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Franklin Inst.'s Benjamin Franklin Medal and Bower Award Laureates

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  • Franklin Inst.'s Benjamin Franklin Medal and Bower Award Laureates

    Source: The Franklin Institute

    The Franklin Institute Committee on Science and the Arts Announces the Benjamin Franklin Medal and Bower Award Laureates for 2004


    Raymond Damadian, Inventor of the First Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    (MRI) Machine, Among the Laureates Honored with America's Most
    Historic Science Awards -- Widely Regarded as American Nobel Prizes


    PHILADELPHIA, March 18, 2004 (PRIMEZONE) -- The Franklin Institute's
    Committee on Science and the Arts, together with Institute President
    and CEO Dennis M. Wint, today announced the Benjamin Franklin Medal
    and Bower Award laureates for 2004. These preeminent scientists are
    being recognized for their outstanding achievements in the fields of
    chemistry, computer and cognitive science, electrical engineering,
    life sciences, mechanical engineering, and physics. Laureates will be
    honored formally at a gala awards ceremony and dinner, presented by
    Fleet Bank, on Thursday evening, April 29, 2004, at The Franklin
    Institute, in Philadelphia. The Master of Ceremonies for this
    celebration will be Lester Holt. Holt is the lead anchor for daytime
    news and breaking news coverage on MSNBC.

    The 2004 Franklin Institute Bower Award Laureates are: Seymour Benzer,
    who will receive the esteemed Bower Award for Achievement in Science
    and the accompanying $250,000 Cash Prize; and Raymond Damadian, who
    will receive the Bower Award for Business Leadership. The Benjamin
    Franklin Medal Laureates are Roger Bacon, Harry B. Gray, Richard
    M. Karp, Robert B. Meyer, and Robert E. Newnham.

    "These exceptional scientists are taking up the torch of a
    180-year-old-legacy of extraordinary achievement in science and
    technology," says Wint. "Whether lifting the veil on the mysteries of
    the brain, or inventing tools and technologies to help us conquer
    disease and revolutionize many aspects of science, engineering, and
    business, these Laureates are changing the quality of our everyday
    lives. We are proud to honor these individuals as they have honored
    and inspired us and generations to come through their dedication to
    science."

    Meet The Laureates

    The Bower Award Laureates

    The 2004 Bower Award and the accompanying $250,000 Cash Prize for
    Achievement in Science in the Field of Brain Research goes to
    geneticist Seymour Benzer for his pioneering discoveries that both
    founded and greatly advanced the field of neurogenetics, thereby
    transforming our understanding of the brain. More than anyone else,
    Benzer began the effort to trace the actual, physical links from genes
    to behavior. Research based on these fundamental experiments is today
    providing profound insights into such degenerative disorders as
    Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease. In addition to opening the door
    to a new world of understanding about the genetic basis of brain
    function and pathology, Benzer also is honored for his monumental
    discoveries in molecular biology and physics early in his career.

    The 2004 Bower Award for Business Leadership in the Field of Brain
    Research goes to physician and inventor Raymond V. Damadian for his
    development and commercialization of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
    used in clinical applications. Damadian filed for a patent in 1972,
    which was granted in 1974 for an "Apparatus and Method of Detecting
    Cancer in Tissue". Soon afterwards, he and his team built the first
    MRI scanner and achieved the first human scan (1977), and subsequently
    founded FONAR Corporation and developed the first commercial MRI
    machine in 1980. MRI technology has transformed the diagnosis and
    treatment of disease in our lifetime, and in doing so, created an
    entirely new industry. The development and commercialization of the
    MRI has given the world a Jules Verne view inside our bodies such that
    even the inner workings of the brain are now within reach. Today,
    thanks to Damadian's work, more than 60 million MRIs are performed
    each year around the world.


    The Benjamin Franklin Medal Laureates

    The Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry goes to Harry B. Gray for his
    pioneering contributions to the understanding of the underlying
    physics and chemistry that control electron transfer in
    metalloproteins. Specifically, Gray has applied his knowledge of
    inorganic chemistry to biological processes. He and his team
    identified the molecular pathway by which electrons move in proteins
    that contain a bound metal ion such as iron or magnesium in their
    structure. Examples of metalloproteins in living cells are chlorophyll
    in plants and hemoglobin in blood. Gray is an indefatigable promoter
    of inorganic and biological chemistry.

    The Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer and Cognitive Science goes to
    Richard M. Karp for his contributions to the understanding of
    computational complexity. vHis work helps programmers find workable
    solution procedures to tremendously complex problems, avoiding
    approaches that would fail to find a solution in a reasonable amount
    of time. Scientific, commercial, or industrial situations where his
    work applies include establishing least-cost schedules for industrial
    production, transportation routing, circuit layout, communication
    network design, and predicting the spatial structure of a protein from
    its amino acid sequencing. Karp is among the world leaders in
    algorithm design, analysis, and computational complexity.

    The Benjamin Franklin Medal in Electrical Engineering goes to Robert
    E. Newnham for his invention of multiphase piezoelectric transducers
    and their spatial architecture, which has revolutionized the field of
    acoustic imaging. Specifically, Newnham invented the composite
    piezoelectric transducer, which has had exciting applications in the
    fields of underwater acoustics, medical ultrasound, wireless
    communications, and chemistry. He is considered one of the pioneers in
    the field of electronic composites and acknowledged as the "Father of
    Unified Nomenclature of Piezocomposites".

    The Benjamin Franklin Medal in Mechanical Engineering goes to Roger
    Bacon for his fundamental research on the production of graphite
    whiskers and the determination of their microstructure and properties,
    for his pioneering development efforts in the production of the
    world's first continuously processed carbon fibers and the world's
    first high modulus, high strength carbon fibers using rayon
    precursors, and for his contributions to the development of carbon
    fibers from alternative starting materials. So many of today's
    products and technologies rely on high strength composites. From
    sports equipment to aerospace advancements, high strength graphite is
    an integral part of today's world -- a world made possible by Roger
    Bacon.

    The Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics goes to Robert B. Meyer for his
    creative synthesis of theory and experiment demonstrating that tilted,
    layered liquid crystal phases of chiral molecules are ferroelectric,
    thus launching both fundamental scientific advancement in the field of
    soft condensed matter physics and in the development of liquid crystal
    displays that meet the demands of current technology. The application
    of his work has been instrumental in the development of new
    technologies including flat panel displays and optical switches
    important to the modern computer and optical communication industries.


    The Story of the Franklin Institute Awards Program

    The long, distinguished history of The Franklin Institute Awards
    Program dates back to 1824, when the Institute was founded by a group
    of leading Philadelphians to train artisans and mechanics in the
    fundamentals of science. Philadelphia -- then the largest city in the
    United States -- was the nation's innovation and manufacturing
    center. In 1824, the Institute arranged the first of what became a
    series of annual exhibitions of manufactured goods.

    With the exhibitions came the presentation of awards -- first
    certificates and later endowed medals -- for achievement in science
    and technology. Recipients were selected by the Institute's venerable
    Committee on Science and the Arts, established in 1824 as the
    Committee on Inventions. The Institute's all-volunteer Committee still
    nominates recipients of The Franklin Institute Medals. Committee
    members represent academia, corporate America, and government. They
    evaluate the work of nominated individuals for its uncommon insight,
    skill, or creativity, as well as for its impact on future research or
    application to serve humankind.

    Widely regarded as the American Nobel Prizes, these awards reflect
    upon the spirit of discovery embodied by Benjamin Franklin, as well as
    the power of science to inspire lives and encourage future innovation
    and discovery. The list of Franklin Institute medal winners reads like
    a "Who's Who" of notable Nineteenth, Twentieth, and Twenty-First
    Century scientists. The list includes Alexander Graham Bell, Marie
    Curie, Rudolf Diesel, Thomas Edison, Niels Bohr, Max Planck, Albert
    Einstein, Jane Goodall, and Herbert Kelleher to name but a few. To
    date, 101 Franklin Institute Laureates also have been honored with 103
    Nobel Prizes.

    The newest awards -- the Bower Award for Business Leadership and the
    Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science -- are made possible
    by a $7.5 million bequest in 1988 from Henry Bower, a Philadelphia
    chemical manufacturer. The Bower Science Award carries a cash prize of
    $250,000, making it one of the richest science prizes in America.

    Today, The Franklin Institute continues its dedication to education
    and science literacy, creating a passion for science through its
    museum, outreach programs, and curatorial work. Recognizing leading
    individuals from around the world is one important way that the
    Institute preserves Franklin's legacy.


    Awards Week

    In addition to the formal Awards Ceremony on Thursday evening,
    Laureates will participate in a series of symposia to be held at local
    universities during Awards Week. This year's symposia are scheduled at
    the University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University, Villanova
    University, and the University of Delaware.

    Laureates will also take part in a Meet the Scientist session on
    Tuesday of Awards Week, during which hundreds of students from city
    schools are invited to meet the scientists and join in a question and
    answer session with them. This lively and exciting discussion presents
    a rare opportunity for students to interact with some of the most
    exceptional scientists in the world. Moderating the event and
    interacting with these world-renowned scientists are students from
    Partnerships for Achieving Careers in Technology and Science (PACTS) -
    a Philadelphia-based program for minority middle- and high-school
    students.

    Also scheduled for Tuesday is an interactive Celebration of Science,
    wherein demonstrations geared to young museum visitors highlight the
    scientific concepts behind the work of this year's Laureates.

    The 2004 Franklin Institute Awards Ceremony and Dinner is generously
    presented by Fleet Bank. Fleet's lead sponsorship helps to underwrite
    the extraordinary costs associated with staging the April 29, 2004
    Awards Ceremony, which will be attended by more than 700 business,
    civic, governmental, and education leaders. This support also provides
    funds for free or reduced admissions for the 300,000 or more
    schoolchildren who visit the museum each year.

    Also providing support are Associate Sponsors, Centocor, Inc.;
    Cephalon, Inc.; Endo Pharmaceuticals Inc.; and the Four Seasons
    Hotel. In addition to their support of the formal Awards program on
    Thursday evening, Cephalon, Inc. will generously underwrite the
    Laureates' Symposia and the Meet the Scientist program during Awards
    Week.

    For more information on the 2004 Franklin Institute Awards Program,
    please call Donna Dickerson, Awards Program Director, at 215.448.1329,
    or check the Institute's web site at http://www.fi.edu,
    http://www.fi.edu/tfi_awards. For tickets, please call Barbara Cowan,
    Director of Development Events, at 215.448.0984. To arrange for
    interviews or to receive additional Laureate information and
    photographs, kindly contact Evan Welsh, Public Relations Director, at
    The Franklin Institute at 215.448.1176 or [email protected]; or Emily
    Reynolds, Communications Manager, at 215.448.1175 or [email protected].


    CONTACT: The Franklin Institute
    Evan Welsh, Public Relations Director
    (215) 448-1176
    [email protected]

    Emily Reynolds, Communications Manager
    (215) 448-1175
    [email protected]

    © 2003 PrimeZone Media Network, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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