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Accolades
Nick
Clesceri, professor of environmental engineering, has taken
a one-year leave of absence from Rensselaer to accept an appointment
with the National Science Foundation. Clesceri has been named
program director for the environmental engineering program in
the bioengineering and environmental systems division of the Engineering
Directorate. Clesceri will work with other program directors in
formulating research strategies, developing cooperation among
government, academia, and industry, fostering outreach to underrepresented
groups, and providing leadership within NSF and the research community.
9/1/00
Howard Littman, professor of chemical engineering,
was awarded the Best Review Award, 1998/1999 from the Canadian
Journal of Chemical Engineering. The award was established
to recognize the key role of reviewers in maintaining the high
quality of a research journal. Littman received a complimentary
subscription to the journal for 2000. 9/1/00
E.
Bruce Nauman, professor of chemical engineering, has been
named to receive the NAMF Award of the American Institute of Chemical
Engineers (AIChE), for sustained contributions to mixing research
and practice. It is given by the North American Mixing Forum of
the AIChE under the sponsorship of the Procter & Gamble Company.
9/1/00
Mark
Rea, director of the Lighting Research Center, has received
the 2000 Illuminating Engineering Society of North America Medal,
the highest honor in the field of lighting. The medal honors "meritorious
technical achievement that has remarkably furthered the profession,
art, or knowledge of illuminating engineering." Rea was cited
for his leadership as editor-in-chief of the IESNA Lighting
Handbook, his nearly 150 technical papers and presentations,
his work on lighting technologies, and his contributions to the
development of the world's first master's of science in lighting
at the LRC. Rea is a fellow of the IESNA and a member of the Optical
Society of America and the Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage.
9/1/00
Arthur
Sanderson, vice president for research, and George Saridis,
professor emeritus of electrical, computer, and systems engineering,
were recipients of the Institute of Electric and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE) Third Millennium Medal presented at the IEEE International
Conference on Robotics and Automation. J. Keith Nelson, chair
and professor of electric power engineering, was also presented
with the IEEE Third Millennium Medal at the IEEE Dielectrics and
Electrical Insulation. 9/1/00
Peter
Schroth, clinical professor in the Lally School of Management
and Technology at Rensselaer at Hartford, was one of the featured
speakers in a program of the American Bar Association in Washington,
D.C. In May, Schroth was the commencement speaker at Shimer College,
which awarded him the honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters.
He also has been named editor of the Journal of Business in
Developing Nations. 9/1/00
The
Rensselaer Technology Park has won an Award of Excellence
from the Association of University-Related Research Parks. The
award recognizes parks "that excel in bringing technology
from the laboratory to economically viable business activities
as well as actively participating in the university community,
creating an important positive effect on university research funding
and on recruitment of superior students and faculty."
9/1/00
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