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===Graham Colditz===
Colditz is the Niess-Gain professor of surgery, professor of medicine and associate director of prevention and control at the Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Mo. He is also chief of the division of public health sciences, department of surgery and deputy director at the Institute for Public Health at Washington University School of Medicine.
 
Colditz’s research interests are lifestyle and environmental risk factors that contribute to the onset of cancer. PI on two large-scale, population studies involving subsets of individuals with a particular disease. The Nurses’ Health Study at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the [[Growing Up Today Study]] (GUTS).
 
Awards AACR-DeWitt S. Goodman Memorial Lectureship, Fulbright Scholarship, Knox Fellowship at Harvard University, the American Cancer Society Faculty Research Award, the ASPO Distinguished Achievement Award, election to membership of the Institute of Health and the American Cancer Society Cissy Hornung Clinical Research Professorship. In 2011, he was awarded the American Cancer Society Medal of Honor for cancer control research.
 
<ref name="AACR">{{cite web | url=http://www.aacr.org/home/public--media/aacr-in-the-news.aspx?d=2734|title=AACR Honors Graham A. Colditz, M.D., Dr.P.H., With Award for Excellence in Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention| date=23 March 2012 | accessdate=2012-08-07}}</ref>
 
 
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==Notable Science==
==G. J. Lapeyre award==
 
In 1973 the vault that held Tantalus was being enlarged, and during a facility picnic a rainstorm hit and caused the vault to start to flood. Jerry Lapeyre of [[Montana State University]] used the lab's tractor to build earthworks to divert the water. His efforts led then-director Rowe to create the annual G. J. Lapeyre award to be awarded to “one who met and overcame the greatest obstacle in the pursuit of their research”. The trophy has an octagonal base representing Tantalus, with a beer can from the lab picnic which preceded the flood, topped by a concrete “raindrop”.<ref name="Lapeyre">{{Cite journal
|last=Lapeyre |first=Gerald J.
|year=1994
|title=Development of synchrotron radiation photoemission from photoionization to electron holography
|journal=Nuclear Instruments and Methods A
|volume=347 |pages=17-30
|doi=10.1016/0168-9002(94)91848-1
}}</ref>
 
==The Canadian Synchrotron Radiation Facility==
 
==Notable Science==
 
==Educational Outreach==
 
==Technical description==
===Beamlines===
 
{| class="wikitable" width="100%"
|-
! Name
! Port assigned<ref name="beamlines">{{cite web | url= http://www.src.wisc.edu/facility/beamspecs.htm|title= Beamline Specifications| accessdate=2012-07-30}}</ref>
! Source
! Energy range (eV unless stated)
! Usage
|-
| 10m TGM
| 123
|
|
|
|-
| 4m NIM
| 081
|
|
|
|-
| 6m TGM
| 042
|
|
|
|-
| Ames-Montana ERG-Seya
| 053
|
|
|
|-
| DCM
| 093
|
|
|
|-
| HERMON
| 033
|
| 62-1400
|
|-
| Infrared
| 031
| Bending magnet
| 650-8000
| Infrared spectromicroscopy
|-
| IRENI
| 02
| Bending magnet
| 850-5500
| Infrared spectromicroscopy
|-
| Mark V Grasshopper
| 043
|
|
|
|-
| PGM undulator on U3
| 071
|
|
|
|-
| Stainless Steel Seya
| 051
|
|
|
|-
| U2 VLS-PGM
| 041
|
|
|
|-
| U2 Wadsworth
| 041
|
| 7.8-40
|
|-
| U9 VLS-PGM
| 091
|
|
|
|-
| Undulator4m NIM on U1 VLS-PGM
| 011
|
|
|
|-
 
| White light
| 061
|
|
|
|-
|}
 
<ref name="Tant">{{Cite journal
|last=Lynch |first=D. W.
|year=1997
|title=Tantalus, a 240MeV Dedicated Source of Synchrotron Radiation, 1968-1986
|journal=Journal of Synchrotron Radiation
|volume=4 |pages=334-343
|doi=10.1107/S0909049597011758
}}</ref>
{{Reflist}}