
Campbell began his career in social and cross-cultural psychology with bench science–type contributions to such issues as leadership and subordination, conformity to groups, ethnocentrism, and xenophobia. Through his unique disposition to engage in fierce but always amicable intellectual exchange across disciplinary boundaries, inspiring teaching, and more than 240 publications, Campbell made significant contributions to a wide variety of disciplines. Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, ), psychology, anthropology, methodology of social science, education, evolutionary theory, epistemology, science studies. Grass Lake, Michigan, 20 November 1916 ĭ.

There is also one special memorial erected to a soldier of the Canadian Infantry Corps who is known to have been buried in this cemetery, but the exact site of whose grave could not be located.( b. There are a total of 2,048 burials in Beny-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery. Canadians who died during the final stages of the fighting in Normandy are buried in Bretteville-sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery. In this cemetery are the graves of Canadians who gave their lives in the landings in Normandy and in the earlier stages of the subsequent campaign. It was on the coast just to the north that the 3rd Canadian Division landed on 6th June 1944 on that day, 335 officers and men of that division were killed in action or died of wounds. The bus service between Caen and Arromanches (via Reviers and Ver-sur-Mer) passes the cemetery. The village of Beny-sur-Mer is some 2 kilometres south-east of the cemetery. It is located 15 kilometres north-west of Caen and 18 kilometres east of Bayeux and 3.5 kilometres south of Courseulles, a village on the sea coast. Reviers is a village and commune in the Department of the Calvados.


Beny-sur-Mer Canadian War Cemetery is about 1 kilometre east of the village of Reviers, on the Creully-Tailleville-Ouistreham road (D.35).
