Knowles Elected Trustee Of Howard Hughes Medical
Institute
Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, has been
elected a trustee of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the second largest
philanthropy in the country.
Knowles, who has been on the Harvard faculty since 1974, was named the
Amory Houghton Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry in 1979. He was appointed
Dean in 1991.
His research has been at the boundary of chemistry and biochemistry.
He has been particularly interested in the rate and specificity of enzyme
catalysis and the evolution of protein function. He has published more than
250 research papers.
Knowles was born in England, where he was educated at Magdalen College
School, Oxford. After serving as a pilot officer in the Royal Air Force,
he graduated from Balliol College, Oxford, receiving his B.A. in 1959 and
his D.Phil. in 1961. Before joining the Harvard faculty, he was fellow and
tutor of Wadham College, Oxford. He also held a postdoctoral fellowship
at the California Institute of Technology and was a visiting professor at
both Harvard and Yale.
Knowles was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1977, and to membership
in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1982. In 1984, he was elected
to an honorary fellowship of Balliol College, and in 1990, to an honorary
fellowship of Wadham College. He became a foreign associate of the National
Academy of Sciences and a member of the American Philosophical Society in
1988.
Knowles has received many awards, including the Charmian Medal of the
Royal Society of Chemistry, the Bader Award and an Arthur Cope Scholar Award
from the American Chemical Society, the Davy Medal from the Royal Society,
and the Robert A. Welch Award. He was appointed Commander of the British
Empire in the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1993.
Knowles will become one of the nine trustees of the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute (HHMI), which is among the largest philanthropies in the world.
The Institute's scientists conduct basic biomedical research in hundreds
of laboratories located on the campuses of universities, academic medical
centers, and other research institutions in the United States with which
the Institute collaborates. HHMI also has a large grants program through
which it supports science education at every level in the United States,
as well as the work of individual scientists in selected foreign countries.
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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