Carver Charitable Trust Endows CCOM DNA Facility
Tuesday, November 17th, 2009Leaders of the Roy J. Carver Charitable Trust of Muscatine, Iowa, University of Iowa Health Care and the UI Foundation have announced a $2 million gift from the Carver Charitable Trust that will establish an operational endowment for the DNA Facility in the University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine.
The proceeds from the operational endowment will support research projects, help to recruit and retain essential faculty and staff, and assist in the purchase of scientific instruments. Click to continue »

A leading cellular neuroscientist will speak as part of the Carver College of Medicine’s Distinguished Biomedical Lecture Series. Pietro, De Camilli, MD, Eugene Higgins Professor of Cell Biology and Neurobiology at Yale University will present “Molecular Mechanisms of Endocystosis” on Thursday, November 19 at 4 p.m. De Camilli’s talk is also the Department of Pharmacology’s 2009 Michael J. Brody Memorial Lecture.
Alexander Horswill, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology has been selected by the American Society for Microbiology to receive a Merck Irving S. Sigal Memorial Award. The award is one of only two such awards to be conferred by the society in 2010.
Two researchers in the University of Iowa Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine have been renewed for another five years as investigators of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI). Both researchers, Kevin Campbell, Ph.D., and Michael Welsh, M.D., have been HHMI investigators since 1989.
University of Iowa President Sally Mason announced today a $26.4 million gift commitment from longtime UI benefactors John and Mary Pappajohn of Des Moines — the largest single gift commitment ever for the UI from individual Iowa donors — and said it will provide the university’s new interdisciplinary Institute for Biomedical Discovery with “the catalyst it needs to reach its full potential.”
The University of Iowa has received a $100,000 Grand Challenges Explorations grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The grant will support an innovative global health research project conducted by Craig Morita, M.D., Ph.D., faculty member in the UI Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine, to create a vaccine against microbes that cause diarrhea.