- Earl Evans (scientist)
Earl Alison Evans (
March 11 ,1910 inBaltimore, Maryland -October 5 ,1999 inChicago ) was the chairman of thebiochemistry department at theUniversity of Chicago for 30 years, during which time he pioneered several techniques whose use is widespread.In 1940 he collaborated with
Louis Slotin in using the university'scyclotron to produce enoughcarbon-11 andcarbon-14 for early studies inradiobiology . This led to his demonstration thatanimal cell s are capable of fixing carbon dioxide to synthesizecarbohydrate s, a work which earned him both the 1941 Lilly Prize, and in 1942, the chairmanship of the department.During the
Second World War , Evans worked for the US Government developing new treatments formalaria , and in 1947 he was named scientific attaché to the American Embassy in London.He returned to Chicago in 1948 and began reconstructing the university's biochemistry department in the wake of the war. To this end, he hired several talented biochemists, including
Elwood Jensen ,Albert Lehninger ,Eugene Kennedy ,Hans Gaffron , and future Nobel LaureateKonrad Bloch . As part of thephage group , Evans hired fellow membersLloyd Kosloff andFrank Putnam , with whom he established the use ofbacteriophage s andantibody labeling for studying DNA.References
* [http://www.uchospitals.edu/news/1999/19991005-evansobit.html Obituary]
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