Lewis G. Longsworth

Lewis Gibson Longsworth (November 16, 1904 – August 8, 1981) was an American chemist and biochemist. [1] [2] The New York Times said that his research "helped to make modern biochemistry possible".[1] Longsworth was notable for creating separation methods that allowed to measure trace quantities of biological chemicals,[1] as well as for new methods and improved techniques for studying the structures of proteins.[1] Longsworth was a member of the National Academy of Sciences[1][2] and a professor at Rockefeller University.[1][2] He was also a member of the American Chemical Society, Electrochemical Society, Harvey Society, and Sigma Xi.[2] He was the recipient of the 1968 American Chemical Society Award in Chromatography and Electrophoresis.[2][3]

Life and career

Longsworth was born in Somerset, Kentucky. He graduated from Southwestern College in 1925. Longsworth received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Kansas in 1928 and spent his career of 42 year at the Rockefeller Institute.[2]

gollark: [REDACTED]
gollark: Yes, unfortunately my attempt at stealing the bots here failed since they are not set as public.
gollark: Maybe you can steal just the markdown parser and tack a simple markdown AST to HTML backend on.
gollark: pulldown-cmark (Rust CommonMark parser) contains 3000 lines of parsing code, although it does have to care about low level details and does some SIMD magic for performance.
gollark: Standards compliant markdown parsing is very hard.

References

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