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ABOUT PEOPLE

ASEE Prism,  Summer 2005  

THE National Academy of Engineering elected eight new ASEE members in recognition of their outstanding contributions to engineering research, practice, or education.

GEORGE GEORGIOU, Joe C. Walter Jr. Endowed Chair, department of chemical engineering, University of Texas-Austin, for his contributions to protein engineering, especially the development of therapeutics to biological warfare agents, protein manufacturing technologies, and combinatorial library screening methodologies.

CAROL K. HALL, Alcoa Professor of Chemical Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, for applications of modern thermodynamic and computer-simulation methods to chemical engineering problems involving macromolecules and complex fluids.

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LEAN H. JAMIESON, Ransburg Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and associate dean for undergraduate education, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind., for innovations in integrating engineering education and community service.

DAVID A. LANDGREBE, Professor Emeritus of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind., for contributions to the development of multispectral technology for remote Earth sensing.

SUBHASH MAHAJAN, chair, department of chemical and materials engineering, Arizona State University-Tempe, for advancing our understanding of structure-property relationships in semiconductors, magnetic materials, and materials for light-wave communication.

DANNY DAVID REIBLE, co-director, professor, and chair, department of civil engineering, University of Texas-Austin, for the development of widely used methods of managing contaminated sediments.

POL D. SPANOS, L.B. Ryon Chair in Engineering, Rice University, Houston, for the development of methods of predicting the dynamic behavior and reliability of structural systems in diverse loading environments.

RALPH T. YANG, Dwight T. Benton Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor, for the development of the theory, methods, and materials for the removal of environmentally hazardous compounds from transportation fuels and other difficult separations.

Copyright American Society for Engineering Education Summer 2005
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