Committee on Membership Structure and Elections

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Committee on Membership Structure and Elections NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES – Committee on Membership Structure and Elections Susan Wessler, chair Michael Hout NAS Home Secretary Professor of Sociology Neil and Rochelle Campbell Chair for Innovation in Science Education Department of Sociology Department of Botany and Plant Sciences New York University University of California, Riverside Evelyn Hu Marcia McNutt, ex officio Tarr-Coyne Professor of Applied Physics and Electrical Engineering President John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences National Academy of Sciences Harvard University Cynthia Beall Marc Kastner Distinguished University Professor and S. Idell Pyle Professor Donner Professor of Physics Emeritus, Massachusetts Department of Anthropology Institute of Technology Case Western Reserve University Adjunct Professor of Physics, Stanford University Philip Benfey Harris Lewin Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Distinguished Professor and Robert & Rosabel Osborne Endowed and Paul Kramer Professor of Biology Chair in Evolution and Ecology Department of Biology University of California, Davis Duke University Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz Patricia Dove Group Leader C.P. Miles Professor of Science and University Distinguished Professor Howard Hughes Medical Institute Department of Geosciences Janelia Research Campus Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Margaret Murnane Scott Edwards Professor of Physics and Fellow JILA Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology and Curator of Ornithology University of Colorado Museum of Comparative Zoology Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Peter Palese Harvard University Horace W. Goldsmith Professor and Chair Department of Microbiology Joseph Francisco Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai President's Distinguished Professor of Earth and Environmental Science Kenneth Ribet Department of Earth and Environmental Science Professor University of Pennsylvania Department of Mathematics University of California, Berkeley Fred Gage President and Vi and John Adler Professor Donald Saari Laboratory of Genetics Distinguished Research Professor (Economics and Mathematics) and Salk Institute for Biological Studies Director Emeritus Institute for Mathematical Behavioral Sciences David Ginsburg University of California, Irvine Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and James V. Neel Distinguished University Professor Christine Seidman Departments of Internal Medicine, Human Genetics, and Pediatrics Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and T.W. Smith University of Michigan Medical School Professor of Medicine and Genetics Brigham and Women's Hospital Susan Gottesman Harvard Medical School Co-Chief, Laboratory of Molecular Biology National Cancer Institute James Tiedje National Institutes of Health University Distinguished Professor and Director Center for Microbial Ecology Angela Gronenborn Michigan State University UPMC Rosalind Franklin Professor and Chair Department of Structural Biology Brian Wandell University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Isaac and Madeline Stein Family Professor Department of Psychology Susan Hanson Stanford University Distinguished University Professor Emerita School of Geography Clark University .
Recommended publications
  • Bigelow, Henry Bryant
    NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES H E N R Y B RYANT BIGELO W 1879—1967 A Biographical Memoir by AL F R E D C. REDFIELD Any opinions expressed in this memoir are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academy of Sciences. Biographical Memoir COPYRIGHT 1976 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES WASHINGTON D.C. HENRY BRYANT BIGELOW October 3,1879-December 11,1967 BY ALFRED C. REDFIELD ENRY BRYANT BIGELOW was an accomplished systematic zool- H ogist, being a recognized authority on both the coelenter- ates and fishes. His 1911 paper on the siphonophores was considered to be the most useful report on this group that had ever been written. In recognition of his later work on the fishes of the western North Atlantic he was awarded the Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal by the National Academy of Sciences in 1948. Of wider impact on the development of marine science was his recognition of the interdependence of the physics, chem- istry, and biology of the sea, as exemplified by his studies of the Gulf of Maine and his part in the creation of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, of which he was the first director. Seventy-five years ago, when Alexander Agassiz visited the Maldive Islands with Henry Bigelow as his assistant, oceanog- raphy in America was an interest promoted from time to time through individual initiative and, when in line with their pri- mary duties, by appropriate governmental agencies. Today it is a fully recognized division of science, complete with standard textbooks and special journals.
    [Show full text]
  • George P. Merrill Collection, Circa 1800-1930 and Undated
    George P. Merrill Collection, circa 1800-1930 and undated Finding aid prepared by Smithsonian Institution Archives Smithsonian Institution Archives Washington, D.C. Contact us at [email protected] Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Historical Note.................................................................................................................. 1 Descriptive Entry.............................................................................................................. 2 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 3 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 4 Series 1: PHOTOGRAPHS, CORRESPONDENCE AND RELATED MATERIAL CONCERNING INDIVIDUAL GEOLOGISTS AND SCIENTISTS, CIRCA 1800-1920................................................................................................................. 4 Series 2: PHOTOGRAPHS OF GROUPS OF GEOLOGISTS, SCIENTISTS AND SMITHSONIAN STAFF, CIRCA 1860-1930........................................................... 30 Series 3: PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE TERRITORIES (HAYDEN SURVEYS), CIRCA 1871-1877..............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Terrestrial Forest Management Plan for Palmyra Atoll
    Prepared for The Nature Conservancy Palmyra Program Terrestrial Forest Management Plan for Palmyra Atoll Open-File Report 2011–1007 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey Cover: Images showing native species of the terrestrial forest at Palmyra Atoll (on the left from top to bottom: red-footed boobies, an undescribed gecko, and a coconut crab). The forests shown are examples of Pisonia grandis forest on Lost Islet (above) and an example of coconut palm monoculture on Kaula Islet (below) at Palmyra Atoll. (Photographs by Stacie Hathaway, U.S. Geological Survey, 2008.) Terrestrial Forest Management Plan for Palmyra Atoll By Stacie A. Hathaway, Kathryn McEachern, and Robert N. Fisher Prepared for The Nature Conservancy Palmyra Program Open-File Report 2011–1007 U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Department of the Interior KEN SALAZAR, Secretary U.S. Geological Survey Marcia K. McNutt, Director U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia: 2011 For more information on the USGS—the Federal source for science about the Earth, its natural and living resources, natural hazards, and the environment, visit http://www.usgs.gov or call 1–888–ASK–USGS. For an overview of USGS information products, including maps, imagery, and publications, visit http://www.usgs.gov/pubprod To order this and other USGS information products, visit http://store.usgs.gov Suggested citation: Hathaway, S.A., McEachern, K., and Fisher, R.N., 2011, Terrestrial forest management plan for Palmyra Atoll: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2011–1007, 78 p. Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California, San Diego La Jolla, California 92093 Scripps Stories: DAYS to REME
    Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California, San Diego La Jolla, California 92093 Scripps Stories: DAYS TO REMEMBER In celebration of 90 years Edited by Kittie Kerr Kuhns and Betty Shor 1 October 1993 SIO Reference Number 93-35 The cover photo is Scripps circa 1940. Cover design: Steven Cook Stories were solicited from Scripps alumni and past and present Scripps employees to honor the 90th anniversary of Scripps. To obtain copies of this publication please write to: Kittie Kuhns Technical Publications 0233B Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California, San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, California 93093-0233 2 INTRODUCTION It is not easy to define Scripps Institution of Oceanography, but it has seemed through the years that its staff and students have always been like a family. To acknowledge the institution’s 90th year we asked for reminiscences and, to our gratification, a great many were sent to us. They recall people and moments as far back as the 1930s and as recent as the 1980s. There is strong support given by the Scripps community to individuals during times of adversity. When good news arrives, joy spreads, and a celebration is in order. We see from these stories that this is a long held tradition. This community feeling is what makes Scripps special. Not only is it a great center of research and learning, Scripps Institution is a family. Some start their careers here and some end them here, but it is the love and caring that make Scripps unique. As editors we have chosen to arrange this collection as close to chronology as is convenient.
    [Show full text]
  • Louis Agassiz
    Louis Agassiz From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz (May 28, Louis Agassiz 1807—December 14, 1873) was a Swiss-American zoologist, glaciologist, and geologist, the husband of educator Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz (married in 1850), and one of the first world-class American scientists. Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early work 3 Proposal of an ice age 4 Relocation to the United States 5 Legacies 6 Racial classification scheme and racism Louis Agassiz 7 Works Born May 28, 1807 8 Sources Haut-Vully, Switzerland 9 References 10 External links Died December 14, 1873 (aged 66) Cambridge, Massachusetts Nationality American Early life and education Fields Zoology Further information: Agassiz family Louis Agassiz was born in Môtier (now part of Haut-Vully) in the canton of Fribourg, Switzerland. Educated first at home, then spending four years of secondary school in Bienne, he completed his elementary studies in Lausanne. Having adopted medicine as his profession, he studied successively at the universities of Zürich, Heidelberg and Munich; while there he extended his knowledge of natural history, especially of botany. In 1829 he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at Erlangen, and in 1830 that of doctor of medicine at Munich. Moving to Paris he fell under the tutelage of Alexander von Humboldt and Georges Cuvier, who launched him on his careers of geology and zoology respectively. Until shortly before this time he had paid no special attention to the study of ichthyology, which soon afterwards became the great occupation of his life, if not the one for which he is most remembered in the modern day.
    [Show full text]
  • SCOTT VERNON EDWARDS Alexander Agassiz Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Curator of Ornithology, Museum of Comparative Zoology
    SCOTT VERNON EDWARDS Alexander Agassiz Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology Curator of Ornithology, Museum of Comparative Zoology 26 Oxford Street Tel: 617-384-8082 Harvard University FAX: 617-495-5667 Cambridge, MA USA e-mail: [email protected] http://www.oeb.harvard.edu/faculty/edwards PERSONAL BORN: Honolulu, Hawaii, USA 7 July 1963; married, two children. EDUCATION 1981 - 1986 B.A. (Biology) Harvard University, magna cum laude. Thesis: Mitochondrial DNA variation and the phylogeny of African Mole-Rats (Rodentia: Bathyergidae) 1986 - 1992 Ph.D. (Zoology/Museum of Vertebrate Zoology) University of California, Berkeley. Thesis: Mitochondrial DNA evolution in social babblers (Aves: Pomatostomus) 9/92 - 9/94 Alfred P. Sloan Postdoctoral Fellow in Molecular Evolution, Center for Mammalian Genetics, U. Florida, Gainesville (W. Potts & E. K. Wakeland labs; evolution of MHC genes in birds). POSITIONS HELD 6/13 – 6/15. Division Director, Division of Biological Infrastructure (DBI), Biology Directorate, National Science Foundation (temporary position). 12/03 – pres. Alexander Agassiz Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology & Curator of Ornithology, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University 9/03 – 12/03. Professor of Biology, University of Washington 1/03 – 12/03. Adjunct Associate Professor of Genome Sciences, University of Washington 1/00 – 12/03 Associate Professor of Zoology and Curator of Genetic Resources, Burke Museum 1/95 - 2000 Assistant Professor of Zoology and Curator of Genetic Resources, Burke Museum . Active research program in the Department of Zoology and Burke Museum; active teaching program (see below); in charge of growth and dissemination of large (~22,000 specimens) frozen tissue collection (mostly birds). 6/87 - 5/92 Graduate Student, University of California, Berkeley, Museum of Vertebrate Zoology; (Advisors: N.
    [Show full text]
  • Gran and Heav I
    Alexander Agassiz, 1835-1910 Item Type article Authors Mayer, Alfred Goldborough Publisher Government Printing Office Download date 25/09/2021 20:01:02 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/1834/19815 ALEXANDE I By ALFRE Marine laboratory of t71 Alexancler Ern]*z,,.,u R Agass~z,was born at Neuch The great English statisti eminence in science are nea and Alexander Ag-assiz was was Cecile Braun, the daul Grand Duchy of Baden, wh sessor of the largest collec Braun was a woman of cult1 and she was the first who 1 Louis Agassiz, some of the being by her hand. Her b her son mas named, was a ( and another brother, Max B and geologist and the direct Thus we find that intellectua the paternal and maternal a After the krth of her son heavy expensas demanded h numerous elaborate monogra tions, had exhausted not only the resources of the entire con coulcl be enlisted for the cal Louis Agaxsiz was forced ti, journey toward America, whe endeavors. Before his wife 0 home she died in 1848, after : I cite these events because t ander Agassiz was passed in rov,nrhicll map have left its --- 1 RPprinted by permission from th, 1910. i I I _ _- ALEXANDER AGASSIZ, 1835-1910.1 [With 1 p1nte.J Ry ALFRED(:OT.DSBOROUGH ~IAYER, Marine laborc~ioryof tl~eCarncdie Institutiota, Tortugas, Fla. Alexander Emmanuel Rodolphe hgassiz, only son of Louis Agassiz, was born at Neuchatel, Swit~zerlniid,on December 17, 1835. The great English statist'ician Galton found that men who attain eminence in science are nearly always sons of remai.kable women, and Alexander Agassiz was no exception to this rule.
    [Show full text]
  • 05 Summers MAR FISH REV 61(4)
    Agassiz, Garman, Albatross, and the Collection of Deep-sea Fishes ADAM P. SUMMERS, KARSTEN E. HARTEL, and THOMAS J. KOOB Introduction Among these expeditions was a rare Lawrence Scientifi c School (his father’s trip, under nongovernment funding, domain), where he studied zoology, ge- The U.S. Fish Commission Steamer from which the specimens were depos- ology, chemistry, and engineering. His Albatross was sent forth on many, ited and described at the Museum of father then convinced him to sign on as often pioneering, missions of basic and Comparative Zoology (MCZ) at Har- an assistant in the Museum, despite the applied science. Principally, this ship vard University. This particular voyage fact that he wanted to become a rail- was engaged in defi ning and discover- left an impressive legacy due primarily road engineer, and he took charge of ing new fi shing grounds and exploit- to the disparate talents of two partici- the work and business of the institution able species. The impact of these ex- pants—the noted invertebrate embryol- (Agassiz, 1913). peditions on the development of var- ogist Alexander Agassiz and the irasci- Determined not to follow in his fa- ious fi sheries is evident in several of ble ichthyologist Samuel Garman. ther’s footsteps in all ways, in 1868 the papers in this special issue of the We are concerned with a single voy- the young Agassiz decided to accept an Marine Fisheries Review. However, the age, in 1891, of only 2 months dura- offer from his brother-in-law, Quincy long-term legacy, and indeed the im- tion, during which the Albatross con- Shaw, to assume managerial control mortality of the Albatross rests to a ducted deep-water trawls and sampled over the failing Calumet and Hecla great extent on the purely scientifi c the eastern Pacifi c off Panama and Ec- copper mines in Michigan.
    [Show full text]
  • Samuel Franklin Emmons
    NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS PART OF VOLUME VII BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF SAMUEL FRANKLIN EMMONS 1841-1911 ARNOLD HAGUE PRESENTED TO THE ACADEMY AT THE ANNUAL MEETING, I9I2 CITY OF WASHINGTON PUBLISHED BY THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OP SCIENCES December, 1912 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. Of the biographical memoirs which are to be included in Volume VII, the following have been issued: PAGES. i- 22: Wolcott Gibbs F. W. Clarke 23- 88: William Keith Brooks Edwin Grant Conklin 89-114: Charles Augustus Young Edwin B. Frost 115-141: Benjamin Silliman (1816-1885) Arthur W. Wright 143-169: James Hammond Trumbull Arthur W. Wright 171-193: William H. C. Bartlett Edward S. Holden 195—201 : Cyrus Ballou Comstock Henry L. Abbot 203-222 : Samuel William Johnson Thomas B. Osborne 223-243: Charles Abiathar White William H. Dall 245-268: Samuel Pierpont Langley Charles D. Walcott 269-288: Charles Otis Whitman Edward S. Morse 289-305 : Alexander Agassiz George Lincoln Goodale 307-334 : Samuel Franklin Emmons Arnold Hague WASHINGTON, D. C. PRESS OF JUDD & DtfTWEttER, INC. I9I3- SAMUEL FRANKLIN EMMONS.0 FRANKLIN EMMONS was born in Boston, March 29, 1841, and died at his home in Washington, March 28, 1911, lacking only one day to complete his seventieth year. He was the fifth child and third son of Nathaniel Henry Emmons, for many years a prominent and highly respected merchant of Boston, engaged in the East India and China trade. His earliest known ancestor on his father's side was Thomas Emmons, whose name appears on the records of the Island of Aquidneck as aiding to found the Rhode Island Colony and later the town of Newport, from 1638 to 1641.
    [Show full text]
  • 8705K CIW 2002 YB Text
    THE PRESIDENT’ S REPORT Year Book 01/02 July 1, — June 30, CARNEGIE INSTITUTION OF WASHINGTON Department of Embryology ABOUT CARNEGIE 115 West University Parkway Baltimore, MD 21210-3301 410.554.1200 . TO ENCOURAGE, IN THE BROADEST AND Department of Plant Biology MOST LIBERAL MANNER, INVESTIGATION, 260 Panama St. RESEARCH, AND DISCOVERY, AND THE Stanford, CA 94305-4101 650.325.1521 APPLICATION OF KNOWLEDGE TO THE Geophysical Laboratory IMPROVEMENT OF MANKIND . 5251 Broad Branch Rd., N.W. Washington, DC 20015-1305 202.478.8900 The Carnegie Institution of Washington Department of Terrestrial Magnetism was incorporated with these words in 1902 5241 Broad Branch Rd., N.W. Washington, DC 20015-1305 by its founder, Andrew Carnegie. Since 202.478.8820 then, the institution has remained true to The Carnegie Observatories 813 Santa Barbara St. its mission. At six research departments Pasadena, CA 91101-1292 across the country, the scientific staff and 626.577.1122 a constantly changing roster of students, Las Campanas Observatory Casilla 601 postdoctoral fellows, and visiting investiga- La Serena, Chile tors tackle fundamental questions on the Department of Global Ecology 260 Panama St. frontiers of biology, earth sciences, and Stanford, CA 94305-4101 astronomy. 650.325.1521 Office of Administration 1530 P St., N.W. Washington, DC 20005-1910 202.387.6400 http://www.CarnegieInstitution.org ISSN 0069-066X Design by Hasten Design, Washington, DC Printing by Mount Vernon Printing, Landover, MD March 2003 CONTENTS The President’s Commentary Losses, Gains, Honors Contributions, Grants, and Private Gifts First Light and CASE Geophysical Laboratory Department of Plant Biology Department of Embryology The Observatories Department of Terrestrial Magnetism Department of Global Ecology Extradepartmental and Administrative Financial Statements An electronic version of the Year Book is accessible via the Internet at www.CarnegieInstitution.org/yearbook.html.
    [Show full text]
  • PART II. OTHER PUBLICATIONS of the ACADEMY MEMOIRS of the NATIONAL ACADEMY of SCIENCES -The Memoirs Are Monographs Published at Irregular Intervals
    PART II. OTHER PUBLICATIONS OF THE ACADEMY MEMOIRS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES -The Memoirs are monographs published at irregular intervals. Some volumes are comprised of a single monograph, while others consist of several separate papers relating to different branches of science. The Memoirs listed as "out of print" qare no longer available from the Academy,' but it is possible that some of these might still be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C., who sometimes has additional copies which are sold at cost. The Academy edition of the Memoirs is distributed free. CONTENTS VoLums I. 1866. Out of print 1. Reduction of the observations of fixed stars made by Joseph LePaute D'Agelet, at Paris, in 1783-1785, with a catalogue of the corresponding mean places, referred to the Equinox of 1800.0. BENJAMIN APTHORP GOULD. Read January 8, 1864. Pp. 1-261. 2. The Saturnian system. BZNJAMIN Pumcu. Read January 8, 1864. Pp. 263-86. 3. On the distribution of certain diseases in reference to hygienic choice of location for the cure of invalid soldiers. AUGUSTrUS A. GouLD. Read August 5, 1864. Pp. 287-90. 4. On shooting stars. H. A. NEWTON.- Read August 6, 1864. Pp. 291-312. 5. Rifled guns. W. H. C. BARTL*rT. Read August 25, 1865. Pp. 313-43. VoLums II. 1884 1. Report of the eclipse expedition to Caroline Island, May, 1883. Pp. 5-146. 2. Experimental determination of wave-lengths in the invisible prismatic spectrum. S. P. LANGIXY. April, 1883. 4 plates. Pp. 147-2.
    [Show full text]
  • Letters and Recollections of Alexander Agassiz: the 1891 Albatross Expedition
    Letters and Recollections of Alexander Agassiz: The 1891 Albatross Expedition G. R. AGASSIZ Alexander Agassiz (Fig. 1) had fortunately the breaking-out of the a beam (moulded) of 27 feet 6 inches. always been most anxious to supple- war between Peru and Chile made this At 12 feet draught, she displaced a trifle ment his work on the Blake (Fig. 2) expedition impossible. Again in 1888, under 1,100 tons. Her engines had an in the Caribbean, by an expedition business matters prevented his accept- indicated horsepower of a shade over in the Panamic region of the Pacific, ing an invitation to join the Albatross 450, and she was fitted with twin screws. for it was well known that the littoral (Fig. 3) at Panama, on her way from She was furnished with a very com- fauna of these two localities bore a New York to San Francisco. plete marine laboratory; and when re- striking resemblance. This led him Then in 1890, he was asked by Colo- equipped for this expedition possessed to believe that a comparison of the nel Marshall MacDonald (Fig. 4), the all the most approved devices of the deep-sea forms on the Pacific side U.S. Fish Commissioner, to take charge day for the investigation of the ocean. of the Isthmus of Panama with his of a deep-sea expedition off Panama the Her officers were detailed from the old friends in the Caribbean would following year in the Albatross (Fig. 5). U.S. Navy, and her captain, Lieutenant furnish reliable data for some most The conditions under which Agassiz Commander Zera Luther Tanner (Fig.
    [Show full text]