
The
BRI exists to promote excellence in interdisciplinary
scientific research and education. For more than 40 years,
flexibility and focus have allowed us to stay on course
despite vast changes in the arena of biomedical science.
In large measure, credit for this achievement belongs
to the individuals, foundations, and corporations that
have invested in society's future by supporting this multi-faceted
endeavor.
The BRI is a cohesive community, a hub of innovative graduate
training, and a constellation of programs that challenge,
inspire, and nurture UCLA’s neuroscientists. With
the support of our many long-standing benefactors and
new donors, the BRI will continue to be the model for
such centers worldwide.
BRI scientists are continuing to uncover the brain's mysteries.
Your gift – of any size – is a powerful endorsement
of UCLA's Brain Research Institute--where anything is
possible and amazing things are accomplished.
GONDA (GOLDSCHMIED) NEUROSCIENCE & GENETICS RESEARCH
CENTER
In
the next millennium, an effective laboratory environment
will be one which is revolutionary: open, computerized,
interactive, and designed to facilitate a constant exchange
of ideas among investigators from diverse disciplines
and persuasions. To maximize creative neuroscience and
genetics research at UCLA and to attract outstanding young
scientists for the next century, UCLA constructed the
Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience and Genetics Research
Center. Dedicated on December 15, 1998, this unique facility
will create unlimited opportunities for dynamic advances
in medical research that will translate discoveries from
the laboratory bench to the patient's bedside.
The
fields of human genetics and molecular neuroscience are
universally expected to be among the most important disciplines
for the approaching century. They hold tremendous promise
for advancing our understanding of human behavior and
for treating and curing many of humankind's most tragic
and widespread diseases and disorders. To ensure UCLA's
continuing prominence in these fields, the Gonda (Goldschmied)
Neuroscience and Genetics Research Center provides a home
for the UCLA Brain Research Institute and the UCLA Department
of Human Genetics. Research programs in this facility
will enlist faculty from the David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA and the College of Letters and Science.
Designed
by Robert Venturi of Venturi Scott Brown & Associates
and the Los Angeles based firm of Lee, Burkhardt, Liu,
the Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience and Genetics Research
Center was made possible through the vision and generosity
of Leslie and Susan Gonda. As Leslie Gonda explains, he
and Susan were born in Hungary. After escaping from the
Komarom forced labor camp in 1944, Leslie took the Gonda
name in order to escape Hitler's tyranny. Susan survived
internment at Auschwitz, and after the war they were married
in Switzerland.
Leslie
and Susan built a new life for their family in Venezuela
and later in Los Angeles, California. In 1988, they created
a family foundation which they dedicated to the memory
of their family members lost during the Holocaust.
The
Leslie and Susan Gonda (Goldschmied) Foundation has created
centers, laboratories, and endowments to meet the needs
of vascular, diabetes, genetic and neuroscientific research
at major medical institutions and universities around
the globe. Examples of the Gondas' philanthropy include
the Gonda (Goldschmied) Diabetes Research and Education
Wing at Ben-Gurion University, the Gonda (Goldschmied)
Medical Diagnostic Research Center and the Gonda (Goldschmied)
Brain Research Center at Bar-Ilan University, the Gonda
(Goldschmied) Vascular Centers at UCLA and the Mayo Clinic,
The Gonda (Goldschmied) Center for Diabetes and Genetic
Research at the City of Hope, the Mayo/Gonda (Goldschmied)
Integration Center and the Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience
and Genetics Research Center at UCLA.
Leslie
and Susan Gonda believe that through education and advances
in medicine, generations now and in the future will be
able to meet the challenges of an increasingly competitive
world and lead productive, meaningful lives. Through their
generosity the Gondas are teaching their children and
grandchildren the importance of charitable giving. Their
leadership gift to UCLA ranks as one of the most significant
contributions in the history of American philanthropy.
