William Allan Award
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The William Allan Award, given by the American Society of Human Genetics, was established in 1961 in memory of William Allan (1881-1943), one of the first American physicians to conduct extensive research in human genetics.[1] The William Allan Award is presented annually to recognize substantial and far-reaching scientific contributions to human genetics carried out over a sustained period of scientific inquiry and productivity. An award of $10,000 and an engraved medal are presented at the Annual Meeting.
[edit] Award recipients
| Year | Name |
|---|---|
| 1962 | Newton Morton |
| 1965 | James Neel |
| 1967 | Vernon Ingram |
| 1968 | Harry Harris |
| 1969 | Jerome Lejeune |
| 1970 | Arno Multusky |
| 1973 | Barton Childs |
| 1974 | Curt Stern |
| 1975 | Philip Levin and A. S. Wiener |
| 1977 | Victor McKusick |
| 1978 | Charles Scriver |
| 1979 | F. Clarke Fraser |
| 1980 | Walter Bodmer |
| 1981 | Patricia Jacobs |
| 1982 | Elizabeth Neufield |
| 1983 | Frank Ruddle |
| 1984 | Y. W. Kwan |
| 1985 | Joseph L. Goldstein and Michael S. Brown |
| 1986 | Mary F. Lyon |
| 1987 | L. L. Cavalli-Sforza |
| 1988 | T. Caspersson |
| 1989 | David Bostein and Ray White |
| 1990 | Kary Mullis |
| 1991 | Janet D. Rowley and Alfred Knudson Jr. |
| 1992 | Alec Jeffreys |
| 1993 | Antonio Cao and Michael Kaback |
| 1994 | Doug Wallace |
| 1995 | Kurt Hirschhorn |
| 1996 | Robert Elston |
| 1997 | Philip Leder |
| 1998 | Bert Vogelstein |
| 1999 | Stephen Warren |
| 2001 | Charles J. Epstein |
| 2002 | Albert de la Chapelle |
| 2003 | David Weatherall |
| 2004 | Louis Kunkel |
| 2005 | Francis Collins |
| 2006 | Dorothy Warburton |
| 2007 | Arthur Beaudet |

