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The Honourable Allan Blakeney
Affiliation: University of Saskatchewan
Keywords: Federalism, public sector management, how government works
Deceased Date: 2011-04-16
The Honourable Allan E. Blakeney has had a rich and varied public career, as a member of the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly (1960-1988), in various cabinet portfolios (1960-1964), as Premier of Saskatchewan (1971-1982) and Leader of the Opposition (1970-71 and 1982-87). As Premier, Blakeney was deeply involved in federal and constitutional politics. He consistently stood out for his mastery of the issues, and his capacity to integrate principles and pragmatism. He has gone out of his way to communicate his experience-based knowledge to a wider public in lectures, in journal articles, as textbook co-author, and as University professor. He has been an advisor on federalism both to Russian legislators and to the new Republic of South Africa.
Dr. J. Ewart Blanchard
Affiliation: Nova Scotia Research Foundation
Deceased Date: 2003-08-22
Professor Blanchard, after service in the Royal Canadian Navy, graduated in physics from Dalhousie and in geophysics from University of Toronto. He spent a few years in Arizona with Professor A. A. Brant where he gained a good knowledge of exploration geophysics, later put to good use in the discovery of important deposits of limestone (for cement) and salt in Nova Scotia.
Of even greater scientific interest has been his seismic exploration of the crust off the Atlantic Provinces. He has succeeded in mapping the depth to Mohorovicic Discontinuity at the continental margin, a problem often attempted but seldom achieved.
J. Michael Bliss
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Keywords: History, Canada, medicine
Deceased Date: 2017-05-18
Bliss' contributions to Canadian historical scholarship are outstanding for originality, analytical pcwer and narrative force. In "A Living Profit" (1974) he examined the beliefs and motives of businessmen in the age of Canada's industrialization and in his biography of Sir Joseph Flavelle (1978) he brilliantly assessed a turn of the century capitalist, the cultural matrix in which he lived, and the complex -and often surprising - interplay of religion, success and social obligation. This is one of the finest of Canadian biographies and was awarded the Macdonald prize of the Canadian Historical Association and the University of British Columbia medal for biography. In "The Discovery of Insulin" (1982), which won the Royal Society's Hannah Medal, Bliss reconstructed the complicated inner history of the research that led to a remedy for diabetes: this is a brilliant book in the history of medicine; it is no less compelling as a study of human ambitions and conflicts within science.
He has continued to make scholarly contributions with such works as "Northern Enterprise" (1987), "Plague" (1991), "Right Honourable Men" (1994), and "William Osler" (1999). He is a Member of the Order of Canada.
Dr. Edward Blodgett
Affiliation: University of Alberta
Keywords: Poetry, music, history of literature
Deceased Date: 2018-11-15
Poet, translator, medievalist and pioneer of Comparative Canadian Literature, E. D. Blodgett of the University of Alberta has taught English, French, Canadian and Comparative Literature, and distinguished himself through numerous books and articles. As a scholar, editor, teacher, and administrator, he has been prominent in the development of the discipline of Comparative Literature in Canada and has exercised a seminal and methodologically innovative influence on the development of the comparative study of Canadian literatures and their national and international relations. His contribution to Canadian poetry is distinguished.
Myer Bloom
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2016-02-09
Myer Bloom's name is well-known to everybody in the field of nuclear magnetic resonance. He was the first to prodict the possibility of observing spin echoes in pure quadrupole resonance, and (in collaboration with Norberg) to actually observe them. He was also the first to observe the coexistence of paramagnetic and antiferromagnetic phases near the Néel Temperature. Possibly his main achievement is, however, to have established, by a systematical theoretical and experimental study in collaboration with his associates, the essential identy of the spin-lattice relaxation mechanism in the solid, liquid, and gas phases of substances forming molecular crystals.
Prof. Erik Bohn
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Deceased Date: 2012-08-06
Dr. Bohn's contributions in engineering are in the field of automatic control systems. While in industry he played a major part in the design and development of the CF-100 Flight Simulator. At the University he developed and patented a Pulse Analog Computer. Among the approaches to the study of the coupling of radio antennas to the antenna feed his was among the first to treat the combined system and arrive at the current distribution and input impedance of cylindrical antennas. He has published many papers and two books.
Mr. Pierre Bois
Affiliation: Université de Montréal
Deceased Date: 2011-09-30
Pierre Bois a contribué par des observations importantes à plusieurs champs de la médecine expérimentale et, en particulier, à celui de l'endocrinologie. Ses premières recherches portèrent sur les multiples interactions entre glucocorticoïdes et minéralocorticoïdes, et sur les activités pharmacologiques des corticoïdes halogénés qui avaient été synthésisés alors qu'il était candidat au doctorat. Plus tard, il a fait des recherches très intéressantes sur des sujets aussi variés que le lathyrisme, la pharmacologie de la sérotonine, la dystrophie musculaire et la déficience en magnésium. C'est au cours de ces dernières investigations qu'il a fait la découverte pour laquelle il est le mieux connu à travers le monde, soit l'induction de thymome par carence en magnésium.
Dr. Charles Bolton
Affiliation: University of Toronto
Keywords: Stellar spectroscopy, massive stars, binary stars, variable stars, light pollution
Deceased Date: 2021-02-04
Charles Thomas Bolton achieved world-wide recognition for his work on those exotic objects known as black holes. Specifically, he was the first to demonstrate the existence of a black hole. His observations of the star which is coincident with one of the strongest sources of celestial X-rays showed that it is orbiting an invisible body, the source of the X-rays. From the nature of the orbit Bolton showed convincingly that the companion body is so very massive that it must be a black hole. In another area Professor Bolton has solved a long-standing riddle in astrophysics posed by chemical inhomogeneities found in hot luminous stars. His work showed that strong magnetic fields account for their spectra and variability. Bolton's research is of broad significance in modern astrophysics.
Mr. Joseph Bonenfant
Affiliation: Université de Sherbrooke
Deceased Date: 2000-04-24
Joseph Bonenfant, du Département des lettres et communications de l'Université de Sherbrooke, est un littéraire qui a formé, au cours de trente ans de carrière, des disciples qui marquent aujourd'hui les lettres québécoises. Il a lui-même signé de nombreux articles sur la poésie comme genre littéraire ou sur l'oeuvre de poètes français ou québécois.
Il est l'auteur d'un essai, « Passions du poétique », qui lui a valu deux prix littéraires. Sa contribution au rayonnement des lettres et de la culture est reconnue au niveau national et international.
Prof. Laurence Bongie
Affiliation: The University of British Columbia
Keywords: Enlightenment (studies), hume, diderot, condillac, SADE
Deceased Date: 2020-12-26
Laurence Bongie, Department of French, The University of British Columbia, is a researcher and author whose work demonstrates mastery of eighteenth-century literary, philosophic, and historical studies. The French Enlightenment is his chief subject field, but his range of marked competence extends to figures associated with eighteenth-century Britain. His writings present striking discoveries, both archival and interpretative, which change our perspectives on Hume, Diderot, Condillac, Charles Edward Stuart, and Sade, also on the underworld of clandestine publication. His model scholarship is at its best when he is working with primary sources, solving problems, exploding stubborn myths, and challenging ideological pieties. His five ground-breaking books on five different authors place him in the top rank of eighteenth-century scholars.
Dr. Jonathan Borwein
Affiliation: University of Newcastle
Keywords: Experimental mathematics, optimization, functional analysis, high performance computing, collaborative technology
Deceased Date: 2016-08-02
Jonathan Borwein is a mathematician of great versatility and range. He has contributed to classical and modern analysis, optimization, computational mathematics and number theory. One of his accomplishments is the Borwein-Preiss Smooth Variational Principle which has proved to be fundamental for the study of differentiability of functions on Banach spaces. He has been a pioneer in the study of nonsmooth analysis and generalized gradients. In addition, he has made some fascinating contributions to the study of computational algorithms. For instance, with his brother, Peter Borwein, he discovered a cubic analogue of the arithmetic-geometric mean iteration of Gauss and Legendre.
Prof. J. Bosher
Affiliation: York University
Keywords: Merchants,tTrade, Vancouver Island, British Empire, New France
Deceased Date: 2020-09-03
John Francis Bosher is an historian who has established a reputation in both Canada and Europe through his writings on eighteenth century France. His two books, "The Single Duty Project"1965) and "French Finances 1770-1795" (1970), and a large number of scholarly articles have opened up, in an imaginative and pioneering way, the study of the pre-revolutionary public administration of France. His research has been resourceful and thorough, his writing style elegant and his interpretation of the
critical subject widely praised. His studies of the administration of New France and the relations between France and New France have been of great importance to students of Canadian history. Professor Bosher's international standing as an historian is testimony to the seriousness with which he approaches scholarship and the magnitude of his achievement.