UCI Foundation gets new chairman
Andrew Edwards
The UC Irvine Foundation announced the election of a new chairman
Monday, the same day a campus professor was selected to lead a
multimillion-dollar study to combat dengue fever.
Douglas Freeman, who lives in Corona del Mar, was chosen to head
the school’s foundation. Trustees on the UC Irvine Foundation seek
private funding for university endeavors.
Freeman has been a member of the foundation’s board since 1999.
“I’d like [UCI] to be recognized for the exceptional quality of
its faculty and students,” Freeman said. “It’s a really extraordinary
university that’s sort of underappreciated.”
UCI, which turns 40 years old this year, may not enjoy as much
fame as UC Berkeley and UCLA, Freeman said. However, Freeman expects
UCI will emerge as a much more well-respected university in the next
two decades.
“It’s giving both those institutions a run for their money,”
Freeman said.
Freeman said he is waiting to confer with incoming Chancellor
Michael V. Drake to set fundraising priorities.
Drake is set to take over the university’s top position Saturday.
Ralph Cicerone, the outgoing chancellor, was elected president of the
National Academy of Sciences.
Important jobs for the foundation include securing money to
recruit faculty to endowed chairs, enhancing financial aid programs
and financing campus construction, said Thomas Mitchell, UCI vice
chancellor of university advancement.
Also on Monday, the Seattle-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
announced UCI microbiologist Anthony James had been chosen to lead a
$19.7-million research project to examine the potential for genetic
engineering to be used as a tool against dengue fever.
Dengue fever, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, is caused by a mosquito-borne virus.
The disease primarily affects people in tropical urban areas. It
is estimated 50 to 100 million people contract the disease each year.
The grant calls for James to lead research to genetic techniques
that could stop the dengue fever virus from developing in mosquitoes,
hinder mosquitoes from spreading the disease or reduce or destroy
mosquito populations.
“What we hope to provide are potential supplements to existing
approaches to controlling mosquito-borne diseases, such as vaccines
and insecticides, but using genetics as the basis for new tools,”
James said in a statement.
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