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Dr. R. Wallace McLachlan
Deceased Date: 1926-05-10
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Dr. Digby McLaren
Keywords: Geology
Palaeontology
Chronology
Catastrophism
Global change
Deceased Date: 2004-12-08
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Digby J. McLaren, M.A. (Cantab), Ph.D. (Michigan) internationally recognized Stratigrapher and Palaeontologist, and currently the proposed Vice-President of the Palaeontological Society, has done research throughout the Arctic and Western Canada, applying lithological and Palaeontological techniques towards establishing the accepted classification and interpretation of Devonian and other Palaeozoic rocks.
His research on Stratigraphy, interpretation of carbonate rocks, rhynchonelloid brachiopeds, rugose corals, fossil fungi and possible Precambrian metazoans is described in numerous publications including a contribution to an internationally authored "Treatise".
He has proved a capable research manager, first as head Palaeontologist of the Geological Survey and now as Director of the New Institute of Sedimentary and Petroleum Geology.
Dr. Alexander McLay
Deceased Date: 1967-07-17
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Hugh McLean
Affiliation: Western University
Keywords: Organ and church music
Deceased Date: 2017-07-30
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M.A., Mus.B. (Cantab., 1956), FRCO, LRSM. Distinguished recitalist, and soloist (organ, piano and harpsichord), conductor and broadcaster. In addition to his performances and recordings, he is also well known for major articles in "Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians", and a number of important sources of early music in Britain, Japan and Poland. Has taught at University of Victoria, The University of British Columbia and Dean of Music, The University of Western Ontario (appointed 1973). 'He is an outstanding Canadian performer and scholar who has established an international reputation in both musicology and keyboard music.' (46: Professor of Music and Dean, Faculty of Music, University of Western Ontario).
Dr. Frank McLearn
Deceased Date: 1964-10-07
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Dr. Hugh McLennan
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2004-12-24
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Dr. Hugh McLennan received his academic training at McGill University obtaining a B.Sc. (Honours chemistry) in 1947 and a Ph.D. in 1951. He has recently been recommended for promotion to full professor of physiology at the University of British Columbia. He is an imaginative and productive scientist, and has an international reputation for his work on synaptic transmission in the central nervous system of vertebrates with particular emphasis on inhibition. His monograph on Synaptic Transmission is an inportant contribution to the field and has been well received. Recently, he has developed an ingenious technique for brain stimulation and recording in unrestrained animals, and is applying this to the study of behaviour in cats. Dr. McLennan is an excellent teacher and a mature, competent investigator who has contributed much to Canadian Science.
Dr. William McLennan
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Dr. John McLennan
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Dr. John McLennan
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Dr. Norman McLeod
Deceased Date: 1989-10-23
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Dr. Clement Henry McLeod
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Dr. Herbert McLuhan
Deceased Date: 1980-12-31
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Dr. Rowland McMaster
Affiliation: University of Alberta
Keywords: Novel, poetry, prose of thought, Thackeray, Victorian literature
Deceased Date: 2013-07-20
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Rowland D. McMaster has had a long and distinguished career as a specialist in the rich field of Victorian studies. For the past thirty years he has been active as a publishing scholar, textual editor, journal editor, convenor of learned conferences, consultant on academic matters and prominent member of the profession of the university teaching of English in Canada. To an unusual degree he has combined scholarly work of distinction with an exceptionally strong commitment to teaching and administrative and professional responsibilities on a national and international scale.
Dr. James McMurrich
Deceased Date: 1939-02-09
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Prof. John McMurtry
Affiliation: University of Guelph
Keywords: Value structures, social philosophy, marx, global market, education / forms of consciousness, philosophy and world problems
Deceased Date: 2021-12-30
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John McMurtry is a pioneer of social philosophy. His research has specialized in leading academic as well as public understanding into unexamined normative infrastructures which oppress human and environmental life—decision-excluding education, violent sport as a social paradigm, sexuality as a property-structure, mechanistic Marxism, the denial of children's personhood, left-right categorization, the military paradigm of war, zero-sum competition, the transcultural logic of censorship, and the global market as a life-blind value system. His work has been communicated across the world and has frequently let to others' research projects and to public policy formation.
Dr. Andrew George McNaughton
Deceased Date: 1966-07-11
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Dr. Jeremy McNeil
Affiliation: Western University
Keywords: Entomology, chemical ecology, behavioural ecology, reproduction, migration
Deceased Date: 2024-07-18
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Jeremy N. McNeil, was born in England, and received his primary and secondary education in Newfoundland and England, respectively. He moved to Canada in 1964, received a B.Sc. Hon. in Zoology at the University of Western Ontario in 1969 and a Ph.D. in Entomology and Ecology at North Carolina State University in 1972. During his graduate studies Jeremy received both a regional and a national award from the Entomological Society of America for his research.
In 1972 Jeremy took a position in the Department of Biology at Laval University, where he was a professor for 30 years, until the end of 2002. He received a Humboldt Prize and spent 2003 at Hamburg University, then in 2004 was named the Helen Battle Professor in the Biology Department at the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. McNeil’s research interests are in behavioral and chemical ecology, studying fundamental aspects of mate choice, migration, as well as plant-insect and host-parasitoid interactions from an interdisciplinary perspective. He has trained 32 M.Sc., 17 Ph. D. students, as well as 12 PDFs, most now well established researchers in Universities and Government agencies around the world.Together they have published >190 papers in primary international journals and > 10 book chapters. He was received a number of research awards, including the C. Gordon Hewitt Award and Gold Medal from the Entomological Society of Canada, The Fry medal from the Canadian Society of Zoologists, The Silver Medal of the International Society of Chemical Ecology, the L. O. Howard Award from the Entomological Society of America (Eastern Branch) and the Delwart Prize in Chemical Ecology (Belgium).
Professor McNeil has been heavily involved in teaching, giving both undergraduate and graduate courses in entomology and ecology, as well as developing a course, "Communication in Science" discussing the preparation of manuscripts, posters and oral presentations. In the last decade he has given short versions of this course in France, Portugal, Thailand and China, as well as annually at the University of Neuchatel in Switzerland. He was named "Professuer etoile" in the Faculty of Science at Laval University and in 1985 was the Eastern Branch Nominee for the Entomological Society of America's Distinguished Achievement Award in Teaching.
Jeremy has served on editorial boards of The Canadian Entomologist, The Canadian Journal of Zoology, Entomologia experimentalis et applicata, The Journal of Chemical Ecology, Chemoecology and the Journal of Economic Entomology. He regularly serves on committees for granting agencies (Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada, The Canadian Foundation of Innovation, The Canada Research Chairs program), as well as a referee for international journals, granting agencies and Universities.
Dr. McNeil is a member of several learned Societies and served as President of the Entomological Society of Canada, the Entomological Society of Quebec, the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies and the International Society of Chemical Ecology. He is currently a councillor for the Entomological Society of Ontario. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and is currently the RSC Foreign Secretary.
Dr. McNeil is also been very active in the public awareness of science and each year, for the last 20 years, has spoken to > 500 school children in North America, Europe and Australia. He also gives regular presentations at public institutions, as well as to amateur science and gardening clubs. Jeremy has received several regional and national awards for his outreach activities, including The Faculty of Science Outreach award at UWO, the McNeil Medal from the RSC (no relation!!) and the Gordin Kaplin Award from the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies.
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Jeremy N. McNeil, was born in England, and received his primary and secondary education in Newfoundland and England, respectively. He moved to Canada in 1964 when he enrolled in an honours degree in Zoology at the University of Western Ontario. Upon graduation in 1969 he enrolled as a graduate student in Entomology and Ecology at North Carolina State University and received his Ph.D. in 1972 under the direction of Professor R. L. Rabb. During his graduate studies Jeremy received a regional and a national award from the Entomological Society of America for his research on the diapause of hyperparasitoids of the tobacco hornworm.
Following his Ph.D. Dr. McNeil immediately moved to the Department of Biology at Laval University in Quebec City, where he was a professor for 30 years, until he took early retirement at the end of 2002. At this time he received a Humboldt Prize and spent 2003 at Hamburg University working with Professor W. Francke in the Department of Organic Chemistry. Having decided retirement was not for him, Jeremy accepted a position as the Helen Battle Professor in the Biology Department at the University of Western Ontario in 2004. From 2008-2011 he was the Scientific Director of the Biotron, a research facility on campus, set up to study different aspects of climate change.
Dr. McNeil’s research interests are in behavioral and chemical ecology, studying fundamental aspects of mate choice, seasonal migration, as well as plant-insect and host-parasitoid interactions from an interdisciplinary perspective. Within his research program Professor McNeil has trained 32 M.Sc., 17 Ph. D. students, as well as 12 PDFs, most now well established researchers in Universities and Government agencies around the world. With his students and collaborators Jeremy has published >190 papers in primary international journals and > 10 book chapters. He was received a number of research awards, including the C. Gordon Hewitt Award and Gold Medal from the Entomological Society of Canada, The Fry medal from the Canadian Society of Zoologists, The Silver Medal of the International Society of Chemical Ecology, the L. O. Howard Award from the Entomological Society of America (Eastern Branch) and the Delwart Prize in Chemical Ecology (Belgium).
Throughout his career Professor McNeil has been heavily involved in teaching, giving both undergraduate and graduate courses in entomology (Introductory Entomology, Integrated Pest Management) and ecology (Introductory Ecology, Behavioral Ecology and Chemical Ecology). In addition he developed a course, "Communication in Science" discussing techniques for the preparation of manuscripts, posters and oral presentations, which he taught regularly for a number of years. In the last decade he has been invited to give short versions of this course at Universities in France, Portugal, Thailand and China, as well as giving it regularly for the last 6 years at the University of Neuchatel in Switzerland. He was named "Professuer etoile" in the Faculty of Science at Laval University (based to student evaluations) and in 1985 was the Eastern Branch Nominee for the Entomological Society of America's Distinguished Achievement Award in Teaching (a nomination prepared by the undergraduate and graduate students in Biology).
Jeremy has/does serve on several editorial boards: The Canadian Entomologist, The Canadian Journal of Zoology, Entomologia experimentalis et applicata, The Journal of Chemical Ecology, Chemoecology and the Journal of Economic Entomology. In addition he annually serves on committees for national granting agencies (Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada, The Canadian Foundation of Innovation, The Canada Research Chairs program), as well as a referee for international journals, granting agencies and Universities.
Dr. McNeil is a member of several learned Societies and has served as President of the Entomological Society of Canada, the Entomological Society of Quebec, the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies and the International Society of Chemical Ecology. He is currently a councilor for the Entomological Society of Ontario. Since being elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada Jeremy has chaired several RSC committees, organised an international symposium on GM plants in collaboration with the l’Academie Francais and represented the RSC in nationally funded collaboration with the Senegalese Academy. Currently he serves as the RSC Foreign Secretary.
Dr. McNeil is also been very active in the public awareness of science and each year, for the last 20 years, has spoken to > 500 school children in North America, Europe and Australia. He also gives regular presentations at public institutions, as well as to amateur science and gardening clubs. Jeremy has received several regional and national awards for his outreach activities, including The Faculty of Science Outreach award at UWO, the McNeil Medal from the RSC (no relation!!) and the Gordin Kaplin Award from the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies.
Dr. William McNeill
Deceased Date: 1959-05-08
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Dr. Murchie McPhail
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Dr. Alexander McPhedran
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Dr. John McRae
Deceased Date: 1960-04-08
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Kenneth McRae
Affiliation: Carleton University
Keywords: Multilingual societies, bilingualism, language policy
Deceased Date: 2015-05-18
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Kenneth Douglas McRae is former chairman of the Department of Political Science at Carleton University, in which he is a Professor, and former Chairman of the Publications Committee of the Social Science Research Council of Canada.
Kenneth McRae is Canada's foremost student of the ethnic politics of multi-national states. Starting his academic career as a political philosopher with the definitive editing of Jean Bodin's "The Six Bookes of a Commonweale", Harvard (1962) he became increasingly engrossed in political problems arising from the heterogeneity of the populations of modern states. He made a major contribution to, and is author (with Louis Hartz and others) of "The Founding of New Societies", 1964; wrote a perceptive and popular study of Switzerland ("Switzerland: Example of Cultural Co-existence", 1964); edited and wrote important parts of "The Federal Capital: Governmental Institutions", 1969; and recently edited and wrote parts of the best available presentation of current theories of a well-known group of scholars concerned with methods of reconciling differences in mixed states ("Consociational Democracy: Political Accommodation in Segmented Societies", 1974).
His work has received international recognition; he is currently co-directing, with Arend Lijphart, the first joint workshop of the European Consortium for Political Research and the Canadian Political Science Association on 'Conflicts and Policy Options in Multinational Societies,' to be held in Louvain in 1976.
Dr. Henry McTaggart
Deceased Date: 1941-11-12
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Dr. Ian McTaggart-Cowan
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2010-04-18
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