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Inventing Tomorrow

ITems | March 2004

Top stories

Candler, Sapiro named Distinguished McKnight University Professors

Professors Graham Candler (aerospace engineering and mechanics) and Guillermo Sapiro (electrical and computer engineering) are among five mid-career faculty honored with the prestigious 2004 Distinguished McKnight Professorship.  Candler is a world leader in computational hypersonic fluid dynamics whose work is central to important national projects in aerospace engineering. He conducts research on flows around bodies that fly at exceedingly high speeds. His methods were used for the design of the Mars Pathfinder and the Stardust Comet Mission vehicles and now are playing a vital role in the redesign of the space shuttle. Considered on of the world's leading mathematicians in the area of image-based differential equation models, Sapiro is leading a mathematical renaissance in image processing and computer vision. His collaborative work with biologists is providing groundbreaking tools for processing biomedical imagery, and the application of his techniques to image restoration is aiding the work of artists, art restoration specialists, and the entertainment industry.

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Heimdahl receives U distinguished teaching award

Associate Professor Mats Heimdahl (computer science and engineering) is one of eight University faculty honored with the 2003-2004 Award for Outstanding Contributions to Graduate and Professional Education. The Distinguished Teaching Awards, which also include the Morse-Alumni Award for Outstanding Contributions to Undergraduate Education, recognize the significance of teaching excellence to the University's mission. Heimdahl and 12 other award recipients will be inducted into the Academy of Distinguished Teachers at a ceremony and reception on Monday, April 26. Find out more...

IT development director accepts new post in Missouri

Phil Oswald, IT's director of development, is leaving the college to become associate vice chancellor for development at the University of Missouri-Columbia. After joining IT in August 2000, Oswald led the college's hugely successful Campaign Minnesota effort, which raised a total of $158 million in gifts from nearly 13,000 donors.

"We're deeply grateful to Phil for all that he's accomplished on behalf of IT," says IT dean H. Ted Davis. "We'll also miss him as a colleague and friend, and we wish him well in his new venture."

Former MGS director Matt Walton dies at 88

Professor emeritus Matt Walton, Newton Horace Winchell School of Earth Sciences, died February 26 in St. Paul. He was 88. Walton served as director of the Minnesota Geological Survey from 1973 to 1986.

During his tenure as MGS director, Walton initiated successful research programs focused on environmental issues and started two programs of considerable significance to the University. The first was the storage and ultimate recovery of waste heat on the St. Paul campus in an underground iron mine in Ely, Minnesota. In the second, he obtained support from the Legislative Commission on Mineral Resources to develop a program in the acquisition of high-resolution, low-level aeromagnetic data, which eventually provided aeromagnetic maps of the entire state.

Honors

Professor Hans Othmer (mathematics) received a prestigious Humboldt Research Award from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Germany. The award recognizes his lifetime achievements, especially in the field of mathematical biology. The award includes 50,000 euro and the opportunity to conduct research projects of his choice in cooperation with specialist colleagues in Germany.

Ann Pineles, advisor in the Office of Lower Division Programs, has received the 2003-2004 John Tate Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Advising. She is one of four University employees honored with the award this year. The Tate Award recognizes outstanding academic advisors and their contributions to the University's educational mission. Recipients will be honored at a ceremony on Friday, April 23.

Events

Distinguished Women Scientists and Engineers Speakers Program: Why Women Reject Majors and Careers in Mainstream Science

April 1: Elaine Seymour, director of Ethnology and Evaluation Research, Center to Advance Research and Teaching in the Social Sciences, University of Colorado at Boulder, will discuss studies by her research group and offer explanations for the underrepresentation of women in some science disciplines. She'll examine factors that contribute to loss at opposite ends of the science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) pipeline: from among able undergraduate women who enter university intending to major in the sciences and from among doctorally prepared women who do not elect a STEM faculty career. Free. For more information call 612-624-2006. 3:30 p.m., 133 Physics.

April 5-6: Alexandra Navrotsky, Edward Roessler Chair in Mathematical and Physical Sciences, University of California at Davis, will present two lectures as part of the Distinguished Women Scientists and Engineers Speakers Program. Her research interests have centered on relating microscopic features of structure and bonding to macroscopic thermodynamic behavior in minerals, ceramics, and other complex materials. Free. For more information contact Professor Renata Wentzcovitch (chemical engineering and materials science, Professor Emi Ito (geology), or Assistant Professor Lee Penn (chemistry). April 5, 3:30–4:30 p.m., 105 Pillsbury Hall; April 6, 1:25 p.m., B75 Amundson Hall.

April 15-16: Vasu Varadan, Distinguished Professor of Engineering Science and Electrical Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, will present two lectures during her visit to campus. Her research interests include modeling and numerical simulation techniques for acoustic and elastodynamic scattering and propagation problems; effective medium simulations for engineered composites for tailored mechanical, electrical and magnetic properties; and the emerging field of metamaterials. Varadan developed the MS WIZ program, one of the first early intervention programs to attract girls ages 11-14 to science and engineering, and served as a U.S. delegate at the U.S.-China Workshop for Women in Science and Technology at the United Nations Conference on Women at Beijing in 1995. Free. For more information contact Assistant Professor Rhonda Drayton or Professor Mos Kaveh (electrical and computer engineering). April 15, 3:35 p.m., 112 Mechanical Engineering; April 16, time and location TBA, "Engineering Is a Woman's 'Best Friend.'"

Young Inventors Fair

April 3: Students in grades 4-9 display their inventions to the public during the Young Inventors Fair on Saturday, April 3, at St. Paul's Landmark Center. IT Alumni Association members were among the generous volunteers who evaluated kids’ original inventions at judging sessions last month. Now you can help us honor the accomplishments of 100 young inventors by volunteering at the fair. For more details or to volunteer call 612-638-1516 or email cmac@ecsu.k12.mn.us. Find out more...

IT Week

April 5-9: Celebrate the IT community by participating in the 2004 IT Week festivities. Major events include the Technology Fair (April 7-8) on Northrop Mall and IT Olympics (11 a.m., April 9, courtyard between Lind Hall and EE/CSci). For more information call 612-626-1552 or email plumbbob@umn.edu.

Design of Medical Devices Conference

April 7–9: Minnesota designers, manufacturers, researchers, and public sector representatives come together to discuss technology and issues related to medical device design. Program includes a student poster session. Register by April 1. Special rates for University faculty and full-time students. For more information call 612-625-2596 or email aburger@me.umn.edu

S&T Banquet

April 14: Charles McQueary, Under Secretary for Science and Technology, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) , will speak at the 2004 Science & Technology Banquet. The banquet begins at 5:30 with a reception, followed by the program and dinner. Preregister for preferred seating. For more information call 612-626-1802 or email stbanquet@umn.edu. 5:30-8:30 p.m., Minneapolis Hilton.

Looking ahead

Distinguished Teaching Awards ceremony

April 26: All members of the University community are invited to a special ceremony and reception to honor 13 faculty who have received the 2003-2004 Distinguished Teaching Awards. These outstanding teachers will be inducted in to Academy of Distinguished Teachers for their contributions to undergraduate, graduate, and professional education. Among those being honored is Associate Professor Mats Heimdahl (computer science and engineering,) who received the Award for Outstanding Contributions to Graduate and Professional Education. For more information call 612-625-9180 or email gaude004@umn.edu.

UMAA 100th Anniversary Gala Finale and Celebration

May 6: Internationally acclaimed contemporary musician Yanni (Psychology ’76) will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters at the University of Minnesota Alumni Association's 100th anniversary gala finale and annual celebration, "Changing the World One Graduate at at Time." The gala event includes a reception and dinner on Northrop Mall followed by a program in Northrop Auditorium. The program also features a keynote address and multimedia presentation by Yanni and musical performances by University students. 5:30 p.m. reception, 6:30 p.m. dinner, 8 p.m. program.

Group sales for parties of 10 or more are on sale now and will receive a $50 discount if ordered by April 2. For information on group sales call 612-625-8878. Tickets go on sale to the general public March 22. Order online or call 612-624-2345.

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