SDSU
BioScience Center Receives
$3 Million Endowment for Director
CONTACT: Aaron Hoskins
SDSU Marketing & Communications
Phone (619) 594-1119 Pager (619) 620-3282
ahoskins@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, January 10, 2005
Since graduating with a degree from the College of Sciences in 1950,
Fred Henry has always been grateful for the career opportunities
made possible by studying at San Diego State. Now the retired Navy
scientist is showing his appreciation by giving SDSU the opportunity
to hire a world-class researcher.
Henry, 81, has pledged an estimated $3 million
from his estate to permanently fund a faculty position which will
serve as the director of the SDSU BioScience Center, a research
facility dedicated to investigating the emerging links between heart
disease and infectious diseases.
Starting this year, he will supplement state funding for a faculty
appointment and give SDSU $85,000 annually for the rest of his life,
allowing SDSU to immediately recruit for the position, entitled
the Frederick G. Henry Chair in Life Sciences.
Im extremely pleased to help San Diego
State enhance its leadership role in microbiology and cardiovascular
research, Henry said. Its incredibly gratifying
to be able to give back to an institution that had such a profound
impact on my life.
I was fortunate that I had a smooth transition
from graduation into a great job, said Henry, who worked at
the Navy Electronics Laboratory for 27 years, during which time
he directed some of the labs most important scientific and
technological endeavors. Most of my associates were Ph.D.s
and graduate students from the best universities across the country,
and I immediately fit right in. I felt lucky to be there, and Im
so very thankful that my education at San Diego State made it possible.
Thomas Scott, dean of SDSUs College of Sciences,
said Henrys generosity enables SDSU to recruit a nationally
recognized scientist to lead the SDSU BioScience Center.
Fred Henrys gift will fund the directorship
at a generous level, allowing SDSU to compete for the most prominent
scientists, Scott said. When you also consider that
the director will oversee a new research facility with a high profile
in the community, we expect well be able to attract considerable
interest from top-level candidates around the country.
Recruitment for the Frederick G. Henry Chair in Life Sciences is
underway and should be
completed by the time the SDSU BioScience Center opens in January
2006. The facility will house the SDSU Heart Institute, the Center
for Microbial Sciences and other core programs and facilities. The
building will feature four floors of research laboratories and a
100-seat auditorium in its 37,000 square feet of space.
SDSU President Stephen Weber said philanthropic
support from companies and individuals such as Henry is increasingly
vital to achieving the universitys educational mission.
Because the state budget continues to be
a challenge for us all, private support is increasingly critical
for us to maintain, and enhance, the quality of SDSU programs and
services, Weber said. Thanks to Mr. Henry, the SDSU
BioScience Center will be able to immediately attract the top-echelon
researcher and administrator needed to achieve its research and
educational goals.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelors
degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 16 areas. SDSUs nearly 33,000 students participate in an
academic curriculum distinguished by direct contact with faculty
and an increasing international emphasis that prepares them for
a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
###
|