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Robert
Packard Biography
Bob Packard was an insightful investment banker in San Francisco, who, early
on, sensed the rising swell in technology and the telecommunications industries
of the late 1980s. He was among the first on Wall Street to grasp the Internet's
far-reaching potential and, as head of technology investment banking for
the firm Alex.Brown, nurtured companies such as America Online, Amazon.com
and Microsoft.
Packard delighted in watching new companies bloom. "He saw possibilities
before the rest of us did," says Anne Martin, president of the Robert
Packard Foundation and chairman of the Center's Board of Governors, who
worked closely with him, "and understood how to build something big
and lasting."
But in November of 1999, at age 41 and at the high point of his career
and family life, Packard learned he had ALS.
"After Bob returned from Johns Hopkins with a confirming diagnosis,"
says Martin, "he realized that no therapy existed for ALS and, even
worse, that no clinical trials that could help him lay on the horizon.
But he'd come back from Baltimore with something like hope, impressed
by the Hopkins research effort and by a young doctor named Jeffrey Rothstein
who devoted much of his life to the disease. Bob had seen a way to fight
ALS and create something positive in the midst of despair."
By February of 2000, though slowed by a rapidly progressing form of ALS,
Packard led his family, friends and colleagues to create the Robert Packard
Foundation, raising more than $4 million and naming Martin as President.
Together with The Emily Davie and Joseph S. Kornfeld Foundation, led by
President Chris Angell, Packard launched a novel attack on the disease
by providing initial funding for the Center for ALS Research at Johns
Hopkins. In August of that year, Robert Packard died, leaving a wife and
three young children.
Through a generous commitment made by The Robert Packard Foundation,
the Center was named in honor of the late Robert Packard in July 2002.
The Robert Packard Center for ALS Research represents the lasting legacy
of Packard's drive and determination, focused on curing a cruel, fatal
disease.
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