Liste der Mitglieder der National Academy of Sciences/1971
Im Jahr 1971 wählte die National Academy of Sciences der Vereinigten Staaten 61 Personen zu ihren Mitgliedern.
Neugewählte Mitglieder
- Edward A. Adelberg (1920–2009), Mikrobiologe, Yale University[1][2][3]
- Julius Axelrod (1912–2004)
- Lawrence Bogorad (1921–2003), Botaniker, Harvard University[4][5][6]
- Aage Niels Bohr (1922–2009)
- William Brace (1926–2012)
- Donald E. Broadbent (1926–1993)
- Arthur M. Bueche (1920–1981)
- Allan Campbell (1929–2018), Genetiker, Stanford University[7]
- Marvin Chodorow (1913–2005)
- Arthur D. Code (1923–2009)
- Philip P. Cohen (1908–1993)
- Mildred Cohn (1913–2009)
- George B. Dantzig (1914–2005)
- Don U. Deere (1922–2018)
- Frank J. Dixon (1920–2008)
- Kenneth O. Emery (1914–1998)
- Josef Fried (1914–2001)
- Augusto Gansser (1910–2012)
- Alan Garen (* 1926)
- Riccardo Giacconi (1931–2018)
- Eleanor Jack Gibson (1910–2002)
- Ward H. Goodenough (1919–2013)
- Luigi Gorini (1903–1976)
- Harry B. Gray (* 1935)
- Ernest Grunwald (1923–2002)
- Arie J. Haagen-Smit (1900–1977)
- Norman Hackerman (1912–2007)
- Vladimir Haensel (1914–2002)
- David S. Heeschen (1926–2012)
- Dorothy Hodgkin (1910–1994)
- David H. Hubel (1926–2013)
- William P. Jencks (1927–2007)
- Michael Kasha (1920–2013)
- Aharon Katzir-Katchalsky (1914–1972)
- Vladimir I. Keilis-Borok (1921–2013)
- Robert P. Kraft (1927–2015)
- Otto Laporte (1902–1971)
- Hans W. Liepmann (1914–2009)
- Irving M. London (1918–2018)
- Peter Marler (1928–2014)
- Philip Morrison (1915–2005)
- Jürgen Moser (1928–1999)
- Earl L. Muetterties (1927–1984)
- Edward P. Ney (1920–1996)
- William A. Nierenberg (1919–2000)
- Irvine H. Page (1901–1991)
- William Dale Phillips (1925–1993)
- Frederic M. Richards (1925–2009)
- Robert G. Sachs (1916–1999)
- J. Robert Schrieffer (1931–2019)
- Richard Evans Schultes (1915–2001)
- Nevin S. Scrimshaw (1918–2013)
- Oliver Smithies (1925–2017)
- Franti F. Sorm (1913–1980)
- Bengt Strömgren (1908–1987)
- Hewson Swift (1920–2004)
- Armen Takhtajan (1910–2009)
- John G. Thompson (* 1932)
- Sidney Udenfriend (1918–1999)
- Gerald J. Wasserburg (1927–2016)
- Vincent Wigglesworth (1899–1994)
Weblinks
Einzelnachweise
- Edward Adelberg. Member Directory. National Academy of Sciences, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch): „December 6, 1920 - August 7, 2009 Election Year: 1971 Scientific Discipline: Microbial Biology“
- Edward A. Adelberg. In memoriam. The Marine Biological Laboratory, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch): „According to his son Arthur, Dr. Adelberg died on August 8. He was a longtime professor at Yale University, whose research interests included genetics, membranes and growth control.“
- Edward A. Adelberg. John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, abgerufen am 26. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch, Steckbrief mit Foto in jungen Jahren): „Born: 12-06-1920 Died: 08-07-2009“
- David Tuller: Lawrence Bogorad, 82, Professor and Renowned Plant Researcher, Dies. The New York Times, 5. Januar 2004, abgerufen am 28. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch): „Lawrence Bogorad, a leading researcher in plant biology who was widely known for his work on the synthesis of chlorophyll and on inheritance patterns in a variety of plants, died Dec. 28 while he was on vacation with his family in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. ... Dr. Bogorad taught biology at Harvard University for more than two decades.“
- Laurie Mets: Lawrence Bogorad. (PDF) Obituary. In: Newsletter 31, 1/2004. American Society of Plant Biologists, Februar 2004, S. 18, 19, abgerufen am 28. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch): „He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1985, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1968, and the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in 1971.“
- Sabeeha S. Merchant: Lawrence Bogorad. (PDF) A Biographical Memoir. National Academy of Sciences, 2009, S. 28, abgerufen am 28. Februar 2018 (amerikanisches Englisch): „Lawrence Bogorad was born in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, then a part of the Soviet Union, on August 29, 1921 into a Jewish family with roots in the Ukraine and Moldavia.“
- A. Campbell: Life in Science: Alan Campbell. In: Bacteriophage. Band 2, Nummer 3, Juli 2012, S. 137–138, doi:10.4161/bact.22762, PMID 23275864, PMC 3530522 (freier Volltext): In 1968, I moved from Rochester to Stanford, where I have studied phages continuously (though not exclusively) ever since.
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