Professor Mostafa
Kaveh, head of the Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering, has accepted a three-year appointment
as IT's associate dean for research and planning, effective March 1. Kaveh
will continue to serve as department head until his successor has been identified,
most likely sometime in April.
As associate dean Kaveh will be responsible for managing the college's financial
resources, including decisions on requests for matching funds. He will also
work to identify and promote major research opportunities for IT faculty as
well as to enhance collaborations between faculty and industry.
U to get $5 million from Microsoft
The University received $5 million from Microsoft on Friday, March 11,
as part of an April 2004 settlement of an antitrust class-action lawsuit against
Microsoft Corporation. The University was not a plaintiff in the case.
As part of the settlement, the University receives $2.5 million in cash and
$2.5 million in product vouchers to be used by the Institute
of Technology.
University President Robert Bruininks announced a
new initiative, the Consortium for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology,
which will be financed with the settlement money and $5 million in matching
funds from the University.
Boston Scientific CTO to headline 2005 S&T
Banquet
Fred
Colen, executive vice president and chief technology
officer of Boston Scientific, will be the keynote
speaker at this year's Science
and Technology Banquet, which will be
held April 28 at the Minneapolis Hilton. IT's
premier annual event, the banquet is a fundraiser,
a social event, and a business networking opportunity
for our students, alumni, and corporate friends
in the Minnesota business community. Banquet
proceeds benefit the IT Alumni Scholarship
Fund. Find
out more...
In memoriam
Professor Paul Ellis (physics) died suddenly of a heart attack Sunday, February
20, at his home in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. He was 63.
Born in Northampton, U.K., Ellis received an undergraduate degree in physics
from the University of Bristol in 1962 and a doctorate in physics from the
University of Manchester in 1966. He joined the University of Minnesota faculty
in 1973. A member of the department's nuclear physics group, Ellis studied
the many-body theory of nuclei and nuclear matter at zero and finite temperature
using relativistic approaches.
Ellis published more than 100 original research articles and coedited the
first two volumes of Trends in Theoretical Physics, the first in a series
associated with the University's Theoretical Physics Institute. He was elected
a Fellow of the American Physics Society in 1998 and received the college's
Best Instructor Award in physics for 1980–81. Read more...
IT welcomes two new faculty
Nelson Assistant Professor Traian
Dumitrica joined the Department of Mechanical
Engineering in December. Dumitrica received his Ph.D. in chemical
physics from Texas A & M
University. His area of research is in theoretical and computations
aspects of materials science, with emphasis on the mechanical properties,
stability, and behavior of distinct nanoscale objects.
Assistant Professor Ryan
Elliott is the newest member of the Department of
Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics faculty. Elliott received a Ph.D. in aerospace
engineering and scientific computing from the University of Michigan in
2004. His areas of research are martensitic phase transformations,
shape memory alloys, atomistic materials simulation, and stability and bifurcation.
He joined the department in January 2005.
Honors
Associate Professor Thomas
Chase (mechanical
engineering) has been named a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers (ASME). The Fellow grade, the highest elected level of ASME membership,
is conferred upon a member who has at least 10 years of active engineering
practice and who has made significant contributions to the profession. Chase
works in the field of computer-aided engineering and has actively published
on the topic of mechanism synthesis.
Distinguished McKnight University Professor Christopher
Cramer (chemistry)
received the 2005 Award for Outstanding Contributions to Postbaccalaureate,
Graduate and Professional Education.
Professor Jane
Davidson (mechanical
engineering) received the University's 2005 Distinguished Women Scholar Award
in science and engineering.
Regents Professor H.
Ted Davis (CEMS) received a Humboldt Research Award,
which recognizes lifetime achievements in research. Recipients of this award
are invited to conduct research projects of their own choice in cooperation
with specialist colleagues in Germany.
Professor Bin
He (biomedical engineering) has been inducted into the American
Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) as a Fellow. AIMBE
currently has about 800 Fellows, who are distinguished for their contributions
in research, industrial practice, and/or education.
Professor Kenneth
Leopold (chemistry) received the 2005 Horace T. Morse-University
of Minnesota Alumni Association Award for Outstanding Contributions to Undergraduate
Education.
Distinguished McKnight University Professor
Robert Tranquillo (biomedical
engineering, CEMS) was invited to deliver the inaugural presentation in the
Medtronic Distinguished Lectureship series at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
in November. He also delivered the Area 15d/e (life science fundamentals)
plenary lecture at the 2004 annual meeting of the American Institute
of Chemical Engineers, also held in November.
Events
IMA Public Lecture: Computers and
the Future of Mathematical Proof
March 30: Computers crash,
hang, succumb to viruses, run buggy programs,
and harbor spyware. By contrast, mathematics
is free of all imperfection. Why are imperfect
computational devices so vital for the future
of mathematics? Thomas C. Hales, Mellon Professor
of Mathematics will explore this topic as part
of the IMA's Math
Matter's Public Lecture Series.
7:00 p.m. 3-210 EE/Csci.
IT Day at the Capitol
March 31: Join alumni, faculty,
staff, and students for Institute
of Technology Day at the Capitol. This
is a great opportunity to educate your legislators
about the value of IT and the University of
Minnesota to the state. Face-to-face meetings
have the most impact with legislators and are
key in building legislative support for the
U's full request. We need your help! Sign
up online.12:30-4:00 p.m.
Distinguished Women Scientists and Engineers Speakers Program: Meg
Urry
April 6: Dr. Meg
Urry, director of the Center for Astronomy
and Astrophysics, Yale University, will present a lecture entitled Hidden
Black Holes in the Young Universe. Free. 4:00 p.m., 131 Tate
Laboratory of Physics.
April 7: Urry, who has worked hard
to increase the number of women in the physical sciences, will also present
an informal talk on April 7 about gender issues in sciences. Free. 11:15
a.m., 358 Tate Laboratory of
Physics.
Girl Scout Patch Day
April 9: The Minnesota section of the Society
of Women Engineers (SWE) is seeking volunteers to help with Girl
Scout Patch Day, a special event designed to teach 100 Scouts in grades
4-6 about engineering. At the end of the day the girls will get a SWE Patch
to wear on their vests. Volunteers will be needed from approximately 7:30
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Many volunteer opportunities available, ranging from
teaching the experiments to stuffing goodie bags and timekeeping. For information
contact cg@swe-mn.org.
Donaldson Lecture: Julia Phillips
April 14: Dr. Julia
Phillips, director of the Physical,
Chemical, and Nano Sciences Center at Sandia National Laboratories, will discuss
some of the scientific and engineering discoveries of the last half century
that have given us the ability to study and control materials at the nanoscale.
In her lecture entitled Why Is Nanotechnology
So Big?, she will also use selected
examples of current nanoscience research to explain why the field is so exciting
and to paint a picture of how nanotechnology has the potential to change our
lives. Reception follows lecture. Free. 3:45
p.m., 2-470 Phillips-Wangensteen
Building.
DTC Symposium: Bioinformatics: Building Bridges
April 14–15: The Fourth
Annual Symposium on Bioinformatics includes
tutorials, world-renowned speakers, poster session, exhibits, demonstrations,
and a lunch hosted by the bioinformatics graduate faculty. Free but pre-registration is
required. For more information call (612) 624-9510 or email info@dtc.umn.edu. Digital
Technology Center, Walter
Library.
CDTL Short Course: Leveraging Innovation to Power Corporate Growth
April 19: Translating information into business success
is a primary focus of this program presented by the Center
for the Development of Technological Leadership (CDTL). Leveraging
Innovation to Power Corporate Growth helps improve the success rate
of corporate innovation. Participants will learn ways to enhance and renew
innovation throughout their organizations. Fee. Register
online. For more information call 612-624-5747 or email shortcourse@cdtl.umn.edu. 8:00
a.m. - 4:30 p.m., West
Bank Office Building.
Looking ahead
MOT Executive Institute: Unleash the Power of Strategy,
Technology, Intellectual Property, and Innovation
May 2–5: The Management of Technology (MOT) Executive
Institute, a short course presented by the Center for the
Development of Technological Leadership, is designed for executives and senior
managers who lead at the intersection of strategy, technology, and innovation.
The schedule includes
full-day sessions on strategy for technology intensive-organizations, leveraging
new technologies for growth, probing the business issues of IP, and developing
and managing innovation. Institute faculty members are drawn from IT and its
MS/MOT program, the Carlson School of Management, and the University of Minnesota
Law School. Fee. Register by
April 25 (registrations after that date accepted only on a space-available
basis). For more information call 612-624-5747 or email
executive_institute@cdtl.umn.edu. West
Bank Office Building.
UMAA Annual Celebration: U's Night with Aaron Brown
May 10: Aaron
Brown, anchor of CNN’s
flagship evening newscast, will be the keynote speaker at the UMAA’s
101st annual celebration.
For more
group sales information (10 or more tickets) call 612-625-8878; for individual
tickets call 612-624-2345. Student discount available. Social hour and dinner,
5:30–7:30
p.m., Coffman Union;
program, 8:00 p.m., Northrop
Memorial Auditorium.
Annual Meeting, North-Central Section of Geological Society of America
May 19–20: The Minnesota Geological Survey, in conjunction
with the Department of Geology and Geophysics, will host the 39th annual
meeting of the North-Central Section of the Geological Society
of America. Registration fee (special rates for students, K-12 teachers, guests).
Standard registration deadline is April 18. On-site registration will be available
(higher registration fee). Register
online. Radisson Hotel Metrodome.
Second International Symposium on Nanotechnology and Occupational Health
October 3–6: The Second International Symposium on Nanotechnology
and Occupational Health will be the premier global meeting of 2005 addressing
the potential implications and applications of nanotechnologies in the workplace.
The symposium will
provide a multi-stakeholder forum for presenting, assimilating, and discussing
the latest breakthroughs and activities in addressing nanotechnology and worker
safety and health. Abstracts are due March 31, 2005. Space is limited, and
early registration (by August 1) is highly recommended. For further information contact Katie Kjeseth at 612-624-3708
or conferences5@cce.umn.edu.