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<i> Times staff writer Steve Emmons compiled the Week in Review stories. </i> It was UC Irvine’s loss but Caltech’s gain. Caltech, Pasadena, announced Friday that Orange County
industrialist Arnold O. Beckman and his wife, Mabel, had pledged $50 million to establish a research center to study problems in the forefront of biology and chemistry, a center--and
grant--that UCI had sought. It will be known as the Beckman Institute, and, “There will be no place quite like it in the country,” said Caltech President Marvin L. Goldberger. The new center
will take some of the scientific advances of the past five years and provide scientists with the resources to experiment in ways not possible under existing research programs. For Arnold
Beckman, 85, Caltech has been an important place. He received his doctorate there in 1928 and was a member of its faculty until 1940 when he left to work full time for his company, Beckman
Instruments Inc. of Fullerton, a manufacturer of medical instruments (now part of SmithKline Beckman Corp.). He was on the university’s board of trustees for nine years and three buildings
on campus now bear his name. He has indicated his eagerness to dispose of a substantial part of his personal fortune, estimated at more than half a billion dollars, before “it gets handed
over to our estate and the government gets it.” Last year, before announcing a $20-million grant to establish the National Academy of Science in Irvine, Beckman said, “It’s harder to give
money away than it is to make it.” MORE TO READ