- Into
the heart of darkness
Nursing
Professor Ann Burgess, whose research has probed the darkest recesses
of crime, has recently won an international honor and the nod to help
create a national resource center for rape victims.
|
|
January 20, 2000
AWARDS & HONORS
NIH gives Grossman a Javits;
McHarg wins Japan Prize
Robert I. Grossman, M.D., Chief of Neuroradiology and Professor
of Radiology, Neurosurgery and Neurology at the Medical Center, has been
awarded the Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award by the National Institutes
of health.
The nearly $4 million award will support Grossmans ongoing research
on neurological disorders in multiple sclerosis patients, enabling him
to study a cohort of patients over a long period of time.
Grossman is one of only 10 Javits Award recipients this year.
Obviously, its very nice in terms of the peer-review process,
Grossman said. It represents the confirmation of a long track record
and that your work is valued by peers.
He insists on sharing the honor of the Javits Award. No one person
ever receives an award. It represents a sustained effort of a lot of people
over a long period of time.
Ian McHarg
|
Ian
McHarg, Professor Emeritus of Landscape Architecture and Regional
Planning, has won the 2000 Japan Prize. The prize, established in 1983
and awarded by the Science and Technology Foundation of Japan, recognizes
the role science and technology play in furthering world peace and prosperity
and bettering mankind. It carries with it a $485,000 cash award. McHarg
was honored for his work in promoting environmentally responsible development,
a cause he first took up in the 1950s. He soon became known for his McHarg
method, a means by which an area is developed only after taking
an inventory of the areas natural resources, thus conserving trees
and not polluting rivers.
Elfriede
Regina Knauer, a consulting scholar in the Mediterranean Section of
the University of Pennsylvania Museum, was twice honored last month for
her research on the art of ancient times.
Knauer received the Prix Stanislas Julien of the Academie des Inscriptions
et Belles-Lettres in Paris for her book, The Camels Load in
Life and Death. The book traces the history of artistic representation
of camels along the Silk Route.
Knauer was also elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society
here in Philadelphia. Knauers expertise is in the art history of
ancient Greece, the ancient and medieval history of the Silk Route and
the culture of the Renaissance.
Truman honors
The
Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation has given the University its
Honor Institution Award for 1999. The award, which was presented to President
Judith Rodin by Truman Foundation Executive Director Louis H. Blair at
a luncheon ceremony Dec. 8, recognizes Penns active encouragement
of students to pursue public and community service and its consistent
success in producing Truman Scholars 13 so far, the most recent
being 1999 Truman Scholar Sarah Zimbler (C00). Penn was one of five
schools honored this year; the other winners were Cornell, Furman University,
Indiana University and the University of South Dakota.
|