Tabla Periódica De Mujeres Científicas

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tabla Periódica De Mujeres Científicas Hoja1 1867 TABLA PERIÓDICA DE MUJERES 1960 Cu K MARIE CURIE LAURA L. KIESSLING POLONIA CIENTÍFICAS EE UU NOBEL 1903 AÑO DE 1878 1943 NACIMIENTO 1897 1910 1925 1939 1952 1964 1867 Mt Q J Cr Be Y Bt Do LISA MEITNER HELEN QUINN PAÍS DE IRENE JOLIOT-CURIE DOROTHY CROWFOOT JUANA BELLANATO ADA E. YONATH JACQUELINE BARTON JENNIFER DOUDNA NACIMIENTO Cu NOMBRE Y AUSTRIA AUSTRALLIA MARIE CURIE APELLIDO FRANCIA EGIPTO ESPAÑA ISRAEL EE UU EE UU POLONIA NOBEL NOBEL NOBEL 1935 1964 2009 1906 1943 NOBEL 1930 1923 1930 1941 1956 1965 PREMIO 1903 NOBEL Go B Yo Kw Me Ju Ar Ib MARIA GOEPPERT-MAYER JOCELYN BELL TU YOUYOU STEPHANIE KWOLEK GABRIELLA MORREALE MANUELA JUAREZ FRANCES ARNOLD ELENA IBÁNEZ POLONIA IRLANDA CHINA ESTADOS ITALIA ESPAÑA EE UU ESPAÑA UNIDOS NOBEL NOBEL NOBEL 1963 2015 2018 1912 1946 1965 1977 1900 1918 1946 1954 1975 1980 1902 1921 1944 1948 1938 1946 1956 1967 W Br Gn T Ct Jo Lo Da Se U Mc Su Ru Bl Sa Va Mn Kr CHIENG-SHIUNG WU CATHERINE BRECHIGNAC GABRIELA GONZÁLEZ MARIAM TORTOLÁ LUCY CARTWRIGHT KATHERINE JOHNSON TERESA LOZANO INGRID DAUBECHIES SYLVIA SERFATY CORINNA ULCIGRAI BARBARA McCLINTOCK ROSALYN SUSSMAN MERCEDES RUÍZ ELIZABETH BLACKBURN MARGARITA SALAS MARÍA VALLET ROSA Mª MENÉNDEZ ANNA KRYLOV CHINA FRANCIA ARGENTINA ESPAÑA REINO EEUU ESPAÑA BÉLGICA FRANCIA ITALIA EEUU EEUU ESPAÑA AUSTRALIA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA UCRANIA UNIDO NOBEL NOBEL NOBEL 1983 1977 2009 1928 1947 1969 1979 1908 1927 1946 1962 1977 1981 1909 1934 1947 1952 1955 1951 1956 1971 R Co Si D Ta Wo By Vo Mi Z Le Mr Bu Ho Zo N So Gz VERA RUBIN FRANCE A. CORDOVA ALICIA M. SINTES JOANNA DUNKLEY HERTA TAUSSIG JOSEFA WONENBURGER PILAR BAYER CLAIRE VOISIN MARIAM MIRZAKHANI SARA ZAHEDI RITA LEVI-MONTALCINI MANUELA MARTÍNEZ LINDA B. BUCK HELEN HOBBS HUDA ZOGHBI CARMEN NÁJERA SUSAN SOLOMON LETICIA GONZÁLEZ ESTADOS FRANCIA ESPAÑA REINO AUSTRIA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA FRANCIA IRÁN IRÁN ITALIA ESPAÑA EEUU EE UU LIBANO ESPAÑA EE UU ESPAÑA UNIDOS UNIDO M. FIELD NOBEL NOBEL 2014 1986 2004 1928 1952 1970 1980 1913 1936 1952 1973 1979 1984 1918 1949 1947 1953 1961 1963 1957 1978 An Gr M Av Ca Ve Sn H Mo Vi E Ll Ba Bd Ge Ms Bb La INMACULADA P. ANDRADE LAURA GREENE SUSANA MARCOS ASIMINA ARVANITAKI EMMA CASTELNUOVO ARGELIA VÉLEZ MARTA SANZ-SOLÉ OLGA HOLTZ SOPHIE MOREL MARINA VIAZOVSKA GERTRUDE B.ELION ANNA LLUCH FRANCOISE BARRÉ LINA BADIMÓN CAROL W. GREIDER MAY-BRITT MOSER CORAL BARBAS ANNA LAROMAINE ESPAÑA EEUU ESPAÑA GRECIA ITALIA CUBA ESPAÑA RUSIA FRANCIA UCRANIA EEUU ESPAÑA FRANCIA ESPAÑA EEUU NORUEGA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA NOBEL NOBEL NOBEL NOBEL 1988 2008 2009 2014 1940 1959 1971 1985 1917 Yz S V To Mh M. JOSEFA YZUEL DONA T. STRICKLAND LICIA VERDE NATALIA TORO DOROTHY MAHARAM ESPAÑA CANADA ITALIA EEUU ESTADOS UNIDOS NOBEL 2018 1896 1916 1934 1935 1938 1940 1942 1945 1948 1965 1966 1977 1978 1980 FÍSICA Cy A Gd Ea Ma Cd Nu P Ce Bs Cv Vl Es Vd QUÍMICA GHERTY T. CORY M.ÁNGELES ALVARIÑO JANE GOODALL SYLVIA A. EARLE CARMEN MAROTO M.ÁNGELES CARDONA CHRISTIANNE NÜSSLEIN EUGENIA DEL PINO ANA M. CRESPO MARIA BLASCO ANA M. CUERVO JAIONE VALLE VANESA ESTEBAN VANESSA VALDIGLESIAS REPÚBLICA ESPAÑA REINO EEUU ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ALEMANIA ECUADOR ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA ESPAÑA CHECA UNIDO MATEMÁTICAS NOBEL NOBEL 1947 1995 1865 1882 1902 1907 1910 1912 1913 1920 1927 1942 1945 1946 1950 1957 MEDICINA BIOLOGÍA Gt Ga Pa Hi Mw Ra Ne Th Vr Ki Za L Dm Al ETHEL GERTRUDE JULIA A. GARDNER PIERINA PASSOTI DOROTHY HILL MARIE MORISAWA DOROTHY H. RAYNER KATHERINE G. NELSON MARIE THARP CARMINA VIRGILI SUSAN KIEFFER CARIDAD ZAZO MARGARET LEINEN SUSANA DAMBORENEA BELEN ALONSO REINO EEUU ARGENTINA AUSTRALIA EEUU REINO EEUU EEUU ESPAÑA EEUU ESPAÑA EEUU ARGENTINA ESPAÑA GEOLOGÍA UNIDO UNIDO Página 1.
Recommended publications
  • Science and the Public Interest an Open Letter to President-Elect Trump and the 115Th Congress
    Science and the Public Interest An Open Letter to President-Elect Trump and the 115th Congress Scientific knowledge has played a critical role in making the United States a powerful and prosperous nation and improving the health and well-being of Americans and people around the world. From disease outbreaks to climate change to national security to technology innovation, people benefit when our nation’s policies are informed by science unfettered by inappropriate political or corporate influence. To build on this legacy and extend the benefits of science to all people, including Americans who have been left behind, the federal government must support and rely on science as a key input for crafting public policy. Policy makers and the public alike require access to high-quality scientific information to serve the public interest. There are several actions Congress and the Trump administration should take to strengthen the role that science plays in policy making. First, creating a strong and open culture of science begins at the top. Federal agencies should be led by officials with demonstrated track records of respecting science as a critical component of decision making. Further, recognizing that diversity makes science stronger, administration officials should welcome and encourage all scientists regardless of religious background, race, gender, or sexual orientation. Second, Congress and the Trump administration should ensure our nation’s bedrock public health and environmental laws—such as the Clean Air Act and the Endangered Species Act—retain a strong scientific foundation, and that agencies are able to freely collect and draw upon scientific data to effectively carry out statutory responsibilities established by these laws.
    [Show full text]
  • Clima Te Change 2007 – Synthesis Repor T
    he Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was set up jointly by the World Meteorological Organization and the TUnited Nations Environment Programme to provide an authoritative international statement of scientific understanding of climate change. The IPCC’s periodic assessments of the causes, impacts and possible response strategies to climate change are the most comprehensive and up-to-date reports available on the subject, and form the standard reference for all concerned with climate change in academia, government and industry worldwide. This Synthesis Report is the fourth element of the IPCC Fourth Assessment Report “Climate Change 2007”. Through three working groups, many hundreds of international experts assess climate change in this Report. The three working group contributions are available from Cambridge University Press: Climate Change 2007 – The Physical Science Basis Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC (ISBN 978 0521 88009-1 Hardback; 978 0521 70596-7 Paperback) Climate Change 2007 – Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC (978 0521 88010-7 Hardback; 978 0521 70597-4 Paperback) Climate Change 2007 – Mitigation of Climate Change CHANGE 2007 – SYNTHESIS REPORT CLIMATE Contribution of Working Group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC (978 0521 88011-4 Hardback; 978 0521 70598-1 Paperback) Climate Change 2007 – Synthesis Report is based on the assessment carried out by the three Working Groups
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2018
    ANNUAL REPORT 2018 JULY 1, 2017 – JUNE 30, 2018 be out-of-date or reflect the bias and expeditionary initiative, which traveled to SCIENCE stereotypes of past eras, the Museum is Transylvania under Macaulay Curator in endeavoring to address these. Thus, new the Division of Paleontology Mark Norell to 4 interpretation was developed for the “Old study dinosaurs and pterosaurs. The Richard New York” diorama. Similarly, at the request Gilder Graduate School conferred Ph.D. and EDUCATION of Mayor de Blasio’s Commission on Statues Masters of Arts in Teaching degrees, as well 10 and Monuments, the Museum is currently as honorary doctorates on exobiologist developing new interpretive content for the Andrew Knoll and philanthropists David S. EXHIBITION City-owned Theodore Roosevelt statue on and Ruth L. Gottesman. Visitors continued to 12 the Central Park West plaza. flock to the Museum to enjoy the Mummies, Our Senses, and Unseen Oceans exhibitions. Our second big event in fall 2017 was the REPORT OF THE The Gottesman Hall of Planet Earth received CHIEF FINANCIAL announcement of the complete renovation important updates, including a magnificent OFFICER of the long-beloved Gems and Minerals new Climate Change interactive wall. And 14 Halls. The newly named Allison and Roberto farther afield, in Columbus, Ohio, COSI Mignone Halls of Gems and Minerals will opened the new AMNH Dinosaur Gallery, the FINANCIAL showcase the Museum’s dazzling collections first Museum gallery outside of New York STATEMENTS and present the science of our Earth in new City, in an important new partnership. 16 and exciting ways. The Halls will also provide an important physical link to the Gilder All of this is testament to the public’s hunger BOARD OF Center for Science, Education, and Innovation for the kind of science and education the TRUSTEES when that new facility is completed, vastly Museum does, and the critical importance of 18 improving circulation and creating a more the Museum’s role as a trusted guide to the coherent and enjoyable experience, both science-based issues of our time.
    [Show full text]
  • Susan Solomon National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration, USA
    One Hundred Reasons to be a Scientist SCIENCE OFFERS AN IMPORTANT INPUT Susan Solomon National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration, USA I began life in Chicago, and first got hooked on science watching the undersea adventures of Jacques Cousteau on TV. In high school, my confidence that science was the right choice for me was boosted when I was lucky enough to take third place in a nationwide science fair with a project that measured the amount of oxygen in gas mixtures. While in undergraduate school studying chemistry at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, I was fascinated to learn of work being done regarding the chemistry of the atmosphere of the planet Jupiter. That’s what started me on the path to doing chemistry on a planet instead of in a test tube. After graduating from IIT I went to © Courtesy of Carlye Calvin graduate school in chemistry at the University of California at Berkeley. My doctoral dissertation was about chemistry on a planet—not Jupiter but on Earth. I earned my doctorate in chemistry in 1981. Prior to the discovery of the ozone hole, my work focused on what you might call some esoteric aspects of understanding the atmosphere. I was looking at things like the impact of natural factors including the aurora on the chemistry of the mesosphere, thermosphere, and stratosphere. Then the ozone hole was discovered, and that changed everything. I was intrigued by the observation, and one of the first things I thought about, coming from this mesosphere/thermosphere kind of work, was whether reactive nitrogen from phenomena like solar protons could be responsible.
    [Show full text]
  • Calendario De Mujeres Científicas Y Maestras
    Mil Jardines Ciencia y Tecnología Calendario de Mujeres Científicas y Maestras Hipatia [Jules Maurice Gaspard (1862–1919)] Por Antonio Clemente Colino Pérez [Contacto: [email protected]] CIENCIA Y TECNOLOGÍA Mil Jardines . - Calendario de Mujeres Científicas y Maestras - . 1 – ENERO Marie-Louise Lachapelle (Francia, 1769-1821), jefe de obstetricia en el Hôtel-Dieu de París, el hospital más antiguo de París. Publicó libros sobre la anatomía de la mujer, ginecología y obstetricia. Contraria al uso de fórceps, escribió Pratique des accouchements, y promovió los partos naturales. https://translate.google.es/translate?hl=es&sl=ca&u=https://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Louise_Lachapelle&prev=search Jane Haldiman Marcet (Londres, 1769-1858), divulgadora científica que escribió sobre química, enero 1 botánica, religión, economía y gramática. Publicó Conversations on Chemistry, con seudónimo masculino en 1805, pero no fue descubierta su autoría hasta 1837. https://lacienciaseacercaalcole.wordpress.com/2017/01/23/chicas-de-calendario-enero-primera-parte/ https://mujeresconciencia.com/2015/08/19/michael-faraday-y-jane-marcet-la-asimov-del-xix/ Montserrat Soliva Torrentó (Lérida, 1943-2019), doctora en ciencias químicas. https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montserrat_Soliva_Torrent%C3%B3 Florence Lawrence (Canadá, 1886-1938), actriz del cine mudo apasionada por los coches, que inventó el intermitente, pero no lo consideró como propio y pasó el final de sus días sola y arruinada. https://www.motorpasion.com/espaciotoyota/el-dia-que-una-mujer-invento-el-intermitente-y-la-luz-de-freno-para-acabar-despues- arruinada Tewhida Ben Sheikh (Túnez, 1909-2010), primera mujer musulmana en convertirse en medica y llegó a plantear temas como la planificación familiar, la anticoncepción y el aborto en su época, en el norte enero 2 de Africa.
    [Show full text]
  • Recognition of Achievement Not Been Conducted and Here We Suggest It As a Discipline For
    Materials Today Volume 00, Number 00 September 2016 COMMENT Comment working in the science and engineering of ceramics and glass has Recognition of achievement not been conducted and here we suggest it as a discipline for consideration as a model for study. Ceramics and glass, a sub-unit – priorities and process of materials science and engineering, encompasses (oxides, 1,2,* nitrides, borides, carbides, inorganic carbon) both traditional Lynnette D. Madsen 1 and new materials. A study of 100 women of achievement in this Svedberg Science, Inc., United States 2 discipline has just been published [2] and this group offers a useful National Science Foundation, United States model for recognition of achievement for organizations in general. [email protected] Election to the National Academies ‘‘is considered one of the 1,2 highest professional honors . new members are elected by cur- Rita R. Colwell rent members based on outstanding achievement and commit- 1 University of Maryland, College Park, United States ment to service’’ [3]. Inherent to the process is nomination by an 2 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, United States academy member, to be recognized for achievement and subse- quent election by the membership. Election to foreign associate is also important, since foreign associates comprise approximately A closer look at the national 10% of membership in the Academies and foreign women can be academies (and have been) elected as associates. Unlike a nomination for the Nobel Prize [4], nomination for membership in the US National Academies is made by US academy members. Honorary membership organizations strive to recognize excel- Thirteen outstanding women having significant accomplish- lence in performance and achievement.
    [Show full text]
  • “Alone We Can Do So Little; Together We Can
    Alone we can do so little; together we can do so much.” —Helen Keller “ ” $4.8 You make a living by what you get. MILLION Total charitable You make a life by what you give. contributions — Winston Churchill (attrib.) since 1995 These inspiring words are the very essence of the generosity shown to Fox & roach Charities by sales associates and employees at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Fox & roach and The Trident Group. Their voluntary payroll and commission deductions and innumerable hours of service in 2014 brought much needed aid to so many children and families in the communities we serve. This spirit of volunteerism and giving has had an enormous impact in wa“ys big and small, and will reverberate for generations to come. In 2014, we began a new and exciting initiative: The Big Idea . Fox ” & roach Charities donated a total of $150,000 to three inner-city educational organizations in Wilmington, Camden, and Philadelphia. The Big Idea funded essential classroom resources and technology upgrades to empower young students’ desire to learn. These kids are amazing and we are so proud to be able to help nurture them on the path to their future. Add to this initiative the record-breaking success of our Backpack Challenge which helped homeless and foster care children start their school year with Our MISSION: confidence— among the many other charitable activities our sales associates and employees so enthusiastically participated in —and one can truly see that “you make a life by what you give.” We are committed to addressing the needs of children and families We believe that our individual offices are in the best position to identify local needs, so they select recipients for a significant portion of the funds they raise.
    [Show full text]
  • Enstrom Email to Wessler Re
    January 22, 2016 You signed the May 7, 2010 Science letter by Peter Gleick Since May 2, 2012 Gleick https://www.heartland.org/sites/default/files/criminal_referral_of_peter_gleick.pdf Lindzen article on NAS UC Mission statement: The University of California System The ten campuses of the University of California system are dedicated to the fundamental missions of teaching, research and public service. Lysenko Interrelationship between Science, AAAS, and NAS Make case that secret committee nominated a self-described activist McNutt to continue recent tradition of activist Cicerone. Reveal demographics of election results, number of votes per sstate who voted to confirm McNutt. If nothing is presented at AAAS meeting ther will be effort to raise serious doubts about objectivity of McNutt,Science, AAAS, and NAS before McNutt becomes NAS Pres on July 1 and before new Science editor is appointed. December 22, 2015 Susan R. Wessler, Ph.D. Home Secretary National Academy of Sciences Distinguished Professor of Genetics Department of Botany and Plant Sciences University of California, Riverside [email protected] Dear Professor Wessler, 1 I helped Dr. Peter Wood prepare his December 9, 2015 National Association of Scholars email letter to California members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) “Concerns about the National Academy of Sciences and Scientific Dissent” (https://www.nas.org/articles/nas_letter), which you have received. I am writing to you about this email letter as both the Home Secretary of the National Academy of Sciences and a UC Riverside Distinguished Professor (http://newsroom.ucr.edu/2547). First, in your role as NAS Home Secretary, I request that you send the email letter to all NAS members, since it deals with serious concerns about suppression of scientific dissent and Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • OCTOBER TERM 1994 Reference Index Contents
    jnl94$ind1Ð04-04-96 12:34:32 JNLINDPGT MILES OCTOBER TERM 1994 Reference Index Contents: Page Statistics ....................................................................................... II General .......................................................................................... III Appeals ......................................................................................... III Arguments ................................................................................... III Attorneys ...................................................................................... III Briefs ............................................................................................. IV Certiorari ..................................................................................... IV Costs .............................................................................................. V Judgments and Opinions ........................................................... V Original Cases ............................................................................. V Records ......................................................................................... VI Rehearings ................................................................................... VI Rules ............................................................................................. VI Stays .............................................................................................. VI Conclusion ...................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Joël LEBOWITZ, the "Grande Médaille"
    page 1/2 Press release Paris, 3 October 2014 JOEL LEBOWITZ, a man of science and peace, the award-winner of the 2014 GRANDE MÉDAILLE of the French Académie des Sciences Award ceremony Tuesday 14 October 2014, 3 PM to 5 PM Under the Cupola of the Institut de France, 23 quai de Conti, Paris, France In 2014, the Académie des Sciences awards its highest distinction to the American scientist Joel LEBOWITZ, a grandmaster of "statistical physics" and a leading figure in the fight for human rights. Under the Cupola, the prestigious laureate, Professor of Mathematics and Physics at Rutgers University (New Brunswick), will give an account of his scientific and personal life. Beyond being a talented researcher and « transmitter », Joel Lebowitz embodies humanism and the universality of science. In addition to his outstanding contributions to science and its transmission, Joel L. Lebowitz devoted his life to standing up for those who had been persecuted or deprived of their rights and fundamental freedoms. Born in 1930 in a Jewish family in Taceva (then in Czechoslovakia, now in Ukraine), he was deported to Auschwitz with all his family, of which he was the only survivor. After the war, he studied in the United States, graduated from Brooklyn College and obtained a PhD from Syracuse University in 1956 under Peter G. Bergmann’s supervision. After positions as a teacher at Yale University, which brought him close to Nobel Prize winner Lars Onsager, then at the Stevens Institute of technology in Hoboken, he was from 1959 to 1976 Assistant Professor then Professor at the Belfer Graduate School of Science of Yeshiva University, New York.
    [Show full text]
  • Masthead (PDF)
    PRESIDENT OF Cellular and Developmental Genetics Physics THE ACADEMY Biology Kathryn V. Anderson Curtis G. Callan, Jr. Ralph J. Cicerone Eric H. Davidson Stanley N. Cohen Anthony Leggett Brigid L. M. Hogan Barry Ganetzky Herbert Levine EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Eric N. Olson Iva S. Greenwald Boris I. Shraiman Inder M. Verma Michael Rosbash Jeffrey C. Hall David D. Sabatini Philip C. Hanawalt Physiology and ASSOCIATE EDITORS Gertrud M. Schüpbach Mary-Claire King Pharmacology Alan Fersht Douglas E. Koshland Richard W. Aldrich Jack Halpern Cellular and Molecular Jasper Rine Susan G. Amara Dolores R. Piperno Neuroscience Allan C. Spradling David Julius Solomon H. Snyder David E. Clapham Reed B. Wickner Arthur Karlin Pietro V. De Camilli Ramón Latorre B. L. Turner II Human Environmental Peter K. Vogt Richard L. Huganir Sciences Plant Biology Stephen T. Warren L. L. Iversen Ruth S. DeFries David Baulcombe David A. Weitz Yuh-Nung Jan Susan Hanson Anthony R. Cashmore Susan R. Wessler Eve Marder Maarten J. Chrispeels Jeremy Nathans Immunology Enrico Coen SPECIAL FEATURE EDITORS Charles F. Stevens Peter Cresswell Joseph R. Ecker Rita R. Colwell Thomas C. Südhof Douglas T. Fearon Robert Haselkorn Christopher B. Field Joseph S. Takahashi Tak Wah Mak June B. Nasrallah Jeffrey Shaman Philippa Marrack Chemistry Susan Solomon Ruslan Medzhitov Stephen J. Benkovic Plant, Soil, and William E. Paul Harry B. Gray Microbial Sciences EDITORIAL BOARD Tadatsugu Taniguchi Michael L. Klein James C. Carrington Arthur Weiss Animal, Nutritional, and Raphael D. Levine Vicki L. Chandler Applied Microbial Sciences Tobin J. Marks Mathematics Brian J. Staskawicz Jerrold Meinwald Richard V. Kadison David L.
    [Show full text]
  • The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report, 2004–2005
    The Brooklyn College Foundation Annual Report, 2004–2005 On the cover: Architectural plan for realization of the campus design envisioned by Brooklyn College’s founding architect, Randolph Evans, in 1935. The plan proposes new entrances to Roosevelt and James Halls, a new West Quad to mirror the existing East Quad, and a new building to anchor the entire campus west of Bedford Avenue. The West Quad Project is one of several ambitious plans the College has launched to build a modern, student-centered campus conducive to learning and scholarship. Dear Friends of Brooklyn College At Brooklyn College in the last year, we have been busy building— not only the physical campus, but also the educational environment that best encourages vigorous learning and scholarship. Our priorities result largely from initiatives we launched during the first five years of my presidency—and particularly within the last twelve months. These include expanding the campus, renewing the natural sciences, and broadening our fiscal base. The physical transformation of the campus continues apace. We have doubled the size of the Morton and Angela Topfer Library Café, and it is open again 24/7. Over the summer, we renovated and modernized eleven lecture halls in Ingersoll Hall. We move ahead with the West Quad Project, laying out a new quadrangle and pouring the foundation for a new building. We have begun a major rebuilding of our science facilities and our science curriculum. The project will proceed in two stages. First, Roosevelt Hall will be transformed into a science building; then we will renovate Ingersoll Hall. The science faculty meanwhile has been discussing and defining the shape science teaching and research should take at the College.
    [Show full text]