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Fall 2001


In This Issue:

Annual Fund Climbs

Welcome, Class of 2003

Society of Columbia Graduates Names Great Teacher

Whitaker Foundation Grant to Biomedical Engineering

Distaff Side of Volunteerism

Alumni Briefs

Reunion 1999

Biomedical Receives $3 Million Whitaker Foundation Grant

The Center for Biomedical Engineering came one step closer to department status with the grant of $3 million over the next three years from the Whitaker Foundation. The Whitaker Biomedical Engineering Development Award, combined with matching Columbia funds earmarked in Z.Y. Fu's naming gift to the School, will help propel the fledgling Center into a full and outstanding Biomedical Engineering Department among the top ranks of biomedical engineering programs in the country.

"The Whitaker grant will allow the Center to hire four new tenure-track faculty members, build a new student laboratory and renovate lab space on the third floor of Engineering Terrace," said Van C. Mow, the Center's Director and Stanley Dicker Professor of Biomedical Engineering. "These funds will help solidify the important multidisciplinary links between engineering and health sciences and also create new ones. We expect to be a major resource for research and teaching within the University in a very short time. The Center already provides a platform for synergistic research interactions between the engineering and medical faculties and our status as a department will only strengthen our efforts."

Dr. Mow was elected last year to the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academy of Sciences, one of only a handful of non-physicians so honored, and became one of only 24 researchers in the U.S. to concurrently hold membership in the IOM and the National Academy of Engineering. His leadership has been key to the successful relationship between the University's engineering faculty and the medical faculty at Physicians and Surgeons. Under his aegis, the Center received a previous Whitaker Foundation Special Opportunity Grant of $1 million in 1996 and, so far this year, research grants to young faculty in the Center total nearly $3 million.

The University Faculty Senate recently approved formation of the Biomedical Engineering Department. If the University Board of Trustees approves, it will become the first new department since Computer Science, which was established in 1979.

"Biomedical engineering is to the new millennium what computer science was to the last half of this century," said Dr. Mow. "We have had a dramatic increase in student interest so that, by 2001, we expect to graduate 40 undergraduate biomedical engineering majors."

The Center has three educational tracks: biomedical imaging, biomechanics, and cellular engineering. Graduate students and doctoral candidates already are doing research in orthopaedic and musculoskeletal biomechanics, artificial organs and cardiovascular prostheses, bone bioengineering, cellular engineering, cardiovascular biomechanics, auditory biophysics, and magnetic resonance imaging.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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