Professors in the Faculties of Science and Arts recognized for their outstanding achievements in astrophysics, biology, and literature Three McGill researchers have been honoured with prestigious medals from the Royal Society of Canada (RSC). Associate Professor Daryl Haggard of the Department of Physics was awarded the Rutherford Memorial Medal in Physics named after one of McGill's most famous radiation physicists for her pioneering studies of neutron stars and black holes. James McGill Professor Graham Bell of the Department of Biology is awarded the Flavelle Medal for his transformational work in experimental evolutionary science. Professor Robert Lecker of the Department of English received the Lorne Pierce Medal for his decades-long contributions to the Canadian literary canon. Bell and Lecker are Fellows of the RSC and Haggard is a Member of the New College of Scholars, Artists and Scientists. “These medals from the Royal Society of Canada are some of the most significant
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Author of the article: Susanna McLeod
Publishing date: Apr 21, 2021  â¢Â 1 hour ago  â¢Â 5 minute read
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Examining data gathered in the laboratory in 1918, a Queenâs University professor of bacteriology and his assistants learned that their vaccines temporarily hindered bacterial influenza. Probes into several types of infections in humans and cattle produced a different reaction in the 1940s â a call from the Canadian military. Then Dr. Guilford B. Reed was asked to contribute to top secret biological warfare research.
With his brand new PhD in science from Harvard tucked under his arm in 1915, Reed (born Nov. 27, 1887, in Nova Scotia) joined the teaching staff at Queenâs University in Kingston. An assistant professor in the department of botany, Reed was soon assigned to the department of pathology and bacteriology to assist Dr. W.T. Connell in his many tasks. In August of the same year, Reed married Elsie Clarissa Porter in
Author of the article: Susanna McLeod
Publishing date: Apr 21, 2021  â¢Â 1 hour ago  â¢Â 5 minute read
Article content
Examining data gathered in the laboratory in 1918, a Queenâs University professor of bacteriology and his assistants learned that their vaccines temporarily hindered bacterial influenza. Probes into several types of infections in humans and cattle produced a different reaction in the 1940s â a call from the Canadian military. Then Dr. Guilford B. Reed was asked to contribute to top secret biological warfare research.
With his brand new PhD in science from Harvard tucked under his arm in 1915, Reed (born Nov. 27, 1887, in Nova Scotia) joined the teaching staff at Queenâs University in Kingston. An assistant professor in the department of botany, Reed was soon assigned to the department of pathology and bacteriology to assist Dr. W.T. Connell in his many tasks. In August of the same year, Reed married Elsie Clarissa Porter in