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The George W. Woodruff School of
Mechanical Engineering at Georgia Tech
Presents

The Annual
Harold W. Gegenheimer
Lecture Series on Innovation

Featuring:

Dr. Steven L. Stice
Professor and Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar,
University of Georgia

Speaking About:

Cloning Technology at a Crossroad:
Raelians or Real Science?

Thursday, October 16, 2003, 3:30 P.M.
Van Lee (ECE) Auditorium
Georgia Tech Campus, Atlanta

(Reception after the lecture on the George P. Burdell Plaza)

Biographical Sketch

Dr. Steven L. Stice has more than sixteen years of research and development experience in biotechnology and is a co-founder of five biotechnology companies. He produced the first cloned rabbit in 1987 and the first cloned transgenic calves, George and Charlie, in 1988. In 1997 his groupDr. Steven L. Stice produced the first genetically modified embryonic stem cell derived pigs and cattle. This research led to publications in Science and Nature journals, national news coverage from CBS, NBC, ABC, and CNN, and the first U. S. patents on cloning animals and cattle embryonic stem cells. Dr. Stice holds fourteen patents with six pending, all dealing with stem cells or cloning. In 2001, Dr. Stice announced a breakthrough in the cloning process and the first cloned animal (calf) from an animal that was dead for 48 hours. Throughout his career he has published and lectured on cloning and stem cell technologies. Prior to joining the University of Georgia, Dr. Stice was a cofounder and Chief Scientific Officer at Advanced Cell Technology, a company developing cloning and stem cell technology. Dr. Stice is a Professor and has a Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar endowed chair at the University of Georgia. His research focuses on developing innovative animal cloning and stem cell technologies. He cofounded CytoGenesis, Inc, which was later purchased by BresaGen. Dr. Stice helped BresaGen develop four of the human embryonic stem cell lines approved for NIH funding.

Dr. Stice was named one of the 100 Most Influential Georgians in 2002 by Georgia Trend magazine. In 2000, he was named one of the top forty entrepreneurs under forty years old in Georgia, and he received the AGR grand president’s award for leadership in agriculture and the Outstanding Young Alumni Award from the University of Illinois.Dr. Stice received a B.S. degree in agricultural science from the University of Illinois in 1983, an M.S. degree in 1985 from Iowa State University, and a Ph.D. in 1989 from the University of Massachusetts in Amherst.
 
Synopsis of the 2003 Gegenheimer Lecture
 
Fifty years ago Briggs and King cloned the first frog embryo, and since that time, there has been tremendous interest and concern about how the science will be used. Cloning advances have been a boon for many groups, including the movie industry, press, experts, both ethical and scientific, that have hit the speech and book selling tours, and finally, the religious cults like the Raelians who claimed they cloned the first human last year. Once we get past the hype and the fiction, where have cloning innovations taken us and where is it going? Today, pharmaceutical companies are producing lifesaving drugs cheaper and safer through cloned animals. Cloning is being used to produce farm animal using less natural resources to produce the same amount of protein. In the future, cloning technology may improve the quality life for people suffering from diabetes, Parkinson’s, and other debilitating diseases. Cloning is a scientific phenomenon that turns old cells into young cells, thus providing insight into the aging process and cancer. But someday, someone may clone another human being. As is the case with any technological advance, there has been setbacks, and we will need to decide whether the potential benefits outweigh the risks. We certainly have not seen the last of the Raelians either.
 
About the Lecture Series

The Lecture Series on Innovation was established in 1995 through an endowment from Mr. Harold W. Gegenheimer (Class of 1933) to support student programs that encourage creativity, innovation, and design. Through the lecture series and support of capstone design projects, students are exposed to processes that stimulate creativity and lead to inventions and patents. The previous Gegenheimer lecturers were:

1995 Dr. Jerry M. Woodall
Distinguished Professor of Microelectronics at Purdue University
Necessity Is the Mother of Invention, But Curiosity and Persistence Make It Happen
 
1996 Mr. Burt Rutan
President and CEO of Scaled Composites, Inc.
Innovation: Use It or Lose It
 
1997 Dr. Jim Adams
Professor at Stanford University
Creativity Versus Control: Their Impact on Innovation
 
1998 Dr. George N. Hatsopoulos
Founder of Thermo-Electron Corporation
Thermo Electron and the Spin-Out Business Design
 
1999 Mr. Richard Teerlink
Retired President and CEO of Harley Davidson, Inc.
Our Learning Journey
 
2000 Dr. Woodie Flowers
Pappalardo Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT
Innovator, Innovatee, or Somewhere Between?
 
2001 Dr. Leo Beranek
Co-Founder, Past President, and CEO of Bolt Beranek & Newman
Concert Halls of the World and Their Design
 
2002 Dr. Roger L. McCarthy
Chairman of Exponent, Incorporated
 

About the Woodruff School

The Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering is the oldest and second largest of the nine divisions in the College of Engineering at Georgia Tech. The School offers academic and research programs in mechanical engineering, nuclear and radiological engineering, and health physics. The enrollment includes about 1350 undergraduates and more than 650 graduate students. Studies are directed by a full-time staff of 83 professors, 23research faculty, and 4academic professionals, who are supported by 52 staff members. The George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering is the only educational institution to be designated an ASME Mechanical Engineering Heritage Site. For more information about the Woodruff School contact:
 

Phone: (404) 894-3200
Fax:  (404) 894-8336
E-mail: menehp.info@me.gatech.edu
Web: http://www.me.gatech.edu

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