| October
18, 2004
Scripps Oceanography's Oldest Living
Alumnus Receives UCSD Alumni Award
100-year-old
Ancel Keys to Receive Professional Achievement Award;
Scripps Graduate Marcia McNutt Will Receive Outstanding Alumna
Award
By Dora Dalton
Ancel
Keys, the oldest living alumnus of the century-old Scripps Institution
of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego,
has been selected to receive the Professional Achievement Award
from the UCSD Alumni Association. The association's interim
director, Armin Afsahi, presented Keys with the award at his
home in Minneapolis, Minn., last month. Keys' daughter, Carrie
D'Andrea, will attend the association's Awards for Excellence
Gala on Oct. 23 on behalf of her father.
The 100-year-old Keys
received a Ph.D. in oceanography from Scripps in 1930. Among
his many notable career achievements are the development of
K-rations during World War II and his landmark studies of the
relationship between diet and blood cholesterol levels.
"Ancel Keys is
one of the most extraordinary and influential alumni to have
received his education at the University of California,"
said Scripps Director Charles F. Kennel. "How fitting and
poignant for an alumnus of Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
which celebrated its centennial last year, to receive this award
during his own centennial year."
Keys was born on January
26, 1904, in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He received a B.A.
in economics and political science in 1925 and an M.S. in biology
in 1929, both from the University of California, Berkeley. After
his graduation from Scripps in 1930, and the completion of postdoctoral
fellowships in Copenhagen and at Cambridge University, he joined
the physiology faculty at Harvard University. He earned a second
Ph.D., in physiology, from Cambridge University in 1938. In
1939 he joined the staff of the Mayo Clinic and became assistant
professor at the University of Minnesota; he became full professor
in 1954 and emeritus professor in 1972. The University of Minnesota
gave him an honorary doctorate in 2001.
Although he studied
fish biology and physiology at Scripps, he spent his career
studying the physiology of humans. During World War II he was
commissioned by the U.S. government to study human performance
while in a state of nutritional deficiency and as a result developed
the emergency K-rations-high-calorie, lightweight meals to be
used by troops when no other food was available. During the
1950s and '60s, he and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic and the
University of Minnesota defined the relationship between the
fat composition of diet and serum cholesterol levels. The Keys
Equation continues to be the best way to predict the effects
of diet on blood cholesterol levels and the resulting risk of
coronary heart disease-an accomplishment that earned him the
nickname "Mr. Cholesterol" after he was featured on
a 1961 cover of Time magazine. For the next two decades he conducted
pioneering studies on the lifestyles and diets of entire populations
and determined lifestyle-related risk factors for a number of
diseases.
"UCSD and Scripps
have a long tradition of producing outstanding scholars with
an international reach," said Marye Anne Fox, chancellor
of UCSD. "Ancel Keys is a most deserved alumnus for this
very special award. He is a terrific example for students and
young alumni of the tremendous impact their education and experience
at UCSD can have on their lives."
Also being honored
at the UCSD Alumni Awards Gala is Scripps alumna Marcia McNutt,
president and CEO of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
and the Griswold Professor of Geophysics at Stanford University.
The 1978 Ph.D. graduate of Scripps will receive the Outstanding
Alumna Award in recognition of her accomplishments in fundamental
research, teaching, service and scientific leadership. Her research
on the subject of the equilibrium of the earth's crust on continents
and oceans led to fundamental contributions in understanding
the evolution of islands.
The UCSD Alumni Association,
formed in 1964 and now representing more than 96,000 alumni,
aims to foster a lifelong, mutually beneficial relationship
among alumni, students and UCSD.
Media Contacts: Dora
Dalton or Mario Aguilera (858) 534-3624
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