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UCSB Names Institute For Theoretical Physics For Industrialist
And Philanthropist Fred Kavli
June 7, 2002
The Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa
Barbara was named in honor of Fred Kavli at a special campus ceremony held June
7, 2002.
The internationally renowned institute hosts the world's leading physicists
who come to Santa Barbara for special conferences and other programs dedicated
to exploring some of the most challenging scientific questions of our time.
The Kavli Foundation and Kavli Institute have provided landmark
gifts to the Institute for Theoretical Physics and its programs.
It is in recognition of this outstanding support that the institute
is to be named in honor of Fred Kavli. A resident of Santa Barbara,
Kavli is a trustee of The UCSB Foundation.
"These grants will have a lasting impact on our Institute for Theoretical
Physics and the world's scientific community," said UCSB Chancellor Henry
T. Yang. "Fred Kavli's pioneering spirit is an inspiration to us all. We
are honored to have his name on this important institute."
David Gross, director of the Institute for Theoretical Physics, said that
the Kavli support would enable the institute to respond more quickly to scientific
developments. "To be really effective as the lightning rod for physics and
all of its unfolding 21st-century ramifications, the Institute for Theoretical
Physics must have the ability to respond rapidly to breakthroughs," said
Gross. "Fred Kavli's support has given us that ability. He is both remarkably
generous and remarkably visionary, and we are very grateful."
The institute is a national research center and currently receives $4 million
annually from the National Science Foundation to support programs. The institute
is located at UCSB because the university's proposal to the National Science Foundation
20 years ago to establish an institute for theoretical physics was selected over
competing proposals from 50 other institutions.
The institute is housed in Kohn Hall, a building designed by Michael Graves
and named for the institute's founding director, Walter Kohn, a UCSB physicist
and research professor who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1998. The institute
is now developing plans for an addition to the building.
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