| June 22, 2000
Media Contacts: Jan Jennings
(858) 822-1684,
or Kim McDonald (858)
534-7572
UCSD PROFESSORS IN NATURAL
SCIENCES HONORED FOR ACHIEVEMENTS
Seven professors in the
natural sciences at the University of California, San Diego are being
recognized for their achievements. They are Terence T.-L. Hwa, Roger
Y. Tsien, Edward A. Dennis, Yuki Goda, Carl E. McIlwain, Kim Baldridge
and Ivan K. Schuller.
Physics professor Hwa is the
recipient of a 2000 Innovation Award in Functional Genomics from the
Burroughs Wellcome Fund. The goal of this new award program of the
North Carolina-based Burroughs Wellcome Fund is to accelerate
integration of the vast mount of genetic sequence and expression data
being generated in the world's laboratories into functional and
clinically relevant information that will yield insights into
mechanisms of human disease.
Hwa is being awarded a
$200,000 grant over a three-year period to continue his research on
gene expression profiles based on statistical significance of
clustering analysis. Hwa received a bachelor's degree in physics,
biology and electrical engineering from Stanford University and a
master's degree and Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. He has served on the UCSD faculty since 1995.
Tsien, a professor of
chemistry, biochemistry and pharmacology, has received the Herbert A.
Sober Lectureship Award from the American Society of Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology. The lectureship recognizes outstanding
contributions to biochemical and molecular biological research, with
particular emphasis on development of methods and techniques to aid in
research.
Tsien presented a lecture at
the Society's annual meeting held earlier this month in Boston, where
he received his award. He holds a bachelor's degree in chemistry and
physics from Harvard University and a Ph.D. in physiology from the
University of Cambridge in England. He has been on the UCSD faculty
since 1989.
Chemistry and biochemistry
professor Dennis, who is also chair of the department, is the
recipient of the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology Avanti Award. The award recognizes outstanding research
contributions in the area of lipids.
Dennis received his award at
the Society's annual meeting in Boston where he presented a lecture.
He earned a bachelor's degree from Yale University, master's and Ph.D.
degrees from Harvard University, and has been on the UCSD faculty
since 1970.
Goda, an assistant professor
of biology, has been awarded two fellowships in support of her studies
of the molecular mechanisms of signaling in the nervous system.
Goda will receive $50,000
each year for three years from the Rita Allen Foundation which
supports scientists carrying out promising investigations of cerebral
palsy and multiple sclerosis. She also will receive $40,000 each year
for three years from the Esther A. and Joseph Klingenstein Foundation
that supports work that may lead to a better understanding of
epilepsy.
Goda received a bachelor's
degree in biochemistry and chemistry from the University of Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Stanford University, and
has been with the UCSD Department of Biology since 1997.
Research physics professor
McIlwain has been awarded the Hannes Alfvén Medal 2000 by the
European Geophysical Society for the study of the Earth and planetary
sciences. The award was established to honor the scientific
achievements of Hannes Alfvén and to recognize in its recipients
outstanding scientific contributions toward the understanding of
plasma processes in the solar system and other cosmical plasma
environments.
McIlwain received a
bachelor's degree from North Texas College and a master's degree and
Ph.D. in physics from the State University of Iowa. He has been on the
UCSD faculty since 1962.
Baldridge, an associate
adjunct professor of chemistry, is the winner of the 2000 Agnes Fay
Morgan Award given by the Iota Sigma Pi Honor Society for outstanding
research achievement by a female chemist under the age of 40. It is
awarded over all disciplines of chemistry and biochemistry.
Baldridge received her
bachelor's degree in mathematics and chemistry from Minot State
University in North Dakota and a master's in mathematics and a Ph.D.
in theoretical chemistry from North Dakota State University. She
joined the UCSD faculty in 1991.
Physics professor Schuller
has been elected the recipient of a Humboldt Research Award for Senior
U.S. Scientists given by Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung, a foundation
based in Bonn, Germany. The foundation was established to foster
scientific and cultural contacts between Germany and other countries
and the Humboldt Research Award recognizes individual accomplishments
in research and teaching.
In addition to receiving the
award and a monetary grant, Schuller will give lectures and
collaborate in research with colleagues in Germany at
yet-to-be-determined dates over the next five years.
Schuller received his
bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of Chile and his
master's and Ph.D. degrees from Northwestern University. He has been a
professor at UCSD since 1987. |