Edith J. Crawley Vision Science Research Laboratory Dedicated
The laboratory, located on the fifth floor of the Center for Academic and Research Excellence (CARE)/
Quest for Vision board members, members of the
The space is beautiful and is helping advance our research to new levels, says Winston Kao, PhD, professor and director of ophthalmologic research at UC. It also gives us an opportunity to have more interaction with other scientists. We can have stimulation among peersour project, their projectand establish cooperation.
The building, which was dedicated last fall, and lab is named after the late Edith J. Crawley, a UC graduate who was successfully treated for vision problems at the university.
Upon her death in 2003 at age 92, the sale of land holdings in
James Augsburger, MD, chair of the department of ophthalmology, says that in addition to Kaos research, which is focused primarily on problems of the cornea and how it heals after injury, research teams will work on finding treatments for macular degeneration and glaucoma.
The additional space permitted by Mrs. Crawleys gift effectively allows us more than double the space we have for eye and vision science, he says. It will also give us the space needed to recruit additional outstanding vision research scientists.
David Stern, MD, vice president for health affairs at UC and dean of the
This lab and the CARE/Crawley building as a whole serves as a highly visible gateway to the Academic Health Center and holds some of the most technically advanced laboratory research and teaching space in the nation, he says.
I thank Edith J. Crawley for her graciousness and her desire to save the vision of millions of people worldwide through this gift.
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