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Jason Altom (6 October 1971 – 15 August 1998) was an American PhD student working in the research group of Nobel laureate Elias James Corey at Harvard University.He killed himself by taking potassium cyanide in 1998, citing in his suicide note "abusive research supervisors" as one reason for taking his life.
Jon Clardy (born May 16, 1943, Washington, D.C., United States) is currently the Hsien Wu and Daisy Yen Wu professor of biological chemistry and molecular pharmacology at Harvard Medical School. [1] His research focuses on the isolation and structural characterization of natural products, and currently investigates the role of biologically ...
Johnny Matson (US), former professor of psychology at Louisiana State University, who was criticized starting in 2015 for his peer review practices as a journal editor, [123] [124] in 2023 had 24 of his research papers retracted because of undisclosed conflicts of interest, duplicated methodology, and a compromised peer-review process.
Edwin Joseph Cohn (December 17, 1892 – October 1, 1953) was a protein scientist. A graduate of Phillips Academy, Andover [1911], and the University of Chicago [1914, PhD 1917], he made important advances in the physical chemistry of proteins, and was responsible for the blood fractionation project that saved thousands of lives in World War II.
William John Crozier was born on May 24, 1892, in New York City to William George Crozier and Bessie Mackay. [4] Crozier started his education at the College of the City of New York, pursuing a degree in physical chemistry and biochemistry.
Albert Baird Hastings (November 20, 1895 – September 24, 1987) was an American biochemist and physiologist.He spent 28 years as the department chair and Hamilton Kuhn Professor of Biological Chemistry at Harvard University.
David Ruchien Liu (traditional Chinese: 劉如謙; pinyin: Liú Rúqiān; born 1973) is an American molecular biologist and organic chemist who is the Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences at Harvard University and the Richard Merkin Professor at the Broad Institute, where he is the director of the Merkin Institute for Transformative Technologies.
He received his B.A. in chemistry and physics from Harvard in 1963, and was then a Henry fellow at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge.In 1967, he received his Ph.D. in biophysics from Harvard, was a research fellow there as well as a junior fellow in the Society of Fellows, and joined the Harvard faculty in 1971.