Emily M. Gray Award
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Emily M. Gray Award
The Emily M. Gray Award from the Biophysical Society in Rockville, Maryland, is given in recognition of "significant contributions to education in biophysics."Emily M. Gray Award page
(last visited Mar. 24, 2014).
The award was established in 1997 and first awarded the year thereafter.


Award recipients

* 1998: Muriel S. Prouty * 1999: Kensal E. van Holde * 2000: Charles Cantor and Paul Schimmel * 2001: Jane S. Richardson, Jane Richardson * 2002: Norma Allewell * 2003: Michael Summers * 2004: Richard D. Ludescher * 2005: Barry R. Lentz * 2006: Ignacio Tinoco, Jr. * 2007: John Steve Olson * 2008: David Eisenberg, David S. Eisenberg and Donald Crothers, Donald M. Crothers * 2009: Philip C. Nelson * 2010: Greta Pifat-Mrzljak * 2011: Bertil Hille * 201 ...
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Biophysical Society
The Biophysical Society is an international scientific society whose purpose is to lead the development and dissemination of knowledge in biophysics. Founded in 1958, the Society currently consists of over 7,500 members in academia, government, and industry. Although the Society is based in the United States, it is an international organization. Overseas members currently comprise over one third of the total. Origins The Biophysical Society was founded in response to the growth of the field of biophysics after World War Two, as well as concerns that the American Physiological Society had become too large to serve the community of biophysicists. Discussions between prominent biophysicists in 1955 and 1956 led to the planning of the society's first meeting in Columbus, Ohio in 1957, with about 500 attendees. Among the scientists involved in the early effort were Ernest C. Pollard, Samuel Talbot, Otto Schmitt, Kenneth Stewart Cole, W. A. Selle, Max Lauffer, Ralph Stacy, Herma ...
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