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The Copy Shop 539 E. 13th Ave. 485-6253 UNIVERSITY Women in science are still rare By Carne Dennett Emerald Associate Editor In spile of reports that the United Stains lags behind in the sciences and despite the fuel that science remains a male-dominated realm, the University has managed to attract an exceptional grouji of intelligent, accomplished women sci ence faculty. These women are on the cutting edge of fields like molecular biology, neuroscience, biochemis try. artificial Intelligence, psychology nnd human movcmnnl. Among them arc recipients of some of the most presti gious fellowship and grants in ihe country. However, the Univer sity, should not take this as prodding to prop themselves up on a ped estal There are no women faculty in the physics department, and only throe In chemistry. One of those throe. Associate Professor Geral dine Richmond, said the University Is not tops at recruiting and supporting women science faculty. But what makes the University different from oth er schools is that the women here are very good. "I don’t think you could point to a single fe male hero that you could question whether she goi the job here because of a ’token’ situation." she said. "I think every woman that you look at hern has been extremely successful. "That reflects on thu University for recognizing that we don't need the extra shove, we just don't want to hassle with people who stand in our way." Diane Hawley, an assistant professor in chemis try. said the University is bettor than many placos she has experienced When Hawley was looking for u job eight years ago, she perceived a negative feeling toward women at some of the places she interviewed One school had Hawley tulk to women in an other academic department, presumably because there were none in the science departments. "Sometimes they would ask me if I had special concerns us a woman." she said. "It made me feel really uncomfortable, because one would like to think that in a process liko that, the considera tions would bo the same for a man and a wom an.” When Hawley applied at the University In lUBS, she saw no indication that her interviewers wore thinking ubout her gender — a good sign, she said, one she lias also noticed in hiring of new facultv. Ths University's group of women scientists lias UNIVERSITY RESEARCH I third in a series . jumped the hurdles lo achieve not average ca reers. but award-winning careers. Togother they have received many national uwards, including Guggenheim Fellowship, Searlo Scholar. National Science Foundation Presidential Young Invosliga tor, Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship and Searlo Schol ar awards. In 1990. The Scientist magazine discovered that of the nine Presidential Young Invttstigators on the University faculty, six were women — giving the University the highest proportion of femule PYls in the nation. PYIs receive $25,000 a year for five yours to help support their labs, with on addi tional $37,000 a yoar if matched by industry or private-sector sources. Richmond, a PYI and winnor of several other awards, does research using lasers to study what interactions between liquids and mnturial sur faces, in the hopes of understanding what proper ties of a metal or semi-conductor hold it together or make it corrode. "Surfaces are what interact with the rest of the world," she said "Surfaces are whore all the ac tion is." Sarah Douglas, an associate professor of com puter science and information science, studies human-computer interactions, or "artificial intel ligence." Originally a biochemistry major, she first began working with computers after graduat ing from Berkeley in 196C, and eventually went on to get hor Ph.D in computer science. Douglas said that as an undergraduate, she was interested in mathematics because of its similari ties to language, and found herself wondering how to get her computer to respond in English. "Wo havo not boon able to got a computer to successfully carry on a conversation,*’ Douglus said. This is difficult, she said, because no one really understands how language works. “Can you reduce human language and human intelligence to computational mechanistic pro cesses?” is the driving question behind her re search. "Are human beings just computers.’’ Hawley is studying the molecular mechanism that activates only particular genos in our DNA. Once a gone is activated, a ribonucleic acid copy of the geno is produced, which ultimately leads to the production of the particular enzymes that de termine a cell's kind, shape and function. The failure to produce the RNA allows different cells to serve different purposes in the body, but sometimes it's a mistake that leads to diseases. “The question we're asking is 'What is involved in that selection process?’ " she said. These women ond their colleagues have ac Turn to SCIENCE, Page 5 $1 million will aid science education Undergraduate science edu cation ut the University will l>o strengthened by a now SI million grant, announced Wednesday, from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute of Belhesda, Md. The five-year grunt, among 42 uwurdod competitively by HHM1 to collogos and univer sities throughout the United Stales, is part of an ongoing effort — tho largest private in itiative of its kind — to keep American students competi tive in science and mathemat ics. At the University, the mon ey will be used in several ways to make the study of sci ence a more attractive option for undergraduates, Including development of innovative new teaching methods and materials. "Many colleges and univer sities across the country have boon criticized for 'abandon ing' undergraduate educa tion." said University Presi dent Myles Brand in a press release. "In contrast, at the University of Oregon, through our Oregon Model, we are re doubling our long-standing commitment to quality, acces sible undergraduate educa tion in a comprehensive re search university setting." In tho ruleaso, Daniel Udovic, associate professor of biology, said the grant will support: • Activities aimed at at tracting and retaining stu dents to tho study of science, including seminars and activ ities for beginning students, peer tutoring to help students with special needs, indepen dent research experiments for advanced undergraduates supplemented by special sem inars. and opportunities for undergraduates to publish their research results and present them at scientific meetings. • Development of computer scienco software for introduc tory biology und related fields and tutorials in these areas. • Summer programs for mid dle school, secondary school and community college sci ence teachers that will pro vide opportunities for curric ulum development, particu larly laboratory activities, and for collaborative research with University faculty. Udovic. who heads tho Bi ology department, said the HHM1 grant will help tho University attract and retain its best students in the sci ences and load to "an im proved learning environment. particularly for first- and sec ond-year students, that will encourage a sense of belong ing in the University science community." John Moseley, University vice president for research, said the HHMI funds will “substantially enrich the UO's ability to provide the kind of stimulating under graduate educational experi ences that are critical to acti vating a student's intcrust in a career in the scioncus." In all, 1B1 public and pri vate colleges and universities are now part of the HHMI ini tiative. which, at $175.5 mil lion. is the nation's largest privutely funded science ef fort. The HHMI, established In 1953, employs scientists In cell biology, genetics, immu nology, neuroscience and structural biology. In 1990, HHMI selected Bri an Matthews, a University physics professor and director of the University's Institute of Molecular Biology, for a sev en-year term as the first HHMI investigator in Oregon. A physicist and crystallogra pher, Matthews is one of nine university faculty members belonging to the National Academy of Sciences.