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Science & Technology

Paul Berg, Ph.D. Biochemistry '52, D.Sc. Honoris Causa '97

Paul Berg Photo

Paul Berg earned his Ph.D. from the biochemistry department and received the 1980 Nobel prize in chemistry for pioneering genetic engineering research. Dr. Berg is the Cahill Professor in Cancer Research Emeritus at Stanford's Department of Biochemistry, and Director of the Beckman Center Emeritus.

Polykarp Kusch (1911 - 1993), B.S. Physics '31

Polykarp Kusch graduated from Case Institute of Technology with a B.S. in physics. He shared the 1955 Nobel prize in physics for research on electrons' magnetic strength that resulted in major modifications to atomic theory. Dr. Kusch was a member of the faculty at Columbia from 1946 until 1971. He then taught physics at the University of Texas in Dallas until his retirement in 1982.

Donald A. Glaser, B.S. Physics '46

Donald A. Glaser who received his B.S. in physics from the Case Institute of Technology in 1946, received the 1960 Nobel prize in physics for inventing the "bubble chamber," a device that allows scientists to photograph trails left by high-speed atoms traveling through super-heated liquids. Dr. Glaser is a professor of biophysics and neurobiology in the graduate school physics department at the University of California Berkeley College of Letters and Science.

Donald A. Thomas, B.S. Physics '77

Donald Thomas

Dr. Donald A. Thomas, an astronaut with NASA, is a veteran of four space flights--logging over 1,040 hours in space serving as a mission specialist on STS 65, 70, 83, and 94. In 1990 he served as Principal Investigator for the Microgravity Disturbances Experiment, a middeck crystal growth experiment which flew on STS-32. From July 1999 to June 2000 he was Director of Operations for NASA at the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in Star City, Russia. Thomas holds two patents, has authored several technical papers and has received numerous awards including: the NASA Sustained Superior Performance Award, 4 NASA Group Achievement Awards, 4 NASA Space Flight Medals, 2 NASA Exceptional Service Medals, and the NASA Distinguished Service Medal.

Peter Tippett, Ph.D. Biochemisty '81, M.D. '83

Peter Tippett Photo

Peter Tippett is chief technology officer at Cybertrust. He has been a leader in the computer security industry for more than fifteen years, beginning with the development of the first--and highly acclaimed--anti-virus software, "Vaccine". In 1992 Dr. Tippett sold his company, Certus, to Symantec which turned "Vaccine" into the incredibly popular "Norton AntiVirus." As one of the leading experts regarding the growth of microcomputer viruses, Dr. Tippett has worked closely with the Federal Government; providing key information to the Department of Justice about David Smith--the writer of the Melissa Virus, advising the Joint Chiefs of Staff on cyberwarfare during Desert Storm and consulting with former computer security czar, Howard Schmidt. Dr. Tippett was also featured in the Winter 2004 issue of Case Magazine.