|
AWARDS &
HONORS
Sabloff named to Smithsonian
panel
In an effort to sharpen its scientific research, the Smithsonian Institution
has appointed Jeremy Sabloff chairman of its science advisory commission.
Sabloff, the Williams Director of the Universitys Museum of Archaeology
and Anthropology, and 17 other commission members will explore various
topics, including the relationship between research and public programming.
The commission members, whose areas of expertise span studies from anthropology
to zoology, were selected by nationally recognized leaders in the scientific
and academic community.
Carnegie award
Rogers Smith, Christopher H.
Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science, has been named one
of 16 Carnegie Corporation scholars for 2001. Smith will use his grant
towards the study of federal statutes and judicial decisions relating
to basic citizenship issues from 1912 to the present. He argues that changes
to U.S. citizenship laws during this period helped strengthened the realization
of American democratic principles. From this study, he hopes to identify
the current factors which help make civic participation a democratic process.
Research grants
Cancer research recently got a boost thanks to a $7.5 million grant to
the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Childrens Hospital
of Philadelphia. Sponsored by the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, the award
is part of a global program that seeks to find cures for blood-related cancers.
The HUP team will focus on treatments and vaccines that are patient-specific.
This approach has been neglected by the pharmaceutical industry, which tends
to focus on drugs which they can develop for everyone instead of developing
a combination of approaches
tailored to the needs of each patient. But HUP will not be alone in its
effortsit plans to carry out human clinical trials with CHOP for both
pediatric and adult patients.
A $3.1 million bioengineering research grant
will allow researchers at the University to study brain injuries at an
unprecedented level of detail. Led by David F. Meany, associate
professor of bioengineering, the team will study genes and proteins altered
in single neurons in the brain to better understand the cells responses
to contusions and other forms of brain trauma. The research, which will
be funded by a grant from the National Institute of Child Health, aims
to find new medications and treatment for victims of brain injuries.
An interdisciplinary team of Penn
scientists will soon enjoy a new nanotechnology science and engineering
center. The National Science Foundation has awarded $1.45 million so that
Penn researchers may learn the process in which simple biological molecules
organize into complex structures and apply that knowledge to the development
of synthetic self-assembling molecules. Headed by Virgil Percec,
professor of chemistry, the team is composed of Penn chemists, physicists,
biochemists, biophysicists and materials scientists.
International awards
Irwin B. Levitan has received
the 2001 Ranwell Caputto Award from the Argentine Society for Neurochemistry
for excellence in the area of neurochemistry. Presented annually in Buenos
Aires, the award recognizes Levitans work, which combines biochemistry,
molecular biology, and electrophysiology to discover how the regulation
of nerve cell activity controls behavior. Levitan is chairman of Penns
department of neuroscience and David J. Mahoney Professor of Neurological
Sciences.
Two Penn scholars have snagged 2001 International Communication Association
awards.
Larry Gross, a professor of
communications, received the ICAs B. Aubrey Fisher Mentorship Award
for his role in guiding communications research. Grosss influence
is apparent in the 40 doctoral dissertations and 140 masters theses
he has supervised.
Amy Jordan, a senior research investigator
at the Annenberg Public Policy Center, was recognized with the Most Important
Applied/Public Policy Research Award. Jordans studies focuses on
the effect of the Childrens Television Act on parents and young
television viewers.
|