September 11, 2015
LA JOLLA–The Salk Institute is pleased to announce the election of Edwin K. Hunter, a longtime supporter of the Institute and president of Hunter, Hunter & Sonnier, LLC, to its Board of Trustees. The Board voted on the appointment August 28.
“Edwin’s expertise in tax law, estate planning and philanthropy make him a valuable asset to our board,” says Salk Board Chairman Irwin M. Jacobs. “In addition, he comes into this role with a great deal of familiarity with the Institute having served as chairman of Salk’s yearly Tax Seminar for the past five years, and establishing the Edwin K. Hunter Chair in Molecular Biology in 2013.”
In 2014, Louisiana State University established the Edwin K. Hunter Chair in Communications, commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the LSU Free Speech Alley that Mr. Hunter created while an undergraduate student at LSU. Also a graduate of the LSU Law School, he was inducted into the Order of the Coif and edited the Louisiana Law Review.
Mr. Hunter currently practices law in Louisiana and is a member of the Louisiana, Texas and District of Columbia bars. As a Board Certified Tax Attorney, he conducts talks on tax law, estate planning and philanthropy, and is a published author on these topics. In addition, Mr. Hunter has served as a director of companies in the fields of cardiology, orthopedics, stem cell research and nutraceuticals. He is also a founding director of the Community Clinic of Southwest Louisiana and the Community Foundation for Southwest Louisiana.
Mr. Hunter serves as a trustee for the Joe W. and Dorothy Dorsett Brown Foundation, der Fritz Lang Foundation, der Olive Tupper Foundation and the Chambers Medical Foundation. He is past chair of the Section on Taxation of the Louisiana State Bar Association, a member of the Louisiana Educational Television Authority, a member of the Governor’s Commission on Public Broadcasting, and counsel for the Louisiana Commissioner for Indian Affairs.
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Das Salk Institute ist ein unabhängiges, gemeinnütziges Forschungsinstitut, das 1960 von Jonas Salk, dem Entwickler des ersten sicheren und wirksamen Polio-Impfstoffs, gegründet wurde. Die Aufgabe des Instituts besteht darin, grundlegende, kooperative und risikofreudige Forschung voranzutreiben, die sich mit den dringendsten Herausforderungen der Gesellschaft befasst, darunter Krebs, Alzheimer und die Gefährdung der Landwirtschaft. Diese Grundlagenforschung bildet die Basis für alle translationalen Bemühungen und führt zu Erkenntnissen, die neue Medikamente und Innovationen weltweit ermöglichen.