Zoology at the University of Birmingham, and later at University College, London, the Jodrell Professor of Zoology, and the director of the National Institute for Medical Research. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society at the age of 34, and was elected to the New York Academy of Sciences, the American Acadmy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Philosopical Society.

Peter Medawar was also an author of grace, clarity, and wit on scientific, philosophic, educational, and other subjects. His books include Pluto's Republic, a book of essays, including several on the philosophy of science and scientific method, Advice to a Young Scientist, Aristotle to Zoos (with his wife Jean Shinglewood Taylor), and Memoirs of a Thinking Radish, a brief autobiography.

External link