| Five elected to AAAS
Five Caltech faculty members are among this year’s newly elected
fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. They join 191 other
Americans and 17 foreign honorees as the 225th class of fellows of the
prestigious institution that was founded in 1780 by John Adams and other
prominent Americans.
This year’s new Caltech inductees are Barry Barish, the Linde Professor
of Physics and director of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
Observatory (LIGO); William Bridges, the Braun Professor of Engineering,
Emeritus; Andrew Lange, the Goldberger Professor of Physics; Barry Simon,
the IBM Professor of Mathematics and Theoretical Physics; and David Tirrell,
chair of the Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering and McCollum-Corcoran
Professor and professor of chemistry and chemical engineering.
The five from Caltech join an illustrious list of fellows, both past
and present. Other inductees in the 225th class include Supreme Court
Chief Justice William Rehnquist, Angels in America author Tony Kushner,
Academy Award–winning actor Sidney Poitier, former NBC Nightly News
anchor Tom Brokaw, Washington Post CEO Donald Graham, and Pulitzer Prize–winning
cartoonist Art Spiegelman. Past fellows have included George Washington,
Benjamin Franklin, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Albert Einstein, and Winston Churchill.
According to the academy’s president, Patricia Meyer Spacks, the
fellows were chosen “through a highly competitive process that recognizes
individuals who have made preeminent contributions to their disciplines
and to society at large.”
“Throughout its history, the Academy has convened the leading thinkers
of the day, from diverse perspectives, to participate in projects and
studies that advance the public good,” said Executive Officer Leslie
Berlowitz.
The academy is an independent policy research center that focuses on
complex and emerging problems such as scientific issues, global security,
social policy, the humanities and culture, and education.
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