
·
John D. French, Director, 1961-1976
· Carmine D.
Clemente, Director, 1976-1987
·
Arnold B. Scheibel, Director, 1987-1995
· Allan J. Tobin, Director, 1995-2003

Dr. John Douglas French, "Jack"
to his friends, was a distinguished neurosurgeon and
investigator, and a co-founder and first Director at
UCLA's Brain Research Institute.
Jack French was born April 11, 1911 in Los Angeles. He
obtained his undergraduate degree from UCLA, and then received a medical degree from the University
of Southern California in 1937. After internship at the University
of California at San Francisco, and residency at the
University of Rochester, he stayed at Rochester serving
as acting head of neurosurgery. Jack spent 1947 at the
Illinois Neuropsychiatric Institute, concentrating on
neurophysiology and interacting with neuroscientists,
in the new surgical program headed by Dr. Percival Bailey.
In 1948 Jack became Chief of Neurosurgery at the Long
Beach Veterans Administration Hospital (LBVAH), and a Professor of Anatomy at UCLA's new medical
school.Brain Research Institute
In 1950 H.W. Magoun, one of Jack's Chicago contacts,
was appointed UCLA Professor and Chairman of Anatomy;
however, research facilities on the Westwood campus
were practically nonexistent. This led Magoun to ask
Jack about space in the LBVAH, and Jack's reaction was
immediate. He persuaded the enlightened director Dr.
E.V. Edwards to make research space and consultantships
available to Magoun, D. Lindsley, C.H. Sawyer, and others.
Soon, the LBVAH research group became highly productive,
and years before receiving Institute status from the
Regents, the Magoun-French neuroscience group became
known internationally as a leading
center for research on the nervous system.
Jack actively co-authored articles on the neural mechanisms
of sleep, wakefulness, coma, epilepsy, and stress-induced
ulcerations, wrote reviews and edited books. His bibliography
of over 100 titles reveals additional interests in educational
and historical issues; his CV lists numerous state,
national and international distinctions.
The momentum of the LBVAH group led Magoun, French
and others to apply to the Regents for the creation
of a research institute that would expand and improve
on the LBVAH facility with a broad-front, interdisciplinary
attack on the nervous system. Two years after receiving
approval for the development of an Institute from the
Board of Regents in 1959, the Brain Research Institute
(BRI) building was completed on the UCLA campus in 1961.
Jack's role was important in the founding of the BRI
and, nominated by Magoun, he became its first Director.
This office's obligations, reflecting disparate issues,
were numerous, demanding and at times frustrating. Jack
led the BRI to a leading position among the world's
research institutes, promoting and supporting the NIH
Mental Health Training and Clinical Research Programs,
the Space Biology and Data Processing Laboratories (inspired
by W.R. Adey), and the Brain Information Service, initiated
by Dr. Magoun.
In 1955 Jack married Dorothy Kirsten, a world-renowned
operatic soprano. While Jack suffered the ravages of
Alzheimer's disease, Dorothy established the John Douglas
French Foundation and Hospital for Alzheimer's Disease.
Dr. French directed the Brain Research Institute for
17 years.
He passed away on January 25, 1989, a patient in the
hospital that bears his name.


Carmine D. Clemente was born in Penns Grove, New Jersey
on April 29, 1928. He received his A.B., M.S. and Ph.D.
degrees at the University of Pennsylvania and upon the
completion of his doctorate in 1952 he joined the then
newly formed UCLA School of Medicine in Los Angeles,
California as an Instructor in Anatomy. The research
for his doctoral dissertation dealt with regeneration
of nerve fibers in the spinal cord of adult mammals,
a subject which has achieved increasing interest to
biomedical investigators over the past three decades.
Dr. Clemente was awarded a Bank of America - Giannini
Foundation postdoctoral fellowship which enabled him
to carry out research on nerve regeneration at University
College, London in 1953 and 1954. He then returned to
UCLA as an Assistant Professor of Anatomy. During the
next nine years he was elevated through the ranks of
his department and in 1963 he became Professor and Chairman
of the Anatomy Department at UCLA. He served as Chairman
for ten years and then for eleven years (July 1976 -
July 1987) he served as Director of the Brain Research
Institute at UCLA, a ten-floor building containing 135
research laboratories. This Institute comprises over
140 UCLA faculty members, all doing research in the
field of neuroscience or brain research. Since 1987,
he has continued at UCLA as Professor of Anatomy and
Cell Biology and Chairman of the Psychoneuroimmunology
Program. Dr. Clemente also holds the position of Professor
of Surgical Anatomy at the Charles R. Drew - Martin
Luther King Medical Center and Postgraduate Medical
School and he has served on the Board of Directors of
the Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science
since 1985.
Dr. Clemente's early research dealt almost exclusively
with regeneration and transplantation of neural tissue
in the central nervous system of mammals. Additionally,
since 1960 his research has focused on the central control
of visceral functions. He has investigated the brain
mechanisms related to sexual and feeding behaviors and
especially the brain systems related to wakefulness
and the onset of sleep. During this entire period, however,
his interest in CNS regeneration has remained unabated
and he has continued to do research on nerve regeneration,
often in collaboration with graduate students and postdoctoral
scholars. Dr. Clemente has published nearly 200 scientific
papers and books. For his research he has received the
Annual Award of Merit in Science from the National Paraplegia
Foundation, the Pavlov Medal from the Pavlovian Society
of North America, the 1978 Annual Research Award of
the Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science and
the 1986 Rehfuss Award and Medal from the Jefferson
Medical College in Philadelphia. He has served as President
of three scientific organizations: The American Association
of Anatomists, the Association of Anatomy Chairman and
the Pavlovian Society of North America. For fifteen
years (1973-1988) Dr. Clemente was the Editor-in-Chief
of Experimental Neurology, an interdisciplinary journal
in neuroscience.
Dr. Clemente is also active in the field of medical
education and has served as Chairman of the Council
of Academic Societies of the Association of American
Medical Colleges (AAMC) as well as a member {for six
years) of the Liaison Committee on Medical Education,
the accrediting body of the A.M.A. and the A.A.M.C.
for all the medical schools in the United States and
Canada. He has published an Atlas of Human Anatomy,
used by most American medical students, and in 1985
he completed an extensive revision of the 30th American
Edition of Gray's Anatomy that won First Prize in the
Medical Book Division of the Philadelphia Book Fair
in 1986. Dr. Clemente has produced a series of sound
and color films on the dissection of the human body
that are now used in over 170 medical schools throughout
the world. He has taught anatomy to first-year medical
students at UCLA for the past 52 years and he also teaches
surgical anatomy to residents in surgery at the Martin
Luther King Hospital in Los Angeles since 1973 when
the hospital opened. He officially retired from UCLA
in 1994 but has been recalled to continue teaching anatomy
to both medical and dental students.
Dr. Clemente has been elected to membership in the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences and
has been honored by presenting distinguished scientist
lectureships or "named" lectureships at Tulane
University, the University of Arkansas, the Medical
College of Virginia, the University of Iowa, Denison
University, the Hahnemann Medical College, the University
of Texas at San Antonio, the New Jersey College of Medicine,
the University of Mexico in Mexico City, the University
of Tokyo, Chiba University, the University of Osaka,
Kanazawa University, and the University of Kyoto in
Japan. In May of 1986 he spent a period of ten days
as Distinguished Visiting Professor at the Michigan
State University Medical School in East Lansing, Michigan
In 1989, Dr. Clemente was the recipient of a John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship which allowed him to
spend a year doing research on neural transplantation
in the Laboratory of Neurobiology at the National Institute
for Medical Research at Mill Hill, London, England.
In 1993, he was presented the Henry Gray Award of the
American Association of Anatomists and in that same
year selected as the Honored Member of the Year by the
Association of Clinical Anatomists. These were both
the highest awards presented annually by these scientific
organizations. In 1996 he was selected to receive one
of the UCLA Awards for Excellence in Medical Education,
and in 1997 he received the UCLA Medical Alumni Association
Award of Extraordinary Merit. In June, 2003, Dr. Clemente
was an awardee at the Annual Meeting of the Federation
of Sleep Research Societies for his early research on
forebrain mechanisms related to the onset of sleep.


Arne Scheibel was born in New York City
in 1923 where he lived for the first 24 years of his life.
He did his undergraduate work at Columbia College and
received his Doctor of Medicine degree from Columbia College
of Physicians and Surgeons in 1946. Though initially interested
in cardiology, the apparent pervasiveness of emotional
factors in the disease patterns he was seeing led him
to switch to psychiatry. After a year of psychiatric residency
training at Washington University in St. Louis, he entered
the Army as a medical officer and received further training
while on active service at Brooke General Hospital in
San Antonio. During this period he met and married his
first wife, Madge (Mila) Ragland.
Increasingly troubled by the lack of knowledge about
brain substrates of psychiatric syndromology, Arne joined
the neurophysiology laboratory of Warren McCulloch at
Illinois Neuropsychiatric Institute to learn something
about brain structure and function. Here, for the first
time, he read some of the work of Camillo Golgi and Santiag
Ramon y Cajal and discovered the beauty of the fine structure
of the central nervous system as revealed by the silver
chromate methods of Golgi. Today, more than half a century
later, although largely superseded by more discriminative
techniques, the Golgi still remains the “gold standard”
against which all neurohistological techniques are measured.
After a short period as faculty member at the University
of Tennessee and 15 months spent abroad (Universities
of Pisa and Oslo) on a Guggenheim fellowship, Arne joined
the faculty of the University of California at Los Angeles
as a member of the Departments of Anatomy,
and Psychiatry (1955), and is presently starting his forty
eighth year of uninterrupted service. Mila died at the
end of 1976 after a very long illness, thereby ending
a long personal as well as professional relationship.
Arne married Dr. Marian Diamond of U.C. Berkeley in 1982,
thereby starting a “commuting marriage” much
to the satisfaction of Marian and Arne as well as the
airlines.
Arne had the privilege of serving as Acting Director
(1987-1990) and Director (1990-1995) of the Brain Research
Institute during a period of economic stress - a period
in which the continued existence of the Institute itself
was under question. With a strong and efficient staff
and a determined membership (which exceeded 200 investigators)
the Institute was kept intact and innovative programs
were initiated, several of which (e.g. a student-manned
community outreach program now known as “Project
Brainstorm,” interdisciplinary faculty meetings
and seminars called “affinity groups,” etc.)
still continue.
Arne's research, stemming from his interests in both
psychiatry and the neural underpinnings of behavior, have
revolved about the structuro-functional basis of cognition
and action. Using both neurohistological and neurophysiological
techniques, his laboratory has studied the reticular core
of the brain stem and thalamus, the organization of neural
modules, structural correlates of aging and psychosis,
and the relation between levels of cognitive activity
and the patterns and richness of neuropil.
Today, his greatest satisfaction stems from sharing the
nervous system with his students. Teaching full time at
UCLA is both a privilege and a joy. So far as he is concerned,
there is no question about who is learning more!

Allan J. Tobin was born in
Manchester, New Hampshire, on August 22, 1942. He
received his S.B. in Humanities and Science from
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his Ph.D. in
Biophysics from Harvard University, in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship in
Biophysics at the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot, Israel,
and a postdoctoral fellowship in Biology at M.I.T. In
1971, Allan joined the faculty of Harvard University,
and then moved to UCLA in 1975 as Assistant Professor of
Biology. As part of the effort to consolidate
neuroscience within the UCLA College, he moved to the
Department of Physiological Science, where he became
Professor of Neuroscience. In 1994, he was concurrently
appointed Professor of Neurology. Allan was a visiting
scientist at the Institut Pasteur in 1982 and at the
Université Pierre et Marie Curie in 2002-2003.
Over his 28 years at UCLA, Allan
held varied appointments both at UCLA, and in the
scientific community: at UCLA, he was Chair of the
Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program from 1989-1995,
Director of the Brain Research Institute from 1995-2003,
cofounder of the NeuroEngineering Training Program, and
from 1996 to 2003, the Eleanor Leslie Chair in
Neuroscience. He was a member of the Molecular Biology
Institute and, of course, the Brain Research Institute.
Outside of UCLA, Allan was also Scientific Director of
the Hereditary Disease Foundation and a member of its
Science Advisory Board, as well as a member of the
Scientific Advisory Board of the Dystonia Medical
Research Foundation and the American Paralysis
Association (later the Christopher Reeve Paralysis
Foundation). He also was a member of the Academic
Advisory Council of University of Judaism and of the
Neurology C Study Section of the NIH. He also chaired
the strategic planning committee on neurodegenerative
disorders for NINDS.
Allan received a number of honors
and awards, including the Eleanor Leslie Chair in
Neuroscience, the David Gillespie Memorial Lectureship
at the Medical College of Pennsylvania and Hahnemann
University, Centennial Lectureships at the National
Student Research Forum of the University of Texas
Medical Branch, the National Medical Research Award to
the Huntington's Disease Collaborative Research Group, a
Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award from the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the
Shannon Award from the National Institute of Health, a
Distinguished Teaching and Service Award from the UCLA
Department of Biology, a Mary Jennifer Selznick
Fellowship from the Hereditary Disease Foundation, a
Fellowship from the Committee to Combat Huntington's
Disease, and a U.S. Public Health Service Postdoctoral
Fellowship.
Allan’s research laboratory at UCLA
used molecular and cellular techniques to study the
function, regulation, and degeneration of GABA-producing
neurons in the brain and spinal cord, in order to
address basic mechanistic questions important for
Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, epilepsy, and
spinal cord injury. In addition to publishing over one
hundred scientific papers, he is the coauthor of
Asking About Life, a prize-winning university
biology textbook whose three editions sold more than
150,000 copies.
Allan J.
Tobin retired from UCLA at the end of 2003. Dr. Gerald
Levey, Dean of the School of Medicine, in his
announcement about Allan’s retirement wrote:
Allan’s leadership over nearly three decades has helped
to build UCLA's neuroscience and brain research programs
into the finest in the nation. His skill and hard work
as director and as a valued faculty member are
recognized and appreciated by all those who have had the
pleasure to work with him.
Under Allan’s leadership and relationship-building
skills, the UCLA neuroscience community has done much to
create a vibrant, stimulating, and productive
environment across many campus disciplines.
Allan’s research has spanned diverse areas such as
enhancing GABA action, promoting spinal cord repair,
preventing diabetes, and devising cell-based screens for
neurodegenerative disorders. After devoting more than 28
years of service to UCLA, however, Allan has decided to
focus on a single challenge -- to find an intervention
for Huntington's disease, the concern that brought him
into neuroscience in the first place.
He will be leaving UCLA to work full-time with the High
Q Foundation, an organization specifically created to
find interventions for Huntington's disease. He will be
remembered as one of the most cherished and respected
members of our faculty.
At the
beginning of 2003, Allan retired from UCLA to join the
High Q Foundation (now called the CHDI Foundation), a
privately funded organization dedicated to finding
treatments for Huntington’s Disease. His interest in
Huntington’s disease dates from 1972, when he attended
an early Hereditary Disease Foundation (HDF) workshop.
Since 1979 he has convened more than 250
interdisciplinary workshops and organized several
research consortia, including the successful search for
the HD gene. At CHDI, he continues his efforts to
catalyze interactions—among basic and clinical
researchers, among chemists and biologists, and among
neuroscientists and molecular biologists—that, he hopes,
will lead to interventions that will stop or slow the
progression of neurodegenerative diseases.
