|
 |
society
history
The founding
of the Biophysical Society was the outgrowth of the initiative of the
Committee of Four, composed of Samuel A. Talbot, Chairman, Kenneth S. Cole,
Ernest C. Pollard and Otto H. Schmitt, elected by a group of interested
scientists at the Federation Meeting in Atlantic City, April, 1956. This
Committee, assisted by Ralph W. Stacy, Local Arrangements Chairman and
Herman P. Schwan, Publicity Chairman, organized and administered the First
National Biophysics Conference held in Columbus, Ohio, March 4-6, 1957.
At the business meeting held during this conference, presided over by Max
A. Lauffer, the decision was made to organize the Biophysical Society and
a Temporary Council was elected. The Temporary Council later elected Robley
C. Williams as its President, adopted the Constitution and Bylaws of
the Society, developed by a committee chaired by Max A. Lauffer, formulated
a temporary plan of operation for the first year of the Society, prepared
a slate of officers for the first year and planned, with Cyrus Levinthal
as Program Chairman and Arthur K. Solomon as Local Arrangements Chairman,
the second meeting of the Biophysical Society held early in 1958 in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. At this meeting, the recommendations of the Temporary
Council were accepted, the Constitution and Bylaws were ratified and the
proposed slate of officers elected, thereby formally founding the Biophysical
Society. |