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FACES
Avian influenza—it’s
strictly for the birds
A road trip in Latin America and a lifelong
interest in a debilitating endemic disease
 Sharing
a home, a family and science—two alumni try to make a difference



ALUMNI
Three Yale alumni received Lasker Awards in September
NOTES

Alumni notes
Aaron Beck

Elizabeth Blackburn

Joseph Gall
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Three
Yale alumni received Lasker Awards in September
Three Yale alumni received Lasker Awards in September for outstanding
research in medicine. For 61 years the Albert Lasker Medical Research
Awards, among the most coveted in science, have honored scientists, physicians
and public servants who have made major advances in the understanding,
diagnosis, prevention, treatment and cure of many of the great crippling
and killing diseases of the 20th and 21st centuries.

This year’s recipients include Aaron T. Beck, M.D. ’46,
who on September 17 received the 2006 Albert Lasker Award for Clinical
Medical Research, “for the development of cognitive therapy, which
has transformed the understanding and treatment of many psychiatric conditions,
including depression, suicidal behavior, generalized anxiety, panic attacks
and eating disorders.”

Beck is university professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University
of Pennsylvania, where he joined the faculty in 1954. His initial research
dealt with the psychoanalytic theories of depression, but he subsequently
developed a different theoretical-clinical approach that he called cognitive
therapy. Since 1959 he has directed research into the psychopathology
of depression, suicide, anxiety disorders, panic disorders, alcoholism,
drug abuse and personality disorders, as well as the application of cognitive
therapy to these disorders. His most recent work has focused on reducing
the number of suicide attempts among chronic attempters and patients diagnosed
with borderline personality disorder.

The two other Yale alumni to receive Lasker awards were colleagues here
in the 1970s.

Elizabeth H. Blackburn, Ph.D., FW ’77, Sc.D.H. ’91,
the Morris Herzstein Professor of Biology and Physiology in the Department
of Biochemistry and Biophysics at the University of California, San Francisco,
shared in the Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research. She won
the award, along with Carol W. Greider, Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins, and Jack
W. Szostak, Ph.D., of Harvard, for the prediction and discovery of telomerase,
an enzyme that contains RNA and synthesizes the ends of chromosomes, protecting
them and maintaining the integrity of the genome. Blackburn began her
research in this area while she was a postdoctoral fellow at Yale.

Blackburn earned her doctorate from the University of Cambridge in England
in 1975 and did her postdoctoral work at Yale from 1975 to 1977 in molecular
and cellular biology in the laboratory of another 2006 Lasker honoree,
Joseph G. Gall, Ph.D. ’52.

“As a postdoctoral fellow in my lab at Yale,” Gall recalled,
“Liz identified the short DNA sequence that defines the telomeres,
or ends of chromosomes. Later when she and her student, Carol Greider,
found the enzyme (telomerase) that adds these sequences to chromosomes,
everyone knew immediately that they had made a monumental discovery. Since
then, the importance of their discovery has only grown.”

Among other honors and awards, Blackburn was named California Scientist
of the Year in 1999, elected President of the American Society for Cell
Biology for the year 1998 and served as a board member of the Genetics
Society of America (2000-2002). Dr. Blackburn is an elected fellow of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1991), the Royal Society of
London (1992), the American Academy of Microbiology (1993) and the American
Association for the Advancement of Science (2000). She was elected Foreign
Associate of the National Academy of Sciences in 1993, and was elected
as a member of the Institute of Medicine in 2000.

Gall received the Albert Lasker Award for Special Achievement in Medical
Science, “for a distinguished 57-year career—as a founder
of modern cell biology and the field of chromosome structure and function;
bold experimentalist; inventor of in situ hybridization; and early
champion of women in science.” Gall, now at the Carnegie Institution
(Department of Embryology at Baltimore), ranks among the most distinguished
cell biologists in the history of the discipline.

Among Gall’s awards are the 2004 Society for Developmental Biology
Lifetime Achievement Award and the 1996 American Association for the Advancement
of Science Mentor Award for Lifetime Achievement. In 1988 he received
the Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal, the highest honor bestowed by the Yale
Graduate School on exceptionally distinguished alumni.
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