The Family Fund provides supplementary support to encourage and
facilitate families -- especially those in which the physicist is
also the mother of young children -- to participate in the weeks-and
months-long collaborative research opportunities that are the
hallmark of KITP programming. Ann Rice chose to donate the $1.4
million proceeds from the sale of her home, she and her husband
Mike shared, to create the "Drs. Ann and Myron Rice Family Fund
for the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics." Because the
endowment was established in the form of a charitable remainder
trust, Ann also generously added a cash gift of $30,000 that
enabled the Family Fund to become operational in the spring of
2008. "I thought it would be a wonderfully appropriate memorial
for Mike, who was so encouraging and supportive of my own career
development," said Ann. "Both of us have had a life-long
commitment to the value of higher education. With this gift we
are enabling higher educators themselves to develop insight
through collaboration. It pleases me that we have found a way to
help that is deeply in keeping with our core values as a couple."
Remarks by David Gross, Chancellor Henry T. Yang, Monica Curry
Ann and Myron Rice
With a BA degree from the former Georgia State College for Women
(GSCW), Ann Smith began teaching high school home economics when
she was 19 years old. All the while teaching at the institutions
she attended, she went on to complete a 1951 MS degree from the
University of Georgia and a PhD from Florida State University in
economics, sociology and personal finance. The latter degree was
conferred in 1964, the year that she joined the UCSB home
economics faculty as a teacher of family finance and investment.
The author of two college textbooks on family management and more
than 50 articles and one book chapter related to teaching
financial management, Rice also served on the board of the
Consumers Union. Honored for her service on the advisory board of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, she was named Alumna of the
Year by Georgia College and State University (formerly GSCW).
Ann's husband Myron Rice, known as "Mike", was an Ohio native,
attended Miami University, where he obtained bachelor and master
degrees in business, and Cleveland College, where he earned a
doctor of chiropractics. After enlisting in the U.S. Army Air
Force in 1941 and serving in Europe during World War II, Mike met
and married Ann. They were married for 52 years. A skilled metal
smith, Mike designed orthopedic footwear for children. In addition
to his chiropractic practice, he owned and operated a trucking
company. Awarded a Utah State University doctorate in business
education in 1972, he served as professor at Santa Barbara City
College for 20 years, where in addition to teaching he chaired the
business department and supervised the work experience programs.
He also helped to establish the graduate program at Brooks
Institute, where he taught fledgling professional photographers
how to make a business of their art.
Lecture on "Quantum Whirlpools" by Professor Kathryn Moler, Stanford University