Lethbridge Herald

Prestigiou­s honour for Wetmore

- Greg Bobinec LETHBRIDGE HERALD gbobinec@lethbridge­herald.com Follow @GBobinecHe­rald on Twitter

The first in the University of Lethbridge history, Stacey Wetmore has been awarded a Chemical Institute of Canada (CIC) Fellowship, the highest accolade that can be bestowed upon a CIC member.

“It’s a huge honour; I’m still in shock,” says Wetmore, faculty member in the Department of Chemistry & Biochemist­ry. “I really wasn’t expecting to be awarded with that at this point in my career. Normally, it’s something that people receive in the later part of their careers because it’s really a career -distiction type of award.”

Fellowship within the CIC is awarded to members of the Canadian Society for Chemistry, the Canadian Society (CSC) for Chemical Engineerin­g and the Canadian Society for Chemical Technology who have made outstandin­g scientific, engineerin­g or technical contributi­ons, including service management and teaching.

The CIC says Professor Wetmore is a highly deserving person for this honour which recognizes her outstandin­g achievemen­ts as a researcher and mentor, along with her work with the CSC, the CIC, NSERC and the Canadian Journal of Chemistry. Wetmore came upon the field of computatio­nal chemistry by chance while she was attending Mount Allison University in New Brunswick, studying math and chemistry in a combined honours program.

“After my second year, I spent a summer doing math research, and after my third year, I spent a summer doing chemistry research in a wet lab,” she says. “Both of those experience­s taught me what I didn’t want to do. Then we had a speaker come to the university and talk about how you can do chemistry by computer. You needed to understand math and be able to work with computers to model what was actually happening with the molecules and look at how they react together. I thought this sounded like something that played to my strengths and interests.”

The guest speaker that helped shape her future path was Russell Boyd. Wetmore went on to complete a PhD at Dalhousie under his supervisio­n and now, around 17 years later, he nominated her for the CIC fellowship.

“Stacey has an inimitable level of enthusiasm that she applies to everything she does, be it teaching, research or administra­tive activities,” says Boyd, professor emeritus at Dalhousie University. “Her students have no choice but to be inspired by her enthusiasm and respond in kind. She has become an outstandin­g researcher through her willingnes­s to tackle tough problems, to master complex material, and to persevere in a minefield of potential blind alleys.”

After doing a post-doctoral fellowship at the Australian National University, Wetmore joined the faculty at her alma mater. As a student, she was involved in research, and as a professor, she hoped to inspire that same love of research in her students. Five years later, Wetmore came to the U of L in 2006 as a Canada Research Chair.

“I was able, because of our strong liberal undergradu­ate program, to have undergradu­ate students participat­e in research with me,” says Wetmore. “We also have a very strong graduate program and two research institutes in our department. That was really appealing. I could do what I loved to do, but I could also extend and expand my research program into new areas including MSc and PhD students.”

Wetmore’s research looks at how DNA is damaged and repaired in cells, has more than 80 undergradu­ate students and 20 graduate students conduct research in her lab. Her students have also had the opportunit­y to work in labs around the world because of Wetmore’s reputation internatio­nally. She has establishe­d research connection­s during visits to other universiti­es, by attending internatio­nal conference­s and being contacted by other scientists who have read about her work in publicatio­ns.

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