M ARTLETS W IN H O M E OPENER, PG 18
ARMSTRONG BITES INTO PARANORMAL TREND, PG 13
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G il l vvvy \y .m ciiilltribune.com
P u b lish ed bv the S tu d e n ts’ Society o f M cG ill U niversity
Vol. 29 Issue 7 • W ednesday. O c to b e r 14. 2009
M cG ill field studies: out o f the classroom and into the wild
PHOTO COURTESY OF JOHN BLAIR
The students from the 2009 C anadian Field Studies in Africa program . The program takes students from C anadian universities to E ast A frica to learn ab o u t the continent in a way they never could in a classroom . See full story on pages 10 an d 11.
Two McGill alumni among cast of 2009 Nobel Prize Laureates Awarded fo r physics, medicine T R IP YANG Contributor
Two McGill alumni are among the new est Nobel laureates, after being awarded Nobel Prizes in their respective fields last week. A co-recipient of the Nobel Prize in Phys ics, Willard Boyle, B.Sc ‘47, M.Sc ’48. and PhD ’50, helped invent the charged-couple de
vice, which revolutionized present-day digital photography. Jack Szostak, B.Sc ’72, shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with two other U.S.-based scientists for their work in discerning how DNA is protected and fully replicated during cell division. There are cur rently six McGill graduates and two professors who have won the Nobel Prize. “This is wonderful news for McGill and Canada. Anything that raises the profile of
McGill provides the [school] with a positive benefit." said Paul Lasko, chair of the depart ment of biology. "McGill is doing many things well. Look at the rankings.” The Nobel Prize announcements come during the same week that McGill was ranked 18th in the annual Times Higher EducationQS world survey, and a week after 19 McGill professors received Canada Research Chair awards - the highest number of grants awarded to any university in the country.
"These rankings check how our students have done in regards to winning awards,” said Martin Grant, dean of science. “What does it say when McGill students have won Nobel Prizes? Well, they’re not doing a bad job.” The son of an American Air Force officer, Szostak enrolled at McGill at the age of 15. After receiving two scholarships and a botany prize, Szostak continued his research at Cor nell University before founding his own lab at See GRANT on page 2
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