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April
20, 2004
Two UCSD Professors In Biology
And Physics
Elected To National Academy Of Sciences
By Kim McDonald
The National
Academy of Sciences today elected a biology professor and a
physics professor at the University of California, San Diego
to membership in the prestigious academy, one of the highest
honors bestowed on U.S. scientists and engineers.
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Brian Maple
PhotoCredit:
UCSD |
M. Brian Maple, Bernd
T. Matthias professor of physics and director of UCSD’s
Institute for Pure and Applied Physical Sciences, and Charles
S. Zuker, a professor of biology and of neurosciences at UCSD,
were among the 72 new members and 18 foreign associates from
13 countries elected to the academy this morning “in recognition
of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original
research.”
Their election brings
the number of current faculty members at UCSD who are members
of the National Academy of Sciences to 71, ranking the university
seventh in the nation in the number of academy members. The
National Academy of Sciences, established by Congress in 1863,
serves as an official adviser to the federal government on matters
of science and technology.
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Charles Zuker
PhotoCredit:Barbara
Ries for HHMI |
Mark Thiemens, Dean
of UCSD’s Division of Physical Sciences, and Eduardo Macagno,
Dean of UCSD’s Division of Biological Sciences, noted
that “The election of Professor Maple and Professor Zuker
to the academy today is a testament to their scientific achievements
and underscores the intellectual vitality of UCSD’s two
science divisions.”
“It’s often
said that Roger Revelle built this university from the top down
by recruiting members of the National Academy of Sciences to
UCSD. But much of our scientific talent, as demonstrated by
the election today, resides in the faculty who have developed
and established themselves at UCSD,” added the two deans.
Maple received his
doctorate in physics from UCSD in 1969, working under the renowned
UCSD physicist Bernd Matthias, and was named Distinguished Alumnus
of the Year at UCSD in 1987. An expert on high-temperature superconductors—materials
that lose all resistance to electricity at commercially attainable,
cold temperatures—he presided over the celebrated high-temperature
superconductivity session, dubbed the “Woodstock of Physics,”
during the American Physical Society’s March meeting in
1987. His research interests also include magnetism, low-temperature
physics, high-pressure physics and surface science. Maple has
been on the faculty at UCSD since 1973.
Zuker, a 46-year-old
neurobiologist, was born in Chile and moved to the U.S. to obtain
his doctorate in molecular biology from the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. Zuker is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Investigator and has been on the faculty at UCSD since 1987.
Recently elected to the Academy of Arts and Sciences, Zuker
and his colleagues in his laboratory employ a combined molecular,
genetic, and physiological approach to investigate the biology
of sensory transduction mechanisms in photoreceptors, mechanoreceptors
and taste receptors.
Media Contact: Kim
McDonald, (858) 534-7572
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