Join us October 3 for
A Celebration of Stars - The 2009 Medal Awards
For advance reservations or more information, call
866-YOU-4UCI (866-968-4824)
UC Irvine announces
the
2009 Medal recipients
Medalists will be recognized at awards dinner on Saturday, October 3, 2009
New -
Event
Video - large screen
Learn more about the event sponsor, the UC Irvine Foundation
— Irvine, California, May 27, 2009 —
Four people have been selected to receive UC
Irvine’s most prestigious honor, the Medal,
which annually confers lifelong recognition on
those who have made exceptional contributions to
the university’s mission of teaching, research
and public service.
“These individuals have been instrumental in
shaping the future for our campus and
community,” said Chancellor Michael Drake. “They
are leaders, advisers and innovators, and we
look forward to honoring them for their
outstanding service and contributions.”
This year’s honorees:
Anthony
James ’73, Ph.D. ’79 is a Distinguished Professor of
Microbiology & Molecular Genetics at UCI, where
he earned his bachelor’s and doctorate degrees
in biological sciences. An internationally known
biologist, he leads a global effort to develop
new methods of controlling dengue fever
transmission by mosquitoes. Funded by a $19.7
million grant in 2005 from the Foundation for
the National Institutes of Health, the endeavor
is among 43 groundbreaking research projects to
improve health in developing countries that are
supported by a $436 million grant from the Grand
Challenges in Global Health initiative, launched
by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
James’ research interests include the molecular
biology of insect vectors of disease, the
genetics of vector competence, malaria and
dengue fever. In 2006, his team created a
genetically engineered mosquito highly resistant
to the most prevalent type of dengue fever
virus.
He has earned a number of honors for his
research. In 2006 he was elected to the National
Academy of Sciences, and in 1994 he was named a
fellow of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science. James received the UCI
Alumni Association’s Lauds & Laurels
Distinguished Alumnus Award in 2004 and the
Burroughs Wellcome Fund’s New Initiatives in
Malaria Research Award in 2000.
Fariborz
Maseeh is a worldwide expert in
micro-electro-mechanical systems, or MEMS. After
earning a doctorate in engineering from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), he
founded IntelliSense in 1991. It was the first
company to specialize in the custom design,
development and manufacturing of next-generation
MEMS devices – tiny, computer-controlled chips
used in products from cardiac pacemakers to
aircraft landing gears. When IntelliSense was
acquired in 2000, Maseeh established the Massiah
Foundation, whose mission is to make
transformational investments in education,
science, healthcare, and the arts and
humanities.
Maseeh is the founding benefactor of UCI’s
Samuel Jordan Center for Persian Studies &
Culture in the School of Humanities and the
Claire Trevor School of the Arts. It is the
first interdisciplinary center in the University
of California system dedicated to Persian
studies not based in a department of Near East
or Middle East studies.
In addition to serving as a UC Irvine Foundation
trustee and supporting numerous program areas,
including engineering, medicine and
intercollegiate athletics, he sits on advisory
boards of several engineering schools. These
include UCI’s The Henry Samueli School of
Engineering, MIT, University of Southern
California and Portland State University’s
Maseeh College of Engineering and Computer
Science. Maseeh was also instrumental in
establishing the Teaching and Research Award at
The Henry Samueli School of Engineering. He has
received a number of awards, including Ellis
Island Medal of Honor, Computer Town Gold Medal
and Portland State’s Simon Benson Award among
others.
William
Parker is chair of UCI’s Department of
Physics & Astronomy and former vice chancellor
for research and dean of graduate studies,
serving from 2000 to 2006. He joined the faculty
in 1967, two years after the university opened.
His research interests include
superconductivity, macroscopic quantum effects
in superconductors, low temperature physics and
fundamental physical constants, and his work on
the electronic properties of metals has led to a
greater understanding of fundamental physics.
Parker’s administrative service began in 1975,
when he became assistant vice chancellor for
planning and programs. He was named associate
executive vice chancellor in 1984 and helped
create the Irvine Campus Housing Authority – the
organization responsible for the development of
University Hills, a highly regarded national
model for faculty and staff housing communities.
Parker has continued to teach physics throughout
his administrative career. His research efforts,
classroom work and community service have earned
him many honors and awards, including the Lauds
& Laurels University Service Award in 1980;
awards for outstanding teaching from the School
of Physical Sciences in 1979 and 1983; the Lauds
& Laurels Extraordinarius Award in 1989; and the
Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. Distinguished University
Service Award in 2008.
Laurel
Wilkening was third chancellor of UCI,
serving from 1993 to 1998. A renowned planetary
scientist and expert on comets and meteorites,
she served on several NASA committees and boards
during the 1990s.
During her five-year tenure, the campus received
its first two Nobel Prizes, contributed more
than $1 billion per year to the local economy,
completed 250,000 square feet of construction,
and increased private, state and federal
funding. Wilkening’s goal to move UCI into the
ranks of America’s top 50 research universities
was realized in 1995, and the campus was invited
to join the prestigious Association of American
Universities the following year.
Wilkening was instrumental in the creation of
University Research Park. While chancellor, she
asked the UC regents to review and approve a
proposal to lease 85 acres of undeveloped campus
land to the Irvine Company for the creation of
the research park – now a national model for
collaboration between the private sector and
university researchers. She also played a key
role in increasing the number of Regents’
Scholarships for transfer students by 60
percent, in cooperation with the campus’s
Academic Senate.
In addition, the Center for Educational
Partnerships was established during her tenure
to enhance campus outreach to K-12 schools and
community colleges. Since retiring in 1998,
Wilkening has remained active as a board member
for the Planetary Society, the University of
Arizona’s Commission on the Status of Women and
various environmental groups.
Hosted by the University of California, Irvine
Foundation, the Medal awards ceremony – “A
Celebration of Stars” – is the campus’s largest
fundraiser and one of Orange County’s premier
events. This year’s event will be held 5-10 p.m.
Saturday, Oct. 3, at the Bren Events Center and
will be chaired by Gary Singer ’74 and his wife,
Melanie. It will feature a reception and formal
dinner, medalist tributes and entertainment from
the Claire Trevor School of the Arts. Past
medalists, who include Nobel laureates, Pulitzer
Prize winners and industry leaders, also will be
highlighted. Event proceeds support key
programs, including Regents’ Scholarships and
graduate fellowships.
For advance reservations or more information, call 866-YOU-4UCI (866-968-4824)
About the University of California, Irvine:
Founded in 1965, UCI is a top-ranked university
dedicated to research, scholarship and community
service. Led by Chancellor Michael Drake since
2005, it is among the fastest-growing University
of California campuses, with more than 27,000
undergraduate and graduate students, 1,100
faculty and 9,200 staff. The top employer in
dynamic Orange County, UCI contributes an annual
economic impact of $4.2 billion. For more UCI
news, visit
www.today.uci.edu.
News Radio: UCI maintains on campus an
ISDN line for conducting interviews with its
faculty and experts. Use of this line is
available for a fee to radio news
programs/stations that wish to interview UCI
faculty and experts. Use of the ISDN line is
subject to availability and approval by the
university.


