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11/27/01
Six Scholars Elected Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Each year the Council of the AAAS selects a small number of scientists from its membership (nearly all scientists are members) and honors them for "efforts on behalf of the advancement of science and engineering that are scientifically or socially distinguished." This year, from the Biological Sciences, Scott Hawley ('84 Scholar) was elected; from
Chrmistry, M. Reza Ghadiri ('91) and Ronald T. Raines('90); and from Neurosciences, Gilles Laurent ('90), Joesph S. Takahashi ('85), and Marc Tessier-Lavigne ('91). The new Fellows of the Association will be presented at the annual AAAS meeting in Boston on February 16 of 2002.
10/1/01
Our server took a hit from the Nimda virus last month. As candidates tried to download application forms just before the deadline, a computer expert at Johns Hopkins worked diligently for several days on ridding our server of thousands of exe files and cleaning up over a thousand html files that had Nimda commands embedded in them. Mary Tarpey helped by faxing forms to a few desperate candidates, and Andrew Nitchkin did the computer repairs to put us back on line. Thanks Mary and Andrew for making things work!
7/11/01
Marc Tessier-Lavigne,
1991 Scholar, is the first Searle Scholar elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.
This news came via Cedric Chernick, former Director of our Program and continuing enthusiast for it, who read it in C&E News. Congratulations Marc! And we need more news correspondents like Cedric!
6/14/01
New Kircsh Foundation Medical Investigator Awards go to
Allison Doupe, 1993 Scholar and Geraldine Seydoux,1997 Scholar.
The goal of the Kirsch Foundation is to eliminate all diseases. The present awards are for work towards a cure for Parkinson's disease (given to Allison) and to develop stem cell therapies (to Geraldine). The awards are for $150,000 to the investigator and $30,000 to the institution for the first year, with the possibility of additional funding in the subsequent two years. These awards were two of four given this year. One of last year's recipients was Ben
Barres, 1994 Searle Scholar, who will continue to receive funding from the Kirsch Foundation.
6/13/01
DAPHNE PREUSS Will Receive the ASCB-Promega
Award from The Americal Society for Cell
Biology
Daphne Preuss, 1997 Scholar, will receive the third annual ABSC-Promega Award for Early Career Life Sciences. The award will be presented at the ASCB annual meeting in December. Daphne is being recognized "for her work in chromosome structure and pollen function. Her work seeks to identify components that mediate inheritance from the gene products that control fertilization to those that regulate DNA transmission. Preuss was also a key contributor to the sequenceing of the Arabidopsis genome."
4/13/01
FIFTEEN SEARLE
SCHOLARS NAMED FOR 2001
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - Fifteen individuals doing research in
the chemical and biological sciences will each have an
additional $240,000 to support their research programs
during the next three years. The fifteen have been named
as the 2001 Searle Scholars. With the names announced
today, 348 Searle Scholars have shared over $61,360,000
in grants made since the program began in 1981. This
year, 173 applications were considered from recently
appointed assistant professors, nominated by 93
universities and research institutions. The final
selection of Scholars was based on recommendations made
by a Scientific Advisory Board of eleven scientists
distinguished for their research and leadership in fields
of interest to the Searle Scholars Program.
In selecting the Scholars,
the Board looked for individuals who have already
demonstrated innovative research with the potential for
making significant contributions to biological research
over an extended period of time.
The funds that support the
awards come from trusts established under the wills of
John G. and Frances C. Searle. Mr. Searle was President
of G.D. Searle & Co., of Skokie, Illinois, a
research-based pharmaceutical company. Mr. and Mrs.
Searle expressed the wish that some of the proceeds of
their estates be used for the support of research in
medicine, chemistry, and biological science.
In 1980, members of the
Searle family acting as Consultants to the Trustees of
the Trusts established under the wills of Mr. & Mrs.
John G. Searle, recommended the development of a program
of support for young biomedical scientists. This idea
evolved into the Searle Scholars Program, which is funded
through grants from the family trusts to The Chicago
Community Trust and administered by Kinship Foundation in
Northbrook, Illinois.
2001 Class of the Searle Scholars Program
Steven Brenner, University of California, Berkeley
Kenneth Catania, Vanderbilt University
Michael Caterina, The Johns Hopkins University
Joseph DeRisi, University of California, San Francisco
Catherine Drennan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Guowei Fang, Stanford University
Elizabeth Finch, Emory University
Su Guo, University of California, San Francisco
Taekjip Ha, University of Illinois
Tonya Kuhl, University of California, Davis
J.Troy Littleton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Guangbin Luo, Case Western University
Zachary Mainen, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
W. Matthew Michael, Harvard University
Noam Sobel, University of California, Berkeley
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