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Frank Winder (Francis Gerard Augustine Winder; born 14 April 1928; died in Dublin, 30 December 2007) was an Irish professor of biochemistry, a naturalist, and one of Ireland's leading rock climbers in the 1950s and 1960s. ==Scientific career== Winder received his early education at Belvedere College, and developed an early interest in botany and zoology, cycling around the Irish countryside looking for interesting specimens. In 1945 he entered University College Dublin (UCD) to study science and came to the attention of Arthur Stelfox of the Natural History Museum. Stelfox introduced Winder to entomologist Philip Graves, who promptly sent the 18-year-old Winder off to the mountains of Kerry in search of a rare butterfly, but Winder returned with a specimen of a dragonfly, Cordulia aenea, which was previously unknown in Ireland.〔(universityscience.ie – profile of Frank Winder )〕 While climbing a steep gully on Knocknagantee in Kerry in search of a rare fern, Winder sustained a long fall but luckily was not seriously injured. It was that fall which made him realise that he would need to acquire rock-climbing skills if he was to explore cliffs in relative safety. (He later revisited the site of his fall, establishing a new rock-climb on the neighbouring buttress.)〔 Winder graduated from UCD with a BSc in biochemistry in 1948 and an MSc the following year. In 1950, after a brief period working for Glaxo, he joined a Medical Research Council of Ireland research laboratory in Trinity College Dublin working on the chemotherapy of tuberculosis, under the leadership of Vincent Barry. The team developed a class of phenazines that proved very effective in the treatment of TB and leprosy, and remain in use worldwide.〔 Winder also pioneered research into the primary anti-TB drug, isoniazid; his work on this continues to be cited internationally.〔(Graham S. Timmins, Vojo Deretic (2006) Mechanisms of action of isoniazid; Molecular Microbiology 62 (5), 1220–1227; ) 〕 In Trinity, he became a lecturer in biochemistry in 1960, a fellow of the college in 1962, reader in 1966, dean of Graduate Studies 1974 to 1977 and professor in 1975. He was conferred with the degree of Doctor of Science in 1972. He served as director of the Biology Teaching Centre from 1986 to 1991 and was co-opted to Senior Fellowship in 1985. He served on the Board of College where he made contributions to the debates on policy and other business. He retired in 1996, but continued to come to college every day until shortly before his death.〔 In the 1950s Winder was one of the founders of ''Tuairim'', a group of young professionals who formed a think-tank to examine the problems affecting Ireland at the time, especially that of emigration. He was elected to membership of the Royal Irish Academy in 1961 and held the office of vice-president three times.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Frank Winder」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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