TSRI Holds Tenth Commencement 
      
      By Mika Ono 
        
         "So 
          use all that is called Fortune. Most men gamble with her, and gain all, 
          and lose all, as her wheel rolls. But do thou leave as unlawful these 
          winnings, and deal with Cause and Effect..." 
         Ralph Waldo Emerson, Self-Reliance, 
          1841, quoted by Professor Paul Schimmel in TSRI's 2002 commencement 
          address 
       
      For students receiving their doctoral degrees, The Scripps Research Institute's 
        (TSRI) commencement on May 17 provided moments to rememberthe handshake 
        with their advisor, the donning of the ceremonial blue and black hood, 
        the grasp of the diploma in their hand. These were small acts that symbolized 
        the culmination of years of work and as well as the new opportunities 
        that lay ahead. 
        For others, the commencement marked an important moment in the institute's 
        historyTSRI's tenth commencement, the first class to graduate from 
        the newly named Kellogg School of Science and Technology, and the conferral 
        of honorary degrees to philanthropists Janet ("Jean") Kellogg and W. Keith 
        Kellogg II. With this commencement, the institute also celebrated past 
        accomplishments and looked toward a promising future. 
        The commencement ceremony officially began at 10 AM with the march east 
        from The Skaggs Institute, through the tunnel under North Torrey Pines 
        Road, to the Neurosciences Institute auditorium. Led by TSRI President 
        Richard Lerner, faculty, graduating students, and current students processed 
        solemnly along the walkway. 
        Once in the auditorium, Lerner welcomed the group. Jeffery Kelly, vice 
        president for academic affairs and dean of graduate studies, also gave 
        introductory remarks. 
        "In ways that the founders of this program could not have anticipated, 
        the graduate program has brought a spirit of vitality, inquisitiveness, 
        and innovation to the institute that is apparent to everybody who works 
        in this environment," said Kelly. "The students continue to fine-tune 
        the senses of those of us who, in principal, have more experience. They 
        frame new and challenging questions about issues that we thought were 
        fully clarified. They allow us to see science through their own eyes. 
        And they remind us why we choose to make education and research our life's 
        venture." 
        He continued, "It is important to note that many of the scientific discoveries 
        that are made at The Scripps Research Institute involve work of graduate 
        studentssomething that makes us feel enormously proud." 
        Later is his address, Kelly officially announced the naming of the TSRI 
        graduate college the Kellogg School of Science and Technology in "recognition 
        of Jean and Keith Kellogg's commitment to education and science and their 
        generous support of science education at The Scripps Research Institute, 
        in California, and in the state of Illinois... Their endowment of the 
        graduate program provides us with the resources to continuously innovatesomething 
        that is absolutely essential in the fast-moving environment in which we 
        find ourselves today." 
        Paul Schimmel, Ernest and Jean Hahn Professor of Molecular Biology and 
        Chemistry at TSRI, took up this theme in the commencement address. 
        "The graduate program at The Scripps will probably go down as one of 
        the all-time success stories in American graduate education," he said. 
        "The achievement I'm talking about is not the achievement of numbers. 
        It's the achievement of quality, acclaim, and recognition." 
        However, Schimmel advised TSRI, its graduate program, and its 2002 graduates 
        to continually reinvent themselves to remain successful over the long-term. 
        "You've got to go 'back to the future', over and over, throughout your 
        lifeas an individual as well as an institutionif you are going 
        to maintain success," he said. "You're not going to win by leaving things 
        to chance and just extrapolating to the future what you did in the past." 
        After Schimmel's speech, the graduating students' thesis advisors said 
        a few words about the students and their contributions to science, and 
        students accepted their diplomas. K.C. Nicolaou, chair of the Department 
        of Chemistry, set a TSRI record by graduating four Ph.D. candidates this 
        year, the most ever from one lab. 
        Honorary degrees were then conferred on Jean Kellogg and W. Keith Kellogg 
        II. Carolyn McGunn, the daughter of Jean Kellogg, accepted the honorary 
        degree on behalf of her mother. General Packaging Products President William 
        Keith Kellogg III, the son of W. Keith Kellogg II, accepted an honorary 
        degree on behalf of his father. 
        "This is a great achievement for the Kellogg familyto be honored 
        by such an outstanding scientific academy," said William Keith Kellogg 
        III, upon accepting the degree. "It emphasizes our family's consistent 
        commitment to science and education." 
        Jean Kellogg is a philanthropist and friend of both science and higher 
        education. She is a current member of the TSRI Board of Trustees and an 
        emeritus member of the Foundation Board for The Scripps Institutions for 
        Medicine and Science. She has been involved with California State University, 
        San Marcos, from its beginning stages a decade ago, and the Kelloggs have 
        been long-time benefactors of Cal Poly Pomona, providing funding for its 
        4,000-square-foot W. Keith and Janet Kellogg University Art Gallery. Jean 
        Kellogg is also an active community volunteer in local organizations, 
        such as the Rancho Santa Fe Library Guild. 
        Keith Kellogg is the retired chairman of General Packaging Products, 
        a small, Chicago-based company founded by his father, John Kellogg, who 
        pioneered the use of waxed paper in 1915. General Packaging prints protective 
        packaging materials, like candy and frozen food wrappers. Keith Kellogg 
        spent many of his formative years in a cereal factory, working for his 
        grandfather, Will Keith Kellogg, inventor of the corn flake and founder 
        of Kellogg Company, today the world's leading cereal producer. 
        In the past 10 years, TSRI's Ph.D. program has produced 140 graduates, 
        21 of whom graduated this year. The institute's first commencement in 
        1993 graduated a single student. Since then, the program has grown rapidly 
        in both size and reputation. U.S. News & World Report recently 
        ranked TSRI's graduate program ninth in the biological sciences, sixth 
        in chemistry, and second in the specialty of organic chemistry. 
        TSRI alumni hold positions in both academia and industry. Some of this 
        year's graduates will work at Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute 
        of Technology, Uppsala University (Sweden), University of Minnesota, University 
        of California at San Diego, the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research 
        Foundation (GNF), Pharmacia Corporation, and Attenuon, L.L.C. 
        As TSRI's tenth commencement ceremony came to a close, the students, 
        faculty, honored guests, and new alumni filed out of the auditorium to 
        the future that lay waiting. 
         
        
       Go back to News & Views Index 
       
 | 
     
         
        TSRI Professor Paul Schimmel gave a commencement 
        address entitled "Back to the Future" in which he emphasized that responding 
        to change is key for long-term success. Photo by Kevin 
        Fung.  
        
        
        
        
        Twenty-one students received Ph.D. degrees from 
        The Scripps Research Institute on May 17. Photo by Jason 
        Bardi.  
        
        
        
        
        
        Carolyn McGunn and William Keith Kellogg III received 
        the honorary degree on behalf of Jean and W. Keith Kellogg. Photo 
        by Jason Bardi.  
        
        
       |