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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
24, No. 17, March 17, 2005

achievements
A report
on honors, awards, appointments and other outstanding achievements of
faculty and staff members.
Education
| Engineering | FAA | LAS
| Law| UI Press |
education
The department of human resource education
at the UI has received the Outstanding HRD Academic Program of the Year
award from the Academy of Human Resource Development. The award was
announced Feb. 26 in Colorado at the annual academy’s conference.
The academy is the premier professional association that promotes the
link between research and practice in the field of human resource development.
The award is a tribute to the efforts of the faculty and staff members
and students in the department.
engineering
Bill Hammack, a
professor of chemical and of biomolecular engineering , has been named
a Jefferson Science Fellow by the U.S. Department of State. Hammack
is one of five tenured research scientists and engineers chosen to work
alongside senior diplomats and policy makers for a year in Washington,
D.C.
Candidates for Jefferson Fellowships are selected based on their scientific
achievements, communication skills and their ability to describe scientific
topics accurately for non-expert audiences. They also must be interested
in issues at the intersection of science, diplomacy and foreign policy.
Jefferson Science Fellows are asked to advise and also to educate.
Hammack produces “Engineering and Life,” weekly radio essays
on topics from air conditioning to Tupperware. The two- to three-minute
essays are distributed by Illinois Public Radio, and can be heard locally
on WILL-AM (580).
Nick Holonyak, professor
of electrical and computer engineering, has been named a Lincoln Laureate
by Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Holonyak and five other Illinoisans
will receive the Order of Lincoln Medallion in April. The award names
six Laureates of The Lincoln Academy of Illinois every year. It is the
highest honor the state bestows on people of outstanding achievement
who were born, or have lived, in Illinois. Holonyak is being honored
for inventing the light-emitting diode, which is commonplace in digital
displays. In addition, the semiconductor lasers used in CD and DVD players
stem from Holonyak’s work.
Thomas Overbye, professor
of electrical and computer engineering, has been awarded the first Alexander
Schwarzkopf Prize for Technological Innovation from the Industry/University
Cooperative Research Center Association. The group is a
voluntary, independent organization of past and present members of the
National Science Foundation’s Industry/University Cooperative
Research Center Program. Overbye is being recognized for his creation
and development of the power system visualization software known as
PowerWorld Simulator. This software helps visualize the complex processes
in which power flows in the nation’s electrical grid so engineers
can better understand events associated with its operation and repair.
The prize is awarded annually in the name of Alexander Schwarzkopf,
who established the Industry/University Cooperative Research Centers
Program at the National Science Foundation.
fine
and applied arts
Kathleen Conlin, dean
of the College of Fine and Applied Arts, will be named a Fellow of the
American Theatre during ceremonies at the Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts on April 24. Membership in the College of Fellows of the American
Theater is one of the highest honors theater educators and professionals
can bestow on their peers.
The College of Fellows of the American Theater was founded in 1965 to
recognize life achievement and distinguish service to the American theater.
Since its founding, 202 leaders have been invested, of whom 121 are
still living.
Thomas H. Schleis,
a lecturer in the School of Music, has been awarded one of three Outstanding
Instructor awards by the Illinois Lifelong Learning and Service Coalition.
The coalition is a statewide group that represents community colleges,
universities and other senior organizations that provide education programming
for older adults. Schleis received the award for his 10 years of dedicated
teaching of opera and musical theater in the UI Elderhostel and Senior
Scholars programs.
James Zagar, professor
of theater, has won the Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society’s Outstanding
Professor of Freshmen Award. This award is determined by nominations
and votes from incoming honorees in the Alpha Lambda Delta Honor Society.
Zagar will receive a plaque and stipend, and was invited to speak at
the society’s spring banquet and initiation on March 7.
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liberal
arts and sciences
Paul J. Hergenrother,
professor of chemistry, will receive a Sloan Research Fellowship from
the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Hergenrother ‘s grant of $40,000,
to be used toward his research, is one of 20 Sloan awards given annually
in chemistry. The fellowships recognize the very best young faculty
members in science and are meant to enhance their careers.
Cindy Ingold, Women
and Gender Resources librarian at the UI, has won the 2005 Women’s
Studies Section Award for Significant Achievement in Women’s Studies
Librarianship. The award is sponsored by Routledge and honors a significant
or one-time contribution to women’s studies librarianship. Ingold
worked with Linda Krikos, head of the Women’s Studies Library
at Ohio State University and the other recipient of the award, to edit
a volume titled “Women’s Studies: A Recommended Bibliography,
3rd ed.” A cash prize of $1,000 and a plaque will be presented
to Ingold and Krikos during the 2005 American Library Association Annual
Conference in Chicago at the WSS Program on June 27.
law
Richard Painter, professor
of law, has been appointed assistant to the president and associate
White House counsel. Painter will have primary responsibility for handling
ethics matters that arise in the White House and the Executive Office
of the President. Painter will report to White House General Counsel
Harriet Miers, the successor of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
ui
press
A three-volume set designed and produced by the UI Press and written
by William Kinderman, professor of music, was selected as a winner in
the 2004 Chicago Book Clinic book show. The set, titled “Artaria
195,” was designed by Copenhaver
Cumpston. Willis
Regier, director of the UI Press, was the acquiring
editor. The book is a special format, 12 inches by 10.5 inches, full
color with facsimile and transcription of a Beethoven manuscript.
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