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Biology at Syracuse University,
1872–2010
H. Richard Levy
Cloth $29.95
| 978-0-8156-8182-3
| 2012
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H. Richard Levy is professor emeritus in the Department of Biology at
Syracuse University. He has published numerous articles in scientific journals,
book chapters, and review articles.
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The end of World War II witnessed rapid growth in the field of
biology, capped off with Watson and Crick’s pathbreaking work
decoding DNA’s structure in 1953. This revolutionary achievement
dramatically changed how biology was taught around the world,
reverberating into Syracuse University’s own Department of Biology.
In 1872, Alexander Winchell, the first chancellor of Syracuse,
taught the first course that featured biology in the Department of
Geology, Zoology, and Botany. The Department of Biology has
undergone multiple changes, from faculty appointments to research
concentrations to even where the department was housed. Its history,
with mergers and moves, mirrors the field of biology and a century’s
worth of progress. Serving as a single, comprehensive source of
the department’s growth and history, this volume includes personal
accounts and anecdotes from former faculty and alumni from the late
nineteenth century to the present and descriptions of the 175 faculty
members and of the alumni achievements; it also lists the recipients
of undergraduate and graduate biology student awards. This book
is a valued resource and a cherished chronicle of events for those
associated with the department and Syracuse University at large.
7 x 10, 368 pages, 16 color and 108 black-and-white
illustrations, 12 tables, appendixes, glossary, bibliography, index
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