Matching Gifts 3M Foundation, Inc. Advanced Micro Devices Agilent Technologies Air Products & Chemicals Inc. Altria Inc. Amgen Foundation Arkema Inc. Azko Nobel BASF Corporation BEA Systems Boeing Company BP Amoco Foundation, Inc. Bridgestone/Firestone Trust Fund Bristol-Myers Squibb Cadence Design Systems, Inc. Chevron Corporation Citgo Petroleum Corp. Clorox Company Foundation ConocoPhillips Dow Chemical USA Dow Jones & Company Eli Lilly & Company Fnd. Elsevier Foundation Engelhard Corporation Equistar Ethyl Corporation ExxonMobil Foundation Fidelity Foundation Fluor Corporation FMC Foundation Ford Motor Company Genentech General Electric Foundation General Motors Foundation Georgia Power GlaxoSmithKline Hospira IBM Corporation Illinois Tool Works Foundation Intel Foundation Intuit Inc. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Johnson & Johnson Johnson Controls Foundation Lam Research Corporation
Lockheed Martin Medtronic Menasha Corporation Foundation Merck Monsanto Fund MRW & Associates Northern Trust Northrop Grumman Corporation Pfizer Inc. Pharmacia & Upjohn Foundation Pharmacia Foundation Pioneer Hi-Bred International Procter & Gamble Fund Raytheon Company The Rockefeller Foundation Sealed Air Corporation Shell Oil Company Foundation State Farm Tesoro Petroleum Corporation Valero Energy Corporation Wells Fargo Wyeth (American Home Products Corporation)
benefits of
corporate giving
Tyco representative and college alumnus Mark Ellsworth (Ph.D. ’93, Chem) chats with chemistry graduate student Hemamala Karunadasa about her research. Karunadasa’s work is supported by a Tyco Electronics fellowship.
tyco electronics fellowships 63 Tyco Electronics, the world's largest supplier of passive electronic and fiber optic components, has supported College of Chemistry graduate students for many years. Mark Ellsworth (Ph.D. ’93, Chem) of the Menlo Park location has been instrumental in meeting with graduate students and coordinating their fellowships. Two college graduate students are currently supported by Tyco Electronics fellowships — Hemamala Karunadasa of Jeffrey Long’s research group in chemistry, and Amish Patel of Nitash Balsara’s group in chemical engineering. Says Karunadasa, “I'm in my fourth year, and I need to start completing the various projects I have been working on for the past few years. As much as I like to teach, it is a huge time commitment. The Tyco fellowship allows me to give my research undivided attention this year. I am very grateful to Tyco Electronics for their generosity and for their interest in promoting research.”
annual report ’05-’06