, UK, 100 Z-Scheme posters, and 100 books entitled Music of Sunlight by Dr. Wilbert Veit, USA. We are grateful to Mahendra Rathore for the photographs provided for this Report. We also refer the readers to a web site (http://www.schooloflifesciencesdauniv.org) for further information on this conference. References Blankenship RE (2007) 2007 Awards of the International Society SB525334 of Photosynthesis Research (ISPR). Photosynth Res 94:179–181CrossRef Eaton-Rye JJ (2007a) Celebrating
Govindjee’s 50 years in Photosynthesis Research and his 75th birthday. Photosynth Res 93(1–3):1–5PubMedCrossRef Eaton-Rye JJ (2007b) Snapshots of the Govindjee lab from the late 1960s to the late 1990s, and beyond. Photosynth Res 94(2–3):153–178CrossRef Govindjee (2004) Robert Emerson and Eugene Rabinowitch: understanding photosynthesis. In: Hoddeson L (ed) No boundaries. University of Illinois Press, Urbana, pp 181–194 Rebeiz CA, Benning C, Bohnert J, Hoober JK, Portis AR (2007) Govindjee was honored with the first lifetime achievement award, and Britta Forster and coworkers, with the first annual paper prize of Rebeiz foundation Immunology inhibitor for basic research. Photosynth Res 94(1):147–151CrossRef Strasser RJ, Srivastava A, Govindjee
(1995) Polyphasic chlorophyll a fluorescence transient in plants and cyanobacteria. Photochem Photobiol 61:32–42CrossRef”
“Professor emeritus Dr. rer. nat. habil. Paul Hoffmann (see Fig. 1) passed away after a serious illness on July 10, 2008, at the age of 77. The scientific community, in the field of photosynthesis research and at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (Humboldt University Berlin), has lost a dedicated researcher, teacher, and colleague. Fig. 1 Professor Paul Hoffmann in his office in 1988. Courtesy of E. Helmer Paul Hoffmann was born in selleck inhibitor Sattel, a small
Silesian village near Grünberg (now Zielona Góra, Poland), in 1931, as the only son Megestrol Acetate (he had four younger sisters) of a farmer and forestry worker. As a result of World War II, the family had to leave this region and migrated to Western Pomerania in 1945. Here, Paul Hoffmann attended a secondary school in Franzburg and passed the “Abitur” in 1951. In the same year he began to study biology at the University of Greifswald, one of the oldest universities in Germany, earlier focussing on botany, in particular, plant physiology. In 1956, he started his scientific career as an “Assistent” (scientific assistant) at the Botanical Institute, headed by the well-known plant physiologist Heinrich Borriss (1909–1985). At this time, he switched the field of his research activities from earlier electrophysiological studies on leaves of Elodea, the topic of his diploma thesis (completed in 1956), to problems related to photosynthesis.