Return of Private Foundation OMB No 1545-0052 Form 990 -PF Or Section 4947 ( A)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust ` Treated As a Private Foundation 2012 Note

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Return of Private Foundation OMB No 1545-0052 Form 990 -PF Or Section 4947 ( A)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust ` Treated As a Private Foundation 2012 Note l efile GRAPHIC p rint - DO NOT PROCESS As Filed Data - DLN: 93491312007013 Return of Private Foundation OMB No 1545-0052 Form 990 -PF or Section 4947 ( a)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust ` Treated as a Private Foundation 2012 Note . The foundation may be able to use a copy of this return to satisfy state reporting requirements Department of the Treasury • . - Internal Revenue Service , - M,- For calendar year 2012 , or tax year beginning 01-01-2012 , and ending 12-31-2012 Name of foundation A Employer identification number John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation Consolidated 23-7093598 Number and street ( or P 0 box number if mail is not delivered to street address ) Room / suite 6 ieiepnone number ( see instructions) 140 South Dearborn Street No 1200 (312) 726-8000 City or town, state, and ZIP code C If exemption application is pending, check here F Chicago, IL 606035285 G Check all that apply r'Initial return r'Initial return of a former public charity D 1. Foreign organizations , check here F r-Final return r'Amended return 2. Foreign organizations meeting the 85% test, r Address change r'Name change check here and attach computation H Check type of organization FSection 501( c)(3) exempt private foundation F Section 4947( a)(1) nonexempt charitable trust r'Other taxable private foundation J Accounting method F Cash F Accrual E If private foundation status was terminated I Fair market value of all assets at end und er section 507 ( b )( 1 )( A ), c hec k here F of y e a r (from Part 77, col. (c), F Other (specify) _ F If the foundation is in a 60 - month termination line 16)x$ 5,987,438 ,524 (Part I, column (d) must be on cash basis .) under section 507 b 1 B, check here 0- F ( d) Disbursements Analysis of Revenue and Expenses (The (a ) Revenue and ( b) Net investment (c) Adjusted net for charitable tota l of amounts in columns (b), (c), and (d) may not expenses per income income purposes necessanly equal the amounts in column (a) (see books instructions) ) ( cash basis only) 1 Contributions , gifts, grants , etc , received ( attach schedule) 2 Check F if the foundation is not required to attach Sch B 3 Interest on savings and temporary cash investments 35,431 35,431 4 Dividends and interest from securities . 32,796,326 32,770,201 5a Gross rents . b Net rental income or (loss) 6a Net gain or (loss ) from sale of assets not on line 10 92, 502,988 b Gross sales price for all assets on line 6a 3,014 ,057,859 co 7 Capital gain net income ( from Part IV , line 2) 266,529,709 8 Net short- term capital gain . 9 Income modifications . 10a Gross sales less returns and allowances b Less Cost of goods sold . c Gross profit or (loss) (attach schedule) . 11 Other income ( attach schedule ) . 329,179,206 119,430,049 12 Total . Add lines 1 through 11 . 454,513,951 418,765,390 13 Compensation of officers , directors , trustees , etc 4,035,541 1,204,778 2,625,317 14 Other employee salaries and wages 19,411,187 4,193,478 14,697,712 15 Pension plans , employee benefits . 12,280,173 1,335,071 6,576,634 16a Legal fees (attach schedule) . 522,614 318,889 92,964 b Accounting fees (attach schedule ) . 116,088 40 ,781 75,307 W co c Other professional fees ( attach schedule ) . 95 4,392,226 786,740 3,526,217 `''C5 17 Interest 18 Taxes ( attach schedule ) ( see instructions ) 10,466,098 0 31,479 19 Depreciation ( attach schedule ) and depletion . 2,536,714 188,985 20 Occupancy . 931,341 71,168 860,173 21 Travel , conferences, and meetings . 2,714,666 269,406 2,382,559 C5 22 Printing and publications . 106,921 461 105,595 23 Other expenses ( attach schedule ) . 3,836,674 577,505 3,272,777 24 Total operating and administrative expenses. Add lines 13 through 23 . 61,350,243 8,987,262 34,246,734 25 Contributions , gifts, grants paid . 236,557,004 209,859,152 26 Total expenses and disbursements . Add lines 24 and 25 297,907,247 8,987,262 244,105,886 27 Subtract line 26 from line 12 a Excess of revenue over expenses and disbursements 156,606,704 b Net investment income ( if negative , enter -0- ) 409,778,128 c Adjusted net income ( if negative , enter -0-) For Paperwork Reduction Act Notice, see instructions . Cat No 11289X Form 990-PF (2012) Form 990-PF (2012) Panes 2 Attached schedules and amounts in the description column Beginning of year End of year Balance Sheets should be for end-of- y ear amounts onl y (See instructions ( a) Boo k Va l ue ( b ) Boo k Va l ue ( c) Fair M ark et Va l ue 1 Cash-non - interest-bearing . 1,055 2 Savings and temporary cash investments . 455,897,964 622,351,543 622,351,543 3 Accounts receivable Ilk, 35,008 Less allowance for doubtful accounts Oil 19,668 35 ,008 35,008 4 Pledges receivable ► Less allowance for doubtful accounts Oil 5 Grants receivable . 6 Receivables due from officers, directors , trustees , and other disqualified persons ( attach schedule) (see page 15 of the instructions ) . 7 Other notes and loans receivable (attach schedule) Ilk, Less allowance for doubtful accounts Oil 8 Inventories for sale or use . 9 Prepaid expenses and deferred charges . 20,485,370 15,535,366 15,535,366 10a Investments - U S and state government obligations ( attach schedule ) 503,079,113 368,964,873 368,964,873 b Investments - corporate stock ( attach schedule ) . 764,318,58 9 1,714,263,998 1,714,263,998 c Investments - corporate bonds (attach schedule ). 873,173,42 9 322,272,641 322,272,641 11 Investments - land, buildings, and equipment basis Oil 1,938,712 Less accumulated depreciation ( attach schedule ) Ilk, 985,905 1,136, 600 952,807 952,807 12 Investments - mortgage loans . 13 Investments - other ( attach schedule ) . 2,943,602,065 2,771,581 ,158 2,771,581,158 14 Land, buildings , and equipment basis Oil 42,908,514 Less accumulated depreciation ( attach schedule ) Ilk, 12,988,669 30,602,341 29,919,845 29,919,845 ) 110,760,360 141,561,285 141,561,285 15 Other assets (describe ► 16 Total assets ( to be completed by all filers-see the instructions Also, see page 1, item I) 5,703,076,554 5,987,438,524 5,987,438,524 17 Accounts payable and accrued expenses . 7,025,859 8,847,450 18 Grants payable . 243,842,769 272,885,537 19 Deferred revenue . 20 Loans from officers, directors , trustees , and other disqualified persons C5 21 Mortgages and other notes payable ( attach schedule) ) 58,655,999 58,988,352 22 Other liabilities ( describe ► 23 Total liabilities ( add lines 17 through 22) 309,524,627 340,721,339 Foundations that follow SFAS 117, check here ' F and complete lines 24 through 26 and lines 30 and 31. w1 4) 24 U nrestricted . 5,393,551,927 5,646,717,185 25 Temporarily restricted 26 Permanently restricted Foundations that do not follow SFAS 117, check here F- and complete lines 27 through 31. U- 27 Capital stock, trust principal, or current funds . 28 Paid-in or capital surplus , or land , bldg , and equipment fund n 29 Retained earnings , accumulated income, endowment , or other funds 30 Total net assets or fund balances ( see page 17 of the instructions ) . 5,393,551,927 5,646,717,185 31 Total liabilities and net assets/fund balances ( see page 17 of the instructions ) . 5,703,076,554 5,987,438,524 UTIM Analysis of Changes in Net Assets or Fund Balances 1 Total net assets or fund balances at beginning of year- Part II, column (a), line 30 (must agree with end-of-year figure reported on prior year's return) . 1 5,393,551,927 2 Enter amount from Part I, line 27a . 2 156,606,704 3 Other increases not included in line 2 (itemize) IN 3 98,529,137 4 Add lines 1, 2, and 3 . 4 5,648,687,768 5 Decreases not included in line 2 (itemize) Oil IN 5 1,970,583 6 Total net assets or fund balances at end of year (line 4 minus line 5)-Part II, column (b), line 30 6 5,646,717,185 Form 990-PF (2012) Form 990-PF (2012) Page 3 Ca ital Gains and Losses for Tax on Investment Income (b) How acquired (a) List and describe the kind(s) of property sold (e g , real estate, (c) Date acquired (d) Date sold P-Purchase 2-story brick warehouse, or common stock, 200 shs M LC Co (mo , day, yr (mo , day, yr D-Donation la See Additional Data Table b C d e (f) Depreciation allowed (g) Cost or other basis (h) Gain or (loss) (e) Gross sales price (or allowable) plus expense of sale (e) plus (f) minus (g) a See Additional Data Table b C d e Complete only for assets showing gain in column (h) and owned by the foundation on 12/31/69 (I) Gains (Col (h) gain minus (j) Adjusted basis (k) Excess of col (i) col (k), but not less than -0-) or (i) F M V as of 12/31/69 as of 12/31/69 over col (j), if any Losses (from col (h)) a See Additional Data Table b C d e If gain, also enter in Part I, line 7 2 Capital gain net income or (net capital loss) If (loss), enter -0- in Part I, line 7 2 266,529,709 3 Net short-term capital gain or (loss) as defined in sections 1222(5) and (6) If gain, also enter in Part I, line 8, column (c) (see instructions) If (loss), enter -0- in Part I, line 8 3 t1 Qualification Under Section 4940 ( e) for Reduced Tax on Net Investment Income (For optional use by domestic private foundations subject to the section 4940(a) tax on net investment income ) f section 4940( d)(2) applies, leave this part blank Was the foundation liable for the section 4942 tax on the distributable amount of any year in the base period? 1 Yes F No If "Yes," the foundation does not qualify under section 4940 ( e) Do not complete this part 1 Enter the appropriate amount in each column for each year, see page 18 of the instructions before making any entries (d) Base period years Calendar Distribution ratio Adjusted qualifying distributions Net value of noncharitable-use assets year (or tax year beginning in) (col (b) divided by col (c)) 2011 266,551,453 5,516,940,030 0 048315 2010 271,713,938 4,993,555,743 0 054413 2009 328,061,153 4,724,821,192 0 069434 2008 292,335,184 6,166,108,343 0 047410 2007 297,858,527 6,562,394,199 0 045389 2 Total of line 1, column (d) .
Recommended publications
  • 2014-2015 Annual Report
    THE HELEN HAY WHITNEY FOUNDATION 2014-2015 Annual REport 20 Squadron Boulevard, Suite 630 New City, NY 10956 www.hhwf.org Tel: (845) 639-6799 Fax: (845) 639-6798 THE HELEN HAY WHITNEY FOUNDATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES Averil Payson Meyer, President Steven C. Harrison, Ph.D., Vice President Lisa A. Steiner, M.D., Vice President W. Perry Welch, Treasurer Thomas M. Jessell, Ph.D. Payne W. Middleton Thomas P. Sakmar, M.D. Stephen C. Sherrill SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE Steven C. Harrison, Ph.D., Chairman David J. Anderson, Ph.D. Daniel Kahne, Ph.D. Philippa Marrack, Ph.D. Markus Meister, Ph.D. Barbara J. Meyer, Ph.D. Julie A. Theriot, Ph.D. Jonathan S. Weissman, Ph.D. S. Lawrence Zipursky, Ph.D. ADMINISTRATIVE DIRECTOR and SECRETARY Robert Weinberger Page 1 REPORT OF THE VICE PRESIDENT AND CHAIRMAN, SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE I am pleased to report on two years of activity for the Scientific Advisory Committee. Our charge, to select an outstanding group of Fellows each year and to respond as needed to advisory issues that occasionally arise during the tenure of their fellowship, is always a stimulating one, and the talks from third-year Fellows at the Annual Meeting continue to give remarkably positive feedback. Our partnerships with HHMI, the Simons Foundation, and Merck have benefitted the program greatly. We have three Simons Fellows, eight HHMI Fellows and two Merck Fellows, in addition to the eleven we now support from endowment income. (Let me add, on behalf of the SAC, a note of thanks to Perry Welch, the Treasurer of the Foundation, who oversees that endowment with great dedication and insight.) A class of 24 means the competition is fierce, and we continue to identify an extraordinary group of young biomedical scientists.
    [Show full text]
  • Allen Distinguished Investigators
    ALLEN DISTINGUISHED INVESTIGATORS The Allen Distinguished Investigator 2018 program supports early-stage research Chenghua Gu, Ph.D., Harvard Medical School with the potential to reinvent entire fields. “Brain vasculature at the neuro-immune interface” With grants between $1 million and Baljit S. Khakh, Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles “Unmasking and Exploiting Astrocyte Biology” $1.5 million to individuals and scientific Marc Kirschner, Ph.D., Harvard Medical School teams, we provide these Distinguished “Reverse Engineering of Biological Circuits Underlying Investigators with enough funds to Aging and Development” produce momentum in their respective Clodagh O’Shea, Ph.D., Salk Institute for Biological Studies fields. “Assembling DNA into chromatin” Michael Rosen, Ph.D., The University of Texas Southwestern Allen Distinguished Investigators are passionate thought Medical Center leaders, explorers and innovators who seek world-changing “Nuclear Organization Through Phase Separation: breakthroughs. Their ideas are transformative and their Mechanisms, Functions and Disease” scientific insights are game-changing. Christian Steidl, M.D., BC Cancer Research Centre and the Allen Distinguished Investigators may range from senior University of British Columbia investigators to junior scientists. What the Investigators “The microenvironment architecture and ecosystem of share is a pioneering spirit, the ability to imagine possible Hodgkin lymphoma at single cell resolution” futures of science, and the ability to create new ways of Matthias Stephan, M.D., Ph.D., Fred Hutchinson Cancer thinking to share with the world. Research Center and the University of Washington Talent is everywhere. The Allen Distinguished Investigators Cutting across discipline boundaries: Bioengineering meets may come from small universities or large institutions, cities T-cell therapy or towns across the world.
    [Show full text]
  • 20 Best Brains Under 40 | Health & Medicine | DISCOVER Magazine
    11/21/2008 20 Best Brains Under 40 | Health & M… Print this page 20 Best Brains Under 40 11.20.2008 Young innovators are changing everything from theoretical mathematics to cancer therapy. by Andrew Grant, Sarah Webb, Emily Anthes, Yudhijit Bhattacharjee, Jullianne Pepitone, Elizabeth Svoboda Terence Tao Photo: UCLA Terence Tao Mathematician, University of California Los Angeles Many of the great mathematicians of our era probably scored a perfect 800 on the math section of their SATs. Terence Tao squeaked by with a 760—when he was 8 years old. A quarter century later, Tao, now 33, is one of the most prolific and esteemed mathematicians in the nation. In 1999 he became UCLA’s youngest professor at age 24 and later won the 2006 Fields Medal, considered the Nobel Prize of math. In a discipline where one can spend a lifetime working on a single problem, Tao has made major contributions in a number of categories ranging from nonlinear equations to number theory—which explains why colleagues continually seek his guidance. “In every generation of mathematicians, there are a few at the very top,” says Charles Fefferman of Princeton University, a mathematical giant in his own right. “He belongs in that group.” Tao’s best-known research involves patterns of prime numbers (numbers divisible only by one and themselves). While he mainly sticks to the theoretical, his breakthrough work in compressed sensing is allowing engineers to develop sharper, more efficient imaging technology for MRIs, astronomical instruments, and digital cameras. “Research sometimes feels like an ongoing TV series in which some amazing revelations have already been made, but there are still plenty of cliff-hangers and unresolved plotlines that you want to see resolved,” Tao says.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 20 15
    ANNUAL REPORT 2015 HUMAN FRONTIER SCIENCE PROGRAM The Human Frontier Science Program is unique, supporting international collaboration to undertake innovative, risky, basic research at the frontier of the life sciences. Special emphasis is given to the support and training of independent young investigators, beginning at the postdoctoral level. The Program is implemented by an international organization, supported financially by Australia, Canada, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and the European Union. Since 1990, over 7000 awards have been made to researchers from more than 70 countries. Of these, 26 HFSP awardees have gone on to receive the Nobel Prize. APRIL 2015 - MARCH 2016 ANNUAL REPORT — 3 — The following documents are available on the HFSP website www.hfsp.org: Joint Communiqués (Tokyo 1992, Washington 1997, Berlin 2002, Bern 2004, Ottawa 2007, Canberra 2010, Brussels 2013, London 2016): http://www.hfsp.org/about-us/governance/intergovernmental-conference Statutes of the International Human Frontier Science Program Organization : http://www.hfsp.org/about-us/governance/statutes Guidelines for the participation of new members in HFSPO : http://www.hfsp.org/about-us/new-membership General reviews of the HFSP (1996, 2001, 2006-2007, 2010): http://www.hfsp.org/about-us/reviews-hfsp Updated and previous lists of awards, including titles and abstracts: http://www.hfsp.org/awardees — 4 — Table of contents INTRODUCTION
    [Show full text]
  • Allen Institute Scientific Advisory Board Current
    ALLEN INSTITUTE SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARD David Anderson, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology György Buzsáki Ph.D., Rutgers University Edward M. Callaway, Ph.D., Salk Institute for Biological Studies Thomas L. Daniel, Ph.D., University of Washington Catherine Dulac, Ph.D., Harvard University Daniel H. Geschwind, M.D., Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles Michael P. Stryker, Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco Marc Tessier-Lavigne, Ph.D., (Chair) The Rockefeller University David Van Essen, Ph.D., Washington University CURRENT PROJECT ADVISORY COUNCILS ALLEN MOUSE BRAIN CONNECTIVITY ATLAS ADVISORY COUNCIL David Anderson, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology Edward M. Callaway, Ph.D., (Chair) Salk Institute John L.R. Rubenstein, M.D., Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco Clifford Saper, M.D., Ph.D., Harvard Medical School Michael P. Stryker, Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco Karel Svoboda, Ph.D., Janelia Farm Research Campus MOLECULAR NETWORKS ADVISORY COUNCIL Michael Elowitz, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology Daniel H. Geschwind, M.D., Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles Richard Gibbs, Ph.D., (Chair) Baylor College of Medicine Randall Moon, Ph.D., University of Washington Jeffrey Nye, M.D., Ph.D., Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Johnson & Johnson Sharad Ramanathan, Ph.D., Harvard University Eric Schadt, Ph.D., Mount Sinai School of Medicine Lorenz Studer, M.D., Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center FEBRUARY 2013 alleninstitute.org page 1 of 2 brain-map.org ALLEN INSTITUTE FOR BRAIN SCIENCE ADVISORY COUNCILS NEURAL CODING ADVISORY COUNCIL Larry Abbott, Ph.D., Columbia University David Anderson, Ph.D., California Institute of Technology György Buzsáki, M.D., Ph.D., Rutgers Edward Callaway, Ph.D., Salk Institute John H.R.
    [Show full text]
  • Engeniousenious a Publication for Alumni and Friends of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science of the California Institute of Technology
    engengeniousenious a publication for alumni and friends of the division of engineering and applied science of the California Institute of Technology fall 2003 The Division of Engineering and Applied Science consists of thirteen Options working in five broad areas: Mechanics and Aerospace, Information and Communications, Materials and Devices, Environment and Civil, and Biology and Medicine. For more about E&AS visit http://www.eas.caltech.edu. Division Chair Options Richard M. Murray (BS ’85) aeronautics (GALCIT) www.galcit.caltech.edu Division Steering Committee applied & computational mathematics www.acm.caltech.edu Jehoshua (Shuki) Bruck Gordon and Betty Moore Professor of applied mechanics Computation and Neural Systems and www.am.caltech.edu Electrical Engineering applied physics Janet G. Hering www.aph.caltech.edu Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering bioengineering www.be.caltech.edu Thomas Yizhao Hou Professor of Applied and Computational civil engineering Mathematics www.ce.caltech.edu Melany L. Hunt computation & neural systems Professor of Mechanical Engineering www.cns.caltech.edu Ares Rosakis computer science Professor of Aeronautics and Mechanical www.cs.caltech.edu Engineering control & dynamical systems Peter Schröder www.cds.caltech.edu Professor of Computer Science and Applied and Computational Mathematics electrical engineering www.ee.caltech.edu Kerry J. Vahala (BS ’80, MS ’81, PhD ’85) Ted and Ginger Jenkins Professor of environmental science and engineering Information Science and Technology and www.ese.caltech.edu
    [Show full text]
  • California Insɵtute of Technology Division of Biology and Biological
    California InsƟtute of Technology Division of Biology and Biological Engineering Annual Report 2017 Introduction Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2017 Introduction The annual report for Caltech's Division of Biology and Biological Engineering (BBE) presents major research accomplishments of faculty, students, and staff during the previous academic year. This report covers October 1, 2016 to September 30, 2017. Front Cover Illustration Vector-assisted spectral tracing (VAST) in the cerebellum of an adult mouse A movie highlighting the multi-color vector-assisted spectral tracing (VAST) system in the cerebellum of an adult mouse. Due to the stochastic uptake of AAV-PHP viruses encoding either a blue, green or red fluorescent protein, cells are labeled with a wide range of hues. This approach can be used to differentiate neighboring neurons for morphology and tracing studies. Credit: Ben Deverman et al., Gradinaru Lab Back Cover Illustration Engineered adeno-associated viruses efficiently cross the blood-brain-barrier for enhanced brain transduction in adult mice. Representative images of virally-delivered nuclear GFP fluorescence (green) and Calbindin immunohistochemistry (magenta) in the cerebellum. Credit: Chan et al., Gradinaru Lab 2 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2017 Press Releases 6 Annual Retreat 15 Ferguson Prize 17 Ferguson Prize 18 Professorial Awards and Honors 19 Seminars 20 Named Lectures 26 3 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering
    [Show full text]
  • BIO-Annual-Report-2012.Pdf
    The Annual Report of the Division of Biology at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) presents major research accomplishments of Caltech's faculty, students and staff. Through their Principle Investigators, each Caltech group, laboratory, or center submits a report on research projects that were active during the prior Caltech academic year. These reports summarize research progress and results, and list personnel, sponsors, and their publications. The 2012 report covers the time period: July 1, 2011 - June 30, 2012. For more information on the Biology Annual Report please contact Julie Boucher Caltech Division of Biology 1200 East California Blvd MC 156-29 Pasadena, CA 91125 (626) 395-4952 [email protected] T ABLE OF C ONTENTS 2012 Click on title to view page, when done click logo at bottom to go back to table of contents. 2011-2012 News, Events and People 6 Press Releases 10 New Faculty Members 11 Annual Biology Retreat 14 Ferguson Prize 15 Professorial Awards and Honors 17 Division of Biology Seminars 21 Named Lectures 22 Biology Graduate Students 23 Biology Graduates 26 Financial Support and Donors 28 Faculty and Research Staff 34 Administrative Staff Molecular, Cellular, and Integrative Neuroscience 38 Adolphs, Ralph - Bren Prof. of Psychology and Neuroscience, Prof. of Biology 42 Allman, John - Frank P. Hixon Prof. of Neurobiology 44 Andersen, Richard - James G. Boswell Prof. of Neuroscience 48 Anderson, David - Seymour Benzer Prof. of Biology 52 Koch, Christof - Lois and Victor Troendle Prof. of Cognitive and Behavioral Biology and Prof. of Computation and Neural Systems 56 Konishi, Masakazu - Bing Prof. of Behavioral Biology 58 Lester, Henry - Bren Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • Discovery at Caltech!
    BE OUR GUEST OCTOBER 5–7 2017 JOIN US W I T N E S S TOMORROW T O D A Y YOU ARE INVITED TO AN EXCLUSIVE INTELLECTUAL EXPERIENCE FEATURING THE CALTECH INNOVATORS WHO ARE POWERING SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY INTO THE FUTURE. David L. Lee (PhD ’74) Chair, Caltech Board of Trustees and Ellen Lee with Thomas F. Rosenbaum President, Caltech Sonja and William Davidow Presidential Chair and Professor of Physics and Katherine T. Faber Simon Ramo Professor of Materials Science invite you to join them for Thursday, October 5, 2017 through Saturday, October 7, 2017 Program enclosed California Institute of Technology 1200 East California Boulevard Pasadena, California Please advise of any dietary or accessibility restrictions. Kindly reply by Friday, September 15, 2017, to Caryn Golub at [email protected] or (626) 395-2459. ILLUSTRATION BASED ON COMPLEX CONNECTIONS IN A HUMAN BRAIN IMAGED BY CALTECH NEUROSCIENTISTS J. MICHAEL TYSZKA, LYNN PAUL, AND PROFESSOR RALPH ADOLPHS, WITH FORMER POSTDOCTORAL SCHOLAR DANIEL KENNEDY. THEIR FINDINGS APPEARED IN A COVER ARTICLE IN THE JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE. PROGRAM PROGRAM THURSDAY 6:30 P.M. OCTOBER 5, 2017 Opening Reception + Dinner, President’s Residence Hosted by President Thomas F. Rosenbaum and Professor Katherine T. Faber FRIDAY 8:00 A.M. OCTOBER 6, 2017 Breakfast + Discussion, Caltech campus Is there life beyond Earth? Discover how the evolution of our solar system provides clues to the potential for life on faraway planets. 10:30 A.M. Laboratory Experience, Caltech Center for Autonomous Systems and Technologies Can robots think? Be among the first to enter our new drone arena for a demonstration of next-generation intelligent machines.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 20
    80045• HFSP-RA-2011-couv_couv2012 04/06/12 16:44 Page1 11 Acknowledgements HFSPO is grateful for the support of: Australia National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Canada Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR) Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) European Union European Commission - Directorate General Information Society (DG INFSO) 20 REPORT ANNUAL European Commission - Directorate General Research (DG RESEARCH) France Communauté Urbaine de Strasbourg (CUS) Ministère de l’Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche (MESR) Région Alsace Germany Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) India Department of Biotechnology (DBT) Ministry of Science and Technology Italy Ministry of Education, University and Research Japan Ministry for Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) Republic of Korea Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) New Zealand Health Research Council (HRC) Norway Research Council of Norway (RCN) Switzerland State Secretariat for Education and Research (SER) United Kingdom Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) Medical Research Council (MRC) The International Human Frontier Science United States of America Program Organization (HFSPO) National Institutes of Health (NIH) 12 quai Saint Jean - BP 10034 National Science Foundation (NSF) 67080 Strasbourg CEDEX - France Fax. +33 (0)3 88 32 88 97 e-mail: [email protected] Web site: www.hfsp.org Japanese web site: http://jhfsp.jsf.or.jp 80045• HFSP-RA-2011-couv_couv2012 04/06/12 16:44 Page2 HUMAN FRONTIER SCIENCE PROGRAM The Human Frontier Science Program is unique, supporting international collaboration to undertake innovative, risky, basic research at the frontier of the life sciences.
    [Show full text]
  • California Institute of Technology Biology and Biological Engineering Annual Report 2019 Introduction
    California Institute of Technology Biology and Biological Engineering Annual Report 2019 Introduction The annual report for Caltech's Division of Biology and Biological Engineering (BBE) presents major research accomplishments of faculty, students, and staff during the previous academic year. This report covers October 1, 2018 to September 30, 2019. Front Cover Illustration Rendered atomic force microscopy image of a nanoscale tic-tac-toe game Credit: Lulu Qian Lab Back Cover Illustration Rendered atomic force microscopy image of a hexagon-shaped 540 nanometer- wide molecular structure made of 24 triangular DNA origami tiles Credit: Lulu Qian Lab Front Cover: Back Cover: 1 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2019 Press Releases 6 Annual Retreat 12 Ferguson Prize 15 2 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2019 Reddy 16 Professional Awards and Honors 17 Seminars 18 Named Lectures 23 3 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2019 Current Graduate Students 25 Graduating Class of 2019 26 Financial Support and Donors 30 4 News, Events, and People Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2019 Faculty and Research Staff 33 Division Staff 39 Biology and Biological Engineering Faculty Research Updates 40 Biology and Biological Engineering Facilities 272 5 Press Releases Annual Report | Biology and Biological Engineering | 2019 09/26/2019 Otherworldly Worms with Three Sexes Discovered in Mono Lake Lori Dajose The extreme environment of Mono Lake was thought to only house two… 09/26/2019 Stewart and Lynda Resnick Pledge $750 Million to Caltech to Support Environmental Sustainability Research Kathy Svitil 09/16/2019 Postdoc Receives $1.5M Award for Exceptional Early-Career Scientists Elsy Buitrago Delgado 09/13/2019 Beyond the Limits of Nature: A Conversation with Kaihang Wang Lori Dajose Assistant Professor Kaihang Wang works to rewrite the rules of life by….
    [Show full text]
  • German-American Academic Council
    1st Annual National Academies Keck Futures Initiative Conference "Signals, Decisions, and Meaning in Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Engineering" Arnold & Mabel Beckman Center, Irvine, California November 14 - 16, 2003 AGENDA Thursday, November 13, 2003 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. Informal Get-Together / Buffet - Hyatt Regency Irvine, Pool Area Friday, November 14, 2003 Breakfast on your own 8:15 – 11:30 a.m. Optional Tour - Ocean Institute (www.oceaninstitute.org) Transportation provided – Bus leaves at 8:15 a.m. and will return people to the Beckman Center by 11:45 a.m. 11:15 & 11:45 a.m. Bus pick-up from the Hyatt Regency Irvine to the Beckman Center 12:00 p.m. Lunch and Registration 1:00 p.m. Opening Ceremony - Welcome and Opening Remarks Bruce Alberts, President, National Academy of Sciences Wm. Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering Harvey Fineberg, President, Institute of Medicine Dick Foster, Board Member, W.M. Keck Foundation Marc Kirschner, Chair, Signaling Steering Committee 1:30 p.m. Early Sensory Processing ORGANIZER: Terrence Sejnowski, Professor and Head of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory, The Salk Institute MODERATOR: Linda Buck, Full Member, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Affiliate Professor, University of Washington SPEAKERS: Network Dynamics and Olfaction Gilles Laurent, Professor, Department of Biology, California Institute of Technology Principles of Image Representation in Visual Cortex Bruno Olshausen, Associate Professor, Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior, University of California at Davis/Redwood Neuroscience Institute 3:30 p.m. Break 4:00 p.m. Funding Interdisciplinary Research ORGANIZER / MODERATOR: Ellie Ehrenfeld, Chief, Picornavirus Replication Section, National Institutes of Health SPEAKERS: Enriqueta Bond, President, Burroughs Wellcome Fund John Linehan, Vice President, Whitaker Foundation Bruce Hamilton, Division Director, Bioengineering and Environmental Systems, The National Science Foundation 5:15 p.m.
    [Show full text]