2012 AAAS Annual Report
Transcription
2012 AAAS Annual Report
BUILDING A GLOBAL KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY: SCIENCE COMMUNICATION AND COLLABORATION A A AS ANNUAL REPORT 2012 The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) is the world’s largest general scientific society, and publisher of the journal Science (www.sciencemag.org) as well as Science Translational Medicine (www.sciencetranslationalmedicine.org) and Science Signaling (www.sciencesignaling.org). AAAS was founded in 1848 and includes some 261 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of 1 million. The non-profit AAAS (www.aaas.org) is open to all and fulfills its mission to “advance science and serve society” through initiatives in science policy; international programs; science education; and more. For the latest research news, log onto EurekAlert!, www.eurekalert.org, the premier science-news Web site, a service of AAAS. American Association for the Advancement of Science 1200 New York Avenue, NW • Washington, DC 20005 USA Tel: 202-326-6440 For more information about supporting AAAS, please e-mail [email protected], or call 202-326-6636. On the Cover: Even the seemingly pristine Galápagos Islands, one of the most biologically rich and diverse ecosystems on the planet, face increasing threats as a result of climate change, water pollution, invasive plants and animals and other challenges related to human activities. This famous view of Pinnacle Rock on Bartholomew Island was captured in February 2013 by Alan I. Leshner. An extinct volcano, Bartholomew Island features colorful lava formations and wildlife such as blue-footed boobies, Pacific green sea turtles, sea lions and a rare colony of Galápagos penguins. Pinnacle Rock (on the right) is a spearshaped obelisk known as a “tuff cone,” formed when sea water cooled volcanic magma, triggering an explosion that resulted in a huge igneous rock comprised of many thin layers of basalt. [FSC MixedSources logo / Rainforest Alliance Certified / 100 percent green power logo] PRINTER WILL ADD Table of Contents Welcome Letter by Nina V. Fedoroff and Alan I. Leshner ...................... 2 Public Statements on Key Issues ........................................................ 4 Media and Public Engagement ........................................................... 8 Science Diplomacy Worldwide .......................................................... 11 Science, Policy and Society ...............................................................14 AAAS MemberCentral ........................................................................17 U.S. Government Relations ................................................................18 Science, Technology and Security Policy .......................................... 20 The Science Family of Journals ......................................................... 23 Improving Science Literacy ............................................................... 27 Education, Outreach and Careers ..................................................... 29 AAAS Divisions ..................................................................................31 Special Gifts and Projects 2012 ........................................................ 33 AAAS Awards and Prizes .................................................................. 35 AAAS Fellows ................................................................................... 38 Acknowledgment of Contributors and Patron Members ................... 41 Financial Summary........................................................................... 52 AAAS Board of Directors, Officers and Information .......................... 53 Welcome from the AAAS Chair, Nina V. Fedoroff, and the CEO, Alan I. Leshner Scientific evidence tells us unambiguously that global climate change is real and happening now, and it is related to human activities, yet there is still a disconnect between the facts and some people’s beliefs. Warmer temperatures have already affected corn, wheat, rice and soybean yields, which decline by roughly 10 percent in response to each additional degree of heat. And yet the world’s food supply needs to double as the human population pushes toward 9 billion by midcentury. Crops engineered to resist drought and pests suggest a way to feed hungry people while protecting natural resources. Sadly, unfounded public fears about modified foods have persisted. Meanwhile, farmland all over the world has succumbed to overuse, drought and wildfires. Clearly, pursuing new scientific knowledge for its own sake is not enough. Too many people remain unconvinced of the reality of climate change and unconcerned about other urgent problems such as water scarcity and disappearing species. Scientists, engineers and educators must effectively communicate science in order to accelerate the pace of positive change worldwide. Strategies for influencing public perceptions about science-based challenges were the focus of a lively, interactive event that took place during the 2012 AAAS Annual Meeting in Vancouver, Canada. A panel of experts, moderated by award-winning journalist Frank Sesno, director of the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University, offered insights for communicating about climate change, the world’s increasing human population, evolution and more. The event, featuring audience surveys and online feedback, also included Hans Rosling’s unique demonstration of global population trends. (For a video 2 replay, log onto http://www.aaas.org/go/ rosling.) Turn to pages 8-10 for details on the association’s many communication and public engagement efforts. International research collaboration is also a key to leveraging science in the service of society. Science diplomacy, in particular, can speed advances, even amid tense governmental relations, as shared research goals help to build a bridge between nations. AAAS in 2012 demonstrated the promise of this basic principle by dispatching delegations to Iran, North Korea, Burma and Cuba, and by launching a new online publication, Science & Diplomacy. In Iran, for example, which is known for advances in medical and stem cell research, former AAAS President and Nobel laureate Peter Agre joined AAAS Senior Advisor Norman P. Neureiter for meetings with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and others. “It is a strategy of engagement,” Neureiter explained to popular WAMU-FM radio show host Kojo Nnamdi after the Iran trip. “You find common issues in science that you can work on.” Scientific discovery is increasingly an international, multidisciplinary enterprise. At the same time, finding innovative ways to sustain more and more people in the 21st century will require a diversity of ideas from many regions. Read about AAAS international work on pages 11-13. The AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellowships, dating to 1973, were established to bring scientific expertise to bear on the U.S. policy-making process. Today, more than 2,500 alumni of the program are making meaningful contributions to global challenges, too, including efforts to combat hunger, disease and ecological threats. AAAS S&T Policy Fellows have provided crucial data in support of the Endangered Species Act, for example. They have also participated in a federal task force on climate change adaptation, worked on a recovery and reconstruction project in Haiti, and helped to establish a digital research library for Iraqi scientists. Alumni of the program have risen to high-impact positions in Congress, the White House, the State Department, USAID, federal agencies, research universities and non-governmental organizations. Pages 14-15 and 18-19 of this report offer more information on the S&T Policy Fellowships as well as the association’s many other science policy-related programs. Those ongoing activities include a highly effective Research Competitiveness Program that promotes economic progress by helping universities, state agencies and other institutions translate ideas into commercial services and products. Communicating the connection between research investments, innovation and job growth also remains a primary goal for AAAS science policy and government relations staff. In 2012, AAAS provided authoritative, unbiased analyses of federal R&D funding trends, and organized events to inform public discourse on topics such as water conservation, climate change and agricultural advances. The four geographic divisions of AAAS convened regional meetings on topics including sustainable design and human health issues in the Arctic (see pages 31-32). Project 2061, the association’s renowned science-education reform initiative, and experts like Shirley Malcom of AAAS Education and Human Resources are working to improve U.S. science education. The association’s efforts to promote science literacy—encompassing new assessment tools, lesson plans and scholarships for teachers, plus major networking events and presentation opportunities for early-career researchers—are described on pages 27-30. An update on Science Careers, our comprehensive online resource for science job seekers and employers, has also been included there. The Science family of journals, published by AAAS, continued in 2012 to convey original, peer-reviewed research with potential to improve human welfare. (See pages 23-26.) Pioneering studies of H5N1 avian influenza set the stage for the development of antivirals and vaccines, which will be essential in the event of a pandemic. Other research and news articles published by Science, Science Translational Medicine and Science Signaling advanced our understanding of drug-resistant malaria in Southeast Asia, HIV-AIDS in America and key genetic mechanisms that could lead to more robust, productive rice crops. We gratefully acknowledge the efforts of many researchers who are both achieving and communicating life-changing discoveries. With your help, AAAS will continue to play an important role in building a global knowledge society for the 21st century. Nina V. Fedoroff AAAS Chair (2012-2013) and Distinguished Professor of Biosciences at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi Arabia, and Evan Pugh Professor in the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, Pennsylvania State University Alan I. Leshner AAAS CEO and Executive Publisher, Science, Science Translational Medicine and Science Signaling 3 Public Statements on Key Issues The association in 2012 repeatedly urged U.S. congressional leaders and the White House to avoid sweeping budget cuts that would cripple key areas of American science and slow innovation. An automatic “sequestration” of resources would pose an unprecedented risk to the U.S. scientific enterprise, deeply slashing the country’s overall research and development investment, AAAS warned at events on Capitol Hill and in letters to policymakers as well as The New York Times. Through op-ed pieces and interviews, AAAS also called for action on climate change and K-12 science education while promoting science diplomacy. WAMU-FM radio show host Kojo Nnamdi (second from left) moderated a program on science diplomacy that featured AAAS Senior Advisor Norman P. Neureiter (at right), Lehigh University President and U.S. Science Envoy Alice Gast, and Alex Dehgan, science and technology Advisor to the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development. GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE INNOVATION AND GLOBAL COLLABORATION 1 August. Too many people still refuse to accept the scientific facts about global climate change, a point reflected in the decision of North Carolina’s legislature to disregard scientific projections of sea-level rise, AAAS CEO Alan I. Leshner wrote in a (Raleigh) News & Observer op-ed. The piece, co-authored by climate scientist William L. Chameides of Duke University, emphasized that “climate change is real, it is underway now, and humans are contributing to it.” 10 February. Increasingly, innovation will hinge upon international research collaboration as modern science becomes an ever more global enterprise, transcending national boundaries, the AAAS CEO wrote in a Vancouver Sun op-ed co-authored by Stephen Toope, president and vice-chancellor of the University of British Columbia. The op-ed was published in advance of the 2012 AAAS Annual Meeting in Vancouver. “Globally, our support for basic science and international collaborations must not waver,” Toope and Leshner wrote. SCIENCE DIPLOMACY 25 June. Popular radio show host Kojo Nnamdi organized an on-air discussion about science diplomacy following a successful AAAS trip to Iran. Nnamdi’s guests were Norman Neureiter, senior advisor to the AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy; Lehigh University President and former AAAS Board member Alice Gast; and former AAAS S&T Policy Fellow Alex Dehgan, science and technology advisor to the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development. Listen at www.aaas.org/go/kojo/. SCIENCE EDUCATION AND SOCIETY 13 December. With many U.S. school children 4 continuing to lag behind their international peers in mathematics and science, parents must demand that schools do better by their children, according to a nonpartisan committee organized by the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress. The committee’s report, “A Letter on STEM Education to America’s Parents,” was released at AAAS. Shirley Malcom, head of AAAS Education and Human Resources, served on the study committee. public health, or optional labels such as the “kosher” or “USDA organic” labels that support consumer decision-making and reflect verifiable, certifiable standards. In contrast, legally mandated labels, under current U.S. Food and Drug Administration policy, must be relevant to health, safety and nutrition, AAAS explained. The Board concluded that there is no scientific evidence to support such a warning about GM foods. 13 August. Diverse learning environments offer educational benefits to both minority and majority students, AAAS and seven other scientific societies wrote in a legal brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court as it prepared to hear a challenge to a university’s diversity-recruitment efforts. The document, submitted by the American Educational Research Association, summarized peer-reviewed scientific evidence relevant to the case of Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin. THE SCIENTIFIC ENTERPRISE 27 March. AAAS urged Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam to veto a controversial education bill that would call into question the well-established scientific facts behind evolution and global climate change by encouraging teachers to present the “scientific strengths and scientific weaknesses” of issues that “may cause debate and disputation.” 2 December. U.S. scientific advances are being slowed by “excessive, redundant, ineffective reporting and assurance requirements imposed both by government agencies and the universities where research is being conducted,” the AAAS CEO wrote in a 2 December commentary in The Chronicle of Higher Education. The essay, co-authored by Steven J. Fluharty, senior vice provost for research at the University of Pennsylvania, concluded that “such wastefulness is unacceptable” at a time of severely constrained budgets. 9 September. A Washington Post op-ed by the AAAS CEO and U.S. Representative Jim Cooper (D-Tennessee) said that it’s time for Americans to get serious about basic science and stop mocking research projects with unusual titles. 21 March. The association also expressed concern over proposed Oklahoma legislation that would encourage the state’s public school teachers to question the well-established science behind evolution and global climate change. SCIENCE POLICY AND SOCIETY 20 October. Foods containing ingredients from genetically modified (GM) crops pose no greater risk than the same foods made from crops modified by conventional plant breeding techniques, the AAAS Board of Directors concluded. Legally mandating labels on GM foods could therefore “mislead and falsely alarm consumers,” the Board’s statement said. The association emphasized that it was not opposed to labeling intended to protect 5 The United States may risk falling behind in scientific discoveries as other countries increase their science funding, the authors wrote in a piece that celebrated the winners of the firstever Golden Goose Awards. The op-ed was republished by multiple other media outlets. 9 May. AAAS responded to an amendment that would eliminate funding for National Science Foundation political science research by sending letters to key House and Senate contacts, urging them to protect the integrity of the scientific enterprise. 8 June. AAAS issued a public statement in support of a proposed International Science and Technology Cooperation Act, which would establish an interagency committee, under the direction of the National Science and Technology Council, to coordinate and improve the efficiency of U.S. research efforts. 18 January. The association reaffirmed its support for the existing public access policy of the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), and announced its opposition to the Research Works Act. That legislation would prevent the NIH from requiring its grantees to make biomedical research findings freely available via the National Library of Medicine’s Web site. 18 May. In letters to U.S. House and Senate leaders, AAAS and other scientific organizations expressed “deep concern” regarding amendments that would place severe restrictions on the ability of government employees to attend conferences. Such an amendment would “inadvertently impede the free flow of scientific information and the professional development of scientists and engineers,” the letter said. 12 January. AAAS provided input to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy on public access to peer-reviewed publications resulting from federally funded research. Developing public access policies should involve engagement by stakeholders with a range of perspectives, including non-profit publishers such as AAAS. U.S. FEDERAL R&D FUNDING 17 December. AAAS sent letters to President Barack Obama and Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives John Boehner (R-Ohio), urging them to “work together to achieve a bipartisan compromise that avoids the fiscal cliff and moves the country onto solid fiscal footing without sacrificing our nation’s crucial investments in science and technology.” 7 December. The association and 126 partner groups called on the White House and congressional leaders to strike a balanced compromise on the looming fiscal cliff and avoid harming research efforts. 7 December. AAAS rallied its members and others concerned about American innovation to share video and text messages on how sweeping budget cuts could negatively impact 6 scientific progress. The “Speak Up for Science” campaign helped to illustrate the potential effects of a budget sequestration. 19 November. In a letter to The New York Times, the AAAS CEO urged researchers and citizens to oppose sweeping budget cuts that threatened U.S. research and development as part of a budget sequestration. “Hope is not enough,” he wrote. “Every scientist, and anyone else who cares about future prosperity and quality of life, must speak up for science now.” CEO and Kent Kresa, chairman emeritus of the Northrop Grumman Corporation and chairman of the Board of Trustees of the California Institute of Technology, was distributed by the McClatchy news wire and republished by a halfdozen other media outlets. 12 July. AAAS joined more than 3,000 national, state and local organizations in warning members of Congress and President Obama that automatic budget cuts would have devastating effects on research. 27 September. Governments must continue robust funding for basic research if they are to reap the economic benefits of science and technology innovation, the AAAS CEO wrote in the German newspaper Die Zeit. The piece was published in advance of his appearance at the Falling Walls Conference. 27 September. In an op-ed, AAAS warned that across-the-board budget cuts under a sequestration scenario could cripple key areas of science. The piece, co-authored by the AAAS 7 Media and Public Engagement The value of positive interaction between the scientific community and the general public cannot be underestimated. Progress toward solving some of our world’s most critical problems depends equally on the innovations of science and the ability of science experts to communicate and gain public support for their findings. AAAS, through its sophisticated yet highly accessible Annual Meeting, its extensive participation in science events for the public, and its varied public outreach programs, helps to 2012 AAAS ANNUAL MEETING Held in Vancouver, British Columbia, the 2012 AAAS Annual Meeting urged the scientific community to reach out, across national borders and diverse belief systems, to help develop and gain support for solutions to the world’s most urgent problems. AAAS President Nina Fedoroff (shown below) emphasized that scientists in developed and developing nations must collaborate to combat problems such as the threat of widespread hunger as the world’s population grows and climate change endangers the Earth’s limited supply of arable land. New ways to reach the public through traditional and online media on issues such as climate change headlined a plenary event presented by a panel of renowned science communicators. Other presentations focused on wide-ranging subjects, from carbon storage to synthetic hamburgers, to the lag in women’s participation in the science and engineering workforce and leadership positions. The Meeting’s Family Science Days brought more than 6,387 attendees who enjoyed exploring alien planets, sea creatures and rocketry at table-top laboratories, as well as meeting and talking with scientists. The 2012 meeting also drew 4,420 general delegates and 760 journalists, bringing the total attendance to 11,567 attendees. USA SCIENCE & ENGINEERING FESTIVAL AAAS provided thousands of jelly beans—and a memorable learning experience about how taste and smell interact—at the second USA Science & Engineering Festival, the nation’s largest science festival, of which AAAS is a founding partner. The giant, colorful 3-D models of a mouth, nose, ear, finger and eyeball representing the different interactive stations 8 THIS PAGE: JESSE KARRAS; OPPOSITE PAGE: JESSE KARRAS (TOP); JANEL KILEY (BOTTOM) make the world of science accessible to all. of “The Science of our Senses” exhibit, hosted by AAAS Education and Human Resources, drew excited youngsters and parents to the two-day expo event, as did the association’s popular “Meet the Scientists!” stage shows, organized by the Office of Public Programs. During the stage shows, scientists wowed an audience with dynamic presentations. Afterward, audience members spoke one-onone with the scientists and asked questions. Staying with the theme of the senses, the show featured experts researching the science of perception, encompassing topics from how babies make sense of sound to how robots sense touch. Family Science Days drew more than 6,387 attendees to the 2012 AAAS Annual Meeting in Vancouver, B.C. ART GALLERY A discussion exploring the complex problem of worldwide waste was just one example of how the AAAS Art Gallery used art as an entrée to the world of science and technology in 2012. Hosting the “Disposable Culture” exhibit, which was inspired by a special “Working with Waste” edition of the journal Science, the gallery featured five artists who are reintroducing cast-off items to our world through art. The discussion brought experts from different fields who spoke about the innovative work being done to address the issue of accumulating waste. Other 2012 exhibitions focused on the historical, scientific and global impacts of malaria, and the need to protect what lies beneath the surface of the oceans. The gallery is an outgrowth of the AAAS Art of Science and Technology Program, which was created to further public engagement with sci9 At right: Award-winning journalist Frank Sesno, director of the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University (foreground, left) moderated “Science is Not Enough,” an interactive science communication event featuring Hans Rosling (right), James Hansen and Olivia Judson. Below: The AAAS Art Gallery’s multimedia exhibit, “Malaria: Blood, Sweat and Tears,” organized in cooperation with the international nonprofit Malaria Consortium, featured the work of photojournalist Adam Nadel. COMMUNICATING SCIENCE WORKSHOPS Being able to effectively communicate science to the public, policymakers and reporters is a critical skill for scientists and engineers. AAAS organized an array of workshops and talks in 2012 for scientists at the AAAS Annual Meeting, the annual meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists, the Geological Society of America Annual Meeting, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and Virginia Commonwealth University, among others. The workshops reached more than 420 scientists. 10 The tips and tools provided by AAAS workshops seek to foster information-sharing and respect between the scientific community and the public, which is crucial to the communication of critical issues such as the environment and health. The workshops help scientists to conduct media interviews, participate in public forums, and otherwise explain scientific information in a comprehensible and engaging way. SENIOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS Students in Mary Yeates’ high-school classes in Montgomery County, Maryland, are being taught to think like junior engineers. Partly, they have AAAS volunteer Senior Scientists and Engineers (SSE) to thank—for providing Gerry Klebe, an aeronautical engineer who spends quite a bit of his time collaborating with Yeates. “We really ended up transforming the class,” Yeates said. “I’m the CEO, and he’s my senior consultant, and we have management meetings.” The professional input offered by the SSE volunteers comes at a crucial moment in science education, as updated science education standards emphasize the importance of instruction in engineering skills as well as hands-on learning and understanding processes over memorizing information. EDWARD W. LEMPINEN (TOP); CARLA SCHAFFER (BOTTOM) ence and technology by using art as a medium for the presentation of scientific themes. Science Diplomacy Worldwide Over the past few years, an important focus of AAAS international activities has been in the emerging area of science diplomacy. Such efforts demonstrate that progress in both scientific endeavor and international relations occurs when members of the global scientific community engage across borders. Even when diplomatic and political ties are strained between nations, the association’s strategy of scientific engagement helps scientists reach out to one another in the interests of their common pursuits, often with the goal of improving the lives of people around the world. TOM WANG SCIENCE & DIPLOMACY PUBLICATION LAUNCHED The freely available online publication Science & Diplomacy was developed by the AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy to promote interaction between the communities of scientific research and foreign policy. In its first year, it tackled topics ranging from the U.S. Administration’s role in preparing for a global pandemic, to the need for international science collaboration on issues involving food, water and energy. The 2012 issues of the publication showcased many high-level expert authors, who described international projects that have advanced science while accruing benefits to the countries involved. As an example, one article looked at how U.S. science associations and top universities are helping to shift the U.S.-Myanmar relationship from one of tension to socially beneficial cooperation. Two other articles examined science outreach conducted through AAAS and other organizations to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK). A third looked at using engineering diplomacy to encourage productive relationships between the United States and nations in the Middle East and the Caucasus. Referring to the need for globally oriented science-based innovation, Jordanian Princess Sumaya bint El Hassan, president of the Royal Scientific Society, wrote in the September 2012 issue of Science & Diplomacy that “only scientific ingenuity, with the support of diplomatic creativity and drive, can respond to the defining challenges of our 21st century.” AAAS staffers Norman Neureiter and Vaughan Turekian met with representatives of seven government ministries in Myanmar. 11 Above right: Former AAAS President Peter Agre (center, with cane) was joined by Mary Agre, AAAS senior advisor Norman Neureiter (second from left) and distinguished members of Iran’s scientific community during a 2012 science diplomacy visit. 12 AAAS DELEGATION VISITS NORTH KOREA GOODWILL TRIP TO MYANMAR An international delegation co-organized by AAAS made a rare, weeklong visit to the DPRK, or North Korea, to exchange information about environmental challenges related to agriculture and deforestation. “Cooperating with DPRK scientists in their reforestation projects while we learn from each other is a worthy objective,” said botanist and former AAAS President Peter Raven, who made the trip with an international group of 13 researchers in forestry, river reclamation, soils and agriculture. “Not only will it help in starting to come together for our common benefit, but it can be worthwhile both scientifically and, we hope, in relieving human suffering during the years to come.” The visit was jointly organized by AAAS and the Beijing-based Environmental Education Media Project. It was hosted by a DPRK non-governmental organization that sets up international exchanges and cooperation. The visit “exposes scientists from the DPRK to the kinds of research activity going on in other parts of the world, where they generally don’t have any contacts,” said Norman P. Neureiter, senior advisor to the AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy, who was making his third recent visit to the country. “And our people learn something about their country.” As Myanmar, also known as Burma, transitioned toward democracy, AAAS continued its science diplomacy efforts with the Southeast Asian country. Following up on the visit of a AAAS-led delegation in 2010, Chief International Officer Vaughan Turekian, director of the AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy, and Neureiter, the Center’s senior advisor, led another visit including U.S. university researchers and other U.S. scientific society representatives to the rapidly transforming country in 2012, meeting with representatives of seven government ministries, including the nation’s health minister. Specific collaborations were identified in the areas of forest research and laboratory capacity-building in the biological sciences. REACHING OUT TO CUBAN RESEARCHERS AAAS continued to explore the enormous potential of U.S.-Cuba collaboration in scientific areas ranging from malaria research, to environmental issues, to weather. Work on establishing such collaboration followed on AAAS visits to the island nation that began in 2009 and—at least partly because of the many shared concerns of the United States and its nearby neighbor—grew substantially, involving 18 independent scientists in a AAAS- LEFT AND MIDDLE: TOM WANG; RIGHT: ABOLHASSAN VAFAI Above left and middle: AAAS science diplomats discussed potential areas of research collaboration and learned about Myanmar’s current scientific capacity. organized visit that took place at the end of 2011. “Given the proximity of Cuba, when you’re talking about atmospheric or marine science, if it travels to Cuba, it travels to the Southeast coast of the United States. If it spawns off the coast of Cuba, it is caught or affected by currents that go into the United States,” said AAAS Center for Science Diplomacy Director Turekian. In March 2012, Peter Agre, former AAAS president and a Nobel laureate in chemistry, traveled to Cuba to speak at Biotechnology Havana 2012, an international event that focused on medical applications of biotech. “The recent visits showed that the Cuban mindset is really ready to reach out,” said Agre. “The Cubans are understandably proud of their science, and they see us very positively. I would anticipate if we could normalize relations and do science as a starting point, then really good things could happen.” ENGAGING IRAN A small AAAS delegation made a weeklong visit to Iran, speaking at elite universities and meeting government and science policy officials, scholars and students Despite tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear programs and Western economic sanctions on the country, the visit demonstrated the opportunity for scientists from the United States and Iran to establish a dialogue. Calling the exchange a “milestone,” Abolhassan Vafai, a professor at Sharif University of Technology, said the meetings “created a very conducive and fruitful atmosphere for establishing scientific dialogue between the two nations.” The delegation was also invited to meet briefly with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Iran’s sophisticated science sector focuses on medical and stem cell research, petroleum engineering, space exploration and nanotechnology. Many Iranian scientists have been educated in the United States or Europe. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences fosters cooperation with the Iranian Academy, with seminars and workshops held in Iran, the United States and other countries. After the delegation returned, Center for Science Diplomacy senior advisor Neureiter spoke about the trip and its value as a diplomatic effort on The Kojo Nnamdi Show on WAMU-FM in Washington, D.C. 13 Science, Policy and Society The AAAS Center of Science, Policy and Society Programs (CSPSP) engages with the world of science policy through a successful program for science and technology fellows in government and an annual high-level science policy forum known for its astute analysis and information. The center also provides scientific expertise to support human rights and to uphold the quality of scientific endeavors. CSPSP further addresses the implications of science and engineering in public policy, the law and religion. S&T POLICY FELLOWSHIPS APPROACH THE BIG 4-0 As it neared its 40th anniversary, the AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellowships program continued its dual mission of bringing scientific expertise to the world of government policy and political savvy to the science professions. Begun in 1973 with just seven science fellows, the program in 2012 welcomed 279 fellows (shown below), who will serve one or two years in congressional and executive branch positions. As the newest fellows began their program, 14 Senator Jeff Bingaman (D-New Mexico) called on them to help protect America’s contribution to science and engineering research in an era in which he said bipartisan support for it is dwindling, and as some members of Congress believe that any new investment in research needs to be paid for by cutting research elsewhere in the budget. “You’ll be well-positioned to facilitate bipartisan discussions that we need to be having on a daily basis about how we can continue to ad- BRAINS: ANN MCKEE; PHOTO OF MCKEE: BOB ROEHR; RCP Several units of AAAS, in collaboration with The Dana Foundation, organized a series of events for Congressional, public and legal audiences on the implications of advances in neuroscience. The series encompassed poverty’s impacts on the brain, for instance, and what science has told us so far about Alzheimer’s disease, early-onset dementia, brain injuries and mental illness. At one briefing, Martha Farah of the University of Pennsylvania (right, bottom) said children growing up in impoverished conditions with limited cognitive stimulation and high levels of stress may be “more likely to grow up with compromised physical and mental health and lowered academic achievement.” At another event, speakers including Ann McKee of the Boston University School of Medicine (right, middle) explained why high-school athletes risk chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a neurodegeneration that can result from multiple mild concussions. U.S. Representative Chaka Fattah (D-Pennsylvania), a champion for neuroscience (right, top), also took part in the briefing. vance science and engineering innovation in the national interest,” Bingaman told the fellows. Fellows work on such pressing issues as federal policy for adaptation to climate change. More than 50 percent of them continue in government after their fellowships end, and over the years, many have ended up in high-impact positions in the White House, Congress, the State Department, federal agencies, research universities and non-governmental organizations. “One of the exciting things about the program,” said Fellowships Director Cynthia Robinson,” is that [the fellows] have taken the experience they’ve had in Washington, D.C. … to engage in the work that they’ve done throughout the rest of their careers.” peer review of research grant proposals and evaluation of ongoing programs. Identifying, recruiting and managing the experts needed to assist clients in their science and technology projects remains a main focus for AAAS. Among RCP’s many 2012 projects was an independent review of Phase I of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF) Marine Microbiology Initiative, a ten-year, $145 million effort to answer fundamental questions about the diversity of marine microorganisms Members of the AAAS External Advisory Committee and AAAS staff for the Marine Microbiology Initiative of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation include (left to right): Robert Gagosian, Claire Fraser-Liggett, Edward Derrick, Rieko Yajima, Gary Borisy, Margaret Leinen and Paul Snelgrove. RESEARCH COMPETITIVENESS PROGRAM The AAAS Research Competitiveness Program (RCP) provides expertise to organizations engaged in science and technology research. In 2012, RCP undertook 34 projects throughout the United States and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, assisting universities, state-based research collaborations, foundations and state and federal agencies with such processes as 15 reiterated President Barack Obama’s commitment to scientific innovation as a driver of economic productivity, asserting that especially in a time of economic struggle, it is crucial to invest in areas such as advanced manufacturing, “big data” computing and science education. In another presentation, U.S. Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas) promised Congressional support for R&D but warned that the scientific community must “be prepared to negotiate and compromise.” More than 400 government and business leaders, researchers, educators and journalists attended the 2012 Forum. Above: The pervasive use of artificial lighting has been linked to health problems, while also hindering astronomers as they seek to study the stars, speakers said at a 2012 screening of the film, The City Dark: A Search for Night on a Planet that Never Sleeps. The event was co-sponsored by the AAAS Dialogue on Science, Ethics and Religion and the American Astronomical Society. Below: Physicist S. James Gates, Jr. of the University of Maryland-College Park, addressed the 2012 AAAS Forum on Science and Technology Policy. 16 and their role in ocean health. The review involved approximately 20 external consultants, multiple stakeholder meetings, data collection and quantitative and qualitative methodologies. Findings and recommendations were delivered to the GBMF Board in October 2012. FORUM ON S&T POLICY At the 2012 AAAS Forum on Science and Technology Policy, an annual event designed to offer the latest in-depth analysis and information on science policy, science and government leaders presented topics ranging from new insights on voter psychology, to training science and technology students to be innovators, to strategies for keeping the U.S. scientific enterprise vital in a time of critically threatened budgets. Speaker John P. Holdren, the White House science and technology advisor and director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, In 2012, high-resolution satellite images, analyzed by AAAS, offered new insights into the Syrian conflict, revealing apparent evidence of heavily armored vehicles and damage to buildings in civilian neighborhoods. The images “largely corroborate on-the-ground reports of heavy-artillery assaults by the Syrian army moving through neighborhoods,” said Susan Wolfinbarger, director of the Geospatial and Human Rights Project at AAAS, a program funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Oak Foundation and the Open Society Institute. Satellite images taken of Western Ethiopia confirmed that farmers there had been removed from their land and relocated, possibly to make way for large-scale industrial farms. “Using satellite imagery, we came up with the same result as people on the ground,” said Wolfinbarger, referring to a report prepared by Human Rights Watch. Also in 2012, the AAAS Science and Human Rights Coalition held a meeting focused on climate and environmental issues, highlighting that preventing, mitigating and adapting to the challenges of climate change will require important input from indigenous peoples. Rebecca Tsosie, director of the Indian Legal Program at Arizona State University, spoke of the “scientific and ethical component to indigenous knowledge—it tells native people what is the right thing to do. It tells us what effective management is and what the consequences are of destructive or harmful management. That aspect of sacred knowledge cannot be left out of the discussion.” AAAS/KAT ZAMBON SCIENCE IN SUPPORT OF HUMAN RIGHTS AAAS MemberCentral MemberCentral reached out to the AAAS member community and the public with a revamped Web site offering interesting and inspiring podcasts, live chats and webinars on science-related topics. MemberCentral also held a member event in London that was the first of an international series. To visit MemberCentral, go to membercentral.aaas.org. REDESIGN: MemberCentral The MemberCentral Web site got a new look and feel in 2012, with a redesign that made the site easier to use and more accessible to the public. The redesigned site upholds the AAAS mission of engaging the public around scientific issues by highlighting the work that AAAS members do in the laboratory, in the field and in the classroom and community. New blogs and long-form articles appeared on the site in 2012, and the Cutting Edge video series featuring AAAS members giving short lectures grew to include the topics of biofuels and energy from waves, wind and the sun. The site also hosted live chats with the AAAS R&D Policy Analysis group and the AAAS Science & Technology Policy Fellows. The site’s new series of webinars included “Hollywood and Science: Bringing accurate science to TV and film” and “Education Renovation: Overhauling undergraduate STEM programs.” Traffic to the redesigned Web site increased by more than 50 percent over the previous year. climate change. The event, which included a member reception, is providing the model for a series of similar events to be produced globally in 2013. Turn to page 30 for information on Science Careers, the association’s comprehensive online site for science job seekers and employers. See www.sciencecareers.org. AAAS MEMBER EVENT IN LONDON AAAS members at a special event at the Royal Society in London enjoyed a lecture by Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom in one of her final public appearances before she died in June 2012. Ostrom, who won her Nobel Prize for groundbreaking research demonstrating that ordinary people can create rules and institutions to allow sustainable and equitable management of shared resources, spoke about 17 U.S. Government Relations AAAS reaches out to policymakers to reinforce the awareness that science and technology can drive our economy and improve our quality of life. By making objective scientific expertise available to the federal government, the AAAS Office of Government Relations helps to support evidence-based policy decisions and keep citizens informed about where their elected officials stand on pressing issues related to science and technology. GOLDEN GOOSE AWARDS PROMOTE BASIC SCIENCE AAAS helped launch an award program designed to celebrate the enormous human and economic benefits attributable to basic scientific research. The Golden Goose Awards—a collaboration with U.S. lawmakers from both parties and science, business and education leaders—honor federally funded researchers, especially those whose work may have initially sounded odd but resulted in extremely valuable discoveries to benefit society. The awards are a kind of retort to lawmakers such as the late Senator William Proxmire (D-Wisconsin), who mocked certain research projects as wasteful spending. AAAS and the coalition supporting the awards announced the winners in September 2012, publicizing scientists’ accomplishments and struggles in a Washington Post op-ed that also appeared in other media outlets. The winners included Charles H. Townes, who was reportedly warned not to waste resources on the research he undertook to help develop laser technology; Osamu Shimomura, Martin Chalfie and Roger Y. Tsien, whose research on jellyfish nervous systems unexpectedly led to advances in cancer diagnosis and treatment, progress with brain diseases, and improved detection of poisons in drinking water; and Eugene White, Rodney White, Della Roy and the late Jon Weber, who developed materials 18 used in bone grafts and prosthetic eyes based on coral’s microstructure. SPEAKING UP FOR U.S. R&D Pointing to such transformational research as the Human Genome Project, the AAAS Office of Government Relations worked throughout 2012 to build awareness of the importance of federally funded scientific research and the crippling effects on innovation and economic growth of a budget sequestration that would make automatic cuts to such programs. Government Relations staff organized Capitol Hill briefings—drawing on analyses of the AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program and compelling evidence from other AAAS units—to underscore the enormous economic and human benefits that federal investment in research can yield, such as the Google search engine and GPS technology. The briefings pointed out how cuts to the federal research budget, threatened to be the largest in about 40 years, could hobble future prosperity. Expert panelists at one of the briefings said that many new technologies are rooted in disparate fields and are often being developed by universities and smaller start-up companies, rather than large corporations. Both trends, the panelists said, suggest an increasingly important role for federally funded research and development because federal programs already support significant cross-disciplinary work at public laboratories and universities. AAAS also hosted its annual Hill briefing presenting its analysis of the presidential budget request for research and development. “Now more than ever,” said U.S. Representative Judy Biggert (R-Illinois), who spoke at the event, “the advocacy message for strong basic research investments must be heard loud and clear across the Capitol campus if we want to remain a global leader in innovation.” AAAS also offered a Web site with a huge range of resources pertaining to the threatened sequestration and participated in an online campaign to get AAAS members and others in the scientific community to speak out about how sequestration cuts could harm their research. “We want to ensure that the scientific community is heard on this critical issue,” said Joanne Carney, AAAS Office of Government Relations director. COMMUNICATING ABOUT CLIMATE, ENERGY, FOOD AND WATER The second annual Climate Science Day, held in February 2012, brought about 30 scientists to Washington, D.C., to build relationships with members of Congress and provide them with access to the best possible climate science information. “Part of being a good scientist is helping policymakers do their job well by being an objective resource and providing scientific information that they then use in policy decisions,” said Carney, of the AAAS Office of Government Relations, which co-sponsors the effort along with a dozen other scientific professional societies and research organizations. The scientists, who were coached in a training session, didn’t press for particular policies or funding with the lawmakers, but worked to build bridges. “We were not there to debate whether global warming was occurring,” said Steven Cavallo, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Oklahoma, who met with the all-Republican and strongly conservative Oklahoma congressional delegation. “We were just there to open up the discussion, establish a relationship with them.” Climate was also a key theme during the Global Challenges fall lecture series, coorganized by AAAS. Featured topics in the Biometeorologist Hongyan Luo of the National Ecological Observatory Network in Boulder, Colorado, met with U.S. Senator Michael Bennet (D-Colorado) as part of Climate Science Day, an effort to provide policymakers with highquality climate science information. series included the energy-water-food nexus and the effect of climate change on the Arctic. During the Arctic panel, speakers noted that accelerating climate change reduces the Arctic region’s summer ice and uncovers natural resources. At the same time, indigenous populations are threatened and carbon held in Arctic soils is released, compounding the effects of global greenhouse gas emissions. Worldwide climate patterns may be slowed such that extreme conditions related to droughts and floods may last longer. SCIENCE AND THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION Policymakers’ positions on science- and technology-related issues have become increasingly important in an era of budget-cutting as U.S. science education struggles, climate change and energy needs present enormous challenges, medical research is on the threshold of transformative discoveries, and the national economy requires innovative technologies to spur growth. How science and technology are viewed at the highest levels could determine the shape of our futures. AAAS developed a Web site to continuously track the 2012 presidential candidates’ positions on science and technology issues. The association also joined other leading U.S. science and engineering organizations in preparing a list of science questions that were answered by the candidates. 19 Science, Technology and Security Policy A key role of the AAAS Center for Science, Technology and Security Policy (CSTSP) is bringing science and technology expertise to the analysis of global security issues. The center’s activities include public reports and policy recommendations as well as active programs affecting a variety of communities, both domestic and international. Recent activities have been in the areas of international bioengagement, science and security dialogues with domestic and international institutions, and studies and public events on nuclear nonproliferation and space security issues. Participants at the AAAS workshop in Dubai (at right) discussed ways to promote broader cooperation between scientists working in the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan and Pakistan. 20 BIOSECURITY IN THE BMENA REGION In 2012, the Center for Science, Technology and Security Policy (CSTSP) organized the last of a series of four workshops focused on safety and security in bioscience research in countries from the broader Middle East and North Africa (BMENA). Thirteen countries from the region participated in the 2012 workshop, which took place in Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates. The series was funded by the U.S. Department of State, with part of the grant money going toward bilateral cooperation efforts between the United States and participating BMENA countries. The State Department grants catalyzed new scientific collaborations between scientists from BMENA countries and the United States on such projects as nanobiotechnology, wildlife conservation and infectious disease surveillance and genomic technology. Several of these collaborative projects have secured further support to expand. The meetings, which were intended to encourage broader cooperation between American scientists and researchers working in the BMENA region, brought out ongoing challenges being experienced by young researchers there, including a lack of mentorship, scant opportunities to work with regional colleagues, and in some cases, funding and equipment shortages. AAAS, FBI COLLABORATE ON BIOSECURITY AAAS co-organized meetings in 2012 with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Association of American Universities, and the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities to bring together researchers, policymakers and security experts to address the challenges faced in supporting biological research while minimizing security risks. The first meeting established a dialogue between universities and the FBI, providing opportunities for academic scientists and research administrators to work with the security community to develop recommendations to handle such risks as misuse of biological research, theft of biological agents and accidental exposure. The second meeting, which used the H5N1 avian influenza research published by Science as a case study (see page 24), allowed the scientific and security communities to explore the best ways to oversee and communicate “dual-use” research, which has beneficial scientific value but may pose a public threat. The information shared at the meeting is being used to inform national-level policy discussions and proposed regulations regarding institutional oversight of dual-use life sciences research. OPPOSITE: OLIVER JACKSON PHOTOGRAPHY; THIS PAGE: PHOTO COURTESY OF IIASA SUPPORTING NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL Fears of terrorism, nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea, and lingering tensions between the United States and Russia continue to make arms control a global priority, said experts at a workshop on the topic that was co-organized by AAAS. Scientists and engineers play a principal role in lessening the threat of nuclear arms and helping to detect nuclear weapons tests by developing and employing highly sensitive advanced technologies. In addition, as during the height of the Cold War during the 1980s, international collaboration among scientists can build trust that supports arms control efforts. “In terms of U.S. diplomacy, some of the greatest assets we have are not only in our government agencies, but in our foundations, science associations and other areas,” E. William Colglazier, science and technology advisor to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, told the meeting at the Georgia Institute of Technology. “We’re going to have to use all of our assets if we’re going to create a more peaceful world.” PUBLIC, PRESS AND POLICY EVENTS A number of events organized by CSTSP helped to examine and present scientific and technological expertise to policymakers and the public on topics related to nuclear energy and nuclear nonproliferation. One expert panel took place before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and focused on the technical, environmental, safety, security, economic and proliferation issues surrounding the use of small, modular nuclear reactors. Another panel discussion for U.S. House of Representatives staff tackled the current state of Laser Isotope Separation technology, particularly exploring the proliferation risks associated with a technology that makes it easier to enrich uranium while avoiding safeguards. In September 2012, CSTSP organized a Capitol Hill briefing at which nuclear test monitoring Norman Neureiter (right), director of the AAAS Center for Science, Technology and Security Policy and senior advisor to the association’s Center for Science Diplomacy, received the prestigious Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art 1st Class, bestowed by Karlheinz Toechterle, Austria’s federal minister of science. The award recognized Neureiter’s contributions to the success of an international organization that addresses global challenges—the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). 21 Above: Participants at a series of AAAS-cosponsored workshops in Jordan, Kuwait, Tunisia and Dubai discussed the region’s scientific capacity, which will soon include the Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East (SESAME). Now under construction in Jordan, the particle accelerator promises to foster multidisciplinary research and build relationships across borders. experts said that the last decade has seen big improvements in the ability to detect clandestine nuclear explosions. “Technical capabilities have improved significantly in the past decade,” said physicist Richard Garwin, an IBM Fellow Emeritus and member of a National Research Council study panel that produced a March 2012 report reviewing technical issues related to the Comprehensive Nuclear-TestBan Treaty (CTBT). That report concluded there is now 90 percent confidence that the current International Monitoring System could detect an underground nuclear explosion well below 1 kiloton in most regions. The nuclear weapons that were used against Japan in World War II had yields of between 10 and 20 kilotons. The briefing and a workshop that followed helped to inform the ongoing discussion in the Senate and the Administration of President Barack Obama surrounding nuclear test monitoring and verification and the CTBT. AAAS also co-hosted a workshop on nuclear weapon safety, security and “use control” issues in 2012. SESAME Below: A range of science and security resources, including this 2012 report, can be found online at www.aaas.org/cstsp/ publications/. 22 The Science Family of Journals Breakthrough evidence of a mysterious sub-atomic particle known as the Higgs boson, new insights to help protect the public from an avian influenza outbreak, and clues to understanding drug-resistant malaria were among the research findings reported in Science, Science Translational Medicine and Science Signaling in 2012. Science headlines encompassed research advances across the biological, physical and social sciences, plus penetrating news and analysis meant to expand our knowledge of devastating diseases, emerging technologies and more. See www.sciencemag.org. Chimp Viruses Could Support Hepatitis C Vaccine Two Science Translational Medicine studies hinted that vaccines developed with chimp vectors can trigger immune protection against hepatitis C, a virus that affects the liver and is estimated to infect 170 million people globally. There are currently no vaccines to protect against the infection. (Barnes et al., and Colloca et al., 4 January, Science Translational Medicine) Pesticide Impacts on Bumblebee Colonies A pair of studies revealed the multiple ways that a widely used insecticide harms bumble- bees and honeybees, which have been rapidly declining in recent years, in part due to a phenomenon known as Colony Collapse Disorder. Both studies looked at the effects of neonicotinoid insecticides, which are among the most widely used crop pesticides in the world. (Henry et al., and Whitehorn et al., 29 March) Drug-Resistant Malaria in Southeast Asia Researchers have identified a particular region on a chromosome in Plasmodium falciparum— a major malaria parasite—that helps to explain how such parasites in Southeast Asia are developing resistance to the current genera- 23 tion of artemisinin-based drugs. (Cheeseman et al., 6 April) et al., 22 June, special issue, and 19 January and 2 February, ScienceExpress) Traces of Majorana Fermions in Nanowires Denisovans: Neandertal Relative’s Genome Sequenced Majorana fermions, elusive particles that act as their own antiparticles, were spotted inside the nanowires of an exotic superconductor device. These unique particles had never previously been sighted and may have potential for quantum computing platforms. (Mourik et al., 12 April, ScienceExpress) Researchers described the complete sequence of the Denisovan genome, shedding light on the relationships between these archaic humans, who were closely related to Neandertals, and modern humans. (Pääbo et al., 30 August ScienceExpress) ENCODE Project: Eulogy for “Junk DNA” Preparing to Combat H5N1 Five changes to a strain of the H5N1 avian influenza virus were found to make the virus transmissible between ferrets via respiratory droplets. The findings underscored the risk that a similarly transmissible virus might evolve naturally and cause a human pandemic. The work should also assist efforts to develop global influenza bio-surveillance as well as drugs and vaccines to protect against this threat. The findings were published six months after researchers voluntarily agreed to halt H5N1 research amid international discussions on guidelines for conducting such work responsibly. Science made the research freely available: www.sciencemag.org/ hottopics/biosecurity/. (Fouchier 24 A decade-long project, the Encyclopedia of DNA elements, or ENCODE, found that 80 percent of the human genome serves some biochemical purpose, debunking the notion that human DNA is loaded with useless bases. One study in Science found that many noncoding, disease-associated variants are located near regulatory DNA—an insight that might help unlock the genetic basis of complex human diseases. Another paper reported that a wide swath of the human genome is under evolutionary “constraint” and likely key to humanspecific aspects of our biology. (Maurano et al., and Ward and Kellis, 7 September) The Secrets to Sterile Rice A system of three genes seems to be responsible for hybrid sterility in rice, or the inability of many hybrid rice species to pass their genes on to the next generation. These findings suggest one way that hybrid sterility is maintained across rice species, and might suggest ways to improve this food stock. (Yang et al., 14 September) Polar Ice Sheets Losing Mass All the major regions of the polar ice sheets except one have been losing mass since 1992, according to a study that pulled together several independent measurement methods. The research overcame some limitations associated with satellite surveys. (Shepherd et al., 30 November) Early Results: GRAIL Mission to the Moon Three studies based on the Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory mission offered a detailed lunar picture, encompassing the Moon’s gravity field, and the density and characteristics of its crust, which appears to be cut by widespread sheets of cooled magma. (Zuber et al., 5 December, ScienceExpress) OTHER SCIENCE HIGHLIGHTS Powerful Special Issues: Science published 13 substantive special issues on a range of topics, from “Working with Waste” and “Computational Biology,” to “Disease Prevention” and “Black Holes.” On 5 October, for example, a special issue on “Depression” investigated the relationship between neural deficits and major depressive disorder, and why some people may be more resilient to stress and trauma than others. For a special 13 July edition, award-winning Science news correspondent Jon Cohen, working with photographers Malcolm Linton and Darrow Montgomery, visited 10 U.S. cities, which are home to an estimated 1.2 million HIV-infected people, to describe the current state of “HIV/ AIDS in America.” Breakthrough of the Year: The Higgs Boson The observation of an elusive sub-atomic particle known as the Higgs boson was heralded by Science as the most important scientific discovery of 2012. Researchers working with an atom-smasher at a particle physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland, known as CERN, on 4 July unveiled evidence of the Higgs boson, which holds the key to explaining how other elementary particles get their mass. A series of Science review articles helped to explain the technology used to observe this mysterious particle. Details were made freely available with registration: www. sciencemag.org/special/btoy2012. (Negra et al., The CMS Collaboration Team at CERN, and The ATLAS Collaboration at CERN, 21 December, Science) Also in 2012, Science continued to make its high-quality news, analysis and research accessible across many technology platforms by offering “apps” for the iPhone as well as iTouch, iPad and Android devices. From left to right: Resistance to treatment with artemisinin-based drugs is currently emerging in malaria parasites in western Thailand. This photograph shows a camp for displaced persons. Plasmodium falciparuminfected human red blood cells. The midnight sun casts a golden glow on an iceberg and its reflection in Disko Bay, Greenland. Much of Greenland’s annual mass loss occurs through calving of icebergs such as this, research suggests. Neonicotinoid insecticides can harm bees such as this buff-tailed bumblebee, scientists say. Honors we brought in: News reports by Science journalists Jennifer Couzin-Frankel and Gretchen Vogel were included in the 2012 edition of the Best American Science Writing. Couzin-Frankel’s piece on “Aging Genes” examined the debate over the role of a class of proteins called sirtuins in cellular aging. Gretchen Vogel’s piece, “Mending the Youngest Hearts,” described progress with tissue-engineered blood vessels used to repair malformed hearts in very young children. Science contributing correspondent Jon Cohen was named winner of the 2012 Victor Cohn Prize for Excellence in Medical Science Reporting. The award recognized his exemplary coverage of a broad range of biomedical topics, most notably his distinguished and persistent chronicling of the global HIV/AIDS epidemic. Yet another award was handed out to Cohen and Science journalist Martin Enserink, who 25 Science published 13 special issues in 2012 on topics ranging from disease prevention to computational biology. received the American Society for Microbiology’s 2012 Public Communications Award for their article, “False Positive.” Their in-depth piece looked at a controversial study that linked a mouse retrovirus, XMRV, to chronic fatigue syndrome. The original research was partially retracted, and later, researchers at nine different laboratories reported that they were unable to reproducibly detect XMRV or relatives of the virus in blood samples. Science news correspondent Ann Gibbons won the 2012 Anthropology in Media Award from the American Anthropological Association for a decade’s worth of stories on human origins and evolution. Susan Gillespie, the chairperson of the Awards Committee, lauded Gibbons’ “lucid accounts of advances in evolutionary anthropology.” Honors we gave out: Science’s Inquiry-Based Instruction (IBI) Prize was developed to showcase outstanding materials for teaching introductory college science courses in a way that sparks students’ natural curiosity about the world. In 2012, for instance, IBI Prize-winning essays published monthly in Science described a device developed by Rice University freshmen that could help doctors in Malawi to save the lives of gravely ill infants. Called Appropriate Design for Global Health, the device was designed to automatically shut off the 26 delivery of intravenous fluids being delivered to dehydrated infants, thus preventing overhydration. “Improving science education is an important goal for all of us at Science,” then Editor-in-Chief Bruce Alberts said. “We hope to help those innovators who have developed outstanding laboratory modules promoting student inquiry to reach a wider audience.” The 2012 Grand Prize winner of the international competition for The Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neuorobiology was Marlene Cohen of the University of Pittsburgh, who was recognized for her outstanding research contributions into the neural basis of internal mental states. Established in 2002, the $25,000 Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neurobiology is awarded annually for the most outstanding neurobiological research by a young scientist, 35 years of age or younger. Cohen’s winning essay, “When Attention Wanders” explained that when our minds wander, so too do our perceptual abilities. Improving Science Literacy To prepare today’s students for a future that is increasingly dependent on science, mathematics and technology, educators need well-designed and effective preparation, curriculum and assessments. Project 2061 is helping to meet that need through its research and development efforts funded by the National Science Foundation, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, NASA, and the U.S. Department of Education. Building on its own earlier accomplishments in standards-based science education, Project 2061’s current work integrates the teaching and learning of core science ideas, science practices and concepts that cut across disciplines as recommended in the National Research Council’s 2012 report, A Framework for K-12 Science Education. U.S. GREEN BUILDING COUNCIL BETTER BIOLOGY IN MIDDLE SCHOOL Cutting-edge research in biology, biotechnology and biomedicine is advancing quickly, with enormous potential for 21st-century innovation. Biology education, however, has mostly not kept up. New approaches are needed that incorporate scientific practices, offer students the opportunity to experience and think about a variety of real-world and relevant phenomena, and let students see how foundational principles can be applied across the sciences. Now in its third year of a research grant from the U.S. Department of Education, Project 2061 and collaborators at the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study have been working with teachers in Colorado, Maryland, Boston, and Washington, D.C., to develop and try out an innovative curriculum unit designed to prepare middle-school students for success in high-school biology. The unit takes a novel approach by focusing first on core ideas about chemical reactions and then using those ideas to explain growth and repair in living organisms. Students also work with a variety of models—from LEGO® blocks to more conventional models and equations—and learn how to use their new ideas, evidence and reasoning to develop a scientific explanation for what they observe. (See photo, next page.) Schools serving K-12 students are the fastestgrowing segment of the “green building” industry, encompassing efforts to adopt more energy- and water-saving technologies. In 2012, Project 2061 began to investigate strategies for leveraging green schools as powerful, real-world contexts to help middle-school students learn important science, mathematics and technology ideas. The effort is being funded by the National Science Foundation. 27 developing instruments that will be used to measure what students and teachers understand about the concepts being targeted in the curriculum and to monitor the quality of the curriculum itself. “CREATE AND TAKE” TESTS UNDERSTANDING EVOLUTION THROUGH MATHEMATICS Project 2061 received a grant in 2012 from the National Science Foundation to develop a curriculum to help high-school students understand core ideas about evolution and data analysis. An understanding of evolution is crucial to the study of biology, but research has shown that many students have a poor grasp of the topic and fall victim to misconceptions about natural selection and genetics. The University of Utah’s Genetic Science Learning Center, a collaborator on the project, is developing prototype lessons and interactive, multimedia, computer-based simulations. By allowing the students to collect and analyze data from certain animal populations over several virtual years, the simulations will help the students to visualize the organisms and habitats, understand sampling processes, make measurements, and see evidence of natural selection in the data. Project 2061 is 28 IMPROVING ENERGY EDUCATION In 2012, the U.S. Department of Education awarded a $1.6 million grant to Project 2061 to develop new assessments of how students build their knowledge of energy concepts from elementary school through high school. The testing tools will also identify where students are struggling so that teachers can target those areas. The project was one of only 26 funded by the Education Department in 2012 through its competitive education research grants program. “A strong foundation of knowledge about energy is essential,” said Cari F. Herrmann Abell, senior research associate for Project 2061. “Whether choosing which cars we drive or thinking about national energy policy issues, understanding basic energy concepts can help everyone make more well-informed decisions.” JO ELLEN ROSEMAN “We want students to be able to use what they learn from studying relatively simple chemical reactions to then explain more complex phenomena such as protein synthesis in animals or carbohydrate synthesis in plants,” said Project 2061 Director Jo Ellen Roseman. After two rounds of classroom pilot testing, she said that the unit has resulted in “significant learning gains” for all populations of students who have used it. Project 2061 launched a new online feature in 2012 that allows teachers to create tests targeting key ideas related to 16 science topics, from evolution and natural selection, to the mechanics of earthquakes. The new feature builds on the capabilities of the AAAS Science Assessment Web site developed by Project 2061 to provide educators with access to more than 700 carefully developed science test questions. It allows teachers to assess what their students are learning and where they may have gaps. “Getting reliable and timely information about what students know or don’t know means that teachers can adjust their instruction to respond quickly to their students’ needs,” said George DeBoer, deputy director of Project 2061. By April 2012, a year after its initial launch, the Project 2061 Web site had logged 12,000 registered users and nearly 70,000 visitors. Education, Outreach and Careers AAAS brings exciting opportunities to science students and professionals in the science and technology community. Helping build bridges to careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics bolsters the STEM work force and all that it can bring to our lives. At a time when STEM education is struggling to produce enough graduates to keep the United States’ science and technology sectors competitive, AAAS reaches out through a variety of programs to make sure talent and interest in scientific endeavors are nurtured. COLELLADIGITAL.COM EMERGING RESEARCHERS IN STEM In February 2012, the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology made an announcement: For the United States to remain competitive in the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, the country must increase its number of STEM graduates by 1 million over the next decade, which is a 34 percent rise over the current number of students who graduate in those fields. Emphasizing that goal, the 2012 Emerging Researchers National Conference—sponsored by AAAS Education and Human Resources and the National Science Foundation Division of Human Resource Development—supported a diverse group of STEM students and helped them along their path to scientific careers. The conference drew 885 attendees, including 421 undergrad student presenters, 89 grad student presenters and 56 exhibitors. The students shared their scientific research projects, met with peers from all over the country, got feedback from mentors, and attended workshops on applying to graduate school, writing abstracts, and exploring careers beyond academia. and prepares STEM undergraduates and professionals to become K-12 science and mathematics teachers. Having participated in the program for five years, AAAS helped organize the scholarship program conference in May 2012. More than 600 program participants, from some 225 colleges and universities, attended. Just as national science testing showed stagnating scores, with just a third of eighth-graders at or above the proficient level for their grade, a report released by AAAS at the conference described the innovative strategies used by the scholarship program to attract and prepare teachers to address STEM learning challenges. Chantal Gonzalez of San Diego State University received a first place for her poster presentation at the 2012 Emerging Researchers National Conference. She was one of 885 participants in the event, supported by AAAS and the National Science Foundation. NOYCE SCHOLARS CONFERENCE The National Science Foundation’s Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship program recruits 29 to current events and news, the site—with its daily science news content, online science education community and improved resource tools—won perfect scores for content and feature functionality. “The updated site and dynamic resources will keep students and teachers engaged, informed and coming back,” said Suzanne Thurston, AAAS project director. GSK’s SCIENCE IN THE SUMMER Below: Science NetLinks from AAAS provides K-12 teachers, students and families with resources for teaching and learning science. See http://sciencenetlinks.com/. 30 The program finds and develops the teachers by offering them a chance to work in afterschool programs, mentoring them with the help of local educators, and providing them with funding for research projects of their own. Improving STEM learning requires, among other things, “a terrific teacher for every student,” said Shirley Malcom, director of AAAS Education and Human Resources. SCIENCE NETLINKS Science NetLinks, a Web site produced by AAAS, won three Interactive Media Awards in 2012, earning the Best in Class designation in the education, nonprofit and science/technology categories. The site, which is part of Thinkfinity, a partnership between the Verizon Foundation and ten education organizations including AAAS, offers free resources, interactive features, podcasts and hands-on activities for K-12 teachers, students and families. After a redesign based on user surveys that tied the site’s science content more closely SCIENCE CAREERS Published by AAAS, Science Careers offers key resources, news and information to help advance careers in science and technology. Science Careers Jobs offers thousands of industry, academic and government jobs, job e-mail alerts, and a resume/CV database. The Careers Forum offers the opportunity to connect with and receive advice from peers and advisors from industry and academia. See www. sciencecareers.org. In 2012, Science Careers Business published Career Trends: Industry or Academia, a new booklet featuring articles on advancing in academia, preparing for a career in pharmaceutical research, and the benefits of biotechnology training programs. AAAS and Science Careers, in partnership with the Burroughs Wellcome Fund, the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, the University of California, San Francisco, and the Medical College of Wisconsin, launched MyIDP, a Web-based tool created to help graduate students and postdocs in the sciences define and pursue their career goals. CARLA SCHAFFER Above: Children who took part in GlaxoSmithKline’s 2012 Science in the Summer program, administered by AAAS in the greater Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, Maryland area, took part in fun, hands-on chemistry activities. Children at a community center in Washington, D.C., may have been apprehensive about having science class in July, but after just one day of Science in the Summer, they were asking when they would get more hands-on, inquirybased experiences. A GlaxoSmithKline program administered by AAAS, Science in the Summer was provided to elementary-school students at 19 libraries and community centers in 2012. All were located in the Washington, D.C., and Baltimore areas. AAAS oversees the curriculum, recruits and trains teachers, makes site visits and provides materials to each host site. “The reaction from girls and boys, parents and staff at the host sites has been very positive,” said Program Manager Betty Calinger. AAAS Divisions AAAS engages its members through four geographic divisions and 24 sections reflecting a diverse range of scientific disciplines. In 2012, the four AAAS Divisions organized events on topics such as threats to health and way of life in the Arctic, lessons in sustainable design applied to science, research in criminal COURTESY ABEL BAERGA-ORTIZ psychology and the struggling ecosystems of prairies. ARCTIC DIVISION: CIRCUMPOLAR HEALTH CARIBBEAN DIVISION: SUSTAINABLE DESIGN The AAAS Arctic Division held its 2012 annual meeting with the 15th triennial International Congress on Circumpolar Health. Participants from nine Arctic nations—including scientists, doctors, policymakers, indigenous leaders, educators and students—gathered to discuss health issues such as nutrition, obesity, food security, climate change impacts on human health, suicide and public engagement in research. The AAAS Arctic Division has long been influential in health matters, but this was the first time the division’s meeting was held jointly with the International Congress on Circumpolar Health. The health of people living in the Far North is increasingly threatened by environmental damage and by toxic substances that ride air currents from lands to the south, speakers reported. Climate change is disrupting wildlife migration patterns and the water cycle. Processed foods and urban life have caused a rise in “civilization diseases,” and obesity, diabetes, suicide and substance abuse are surging. The traditional lifestyle of many indigenous people is in danger of vanishing. There is a “growing recognition of the need to have … diverse partnerships to study and work on circumpolar health,” said Rhonda M. Johnson, chair of the Department of Health Sciences and a professor of public health at the University of Alaska Anchorage. “An important part of this congress is the opportunity for networking across the northern regions.” The AAAS Caribbean Division focused a September 2012 conference on sustainable design and the lessons that scientists can learn from architects and other designers. “The principles of sustainability in the design of buildings, structures, molecules and even new life forms will require an ongoing conversation between designers, scientists and engineers,” said Caribbean Division President Abel Baerga-Ortiz. “With this dialogue in mind, we will seek to explore the application of concepts borrowed from sustainable design in science and engineering.” Puerto Rican architect Fernando Abruña, Puerto Rican architect and environmental advocate Fernando Abruña, a professor at the University of Puerto Rico, delivered a keynote address on science and sustainable design during the AAAS Caribbean Division’s 2012 annual meeting. 31 Above right: Laurence C. Smith of the University of California-Los Angeles discussed the forces shaping Earth’s northern latitudes when the AAAS SWARM Division convened in Tulsa, Oklahoma. sometimes called the father of green architecture in Puerto Rico, gave the keynote address. Because of the conservation, recycling and energy efficiency made possible by his designs, the Environmental Protection Agency named him in 2012 to its National Advisory Council for Environmental Policy and Technology. At least one panel discussion at the conference took another approach to the topic, with scientists from the fields of zoology, ecology, chemistry and nanotechnology discussing how their research is influenced by concepts of shape, symmetry and aesthetics. PACIFIC DIVISION: CLIMATE, SPACE SCIENCE AND MORE Topics ranging from the effect of climate change on sagebrush-steppe ecosystems to the forensic psychology of female death-penalty cases headlined the AAAS Pacific Division’s 2012 annual meeting. Held in Boise, Idaho, in conjunction with the Northwest Regional Meeting of the American Chemical Society, the event offered many opportunities for the public to have the experience of participating “in a major science meeting,” said Pacific Division President Robert Chianese. Students and scholars from the Pacific region made presentations at the meeting, and field trips took participants to the Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area and the Bruneau Dunes and Observatory. 32 SOUTHWEST/ROCKY MOUNTAINS: FROM ECOLOGY TO MEDICINE The lesser prairie chicken and the prairie mole cricket are just two of the species whose habitat has been destroyed by an invasion of junipers taking over the Great Plains from Texas to South Dakota. “Juniper invasion has emerged as a dominant threat to some of the most threatened ecosystems of North America,” said Oklahoma State University Professor Samuel Fuhlendorf, who spoke at the 2012 AAAS Southwestern and Rocky Mountains Division meeting. Introduced to the prairie as windbreaks, the junipers are just one example of how a natural ecosystem that endured for millennia has been thwarted, experts said at the meeting, which also offered sessions on stem cell research and new uses for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), as well as a symposium on increasing regional bioscience research capacity through outreach, cooperation and internships. “This is an important conference regionally, and it’s important for students and young researchers,” said David Nash, executive director of the Southwestern and Rocky Mountains Division, “so there’s a real value in mixing local, national and international issues.” PHOTO COURTESY OF JOHN WEIR; LAURENCE C. SMITH Above left: Samuel Fuhlendorf of Oklahoma State University is shown initiating a controlled burn on a mixed prairie landscape to limit woody plant invasion and promote a healthy interaction between fire and grazing. Special Gifts and Projects 2012 Philanthropic support allows us to speak up on behalf of science, engineering and society as opportunities and challenges arise. Our members and donors contributed more than $1 million in Flexible Action Funds—AAAS’s only source of flexible, unrestricted funding—in 2012. PHOTO COURTESY OF PETER ECKEL LIFELONG AAAS MEMBER JOINS 1848 SOCIETY Peter Eckel, a long-time supporter of AAAS now celebrating his 25th year of membership, chose in 2012 to identify the association as the recipient of a charitable bequest. The gift will establish an initiative—to be named for Mr. Eckel, as well as his parents, Earl E. and Helen C. Eckel—that will advance public engagement with and understanding of science. Though public attitudes toward science and technology remain generally favorable, tensions have increasingly emerged at the intersection of science and human values, economics and politics, encompassing issues such as global climate change, stem cell research and evolution. Moving forward, it will be critical to ensure that the benefits of science are widely understood, Mr. Eckel explained. His bequest will advance AAAS efforts to promote a more open and comprehensive dialogue among scientists, engineers and non-scientists. “I feel great knowing that I will leave behind a legacy that will be channeled through the AAAS. It means a lot to me to be able to honor my late parents, too,” Mr. Eckel said. A business owner rather than a scientist or engineer, Mr. Eckel has been a supporter of science for decades, having served as a volunteer at COSI-Toledo (since renamed Imagination Station), a hands-on science museum near his home in Maumee, Ohio. “My contributions to science have, by necessity, been limited to the monetary and volunteer spheres,” he said. “The creation of this endowment will allow me to make a final contribution to science.” Mr. Eckel and other members of the 1848 Society demonstrate strong vision and a deep commitment to AAAS by making philanthropic gifts through their wills or other charitable plans. To learn about the 1848 Society, visit www.aaas.org/aboutaaas/giving/recognition/1848/. “I feel great knowing that I will leave behind a legacy that will be channeled through the AAAS. It means a lot to me to be able to honor my late parents, too.” –PETER ECKEL Long-time AAAS member Peter W. Eckel 33 SOME SPECIAL FUNDS AT AAAS By establishing special funds, donors ensure long-term support for a wide range of initiatives to advance science and serve society. Such funds should be established in consultation with the Development Office. For more information, please contact us at (202) 326-6636. The AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Awards Endowment supports an effort, dating to 1945, to honor excellence in science journalism. The Charles Valentine Riley Memorial Endowment supports an annual lecture to promote a broader and more complete understanding of agriculture as the most basic human endeavor and to enhance agriculture through increased scientific knowledge. The Early-Career Award for Public Engagement Fund supports an annual prize recognizing early-career scientists and engineers who have demonstrated excellence in their contributions to public engagement with science activities. The Fund for Honesty in Scientific Research supports efforts to promote scientific integrity. The John P. McGovern Endowment funds an annual lecture by a prominent behavioral scientist. 34 The Joshua E. Neimark Memorial Travel Assistance Endowment provides travel awards for young investigators to attend the AAAS Annual Meeting. The Martin L. and Rose Wachtel Memorial Fund underwrites an annual award that recognizes outstanding work by an early-career investigator in the field of cancer research. The Revelle Fund supports a Science & Technology Policy Fellow, identified by AAAS, in the area of domestic or international environmental issues. The William T. Golden Endowment Fund for Program Innovation inspires new program ideas by funding activities not normally supported by the AAAS general budget. Join the Sustainers Program The Sustainers Program was launched in 2012 to recognize donors who commit to recurring, monthly gifts to our Flexible Action Fund, providing AAAS with the flexibility to be innovative and respond rapidly to critical challenges as they arise. Contact the Development Office for more information about joining the Sustainers Program. Help AAAS speak up for science. Contact the Development Office at (202) 326-6636 or [email protected], or give online at www. aaas.org/makeagift. ATLANTIC PHOTOGRAPHY 2012 AAAS Kavli Science Journalism Award winers included (left to right): Lynda Mapes, Sheraz Sadiq, Alex Chadwick, Bari Scott, Michelle Nijhuis, Carl Zimmer, Sarah Holt and Laurie Donnelly. (See page 37 for the complete list of winners.) AAAS Awards and Prizes The AAAS awards celebrate the achievements of extraordinary scientists, engineers, educators and journalists. We congratulate each of our distinguished winners. Anita K. Jones AAAS PHILIP HAUGE ABELSON PRIZE The Philip Hauge Abelson Prize, established in 1985, is awarded either to a public servant, in recognition of sustained exceptional contributions to advancing science, or to a scientist whose career has been distinguished both for scientific achievement and for other notable services to the scientific community. Anita K. Jones was selected on the basis of her outstanding scientific-technical achievements; her contributions as a mentor, inspiration, and role model for other scientists and engineers; and her lifetime of exemplary public service to government, professional institutions, academia, and industry. Nancy B. Jackson AAAS AWARD FOR SCIENCE DIPLOMACY Established in 2012, the AAAS Award for Science Diplomacy recognizes an individual or a limited number of individuals working together in the scientific and engineering or foreign affairs communities making an outstanding contribution to furthering science diplomacy. Nancy B. Jackson was recognized for her ongoing commitment to international science cooperation to prevent the theft and diversion of chemicals through the establishment of the Chemical Security Engagement Program, and for developing, nurturing, and advancing careers of scientists worldwide, with a special emphasis on women scientists in the Middle East and Southeast Asia. Kiyoshi Kurokawa AAAS AWARD FOR SCIENTIFIC FREEDOM AND RESPONSIBILITY The AAAS Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility, established in 1980, honors scientists, engineers, and their organizations whose exemplary actions, sometimes taken at significant personal cost, have served to foster scientific freedom and responsibility. Kiyoshi Kurokawa was honored for his contribution to society by his remarkable stewardship of an independent investigation into the causes of the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe. Baratunde Cola AAAS EARLY CAREER AWARD FOR PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT WITH SCIENCE The AAAS Early Career Award for Public Engagement with Science, established in 2010 through the generosity of several AAAS donors, recognizes early-career scientists and engineers who demonstrate excellence in their contribution to public engagement with science activities. Baratunde Cola was honored for his commitment to an exceptional research career while sharing his passion for science by engaging in creative outreach with teachers and students in underrepresented communities. 35 Richard B. Alley Alice M. Agogino AAAS AWARD FOR PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT WITH SCIENCE AAAS MENTOR AWARD FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT The AAAS Award for Public Engagement with Science, formerly the Award for Public Understanding of Science and Technology, was established in 1987 and recognizes working scientists and engineers who make outstanding contributions to the “popularization of science.” Richard B. Alley was recognized for his decades-long, broadbased and exceptionally effective efforts communicating the best of climate science to excite the interest of the general public and policymakers. Cato Thomas Laurencin AAAS MENTOR AWARD The AAAS Mentor Award, established in 1996, honors AAAS members who have mentored significant numbers of students from underrepresented groups or who have changed the climate of a department, college, or institution to significantly increase the diversity of students pursuing and completing doctoral studies in the sciences. This award is directed toward individuals in the early- or mid-career stage who have mentored students for less than 25 years. Cato Thomas Laurencin was recognized for his transformative impact and scientific contributions toward mentoring students in the field of biomedical engineering. 36 The AAAS Mentor Award for Lifetime Achievement, established in 1991, honors AAAS members who have mentored significant numbers of students from underrepresented groups or who have changed the climate of a department, college, institution or field to significantly increase the diversity of students pursuing and completing doctoral studies in the sciences. This award is directed toward individuals with more than 25 years of success in mentoring students. Alice M. Agogino was honored for her efforts to significantly increase the number of women and African- and Hispanic-American doctorates in engineering. AAAS NEWCOMB CLEVELAND PRIZE Supported by The Fodor Family Trust The Association’s oldest award, the AAAS Newcomb Cleveland Prize was established in 1923 with funds donated by Newcomb Cleveland of New York City. Now supported by The Fodor Family Trust, the Prize acknowledges an outstanding paper published in the Articles, Research Articles, or Reports sections of Science. Vincent Mourik, Kun Zuo, Sergey M. Frolov, Sébastien R. Plissard, Erik P. A. M. Bakkers, and Leo P. Kouwenhoven were recognized for the report “Signatures of Majorana Fermions in Hybrid Superconductor-Semiconductor Nanowire Devices” published in Science 25 May 2012, pp. 1003-1007. AAAS/SUBARU SB&F PRIZES FOR EXCELLENCE IN SCIENCE BOOKS The AAAS/Subaru SB&F Prizes for Excellence in Science Books, established in 2005, celebrate outstanding science writing and illustration for children and young adults. CHILDREN’S SCIENCE PICTURE BOOK Ocean Sunlight: How Tiny Plants Feed the Seas Molly Bang and Penny Chisholm (Blue Sky Press) MIDDLE GRADES SCIENCE BOOK Temple Grandin: How the Girl Who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World Sy Montgomery (Houghton Mifflin) YOUNG ADULT SCIENCE BOOK The Odyssey of KP2: An Orphan Seal, a Marine Biologist, and the Fight to Save a Species Terrie M. Williams (Penguin Press) HANDS-ON SCIENCE BOOK Citizen Scientists: Be a Part of Scientific Discovery From Your Own Backyard Loree Griffin Burns (Henry Holt) AAAS KAVLI SCIENCE JOURNALISM AWARDS These awards, endowed by Fred Kavli and The Kavli Foundation, recognize excellence in reporting for a general audience and honor individual reporters for their coverage of the sciences, engineering and mathematics. LARGE NEWSPAPER—CIRCULATION OF 100,000 OR MORE Carl Zimmer The New York Times MAGAZINE Michelle Nijhuis Smithsonian magazine TELEVISION SPOT NEWS/FEATURE REPORTING (20 MINUTES OR LESS) Sheraz Sadiq KQED QUEST (San Francisco) TELEVISION IN-DEPTH REPORTING (MORE THAN 20 MINUTES) Sarah Holt and Laurie Donnelly WGBH/NOVA RADIO Bari Scott, Alex Chadwick, Mary Beth Kirchner, Robert Rand, Robin Wise SoundVision Productions for American Public Media ONLINE Lynda V. Mapes, Steve Ringman, Genevieve Alvarez The Seattle Times CHILDREN’S SCIENCE NEWS Kirsten Weir Current Health Kids 37 AAAS Fellows AAAS Fellows are elected annually by the AAAS Council for meritorious efforts to advance science or its applications. Fellows have made significant contributions in areas such as research, teaching, technology, services to professional societies, and the communication of science to the public. The following members, presented by Section affiliation, were elected Fellows in fall 2012. AAAS congratulates them and thanks them for their services to science and technology. AGRICULTURE, FOOD & RENEWABLE RESOURCES James R. Alfano Nilsa A. Bosque-Pérez Richard M. Bostock Edward S. Buckler Yves Carrière Mary Erin Delany Kellye A. Eversole Mark Lawrence Failla John James Finer Avtar Krishan Handa Maria J. Harrison James W. Jones Karen E. Koch Weiping Liu Cathie Martin William B. McGill Ravi Naidu Kerry O’Donnell Melvin J. Oliver N. LeRoy Poff Sanjaya Rajaram Matthew Brian Thomas Michael Karl Udvardi Jonathan D. Walton Guoyao Wu Kun Yan Zhu ANTHROPOLOGY Arlen Frank Chase Mark V. Flinn Mary Anne Katzenberg Joanna E. Lambert Patricia Lambert Lisa J. Lucero Lorena Madrigal Herbert D.G. Maschner Elizabeth Jean Reitz 38 Katerina Semendeferi Jan F. Simek Peter Stuart Ungar ASTRONOMY Lynn R. Cominsky Eli Dwek Bruce G. Elmegreen Neal J. Evans II Neil Gehrels Sun Kwok Angela V. Olinto Richard William Pogge Nathan A. Schwadron Keivan Guadalupe Stassun Michiel van der Klis G. Mark Voit Arthur M. Wolfe ATMOSPHERIC AND HYDROSPHERIC SCIENCES Thomas Stephen Bianchi Anny Cazenave Harindra Joseph Shermal Fernando Susan Joy Hassol Brian John Hoskins Robert A. Houze, Jr. Andrew John Weaver BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES Soman Ninan Abraham Anurag Agrawal Paul G. Ahlquist Susan C. Alberts Stephen Alexander Edith Bach Allen Christopher I. Amos Gynheung An Norman Arnheim Alexander V. Badyaev Diane L. Barber James C.A. Bardwell Susan Schloemer Bell Shelley L. Berger Albert H. Beth James D. Bever John M. Blair Bruce Blumberg Susan Bonner-Weir Bruce A. Bowerman Susan H. Brawley Charles Brenner Michael R. Brent Edmund D. Brodie III Yves V. Brun Thomas P. Brutnell Breck Edward Byers Rafael Daniel CameriniOtero Jane M. Carlton Nicholas C. Carpita Daniel D. Carson Charles Williams Carter, Jr. Patrick J. Casey Susan E. Celniker Roger Chalkley Jianzhu Chen Zhijian ‘James’ Chen Chi-Hing Christina Cheng Xiaodong Cheng Sallie Watson Chisholm Ken W.Y. Cho Vitaly Citovsky Nancy Hall Colburn Luca Comai Roger D. Cone Lynn Cooley Thomas L. Daniel Priya Davidar Roger J. Davis Trisha Nell Davis Troy Day Dennis R. Dean Donald Harry Dean Gregory E. Demas Xing Wang Deng Sharon Y.R. Dent Robert J. Deschenes Lakshmi A. Devi Daryll B. DeWald Biao Ding Andrew Dobson Jerry B. Dodgson Kathleen Donohue Lisa Alayne Donovan Monica Driscoll Crislyn D’Souza-Schorey Robert Joseph Duronio Walter Francis Eanes Joseph R. Ecker Bruce A. Edgar Brian Joseph Enquist William Fredric Fagan Jeffrey L. Feder Xin-Hua Feng Bruce A. Freeman William C. (Clay) Fuqua David M. Gardiner James Roy Garey Rachelle Gaudet Jonathan Gershenzon Harold Lisle Gibbs George W. Gilchrist Lev R. Ginzburg Patricia M. Glibert Gary R. Graves Beverley R. Green Arno L. Greenleaf Elizabeth A. Grimm Deborah L. Gumucio Barry Halliwell Jeffrey Wade Harper Reid N. Harris Ulrike A. Heberlein Steven Henikoff Chien Ho Mark W. Hochstrasser Kay E. Holekamp David Houle Xin-Yun Huang Peter J. Hudson Michael Ibba Mark A. Israel Georg Jander Alan M. Jones Lynn Burgess Jorde Leemor Joshua-Tor Valerian E. Kagan Patrick J. Keeling Douglas Bruce Kell Darlene R. Ketten Aaron A. King Daniel F. Klessig Rob Knight Anthony A. Kossiakoff Elena M. Kramer Michael Steven Krangel Kenneth N. Kreuzer Robert M. Krug Julia Kubanek Ratnesh Lal Charles Lee Wen-Hwa Lee Jianming Li Joyce E. Longcore Gary M. Lovett Susan T. Lovett Sheng Luan Hartmut Luecke Kunxin Luo Svetlana Lutsenko Nancy R. Manley Ann G. Matthysse Earl D. McCoy Anthony David McGuire Hassane S. Mchaourab Blake C. Meyers Jeffery F. Miller Richard A. Miller Harry Lee Thompson Mobley Allen J. Moore John V. Moran Donald L. Mykles Mitzi Nagarkatti Donald Owen Natvig Jeanne M. Nerbonne Marcia E. Newcomer Stuart J. Newfeld Joseph P. Noel Santa Jeremy Ono Elaine A. Ostrander Duojia (DJ) Pan Thomas A. Peterson George N. Phillips, Jr. Eric M. Phizicky Eran Pichersky Jennifer A. Pietenpol William Plunkett Richard S. Pollenz Alvaro Puga Jun Qin Shahin Rafii Francesco Ramirez D. C. Rao Mrinalini Chatta Rao Carlene Allen Raper Andrew Fraser Read Michael Aaron Resnick Nour-Eddine Rhaleb Markus Walter Ribbe Laura Jeanne Robles Mark Gregory Robson Raymond L. Rodriguez G. David Roodman Locke Rowe Rosa M. Ruiz-Vázquez Ann Kiku Sakai Gary S. Sayler Thomas Friedrich Schilling Wolfgang Schmidt Danny J. Schnell Jeffrey S. Schorey Maria Schumacher Lance C. Seefeldt Elba E. Serrano Yun-Bo Shi Laurel Owen Sillerud Jane Silverthorne Michael Kirtland Skinner Barry Paul Sleckman L. Dennis Smith Nahum Sonenberg Stacia A. Sower Raymond John St. Leger John A. Stamatoyannopoulos Rolf Sternglanz Peter Stiling Fengzhu Sun Xiao-Hong Sun Yi Sun Joel L. Sussman William P. Tansey Ronald K. Taylor Keiko U. Torii Richard Henry Treisman Ronald W. Trewyn Raphael H. Valdivia Eberhard O. Voit Diane K. Wagener Geoffrey O. Wasteneys Ruth Welti Bruce J. West Theodore C. White Bridget S. Wilson George B. Witman Christopher V.E. Wright Robin Lynn Wright Hao Wu Anthony J. Wynshaw-Boris Rui-Ming Xu Wei Yang Elton T. Young Hongtao Yu Shuqun Zhang Yi Zhang Keji Zhao Ming-Ming Zhou S. Lawrence Zipursky CHEMISTRY Mahdi M. Abu-Omar Millard H. Alexander Heather Cecile Allen Bruce S. Ault Zhenan Bao Phil S. Baran Ilan Benjamin Eric Block Andrew S. Borovik R. David Britt Stephanie L. Brock Barbara M. Brodsky Michael F. Brown Allison A. Campbell Richard M. Caprioli Eugene Y. - X. Chen Lin X. Chen Sue B. Clark Alvin L. Crumbliss Ken Czerwinski Huw M.L. Davies Vincent Jo Davisson Norman J. Dovichi Prabir K. Dutta Andrew D. Ellington C. Michael Elliott Jeffrey D. Esko Pingyun Feng Robert A. Flowers II Michel R. Gagné Feng Gai Nicholas E. Geacintov Franz M. Geiger Jacquelyn Gervay-Hague Jason E. Gestwicki David Peter Giedroc David S. Ginger, Jr. Theodore Goodson III Howard Lewis Hall D. Michael Heinekey Herbert Henderson Hill, Jr. So Hirata Ralf-Ingo Kaiser Mercouri G. Kanatzidis Kattesh V. Katti Sarah L. Keller Marisa C. Kozlowski N. Rama Krishna Anna I. Krylov Krishna Kumar Sarah Cosgrove Larsen Charles Y-C Lee Chao-Jun Li Jing Li R. Daniel Little Jie Liu Janis Louie Leonard Richard MacGillivray Richard Kenneth Marcus Jennifer S. Martinez Jimmy W. Mays Ursula Mazur Kenneth L. Nash Mary P. Neu Shuming Nie Susan V. Olesik Dennis G. Peters Arthur J. Ragauskas Douglas Ray Hanna Reisler Tomislav Rovis John M. Schwab Sean Campbell Smith Mohan Srinivasarao Arthur G. Suits Basil I. Swanson Kenneth J. Takeuchi Mark Edward Thompson ˘ Turecek Frantisek ˘ Charles G. Wade Jin Wang Peng George Wang Qian Wang Arieh Warshel Kevin M. Weeks Gregory Alan Weiss Christopher J. Welch Carter T. White Olaf Wiest Evan R. Williams Angela K. Wilson John P. Wolfe Stanislaus S. Wong William Hamilton Woodruff Jin-Quan Yu DENTISTRY & ORAL HEALTH SCIENCES Pamela K. Den Besten David H. Kohn Jacques E. Nör No-Hee Park EDUCATION A. Malcolm Campbell Arthur J. Lidsky Karen D. Liller Elizabeth Ann Nalley George D. Nelson Dennis Lee Schatz Ethel D. Stanley Martin Storksdieck Marshall D. Sundberg Gabriela C. Weaver Mark Allen Weiss ENGINEERING Ilhan A. Aksay Paschalis Alexandridis Luís A. Nunes Amaral Michael D. Amiridis Dionissios (Dennis) N. Assanis Kyriacos A. Athanasiou Amit Bandyopadhyay Kent D. Choquette Louis C. Chow Panagiotis D. Christofides Alan W. Cramb Jennifer Sinclair Curtis John G. Ekerdt David P. Fyhrie Mohamed Gad-el-Hak Andrés José García Emmanuel E. Gdoutos Peyman Givi Robert Goldstein Mark A. Handschy Mark F. Horstemeyer Jacob N. Israelachvili Yogesh Jaluria Suhada Jayasuriya Brian A. Korgel Thomas F. Kuech Soundar Kumara Chung K. (Ed) Law Alberto Leon-Garcia Daniel A. Lidar Zongli Lin Azad M. Madni Andreas Mandelis Samir Mitragotri Andreas F. Molisch H. Keith Moo-Young Ranga Narayanan Arye Nehorai James C. Newman, Jr. Ellen Ochoa Tatsuki Ohji Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos Doug D. Perovic Zhihua Qu Rodney S. Ruoff Maria M. Santore Christine E. Schmidt John M. Torkelson Rama Venkatasubramanian Darsh T. Wasan Ralph E. White David B. Williams Rama Krishna Yedavalli Yuntian T. Zhu GENERAL INTEREST IN SCIENCE & ENGINEERING Andy Boyles Cornelia Dean Peter Faletra Mandana Sassanfar Patricia L. Ward Stephen Jay Warshaw GEOLOGY & GEOGRAPHY Douglas West Burbank Eugene Walter Domack Steven George Driese R. Lawrence Edwards Gregory M. Erickson Marilyn Louise Fogel Thomas Hillman Jordan 39 Louise H. Kellogg David L. Kohlstedt David W. Lea Isabel Patricia Montañez Daniel P. Schrag Jeffrey Peck Severinghaus Donald I. Siegel Howard J. Spero Sally Walker Thomas Robert Watters Cathy Lynn Whitlock Karl S. Zimmerer LINGUISTICS & LANGUAGE SCIENCE HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE MEDICAL SCIENCES Michael R. Dietrich Paul E. Griffiths Frederick Grinnell Margaret W. Rossiter INDUSTRIAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY William S. Marras Michael Nastasi John M. Newsam INFORMATION COMPUTING & COMMUNICATION Miklós Ajtai Prabir Bhattacharya Azzedine Boukerche Justine Cassell Amr El Abbadi Joan Feigenbaum Paul F. Fischer Lawrence O’Higgins Hall Raj Jain Lydia E. Kavraki Benjamin Jack Kuipers Michael J. Kurtz Prasant Mohapatra Manish Parashar Nagarajan Ranganathan Thomas C. Rindfleisch Eunice E. Santos Ali H. Sayed Karen R. Sollins Arun K. Somani Aravind Srinivasan Ashok N. Srivastava George O. Strawn Roberto Tamassia Carol Tenopir Kevin Lowell Thompson Victor Vianu Xindong Wu Qiang Yang 40 Sandra Chung MATHEMATICS Susanne C. Brenner Robert Calderbank L. Pamela Cook-Ioannidis Susan Friedlander Carolyn Gordon Deborah Frank Lockhart Susan Montgomery Edward A. Berger Lars Berglund Hal Edward Broxmeyer Genhong Cheng Linzhao Cheng Robert James Coffey, Jr. Marco Colombini Alan D. D’Andrea Eric Delpire Sarah S. Donaldson Ronald N. Germain M. Eric Gershwin Maura Lianne Gillison Clifford Vincent Harding III David G. Harrison Hedvig Hricak Holly A. Ingraham Raghu Kalluri Hagop M. Kantarjian Stuart M. Levitz A. Thomas Look Kun Ping Lu Ormond A. MacDougald Richard Mayeux Kohei Miyazono Jan A. Nolta John Joseph O’Shea, Jr. David Pellman Reed E. Pyeritz Dan Mark Roden Lawrence E. Samelson Rozanne M. Sandri-Goldin Mark S. Schlissel Mary Sharon Stack Lishan Su Kenneth S.K. Tung Jeffery Marvin Vance Sten H. Vermund J. Lindsay Whitton NEUROSCIENCE Timothy J. Bartness Joanne Berger-Sweeney Cesario Venturina Borlongan Randy Lee Buckner Vince D. Calhoun Hollis Tremaine Cline Jonathan D. Cohen Neal J. Cohen Peter Jeffrey Conn Pietro De Camilli Yadin Dudai Robert Haas Edwards Ronald B. Emeson Howard Joshua Federoff Joseph Robert Fetcho Ron D. Frostig Alison Mary Goate James L. Goodson Judy Illes Julie A. Kauer David Kleinfeld Hiroaki Matsunami David A. McCormick Cynthia F. Moss Elisabeth Adams Murray Phillip G. Popovich Alcino J. Silva Nelson Spruston Xiao-Jing Wang Alan Geoffrey Watts PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES Michael Aschner Paula C. Bickford Mark Cushman Paul F. Hollenberg Marilyn Emily Morris John Michael Pezzuto Rao S. Rapaka David E. Smith Anil Kumar Sood Charles M. Thompson Carston R. Wagner Lynn Wecker PHYSICS Andrew Robert Baden Dimitri N. Basov Michael J. Bedzyk Nigel D. Browning Patricia R. Burchat Antonio Helio Castro-Neto Paul M. Champion Pengcheng Dai Stefan Gottfried Frauendorf Michael S. Fuhrer Peter M. Garnavich Paul M. Goldbart Benjamin Grinstein Kenneth Heller Theodore A. Jacobson Rongying Jin James Kakalios Christopher J. Keane Ashutosh Kotwal Wim Leemans Shawn-Yu Lin Andrea J. Liu Mikhail D. Lukin Aneesh Manohar Christopher R. Monroe Douglas Natelson George S. Nolas David D. Nolte Eric B. Norman Mark A. Novotny Anthony Joseph Peurrung Philip W. Phillips Joseph G. Polchinski Richard Henry Price Federico Rosei Randal C. Ruchti Nitin Samarth Kenneth J. Schafer Surajit Sen Ian Shipsey Melvyn J. Shochet Alexei P. Sokolov Gene D. Sprouse Samuel Ting Renata M.M. Wentzcovitch Ali Yazdani Sherry J. Yennello Anton Zeilinger Xiaowei Zhuang PSYCHOLOGY Nelson Cowan Celia B. Fisher Margaret Gatz Peter Adrian Hancock Todd F. Heatherton Julia R. Heiman Ned H. Kalin Todd D. Little Steven J. Luck Laurence T. Maloney Alex Martin John J. McArdle Joseph Lee Rodgers III John M. Roll Steven K. Shevell Eliot R. Smith Anthony D. Wagner Timothy D. Wilson Howard N. Zelaznik SOCIAL, ECONOMIC & POLITICAL SCIENCES Howard E. Aldrich Nicole Woolsey Biggart Herbert Gintis Randy Hodson Edward Paul Lazear Deirdre McCloskey Melvin L. Oliver Zhenchao Qian Alvin E. Roth John Skvoretz Richard Michael Suzman SOCIETAL IMPACTS OF SCIENCE & ENGINEERING Michael M. Crow Kathy L. Hudson Jacob E. Levin Jane C. S. Long Dietram A. Scheufele STATISTICS Arlene S. Ash Katherine Bennett Ensor Marc G. Genton Barry I. Graubard Karen Kafadar KyungMann Kim Ira M. Longini, Jr. David Madigan Nitis Mukhopadhyay Haikady N. Nagaraja Allan R. Sampson Nell Sedransk Ajit C. Tamhane Marina Vannucci Naisyin Wang Ronald L. Wasserstein Russell D. Wolfinger Weng Kee Wong Acknowledgment of Contributors and Patron Members The AAAS Board of Directors gratefully acknowledges the individuals and organizations whose commitment to AAAS has sustained our efforts to advance science in the service of society and supported new activities in 2012. Lifetime Giving Society The Lifetime Giving Society recognizes our most generous living donors – individuals who have contributed a cumulative total of $100,000 or more during the course of their involvement with AAAS. Sibyl R. Golden Alan I. & Agnes F. Leshner The Roger & Ellen Revelle Family Fred Kavli Edith D. Neimark David E. Shaw & Beth Kobliner Shaw Decade Club The Decade Club recognizes individuals who have supported AAAS for ten or more consecutive years. Anonymous (2) Jean Beard Leslie Z. Benet Ernest L. Bergman Herman Birch Phillip L. Blair C. John Blankley Herbert Blumenthal Charles S. Brown Om bravisshi Om Buddhu William A. Buehring Dennis E. Buetow Jean B. Burnett Michael J. Calderwood Nathaniel Chafee Mary E. Clutter Robert C. Cowen Richard H. Cox Bruce H. Dana Robin L. Dennis Paul M. Densen† Craig & Alison Fields Frank W. Fitch Robert C. Forney Helen L. Foster Joseph G. Gall S. Raymond Gambino David M. Gates Mark L. Gilberstadt Sarah B. Glickenhaus Albert E. Goss Albert L. Hale Daniel A. Hamlin James E. Hammerberg Franklin M. Harold George John Irving S. & Alwyn N. Johnson Elaine Kant Rodger & Doris Ketcham Bernard M. Kulwicki Walter R. Lawson Alan I. & Agnes F. Leshner Philip Lichtenberg John H. Litchfield Lars Ljungdahl Walter & Shirley Massey Robert L. Molinari Angelyn & Kevin Moore David W. Moreland Patricia H. Moyer Peter B. Myers Christer E. Nordman Marie U. Nylen Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Allison R. Palmer Joseph C. Parker, Jr. Ralph H. Petrucci Ranard J. Pickering Rex F. Pratt Edward R. Rang Donald G. Rea Juan G. Roederer Kenneth L. Rose Robert Rosenthal Melvin Ross Andrew M. Sessler David E. Shaw & Beth Kobliner Shaw Emma Shelton Linda C. Smith David G. Stahl James Stolzenbach F. William Studier Joan C. Suit Donald A. Swanson Thomas K. Toyama A. Forrest Troyer Ari van Tienhoven Charles P. Wales Emmerson Ward Robert T. Ward Elizabeth K. Weisburger Robert D. Westfall Gary R. White Charles Yanofsky President’s Circle Individuals who made significant pledges and contributions to sustain our most timely and important activities in 2012 are highlighted here as part of the President’s Circle, an initiative to recognize our top donors each year. $100,000 and above $25,000 $49,999 Fred Kavli Stephen P. A. Fodor $50,000 $99,999 David E. Shaw & Beth Kobliner Shaw Deceased † Alan I. & Agnes F. Leshner Ellen J. Scherl $10,000 $24,999 Ruth M. Davis† Paul M. Doty† Gregory S. & Marcella Ferriss Alice S. Huang & David Baltimore Pauline P. Lee in memory of Bernard S. Lee Edith D. Neimark John Chao Claire Perry John M. Clough, Jr. David E. Shaw $5,000 - $9,999 $2,500 - $4,999 Eloise E. Clark Anonymous (2) Anonymous, in memory of Myrtle Ray Zeiber, Jill Sharon Sheridon, Tucker Hake Jeffrey A. Cooper Phillip L. Blair Fred A. Blum Chet & Marie Britten Steven J. Greenberg Randal J. Kirk John S. Reed Woody & Lyn Savage, in honor of John Marean Janet J. Asimov Gary & Fay Beauchamp Floyd E. Bloom Lucio Chiaraviglio Roy Curtiss III Federico Faggin Robert B. Litterman Cherry A. Murray Norman & Georgine Neureiter Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Simon Ramo Beth A. Rosner 41 Pablo Valenzuela Robert J. Glaser Jo Ellen & Mark Roseman Paul Berg Warren B. Weisberg Sarah B. Glickenhaus Robert Rosenthal Leslie C. Berlowitz Mary C. Farach-Carson Dr. Fernando J. Zúñiga y Rivero Howard Gobstein Sue V. Rosser Mani L. Bhaumik Gillian M. Fenton Erwin Goldberg Arnold Roy R. Byron Bird Sibyl R. Golden Howard A. Royle Peter D. Blair Isaiah J. Fidler & Margaret L. Kripke $1,000 - $2,499 Mary L. Good Glenn E. Schweitzer Robert C. Bless Thomas H. Finlay Pablo I. Altieri, M.D. Arthur F. Hebard Andrew M. Sessler Felix H. Boehm Eric Firing Anonymous (7) Donald E. Henson Phillip A. & Ann H. Sharp Stuart Bondurant Gerald J. Fishman David Atlas Ralph Hillman Richard B. Silverman Edward M. Boughton Frank W. Fitch D. James Baker Paul Hoff Andrew D. Sinauer John Brademas Charles J. Flora Nicholas A. Begovich William F. Holmes Henry B. Sinclair Michael Bradie Elson Floyd Jerry A. Bell & Mary Ann Stepp Gordon R. Hough Edward S. Spoerl Nyle C. Brady Richard M. Forester Sahar Houshdaran Peter J. Stang Richard Brandshaft Efi Foufoula-Georgiou Hans Bergstrom Joan M. Hutchins Dusan Stefoski Richard G. Brennan John & Mary Frantz Elwyn & Jennifer Berlekamp Irwin & Joan Jacobs Mary Ann Stepp Josephine P. Briggs Hans Frauenfelder Phyllis E. Johnson Peter F. Stevens Joost A. Businger Joel M. Friedman Margaret M. & Will B. Betchart Dale Kagan & Elyse Rosenstein F. William Studier Robert C. Calfee Richard Friedman Judy Swanson Marc A. Carrasco Bernd Fritzsch Adele L. Boskey Valerie F. Kaplan Matthew D. Todd Victor T. Chang Bill & Julie Fulkerson Peter Boyer Elizabeth M. Keithley Alar Toomre Lloyd F. Chase Deborah J. Fulton Monica M. & E. James Bradford Tong Kele Philip C. Trackman Tom D. Y. Chin Charles G. Gaines Bruce L. Larson Dan Vickery Norman E. Cima S. Raymond Gambino Catherine & George Ledec Bailus Walker, Jr. Jon C. Clardy Frederick R. Gehlbach Joe R. Lee David Weiser Ellen W. Clayton Terry T. Gerritsen S. David Leonard Thomas E. Wellems James S. Clegg Terry L. Gilmore Lawrence D. Longo Robert A. Weller James H. Cleland Janet R. Gilsdorf John Lummis Corwith C. White Thomas E. Clemente Jesus Gomez-Navarro Allan J. Lundeen W. L. Wilson Edward H. Coe, Jr. Kim L. Graham Carol B. Lynch Bruce W. Worster Stirling A. Colgate Marea E. Hatziolos Grant Craig C. Malbon Oran R. Young Rita R. & Jack H. Colwell Henry T. Greely David Comb Mark L. Green James D. Cox M.R.C. Greenwood Bruce H. Dana Irene Meyer & Albert Greif Jackson Davis Donald F. Grether Vincent Jo Davisson Samuel Gubins Kenneth A. DeGhetto Alfred W. Hales Robert J. DeLap Donald P. Harrington Darryl C. DeVivo William K. Hart John J. Deyst, Jr. John H. Hash Russell R. Dickerson Fernand A. Hayot N. L. Doligalski Robert E. Healing W. Graeme Donovan William R. Hearst III Ruth A. Douglas Liz K. Hedstrom Richard D. Drake E. Keith Hege Radoje Drmanac Holliday C. Heine Philip M. DuBois Susan J. Henning Loyal & Bernice Durand Thomas L. Henson Elizabeth D. Earle Peter K. Hepler Elizabeth E. Ehrenfeld Charles E. Hess Henry L. Ehrlich John R. Hess Arthur Eisenkraft John E. Hiatt Vincent A. Elder Kim Q. Hill Lynn & Kathleen Enquist Jacquelyn Hoke Richard W. Benjamin Alan J. Eynon Raymond W. Holton Leo L. Beranek Giuseppina Fabbiano & Keelung Hong Lewis & Connie Branscomb Andrew L. Brill Harold E. Burkhart Jean B. Burnett Peter Byers A. S. Cargill Carlton M. Caves Nathaniel Chafee Maarten J. Chrispeels Kathleen K. Church Mary E. Clutter George W. Cogan & Fannie Allen Donald G. Comb Jonathan C. Coopersmith Kenneth A. Cowin William H. Danforth Troy E. Daniels Jeffrey S. Dean John T. Deane George E. DeBoer Priscilla C. Doman Albert T. Dosser J. David Malone David H. Marlowe J. Howard Marshall III John T. Melson Richard A. Meserve Ronald D. Miller Ernest J. Moniz Gordon E. & Betty I. Moore William A. Murphy, Jr. Judith K. Nyquist Gilbert S. Omenn & Martha A. Darling Claire L. Parkinson Edward E. Penhoet $500 - $999 John D. Aach Sam H. Adams, Jr. Ernest Adelman Edwin J. Adlerman Mihran S. Agbabian Anonymous (17) Kenneth B. Armitage Samuel Aronson Arthur K. Asbury Carolyn H. Asbury Miguel A. Asomoza David R. Atkinson Jaquelin P. Dudley Joseph G. Perpich & Cathy Sulzberger Charles W. Eigenbrot, Jr. Jeffrey W. Pferd David P. Bahner Gerald L. Epstein Charles C. Philipp Mary C. Barber William R. Eyler William H. Press & Jeffrey F. Howell Jeanne P. Barry Joseph V. & Philomena M. Formica Edward K. Rice Roger N. Beachy Thomas C. Rindfleisch Robert C. Forney Juan G. Roederer Paul J. Friedman Antonio H. Romano Henry F. & Christine Sasso Beechhold John C. Fuhr Pamela C. Ronald John F. Finerty Donald P. Gaver, Jr. 42 Diola Bagayoko Merton R. Barry Martin Elvis Owen M. Hubbard John R. MacDonald, Ph.D. John E. Niederhuber Nicholas Schlageter Gene S. Thomas David C. Humm Merritt C. Maduke Concepcion R. Nierras Peter Schlosser Heriberto V. Thomas Mien-Chie Hung Artur Mager Paul L. Schmidbauer William A. Thomas Charles L. Hunze, Jr. Mardi & Michael Maitland Ronald P. & Joan M. Nordgren Alan Schriesheim Anne M. Thompson Leon Hyman John C. Makemson Arthur N. Palmer Sara L. Schupf Joshua Thomson David W. Ignat Shirley & Horace Malcom C. Harvey Palmer Steven Shak J. E. Tillmann Elaine S. Jaffe Maria Julia Marinissen Betty L. Petrie Lu J. Sham Alvin V. Tollestrup Karen S. Jakes Hans M. Mark Ralph H. Petrucci Thomas D. Sharkey Sam Z. Toma Wayne Martin Daniel Pinkel Charles J. Sherr Robert D. Toto Jean’ne M. Shreeve Leon Trilling Matthew & Donna Johnson Kathleen & Randall Matthews Christiane T. Piselli Jonathan A. Plucker Saul Silverstein Gertrude M. Tyce Michael M. Kaback Ray Mattison R.K. & G.J. Rains Charles A. Simenstad Jashvant D. Unadkat Hideko Kaji Robert Maurer Edward R. Rang Joseph V. Simone John Urquhart John R. Kane Michael M. May Stephen Rayport David J. Simons Ari van Tienhoven Elaine Kant Chris L. McAuliffe James C. Register III Bruce M. Simonson Jui H. Wang Edward Keenan Jim & Sue McCarthy Leonard Reiffel James L. Smith Nancy E. Warner David E. Kerley Marcia K. McNutt Charles M. Rice III Judson Somerville Warren & Mary Washington John G. King David Meinke Burton Richter Frank J. Sonleitner Donald & Beverly Waters Miles V. Klein Anastasios Melis Frederick H. Rindge Kenneth L. Webb P. Dileep Kumar James E. Melvin Neil Risch George C. & Maradel B. Sonnichsen George Kunkel Thomas R. Mertens Cynthia Robinson Mary C. St. John Molly H. Weinburgh Jerome Kutliroff A. W. Kenneth Metzner Thomas S. Robison John D. Weinland Lois D. Lehman-McKeeman Barton Milligan James U. Lemke Robert L. Molinari Linda Rockliff, in memory of Burton W. Rockliff Juli Staiano & Marc Washington Albert T. Steegmann, Jr. Edwin G. Moore John L. Rosenfeld Judith S. Stern Elizabeth D. Whitaker Richard & Madelein Lenski Richard A. Lethin Sandra O. Moose David J. Salant Edward C. Stone, Jr. Daniel J. Lew Bayard H. Morrison Federico Sanchez Michael P. Stone Mark T. Lewellyn Enrico Mugnaini Sean Sanders Herbert T. Streu Lowell N. Lewis Lawrence S. Myers, Jr. Alfred P. Sattelberger Richard C. Stroh Philip Lichtenberg Venkatesh Narayanamurti P. Jackson Schad Janet B. Svirsky Peter R. Limburg Paul E. Neiman Naomi Schedl Masaki Tan Jerry B. Lingrel Owen J. Newlin Thomas C. Schelling Richard V. Telloni Irving S. & Alwyn N. Johnson Robert J. Weimer Luiz Weksler Ralph R. Widner Bruce B. Williams John S. & Judith H. Willis Philip J. & Carolyn Wyatt George Yang Charles Yanofsky Ann M. Stock Zakaria Marvin Zelen We are grateful to the following donors for their contributions of $100 or more: $250 - $499 Edward M. Acton Cyrus H. Adams Heman P. Adams Philip D. Aines Ramesh K. Akkina Nancy W. Alcock-Hood James M. Anderson Robert Andres Anonymous (24) Naoko Arai A. Arnheim David P. Balamuth Alain Balland Martin S. Banks Ronald E. Banks William A. Bardeen Franklin L. Barnes, Jr. Paul A. Bartlett Steven J. Battel Sheldon Baumrind Gary L. Cecchini Robin L. Dennis Herbert C. Friedmann Edward W. Beals R. A. Cesena Timothy Devaremme Mary K. Gaillard Jean Beard Jagdish Chandra Bruce L. Dietrich Georgine M. Garbisch R. P. Belden Walter J. Chazin Joe B. Dixon David Garvin Harvey E. Belkin Martin A. Cheever Roger Eichhorn Eli Glatstein Barbara Bell Hillel J. Chiel Franco Einaudi Paul W. Glimcher Charles F. Bennett, Jr. Robert W. Christopherson Robert N. Eisenman Malcolm S. Gordon Herman Birch Ralph M. Clark George A. Englesson Mary E. W. & Albert E. Goss C. John Blankley Steven Clawson Edwin P. Ewing, Jr. Kathleen L. Gould Philip K. Bondy James & Stella Coakley Emmanuel Farber Konstantin Goulianos John G. Bordie David Collier David W. Faris Gerardo W. Gross Dewey E. Born Dale K. Colyer William E. Farrell William J. Guilford J. Stuart Bratholdt James K. Coward Allison F. Fentiman Matthias Haase Robert M. Brenner Walter Craig James P. Ferris Duane E. Haines William F. Brinkman Thomas I. Crowell Lewis T. Fitch Daniel A. Hamlin Michael F. Briselli Michael Cynamon Lysia S. Forno Ingeborg Hanbauer-Costa Robert D. Brown, Jr. J. D. S. Danielson Daniel W. Foster Roy M. Havenhill Dennis E. Buetow Igor B. Dawid Helen L. Foster Evan B. Hazard Elizabeth R. Butch Richard M. Deamer Richard A. Frankel Alan J. Heeger Joiner Cartwright, Jr. Steve J. Demuth Kathy E. Freas Susan M. Hinkins 43 Robert L. Hoguet III Albert S. Mildvan James P. Stone Lizabeth A. Allison Edwin F. Bartholomew Sharon Hrynkow Jerry W. Miller Shepard B. Stone W. Anthony Allison John R. Barton Paul F. Hudrlik Beatrice Mintz Alan J. Strauss Charles E. Alpers Kay Huebner Michael J. Moratto Donald A. Swanson Norman J. Alvares Thomas R. & Johanna K. Baruch Thomas K. Hunt Stewart Lee Moses Richard L. Swent Joseph Amann Sally T. Ishizaka Kristen L. Mueller Andrew G. Szent-Gyorgyi Stefan Ambs Marianna Jackson Thomas W. Mullikin Edward Tarbuck Robert G. Amundson Neil H. Jacoby, Jr. William M. Murray Robert B. Tesh Edward Anders Sheila & Jay Jasanoff Peter B. Myers Arthur R. Thomas Gordon W. Anderson Thomas W. Jeffries Thomas W. Newton David H. Thompson J. Anderson Joseph R. Jehl, Jr. John P. O’Connell Jeremy W. Thorner James J. Anderson Samson A. Jenekhe Richard T. Oehrle Robert W. Thresher Linda M. Anderson Hollis R. Johnson Jeanette A. Paintsil P. Tillier Lloyd L. Anderson Jiri Jonas Victor R. Palmeri James W. Titus Paul M. Anderson Anita K. Jones Suresh S. Patil Franklin H. Top, Jr. Sara F. Anderson William G. Kaelin, Jr. Glen Perry Thomas K. Toyama Robert C. Angerer Joanne K. Kelleher Edward B. Picou, Jr. David H. Tracy Robert R. H. Anholt James M. Kendall John T. Pigott Kalliat T. Valsaraj Anonymous (86) Rodger & Doris Ketcham Ken D. Pischel Albert F. Wagner Rudi Ansbacher Thomas A. Kitchens William H. Plotkin Harold Walba Bradley C. Antanaitis Michael S. Klassen Glenn D. Prestwich Charles Walcott Frederick J. Antosz Jane Q. Koenig Stephen C. Ragatz W. James Waldman Michael W. Arenton Rajiv Kohli John D. Randall Mark E. Weaver Edward M. Arnett Shohei Koide Jimmy L. Rash Irwin Welber Mary C. Arnold Edward J. Kormondy Francis Repas Michael L. Wells William Aron Michael H. Kroll Mary E. Rice Donat G. Wentzel William C. Ashby T. G. Ksiazek Robert D. Westfall Arnold C. Ashcraft Benjamin J. Kuipers Lynn M. Riddiford & James W. Truman James P. Whipple Laurence D. Ashly Michael Hon-Wah Lam Henry M. Rines Irvin L. White Balasubramania H. Athreya Joseph S. Lappin Robert J. Ringlee John F. Wilkerson Marc S. Atkins Kathleen Hoey Lavoie John D. Roberts Robert L. Winders Ronald K. Atwood Myron C. Ledbetter William L. Robison Keith D. Wing William S. Augerson Douglass B. Lee, Jr. Tina Roeder Sidney G. Winter, Jr. Howard Leventhal Alan E. Rogers J. Walter Woodbury David S. & Kathleen N. Ayres Richard A. Levinson Felix J. Rogers George E. Woody Timothy N. Ayres Charles A. Lewis, Jr. Dennis A. Roscetti Milton Zaitlin Daniel L. Azarnoff Herman S. Lilja Kenneth L. Rose Felix E. Zajac III Jocelyne Bachevalier Rulon K. Linford Vera C. Rubin Charlotte M. Zitrin Thomas A. Badgwell Robert B. Loftfield George D. Ryerson Iris L. Long Mary Sale John P. Loveridge Tamiko Sato Paul Lovoi Cecily C. Selby Paul A. Luciw Earl H. Sexton Charles A. Lundquist Carleton B. Shay William B. Lyons Emma Shelton Clifford K. Madsen Paul F. Shepard Mary E. Mahoney Lawrence C. Shimmin David J. March Charles H. Shultz Thomas J. Marlowe Mrityunjay Singh Susan A. Matthies Jack Sjostrom John E. McDonald W. R. Smith-Vaniz John M. McGhee Peter B. Snyder John R. Menninger Q. D. Stephen-Hassard Carl R. Merril Peter J. Stoddard Charles P. Alexander, in memory of Leon M. Jaroff Colin A. Michie James Stolzenbach Caitilyn Allen 44 Walter S. Baer $100 - $249 James S. Aagaard Ashley J. Aberg S. C. Abrahams Melissa Acosta Ernest C. Adams Roger W. Addor Jill P. Adler Leif A. Ahrens Cameron Ainsworth Ingrid E. Akerblom Susan C. Alberts Stanley Bailis Carol Baird Mary Ann Baker Mark Balas Samuel F. Baldwin N. Addison Ball David P. Ballou Karen J. Bame C. Kenneth Banks, Jr. Joseph C. Barbaccia R. Keith Bardin John Bark Wayne Barnes Franklin H. Barnwell Monique Barrett Craig S. Barrow Vicki, Ed & Madi Bass, in honor of Mr. & Mrs. Ronnie Wooten Hyman Bass Anna Battenhouse Diana J. Bauer Kyle D. Bayes T. Edmund Beck David C. Beebe John C. Behrendt Alvin L. Beilby George A. Bekey Paul Belanger Edward A. Belongia Roy Benedek Michael W. Benenson Leslie Z. Benet Thomas L. Benjamin Donald R. Bennett Jennifer M. Berardi Matthew J. Berberich Richard Beresford Elena M. Berger Ernest L. Bergman Maria V. Bergmann Herbert L. Berk Arthur Berman R. Stephen Berry Richard F. Berthelsdorf Kevin P. Bertrand Rose Bethe Erwin P. Bettinghaus Joseph P. Bevak William C. Bianchi Paul Bickart John T. Bickmore Charles E. Bidwell Theodore I. Bieber David K. Biegelsen George E. Bigelow Kelly Biggs Nancy G. Bigham Victor J. Bilotta Graeme Birchall Nirendra N. Biswas Peter E. Black Meredith Blackwell Gregor Blaha Mordecai P. Blaustein Jerome L. Bleiweis Robert J. Blendon David Card John D. Corbett Gilbert R. Di Leone John H. Exton Tim Bloom Fernando P. Cardenas Pierce S. Corden Sidney Diamond Sandra M. Faber Herbert Blumenthal Vernon B. Cardwell Richard C. Corlett David B. Dickinson, Jr. Robert L. Fairchild Hans R. Bode Andrew G. Carey Jimmy C. Cornette Paul W. Dickson, Jr. Curtis Farrar John K. Boitnott James M. Carhart Charles D. Cornwell Paula Diehr Kenneth R. Farrell Susan & Jeffrey Bond William C. Carlson Albert E. Cosand Michael A. Dillon John W. Farrington Martha W. Bond Ralph L. Carmichael Patricia F. Cottam David F. Dinges Ralph W. Fasold Susan B. Bonner-Weir Peter D. Carragher Robert C. Cowen Omer Divers Theodore F. Fathauer Joseph Bordogna Joseph Carson George L. Cowgill Winifred W. Doane James A. Fay David & Harriet Borton Robert A. Cary George E. Cowperthwaite Walter Luis B. Doege Benedict Feinberg John D. Bower Carolyn L. Cason Richard H. Cox Patricia K. Donahoe Arnold M. Feingold Elmo L. Bowman Paul A. Catacosinos Harold P. Coyle, Jr. Terrence M. Donohue, Jr. Shelagh Ferguson-Miller James N. Bradbury Ann D. Catlett George W. Crabtree Linneaus C. Dorman Herbert E. Ferran, Jr. Rick Bradford Winslow S. Caughey William A. Craig Michael P. Doyle William Fickinger Roscoe R. Braham, Jr. Peter C. Chabora Arthur R. Crampton Jeff Dozier Herbert C. Field Robert L. Brammer John H. Chamberlain Stephen H. Crandall John B. Fieser Kristi M. Branch Yuan Chao Peter H. Crawford Abraham I. & Marianna Dranetz Jonathan Braun Paul G. Chapin Denton W. Crocker Mary B. Dratman Terese Finitzo Gay M. Crooks Paul Dreizen Olivera J. Finn Kathleen M. Fisher Daniel Blitz Rubin Braunstein Gary A. Chapman Gerald J. Filbin Alexander J. Bridges Stanley E. Charm John H. Crowe George B. Driesen Paul J. Brindley Allen R. Chauvenet Alfred J. Crowle Lester Dubnick Morris A. Fisher Jon M. Brooks Eugene Y. - X. Chen William L. Cruce Robert A. Dudley James E. Fitzgerald Raymond Brooks Yenming Cheng Kenny S. Crump, Sr. Marilyn J. Duncan Yael Fitzpatrick Charles S. Brown Peter Chesson Franklin Cruz Raynor L. Duncombe David J. Fletcher Dennis J. Brown Arthur N. Chester August O. Curley Edward A. Foegeding Donald J. Brown Wai-Yim Ching Gregory Cybul Thomas H. & Sylvia A. M. Dunning Harold H. Brown Purnell W. Choppin Donn D’Alessio Josee Dupuis John I. Ford Susan G. Brown Albert K. Christensen Joseph A. D’Anna, Jr. John C. Browne Stanley H. Christensen Beverly A. Dale-Crunk Joshua C. Brumberg Robert L. Christiansen Joan Dash John S. Brusca Sita K. Dash Barbara Bryant Tze-Yao & Margaret S. Y. Chu Robert W. Bryant Leo T. Chylack Gary S. David Susan V. Bryant Shaun F. Clancy Herbert A. David Nisso Bucay George A. Clark, Jr. Evan Buck Robert A. Clark David L. Davies William A. Buehring Theodore C. Clarke Charles F. Davis, Jr. Esther A. Bullitt David R. Coahran Peter L. Davis Beryl Burgess George D. Cody Richard O. Davis Mary F. Burke Jules Cohen David S. Dayton Marvin D. Burkhart Michael P. Cohen P. J. De Jong Karolyn Burkhart-Schultz Nadine D. Cohen Catherine D. DeAngelis Ronald G. Burns H. Steven Colburn Stephen H. Burns Geoffrey A. Cole Hans W. Decker John E. Burris Paul D. Coleman William P. Deiss Daryle H. Busch G. James Collatz Charles J. Delp Edward G. Buss Steven Condas Richard Demak Donald G. Buth James W. Conine Gunther Dennert Bradford Butman Arthur R. Cooke Paul M. Densen Susan B. Butts C. Robert Cooke Peter R. Denwood Stephen E. Buxser Lynn Cooley Tina M. Calderon Paul R. Cooley James K. Detling Michael J. Calderwood Max D. Cooper Marshall E. Deutsch Michael Calhoun Carol M. Copp Arthur L. Devries Virginia W. Campbell Philip Coppens Gordon P. DeWolf, Jr. Jasper R. Daube Joseph Davie Charles H. Debrovner Kathryn L. Deriemer Richard W. Dutton Daniel J. Dwyer John L. Dwyer Ira Dyer Joseph E. Earley Kirk A. Easley Douglas P. Easton John Eberhard Gregor P. Eberli Estia J. Eichten Alfred W. Eipper Carol S. Eisenberg Richard Eisenberg Larry D. Eldridge Mark P. Elenko Gary D. Ellis Lynn W. Ellis Thomas S. Ely David K. Emmel Bernard T. Engel Pamela Engel David J. Epstein Robert S. Erdmann Robert L. Erickson Susan G. Ernst W. Gary Ernst Joann L. Evans Randal S. Evans Margaret L. Fonda Thomas A. Ford William J. Forrest Mark A. Fortuna Mary H. Foster William C. Fothergill Reba B. Fournier Elizabeth Fowler Thomas R. Fowler Joseph Frankel William S. Frankl Mark V. Frezzo Carl Frieden Stephen Frolking William E. Fry Dennis G. Fryback Glenn Fuller Kwok S. Fung Stephen K. Furnas Mitchell H. Gail Horace M. Gaims Harold Gainer Joseph G. Gall A. K. Ganguly Kristin Garcia Turkan K. Gardenier Murray B. Gardner William G. Gardner David E. Garfin 45 David J. Garfinkel G. Sheldon Green Oscar E. Hayes Charles E. Huntington Robert Keefe Margaret A. Garnjost Michael V. Green L. Julian Haywood Michael A. Huston Judith C. Keen David M. Gates Frederick D. Greene John S. Hege Michael J. Hutzler Bettie F. Kehrt Fritz Gautschi R. L. Greene Santosh A. Helekar James Hwang B. C. Keith Robert E. Gawley William B. Greenough III Leon Heller Leonard S. Hyman James E. Keith Sinclair Gearing Samuel Hellman David E. Illig John L. Kelland John C. Gehring John S. & Deborah Greenspan Hellen Hellmich Takeru Imanishi G. Randy Keller Janet Geisselsoder Brian A. Gregg Daniel Herdeman Marylou Ingram T. Ross Kelly Aaron J. Gellman Gordon L. Grosscup Joseph P. Heremans Roger Innes William E. Kelly Richard J. Gentile William M. Groton Pablo M. Hernandez Harold E. Jackson, Jr. Marvin D. Kemple C. L. Gephart Helen K. Groves Mario Herrera-Marschitz Robert W. Jackson Arthur Kendall Walter Gerhard Melvin M. Grumbach Jackson R. Herring Mary Jacob Charles F. Kennel Edward Gerjuoy Karl A. Gschneidner, Jr. Davis Hershey George T. Jacobi Thomas W. Kensler George L. Gerton Jean M. Gudas Roger A. Hess William R. Jacobs Kern E. Kenyon Jacquelyn Gervay-Hague Tee Guidotti Jan P. Hessler John H. Jacobsen Anthony M. Kerdock Jason E. Gestwicki Harold Gumbel William Heyman Andre T. Jagendorf Elton Kessel Anne E. Giblin C. David Gutsche Lyndon S. Hibbard John Jagger Philip S. Khoury David T. Gibson Joseph C. Guzzo Paul I. Hicock Jill Jaroff Earl Kicliter Irma Gigli Joanna F. Haas Donald E. Hildebrandt Michael Jennings Ray E. Kidder Mark L. Gilberstadt Jerrier A. Haddad Norwood O. Hill Dana M. Jensen Neal C. Gillespie Michael G. Hadfield John C. Hilliard William A. Jensen Sylvia Kihara & Roger J. Neill Walter L. Gillespie Stephen C. Hadler Ernest Hilsenrath Randall M. Jeter Aaron King James S. Gilliland Fletcher F. Hahn William E. Himwich Yishi Jin Mark T. Kingsley S. Malcolm Gillis Kater Hake Conrad C. Hinckley George John Toichiro Kinoshita Peter A. Gilman Albert L. Hale Irvin N. Hirshfield A. David Johnson Edward O. Kinzie Henry N. Ginsberg Marc S. Halfon David C. Hoaglin Clark Johnson Kate P. Kirby W. Clifford Girard Edward L. Halk Hans Henrich Hock Egil Johnson Vera Kistiakowsky Martin E. Gluckstein Gail H. Hall Mary Y. P. Hockaday Howard P. Johnson Harvie B. Klaus Walter B. Goad John E. Hall Morris Hodara James F. Johnson Scott & Heather Kleiner Edward & Judith Goetzl Mary Beth Hall Gerald M. Hoffman John E. Johnson Harvey L. Kliman David E. Golan Prudence J. Hall John L. Hofstra R. Ann Johnson Thornton C. Kline, Jr. Allen M. Gold Robert B. Hall Michael Hogan Barbara Johnson-Wint William A. Knapp Alvin H. Gold Zach W. Hall Frank Hole Anthony R. Jones James J. Knierim Marian R. Goldsmith Thomas D. Hamilton Kay E. Holekamp Irene M. Jones P. M. Koch Edwin Goldwasser James E. Hammerberg Joe Hollstein Lawrence W. Jones Michael F. Koehl Edward D. Gomperts Katherine A. G. Hammond Richard F. Holm Lucy W. K. Jones Steven Kohler Anne H. Good Gerald R. Hankins David P. Holman Patricia M. Jones Charles E. Kolb Bernard Goodman Carl Hansen Eric W. Holman Natasha Jonoska Leland S. Kollmorgen Colleagues & Staff of Kate Goodrich, in memory of Roy G. Goodrich Stephen L. Hansen Gerald Holton Elke Jordan Gregory Konesky Dirk T. Hanson Timothy J. Holzer Joseph W. Joy C. Ronald Koons Richard Hanson Bruce Kabakoff Victor Korenman Jesse F. Goodwin Edwin B. Hooper, Jr. Alexander Harcourt & Kelly Stewart Peter V. Hornbeck Jack J. Kahgan Richard L. Kornblith Gabriel N. Hortobagyi Virginia L. Kortes Wesley H. Harker Burton S. Kaliski, Jr. Joel S. & Marlene R. Gordon Lansing C. Hoskins Aimee A. Kane Shirley A. Kovacs Franklin M. Harold Edwin W. House James S. Kane Theodore R. Kozlowski Sharon M. Gordon-Girvin Andrew W. Harrell Estil V. Hoversten Norval M. Kane Bernard L. Kravitz Donn S. Gorsline James D. Harris Fred E. Howard, Jr. Henry J. Kaplan Robert A. Kreber Charles A. Goss Leonard Harris Isaac R. Kaplan Bernard E. Kreger Harold C. Graboske Larry B. Howard Richard E. Harris Ellen Kappel Lester C. Krogh Ronald L. Graham Michael J. Huerkamp Melvin A. Harrison Stuart W. Hughes Kirk S. Krogstad David W. Grainger Peter D. Karp William M. Hartmann Randall G. Hulet Jeffrey W. Karpen Judith F. Kroll Judith H. Grassle Alfred C. Haven, Jr. David M. Humphrey David L. Kaufman David Kronen Howard Graves & Julie Baller Susanne M. Humphrey William B. Kaufmann John S. Kronholm Harry B. Gray Frank P. Hungate Ruth Tone Kawashima Warren Kruger M. Frederick Hawthorne Richard H. Goodwin 46 David E. Harmon Bruce Hawkins Steven A. Kuhl Fred A. Kummerow Paul A. Lindberg Gregory Marton John S. Meyer J. Fraser Muirhead Frederick A. Kundell John P. Linderman William J. 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