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An
International Journal
CALL FOR PAPERS: 2006 Launch!
A call for papers and a short
reminder about the impending 2006 launch of:
COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY - PART D: GENOMICS AND
PROTEOMICS
Part D: Genomics and Proteomics. This section covers the broader
comprehensive approaches to comparative biochemistry and physiology that
can be generally termed as " -omics", e.g., genomics, functional
genomics (transcriptomics), proteomics, metabolomics, and underlying
bioinformatics. Papers dealing with fundamental aspects and hypotheses in
comparative physiology and biochemistry are encouraged rather than studies
whose main focus is purely technical or methodological
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/704239/description#description
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BOUTILIER, ROBERT
(1954-2003)
- Developmental Physiology notes with great sorrow the passing
of Bob Boutilier on Sunday, Dec. 21st, 2003. The following
is an obituary from the Halifax Herald, published on Friday, December 26,
2003.
BOUTILIER, Robert Graeme
-BSCH
1976 Acadia, M.Sc. 1978 Acadia, Ph.D. 1981 UEA, England, FRSC 2000 Canada,
D.Sc. 1996 Acadia, 50 years old, formerly from Nova Scotia, died in
Addenbrooke's NHS Trust Hospital, Cambridge, England. He was a son of the
late Robert Boutilier. Bob "Boots" to many took his undergraduate
honours degree and masters at Acadia University, where he made many friends,
and became part of the Acadia family. He went on to take his Ph.D. in
England and then to do postdoctoral fellowships at the Max Planck Institute
in Germany, the Gulbenkian Institute in Portugal, a research station in
Tahiti and the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. His first
permanent position was as an assistant professor in biology at Dalhousie
University in Halifax, and was later head of that department. Bob was then
drawn back to England where he became the editor of the Journal of
Experimental Biology and Senior Reader in the Zoology Department at the
University of Cambridge. He was also a well-loved fellow of Sidney Sussex
College of Cambridge, where he was a tutor and dean of students. Bob was
without question a consummate scientist, friend and teacher of those who had
the privilege of touching his presence. He had a wonderful gift of telling
stories, of making music and of making people laugh. He fought hard but in
the end his body failed him at too young an age. He is survived by his
mother, Anne; sister, Brenda and her husband Mark; several nieces and
nephews; plus a myriad of friends who came in contact with his humorous,
effervescent personality over the years. He will be missed as no other. He
was predeceased by his sister, Beverely and her husband Donald. A funeral
will take place in Cambridge. A memorial service will take place at Acadia
University at a later date.
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RESTORING
PHYSIOLOGY TO THE UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS BIOLOGY CURRICULUM: A CALL
FOR ACTION. The
National Research Council-sponsored report, BIO 2010: Transforming
Undergraduate Education for Future Research Biologists, describes a
number of significant changes that should be made to the undergraduate
biology curriculum if we are able to adequately train students to become
the researchers of the 21st century. What should be of concern to the
physiology community is the lack of identifiable physiology in the proposed
revisions. In the article, Dee Silverthorn, describes the report and
suggests some steps that physiologists can take to enhance our discipline in
the undergraduate biology curriculum. Advan. Physiol. Edu. 27:
91-96, 2003. Http://advan.physiology.org/cgi/content/full/27/3/91. |