| November 21, 2000
Media Contact: Kim
McDonald (858) 534-7572;
Photo Credit: Peter Freed
FOUNDING DEAN NAMED FOR
UCSD'S DIVISION OF BIOLOGY
Professor
Eduardo
R. Macagno, Associate Vice-President of Arts and Sciences for Research
and Graduate Education and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences at Columbia University, has been appointed as the Founding
Dean of the University of California, San Diego's Division of Biology.
Macagno, a professor of biological sciences who has served in his
current administrative posts since 1993 and on the Columbia faculty
since 1973, will begin his tenure at UCSD on February 1, 2001.
"I'm so excited about
the possibilities for the future at UCSD that I'm leaving a place I've
loved for 37 years," says Macagno, who began his Ph.D. in physics
at Columbia in 1963 and never left. "But it's a golden
opportunity to take advantage of the prospects for growth at UCSD and to
think about how biology ought to be done in the coming decades."
Marsha Chandler, Senior Vice
Chancellor for Academic Affairs at UCSD, states that "this is an
inspired and wonderful appointment. Professor Macagno's leadership
will make a real difference in Biology, as well as contributing to the
future success of the campus as a whole."
The Division of Biology,
formerly a department at UCSD, was created in July, when UCSD's
Division of Natural Sciences split into two divisions, Biology and
Physical Sciences, each with its own dean. Mark H. Thiemens, a
professor of chemistry and biochemistry who was the interim dean of
the Division of Natural Sciences, is the Founding Dean of the Division
of Physical Sciences.
"UCSD is among the top
research universities in biology in the United States," says
Macagno "And in time, I think it could be the best place to do
biological research in the country. There are tremendous opportunities
for growing in conjunction with the other science units on campus-the
Division of Physical Sciences, the Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, the School of Medicine and the Jacobs School of
Engineering-in ways that will create a unique scientific enterprise,
without peer." According to Macagno, the Biology Division plans
to increase its faculty from about 60 to more than 100 in the next ten
years.
A developmental
neurobiologist, Professor Macagno has remained active in research
throughout his administrative stints and also serves currently as
co-editor of the Journal of Neurobiology, a position he has held since
1986. Like many scientists at Columbia and UCSD, he has a true
appreciation of the value of interdisciplinary research, having
received his initial training in physics.
After immigrating with his
family from Argentina in 1956, Macagno became a U.S. citizen in 1961
and received his bachelor's degree in physics in 1963 at the
University of Iowa. At Iowa, he worked with James Van Allen's team on
the early exploration of the Earth's radiation belts, then began
graduate work in astrophysics at Columbia under a NASA fellowship.
During the course of his doctoral work, he switched to a project
involving the use of muonic X-rays to study nuclear structure and,
after receiving his doctorate in physics in 1968, became interested in
neurobiology. He carried out his postdoctoral studies in Columbia's
Department of Biological Sciences, working on the development of
computer-based systems for the three-dimensional reconstruction of
neuronal assemblies and beginning a series of studies of the
structure, function and development of a crustacean visual system. His
laboratory now employs a range of molecular, cellular, anatomical and
physiological techniques to investigate cell-cell interactions and how
individual neurons find and innervate their correct targets in the
developing nervous system of the medicinal leech.
As Dean of Columbia's
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Macagno oversaw a major
improvement in graduate student financial aid, a near doubling of the
annual fund from alumni gifts, and the raising of new endowment for
graduate fellowships within Columbia University's
about-to-be-completed $2.2 billion capital campaign. He also initiated
the development and implementation of several very successful
interdepartmental masters degree programs and created new programs
that have significantly enhanced the involvement of graduate alumni
with the graduate school. |