The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (By Name, Year, Category)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (By Name, Year, Category) The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (by name, year, category) Kevin Jerome Rue Mapp Sarah Szanton Amanda Nguyen Brandon Dennison Ralph Lemon Everson Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Arts and Humanities + Employment Ming Kuo Norman Atkins Sherri Mason Enric Sala Linda Rottenberg Natasha Trethewey Environment Human Condition Public Policy Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities + Employment Gregory Asner Angela Blanchard Mona Hanna-Attisha Joseph DeSimone Troy Andrews Hal Harvey Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment + Employment Nadine Burke Harris Michelle Alexander Matthew Mullenweg Roz Chast Frederica Perera William McNulty + Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment Jacob Wood + Employment Human Condition Aaron Wolf Sangeeta Bhatia Abraham Verghese Jonathan Foley Salman Khan Sanjeev Arora Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition Public Policy + Employment The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (by name, year, category) Jay Keasling Leila Janah Mason Bates Richard Jackson Freeman Hrabowski III KC Golden Technology, the Economy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition Public Policy + Employment + Employment John Luther Adams Richard Alley Janine Benyus Ian Cheney + Louis Guillette Joan Kleypas 17th Special Focus on 17th Special Focus on 17th Special Focus on Curt Ellis 17th Special Focus on 17th Special Focus on the Environment the Environment the Environment 17th Special Focus on the Environment the Environment the Environment Nancy Knowlton Nancy Rabalais Sandra Steingraber James Balog Terrence Collins Gretchen Daily 17th Special Focus on 17th Special Focus on 17th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on the Environment the Environment the Environment Global Change Global Change Global Change Richard Feely Cary Fowler Lynn Goldman Elizabeth Kolbert Michael Oppenheimer Daniel Sperling 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on 16th Special Focus on Global Change Global Change Global Change Global Change Global Change Global Change Frederick vom Saal Robert Berkebile P. Dee Boersma Christopher Field Ashok Gadgil Chip Giller 16th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on Global Change the Environment the Environment the Environment the Environment the Environment The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (by name, year, category) Deborah Rice Joel Salatin Kirk Smith Thomas Smith Beverly Wright Ann Hamilton 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on 15th Special Focus on Arts + Humanities the Environment the Environment the Environment the Environment the Environment Thomas FitzGerald Brenda Krause Robert Greenstein Joseph DeRisi Dave Eggers Bernard Amadei Environment Eheart Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition + Employment Susan Seacrest David Heymann Donald Berwick Hugh Herr James Nachtwey Paul Anastas Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment + Employment William Thomas Bruce Katz Leroy Hood Elma Holder Mark di Suvero Jerry Franklin Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Chairman’s Medal Arts + Humanities Environment + Employment Joseph Rogers Sidney Drell Mildred Dresselhaus Richard Goldman August Wilson Peggy Shepard Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Chairman’s Medal Arts + Humanities Environment + Employment The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (by name, year, category) Robert Butler Julius Richmond Robert Langer Richard Lugar+ Bernice Johnson Mario Molina Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Sam Nunn Reagon Environment + Employment Chairman’s Medal Arts + Humanities John Spengler Paul Farmer Geraldine Jensen Paul MacCready Dudley Cocke Rick Lowe Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Arts + Humanities + Employment Jane Lubchenco Cushing Dolbeare George Lee Butler Anita Borg Ruth Patrick Jacques d’Amboise Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Chairman’s Medal Arts + Humanities + Employment Arthur Mitchell James Hansen Aaron Beck John Holdren Steve Wozniak Dorothy Height Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Chairman’s Medal + Employment Russell Train Peter Matthiessen Paul Gorman Robert Moses Edward Zigler Mary Good Chairman’s Medal Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy + Employment The Heinz Awards Recipients 1994 - 2019 (by name, year, category) Walter Turnbull Lois Gibbs Florence Robinson Luis Acosta + Daniel Patrick Dean Kamen Arts + Humanities Environment Environment Frances Lucerna Moynihan Technology, the Economy Human Condition Public Policy + Employment John Harbison Amory Lovins Carol Gilligan Ernesto J. Cortes, Jr. Ralph E. Gomory Rita Dove Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities + Employment George Woodwell James Comer Ralph Cavanagh George Hatsopoulos William R. Hewlett + Beverly Sills Environment Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy David Packard Arts + Humanities + Employment Chairman’s Medal Herbert Needleman Marian Wright C. Everett Koop William Rutter Henry Hampton Paul + Anne Ehrlich Environment Edelman Public Policy Technology, the Economy Arts + Humanities Environment Human Condition + Employment Geoffrey Canada James Goodby Andrew Grove Human Condition Public Policy Technology, the Economy + Employment.
Recommended publications
  • Copyright by Paul Harold Rubinson 2008
    Copyright by Paul Harold Rubinson 2008 The Dissertation Committee for Paul Harold Rubinson certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Containing Science: The U.S. National Security State and Scientists’ Challenge to Nuclear Weapons during the Cold War Committee: —————————————————— Mark A. Lawrence, Supervisor —————————————————— Francis J. Gavin —————————————————— Bruce J. Hunt —————————————————— David M. Oshinsky —————————————————— Michael B. Stoff Containing Science: The U.S. National Security State and Scientists’ Challenge to Nuclear Weapons during the Cold War by Paul Harold Rubinson, B.A.; M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin August 2008 Acknowledgements Thanks first and foremost to Mark Lawrence for his guidance, support, and enthusiasm throughout this project. It would be impossible to overstate how essential his insight and mentoring have been to this dissertation and my career in general. Just as important has been his camaraderie, which made the researching and writing of this dissertation infinitely more rewarding. Thanks as well to Bruce Hunt for his support. Especially helpful was his incisive feedback, which both encouraged me to think through my ideas more thoroughly, and reined me in when my writing overshot my argument. I offer my sincerest gratitude to the Smith Richardson Foundation and Yale University International Security Studies for the Predoctoral Fellowship that allowed me to do the bulk of the writing of this dissertation. Thanks also to the Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy at Yale University, and John Gaddis and the incomparable Ann Carter-Drier at ISS.
    [Show full text]
  • Title: the Distribution of an Illustrated Timeline Wall Chart and Teacher's Guide of 20Fh Century Physics
    REPORT NSF GRANT #PHY-98143318 Title: The Distribution of an Illustrated Timeline Wall Chart and Teacher’s Guide of 20fhCentury Physics DOE Patent Clearance Granted December 26,2000 Principal Investigator, Brian Schwartz, The American Physical Society 1 Physics Ellipse College Park, MD 20740 301-209-3223 [email protected] BACKGROUND The American Physi a1 Society s part of its centennial celebration in March of 1999 decided to develop a timeline wall chart on the history of 20thcentury physics. This resulted in eleven consecutive posters, which when mounted side by side, create a %foot mural. The timeline exhibits and describes the millstones of physics in images and words. The timeline functions as a chronology, a work of art, a permanent open textbook, and a gigantic photo album covering a hundred years in the life of the community of physicists and the existence of the American Physical Society . Each of the eleven posters begins with a brief essay that places a major scientific achievement of the decade in its historical context. Large portraits of the essays’ subjects include youthful photographs of Marie Curie, Albert Einstein, and Richard Feynman among others, to help put a face on science. Below the essays, a total of over 130 individual discoveries and inventions, explained in dated text boxes with accompanying images, form the backbone of the timeline. For ease of comprehension, this wealth of material is organized into five color- coded story lines the stretch horizontally across the hundred years of the 20th century. The five story lines are: Cosmic Scale, relate the story of astrophysics and cosmology; Human Scale, refers to the physics of the more familiar distances from the global to the microscopic; Atomic Scale, focuses on the submicroscopic This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government.
    [Show full text]
  • Sidney D. Drell Professional Biography
    Sidney D. Drell Professional Biography Present Position Professor Emeritus, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford University (Deputy Director before retiring in 1998) Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution since 1998 Present Activities Member, JASON, The MITRE Corporation Member, Board of Governors, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel Professional and Honorary Societies American Physical Society (Fellow) - President, 1986 National Academy of Sciences American Academy of Arts and Sciences American Philosophical Society Academia Europaea Awards and Honors Prize Fellowship of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, November (1984-1989) Ernest Orlando Lawrence Memorial Award (1972) for research in Theoretical Physics (Atomic Energy Commission) University of Illinois Alumni Award for Distinguished Service in Engineering (1973); Alumni Achievement Award (1988) Guggenheim Fellowship, (1961-1962) and (1971-1972) Richtmyer Memorial Lecturer to the American Association of Physics Teachers, San Francisco, California (1978) Leo Szilard Award for Physics in the Public Interest (1980) presented by the American Physical Society Honorary Doctors Degrees: University of Illinois (1981); Tel Aviv University (2001), Weizmann Institute of Science (2001) 1983 Honoree of the Natural Resources Defense Council for work in arms control Lewis M. Terman Professor and Fellow, Stanford University (1979-1984) 1993 Hilliard Roderick Prize of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Science, Arms Control, and International Security 1994 Woodrow Wilson Award, Princeton University, for “Distinguished Achievement in the Nation's Service” 1994 Co-recipient of the 1989 “Ettore Majorana - Erice - Science for Peace Prize” 1995 John P. McGovern Science and Society Medalist of Sigma Xi 1996 Gian Carlo Wick Commemorative Medal Award, ICSC–World Laboratory 1997 Distinguished Associate Award of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Works of Love
    reader.ad section 9/21/05 12:38 PM Page 2 AMAZING LIGHT: Visions for Discovery AN INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM IN HONOR OF THE 90TH BIRTHDAY YEAR OF CHARLES TOWNES October 6-8, 2005 — University of California, Berkeley Amazing Light Symposium and Gala Celebration c/o Metanexus Institute 3624 Market Street, Suite 301, Philadelphia, PA 19104 215.789.2200, [email protected] www.foundationalquestions.net/townes Saturday, October 8, 2005 We explore. What path to explore is important, as well as what we notice along the path. And there are always unturned stones along even well-trod paths. Discovery awaits those who spot and take the trouble to turn the stones. -- Charles H. Townes Table of Contents Table of Contents.............................................................................................................. 3 Welcome Letter................................................................................................................. 5 Conference Supporters and Organizers ............................................................................ 7 Sponsors.......................................................................................................................... 13 Program Agenda ............................................................................................................. 29 Amazing Light Young Scholars Competition................................................................. 37 Amazing Light Laser Challenge Website Competition.................................................. 41 Foundational
    [Show full text]
  • Sidney D. Drell 1926–2016
    Sidney D. Drell 1926–2016 A Biographical Memoir by Robert Jaffe and Raymond Jeanloz ©2018 National Academy of Sciences. Any opinions expressed in this memoir are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academy of Sciences. SIDNEY daVID DRELL September 13, 1926–December 21, 2016 Elected to the NAS, 1969 Sidney David Drell, professor emeritus at Stanford Univer- sity and senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, died shortly after his 90th birthday in Palo Alto, California. In a career spanning nearly 70 years, Sid—as he was universally known—achieved prominence as a theoretical physicist, public servant, and humanitarian. Sid contributed incisively to our understanding of the elec- tromagnetic properties of matter. He created the theory group at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) and led it through the most creative period in elementary particle physics. The Drell-Yan mechanism is the process through which many particles of the Standard Model, including the famous Higgs boson, were discovered. By Robert Jaffe and Raymond Jeanloz Sid advised Presidents and Cabinet Members on matters ranging from nuclear weapons to intelligence, speaking truth to power but with keen insight for offering politically effective advice. His special friendships with Wolfgang (Pief) Panofsky, Andrei Sakharov, and George Shultz highlighted his work at the interface between science and human affairs. He advocated widely for the intellectual freedom of scientists and in his later years campaigned tirelessly to rid the world of nuclear weapons. Early life1 and work Sid Drell was born on September 13, 1926 in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on a small street between Oriental Avenue and Boardwalk—“among the places on the Monopoly board,” as he was fond of saying.
    [Show full text]
  • 14Th Heinz Awards General Press Release
    EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE Contacts: Jon Newman SEPTEMBER 9, 2008 (804) 788-1414 Russ Martz (412) 497-5775 Heinz Awards Honor Five Eminent Americans with 14th Annual Human Achievement Prize Trailblazers in five categories to share $1.25 million awards PITTSBURGH, September 9, 2008 – Celebrating the unbridled human spirit to change the world around us in ways great and small, in the here and now, and for generations to come, the Heinz Family Foundation today announced the recipients of the 14th annual Heinz Awards, among the largest individual achievement prizes in the world. The $250,000 awards recognize significant accomplishments in five distinct categories – the arts and humanities; the environment; human condition; public policy; and technology, the economy and employment. Each area was of particular interest to John Heinz, the late U.S. Senator for whom the awards are named. The recipients, in their respective categories, are: • Arts and Humanities: Ann Hamilton, 52, visual artist and educator, from Columbus, Ohio • Environment: Thomas FitzGerald, 53, founder and director of the Kentucky Resources Council, from Louisville, Ky. • Human Condition: Brenda Krause Eheart, Ph.D., 64, founder of Generations of Hope and Hope Meadows, from Champaign, Ill. - more - • Public Policy: Robert Greenstein, 62, founder and executive director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, from Washington, D.C. • Technology, the Economy and Employment: Joseph DeRisi, Ph.D., 38, molecular biologist, researcher and inventor, from San Francisco, Calif. “If history teaches us anything,” said Teresa Heinz, chairman of the Heinz Family Foundation, “it is that civilizations advance on the backs of singular individuals whose inspiration, foresight and determination know no bounds.
    [Show full text]
  • Newly Opened Correspondence Illuminates Einstein's Personal Life
    CENTER FOR HISTORY OF PHYSICS NEWSLETTER Vol. XXXVIII, Number 2 Fall 2006 One Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3843, Tel. 301-209-3165 Newly Opened Correspondence Illuminates Einstein’s Personal Life By David C. Cassidy, Hofstra University, with special thanks to Diana Kormos Buchwald, Einstein Papers Project he Albert Einstein Archives at the Hebrew University of T Jerusalem recently opened a large collection of Einstein’s personal correspondence from the period 1912 until his death in 1955. The collection consists of nearly 1,400 items. Among them are about 300 letters and cards written by Einstein, pri- marily to his second wife Elsa Einstein, and some 130 letters Einstein received from his closest family members. The col- lection had been in the possession of Einstein’s step-daughter, Margot Einstein, who deposited it with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem with the stipulation that it remain closed for twen- ty years following her death, which occurred on July 8, 1986. The Archives released the materials to public viewing on July 10, 2006. On the same day Princeton University Press released volume 10 of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein, con- taining 148 items from the collection through December 1920, along with other newly available correspondence. Later items will appear in future volumes. “These letters”, write the Ein- stein editors, “provide the reader with substantial new source material for the study of Einstein’s personal life and the rela- tionships with his closest family members and friends.” H. Richard Gustafson playing with a guitar to pass the time while monitoring the control room at a Fermilab experiment.
    [Show full text]
  • Minutes of the Executive Committee Meeting of the APS Forum on The
    Minutes of the Executive Committee Meeting of the APS Forum on the History of Physics, Sunday, April 23, 2006, in the Macmillan Room of the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Dallas, Texas. Present: Robert H. Romer (Chair), Virginia Trimble (Chair-Elect), William E. Evenson (Vice-Chair), Thomas M. Miller (Secretary-Treasurer), Roger H. Stuewer (APS Councillor), Benjamin Bederson (Newsletter Editor), Catherine Westfall, Noemie B. Koller, John S. Rigden, Michael Nauenberg, J. David Jackson (Executive Committee members-at-large), Paul Halpern (Executive Committee member-elect). Bob Romer opened the meeting with introductions and a report on FHP activities, most of which are enlarged upon, below. He handed out framed certificates of appreciation to outgoing Executive Committee members Noemie Koller, and Michael Nauenberg, and mailed one to Nina Byers, and to the outgoing Newsletter Editor, Ben Bederson. Ben Bederson noted that Bob Romer also deserved thanks as FHP chair, a sentiment applauded by all. The APS Treasurer, Thomas McIlrath, was present at the beginning of the Executive Committee meeting and gave an overview of APS finances and publications. The issues he mentioned were APS ones, and did not relate to the FHP specifically. He said that the new APS Treasurer will be Joe Serene. Tom Miller gave a report on FHP finances. The FHP (and APS) fiscal year is the calendar year. The FHP has a carryover from previous years of about $21,000. The FHP receives about $17,500 from the APS annually, partly from annual dues allocation, partly from sharing of March and April meetings fees, and interest income. The FHP spends roughly $11,000 annually on the FHP Newsletter, $11,000 annually on travel expenses, and about $2,000 on miscellaneous expenses (elections, various APS services).
    [Show full text]
  • Efactor October 2009
    October 2009 NIEHS Spotlight Science Notebook Council Meeting Highlights NIEHS Director Gives Mission Accomplishments Distinguished Lecture Throughout the September 15–16 NIEHS and National Toxicology meeting of the National Advisory Program (NTP) Director Linda Environmental Health Sciences Birnbaum, Ph.D., D.A.B.T., A.T.S., Council (NAEHSC) at NIEHS, the presented the first seminar of the discussions were upbeat. ...read more 2009 – 2010 NIEHS Distinguished Lecture Series on September 8 titled “Halogenated Flame Retardants: Does the Benefit Justify the Risk?” ...read more Fellows Recognized at Regional Showcase in Cincinnati NIEHS Microarray Group The University of Cincinnati (UC) Hosts Genomics Day Center for Environmental Genetics (CEG) joined with other NIEHS- NIEHS Genomics Day, held on supported training programs, Centers September 1, offered scientists at and Superfund Research Programs to celebrate the first NIEHS and visitors an afternoon of Environmental Health Sciences Regional Showcase of talks by investigators and trainees, Fellows on September 18 at UC. ...read more a poster session, and an opportunity to learn more about the NIEHS Microarray Laboratory. ...read more 2009 ONES Awardees Named Genome-Wide Association NIEHS announced the selection of six early-stage tenure-track Study Focuses on Asthma investigators as 2009 Outstanding in Children New Environmental Scientist (ONES) A new genome-wide association awardees. ....read more study (GWAS) published August 28 in PLoS Genetics identified the chromosome 9q21.31 region
    [Show full text]
  • Bethany Catalogue 2008-2009
    Bethany Catalogue 2008-2009 Table of Contents College Calendar . 2 Bethany Profile . 3 Admission to the College . 4 Expenses, Aid . 6 Academic Programs . 9 Academic Procedures . 9 Scholarships, Recognition Awards . 22 Student Life . 29 College Facilities . 32 Academic Programs . 34 Biology . 34 Communication . 37 Economics & Business . 4 Education . 45 Fine and Performing Arts . 5 First Year Experience . 59 Fundamental Studies . 62 General Science . 62 History and Political Science . 64 Interdisciplinary Studies . 69 Literature and Language . 72 Mathematics and Computer Science . 82 Physical Education and Sports Studies . 88 Physical Science . 92 Psychology . 97 Religious Studies and Philosophy . 00 Social Science . 06 Social Work . 07 Directories . 111 Index . 22 Bethany e-mail address: [email protected] Bethany on the World Wide Web: www.bethanywv.edu Bethany College Bethany, West Virginia 26032 304-829-7000 1-800-922-7611 College Calendar2008-2009 The Bethany calendar includes two 5-week semesters and a three-week January Term . The fall semester begins in late August and ends before Christmas . The spring semester begins in late-January and ends in mid-May . Summer independent study options are offered . FALL SEMESTER 2008 SPRING SEMESTER 2009 August January 22-24 Friday-Sunday Orientation and evaluation for new students 25 Sunday Final Registration for all students 22 Friday Freshman Convocation 26 Monday First day of classes for all students 24 Sunday Final Registration 30 Friday Last day for adjustment of schedules 25 Monday
    [Show full text]
  • 2013 Annual Report the American Physical Society Strives To
    AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY TM 2013 ANNUAL REPORT THE AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY STRIVES TO Be the leading voice for physics and an authoritative source of physics information for the advancement of physics and the benefit of humanity Collaborate with national scientific societies for the advancement of science, science education, and the science community Cooperate with international physics societies to promote physics, to support physicists worldwide, and to foster international collaboration Have an active, engaged, and diverse membership, and support the activities of its units and members TM © 2014 American Physical Society Cover image: Sine waves. Illustration by Alan Stonebraker. FROM THE PRESIDENT his was a good year for physics, the APS, and its members. The Higgs continued to grab headlines, Twith the awarding of the Nobel Prize to François Englert and Peter Higgs. Their award-winning papers on the Higgs mechanism were published in Physical Review Letters (where else?). The DPF organized a “Higgs Fest” on Capitol Hill, attended by 10 members of Congress and several hundred others, to celebrate the Higgs and the U.S. role in discovering it. In this, the hundredth year of our publishing the Physical Review, the APS prepared to add a new jour- nal to the family—Physical Review Applied. Our newest journal will publish the highest-quality papers at the intersection of physics and engineering, in areas including materials, surface and interface science; device physics; condensed matter physics and optics. 2013 was a big year for APS global engagement. We had our first overseas Fellows receptions—in London and Tokyo—and the Executive Board held its annual retreat abroad, at the Kavli Royal Society International Centre at Chicheley Hall, just outside London.
    [Show full text]
  • Aiphistory Newsletter
    HISTORY NEWSLETTER One Physics Ellipse CENTER FOR HISTORY OF PHYSICS NEWSLETTER Vol. XXXVII, Number 2 Fall 2005 College Park, MD 20740-3843 AIP Tel. 301-209-3165 Major Changes and Progress in the Project to Document the History of Physicists in Industry (HoPI) ome of the highlights of our continuing study of indus- S trial physicists during the last year include: • The grant-funded project has been extended to the end of 2007. • Orville Butler, an experienced PhD historian of science/business, was hired to replace Tom Lassman who left to accept a career track position. • Staff held site visits at major German industrial archives. • A candidates list for longer oral history interviews is being developed. • Oral history interviews were conducted with 3 major industrial physicists. • All 59 interviews with physicists and R&D managers are transcribed and edited. • We’re well into analysis of the transcripts, using NVivo topical-indexing software. By last fall we had completed site visits at the central R&D laboratories at IBM, Corning, GE, Lucent, Xerox, 3M, Exxon Mobil, Kodak, and Texas Instruments—nine of the fifteen com- panies targeted in the study—and had conducted question-set Henry Anton Erikson demonstrating the properties of liquid air in interviews with 54 corporate physicists and science managers his Department of Physics lecture room, University of Minnesota, and 19 technical librarians, records managers, or archivists em- about 1926. Photo courtesy AIP Emilio Segrè Visual Archives, gift of Susan Kilbride. ployed by the companies. Thus we were well ahead of schedule in laboratory site visits and question-set interviews, but as a result we had fallen behind in editing and analyzing the inter- Grants-in-Aid Serve Variety of Purposes views.
    [Show full text]