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IEEE Huntsville Section 2012 E-Week Awards

Join IEEE Huntsville to celebrate National Engineers Week, honor Section members, and network with IEEE members and IEEE members and other area technical peers.

E-Week Banquet – 23 February, 6:P.M. – 9:30 P.M.
Huntsville Marriott – 5 Tranquility Base
Speaker: Dr. Michael Griffin, “What Does It Mean to be an Ethical Engineer?”

IEEE-USA and IEEE Huntsville Section encourage you to support and join in the mission of the National Engineers Week Foundation and its activities—to celebrate, sustain, and grow the engineering profession for years to come—by participating in National Engineers Week 2012 (EWEEK) and the local EWeek Awards Banquet at the Huntsville Marriott.

ASME North Alabama Section is the lead engineering society sponsor for EWeek 2012, visit their website article at http://sections.asme.org/NorthAlabama/ for additional details.

2012 Engineers Week Awards

UAHuntsville Student Chapter Outstanding Student – Wes Bartholomae

Wes Bartholomae is a University of Alabama Huntsville undergraduate majoring in computer engineering. He serves as the current Director of Communications for the IEEE student branch at UAHuntsville, where he’s doing an excellent job of keeping the organization’s communications up to date and running, such as the branch’s website, file server and online forums.

Wes enjoys working on multiple projects in the organization’s lab with a focus on software programming. He is the software team lead for an upcoming robotics competition, in which he developed and implemented a communications protocol that enables the team’s master microcontroller to perform complex tasks by slave microcontrollers, reserving the master microcontroller CPU cycles for more important computations.

Many students are passionate about hobbies and potential future career pursuits they enjoy most. Wes loves programming and goes the extra mile to mentor and help others when they have programming problems. His understanding of designing programs as well as successful experience excites other students about the potentials of robotics programming and embedded software design.

AAMU Student Chapter Outstanding Student – Corey Solomon


Corey Solomon is an Alabama A&M University (AAMU)senior majoring in Electrical Engineering. Corey serves in the AAMU Tutorial Assistance Network (TAN), where he mentors and tutors other students in mathematics and engineering. He worked as an intern at Brookhaven National Laboratory where he developed software applications for nuclear imaging on a field programmable gate array. Corey has a passion for research in the area of materials characterization. He was doing laboratory work characterizing Cadmium Zinc Telluride when he applied for and won the competitive Brookhaven internship.

Corey’s senior design project explores the characterization and fabrication of complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) devices. This project fits well with his future graduate school plans where he will explore the potential of nanotechnology for fabricating semiconductor devices at the atomic level. He is currently the AAMU IEEE Student Chapter President and he helped organize IEEE events that include resume writing classes, career & scholarship fairs, and Meets & Greets student to working professional networking events with several companies. The skills and connections that Cory has made through his IEEE service have helped him tremendously in his coursework and in determining the career and academic path choices he will make in the future.

Outstanding Educator – Dr. Michael Griffin


Michael Griffin is the King-McDonald Eminent Scholar and Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, and the Director of the Center for System Studies at The University of Alabama in Huntsville. From 2005-09 he was the Administrator of NASA. Prior to rejoining NASA he was Space Department Head at the Johns Hopkins University (JHU) Applied Physics Laboratory. He has also held numerous executive positions with industry, including President and Chief Operating Officer of In-Q-Tel, Chief Executive Officer of Magellan Systems, General Manager of Orbital Science Corporation’s Space Systems Group, and Executive Vice President and Chief Technical Officer at Orbital.

Mike’s earlier career includes government service as both Chief Engineer and Associate Administrator for Exploration at NASA, and as the Deputy for Technology at the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization. Prior to joining SDIO in an executive capacity, he played a key role in conceiving and directing several “first of a kind” space tests in support of strategic defense research, development, and flight testing. These included the first space to-space intercept of a ballistic missile in powered flight, the first broad-spectrum space borne reconnaissance of targets and decoys in midcourse flight, and the first space-to ground reconnaissance of ballistic missiles during the boost phase. He also played a leading role in other space missions in earlier work at the JHU Applied Physics Laboratory, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and the Computer Science Corporation.

Mike previously taught for thirteen years as an adjunct professor at the University of Maryland, the Johns Hopkins University, and George Washington University, offering courses in spacecraft design, applied mathematics, guidance and navigation, compressible flow, computational fluid dynamics, spacecraft attitude control, astrodynamics, and introductory aerospace engineering. He is a Registered Professional Engineer in Maryland and California, and is the lead author of over two dozen technical papers and the textbook Space Vehicle Design.

Outstanding Engineer – Dr. William (Bill) Seidler


Dr. Bill Seidler is a Senior Technical Fellow of the Boeing Company with over 40 years of experience in nuclear weapons effects and homeland security. Bill received a Bachelor of Science in Physics, summa cum laude, from the Ohio University in 1967, Master of Science and Doctorate in Nuclear Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1969 and 1972. He is an IEEE Fellow “for contribution to research in electromagnetic pulse effects” and has over 50 papers in referred journals and 80 technical reports.

Bill is currently the Deputy for Technical Excellence for the Boeing Defense Space and Security business and technical lead for Boeing Research and Technology initiatives within Alabama. He has been successful in developing a fusion propulsion research facility jointly with the University of Alabama in Huntsville that will on line in 2012 and served as technical lead for the Boeing Enterprise Systems Engineering and Analysis Domain identifying technologies that improve Boeing’s system engineering tools and processes.

He served as Chief Scientist for the Secure Borders Initiative Network (SBInet), developed the strategy for securing the borders of our country using reliable commercial capabilities, and advanced sensors, and is one of our country’s leading experts in nuclear weapons identification, effects, test, and evaluation. Supporting international space exploration, Dr. Seidler is working with UAHuntsville and NASA on nuclear fusion rocket propulsion for deep space missions.

Dr. Seidler served on the STEDTRAIN Committee for many years and inspired/guided others to contribute to this invaluable program benefiting area teachers with seed grants. His pioneering work among the Boeing engineering community has been legendary, serving as a model for both technology advancement and corporate philanthropy.

As senior Huntsville Boeing technologist, his leading edge technical work on nuclear effects and homeland security has helped secure the nation from terrorists and other adversaries. Among ongoing projects, he collaborates with UAHuntsville, Alabama A&M, Auburn and other universities to identify possible collaboration areas and potential R&D/technology transfers for defense, homeland security, and space exploration.

Outstanding Service – James (Jim) Covington


Jim Covington is currently a Science Applications International Corporation Chief System Engineer. He has over thirty four years of experience in system analysis, system design, software design, development and testing in a variety of business, scientific, real-time and real-time embedded computer applications. His leadership and technical expertise includes extensive experience in integrating and testing multiple CPU computer systems from various manufacturers.

As a system programmer, Jim works with several operating systems, porting and rehosting applications programs and system software from one processor framework to others. He also demonstrates subject matter expertise in hardware interfacing and maintenance. He has worked with computers, mainframes, mini-computers and microcomputers of varied capabilities and application environment over the years, and he has demonstrated proficiency in numerous software languages. As lead system analyst on projects of varying magnitude and purpose, Jim repeatedly demonstrates the expertise and process discipline that successfully delivers critical projects on time and within budget.

Jim has volunteered with the Huntsville Section in various educational activities supported by the Huntsville Section, including serving as a judge for the Alabama Council on Technology in Education (ACTE) Team Programming Challenge, as well as various other ACTE events for the last 25 years. Jim has served as a key member of the Technical Team for the Tennessee Valley Boosting Engineering Science and Technology (BEST) hub for the past five years, serving as IEEE Huntsville Section’s subject matter expert on providing robotic control and actuation components for area K-12 roboticists, as well as serving as technology mentor for the IEEE “A-Team” maintenance crew.

Willie Fitzpatrick, PhD
February 15, 2012
Awards Committee Chair
IEEE Huntsville Section

Engineers Week Awards Banquet, 23 Feb – E-Week 2012, February 19-25

Join IEEE Huntsville to celebrate National Engineers Week, honor Section members, and network with IEEE members and IEEE members and other area technical peers.

E-Week Banquet – 23 February, 6:P.M. – 9:30 P.M.
Huntsville Marriott – 5 Tranquility Base
Speaker: Dr. Michael Griffin, “What Does It Mean to be an Ethical Engineer?”

IEEE-USA and IEEE Huntsville Section encourage you to support and join in the mission of the National Engineers Week Foundation and its activities—to celebrate, sustain, and grow the engineering profession for years to come—by participating in National Engineers Week 2012 (EWEEK) and the local EWeek Awards Banquet at the Huntsville Marriott.

ASME North Alabama Section is the lead engineering society sponsor for EWeek 2012, visit their website article at http://sections.asme.org/NorthAlabama/ for additional details.

2012 IEEE Huntsville Section Awards:

  • Outstanding Engineer: William (Bill) Seidler, Ph.D.
  • Outstanding Service: Mr. James (Jim) Covington
  • Outstanding Educator: Michael D. Griffin, Ph.D.
  • Outstanding Student Member (Alabama A&M University Student Chapter): Corey Solomon
  • Outstanding Student Member (UA Huntsville Student Chapter): Mr. Wes Bartholomae

Banquet registration $30 per person
Contact: Sonya Dillard at sonya.dillard@nasa.gov

National Engineers Week, February 19-25, 2012

How do you plan to celebrate E-Week?

We hope that you join us to support programs and activities during the upcoming E-Week 2012 and E-Week 2013 celebrations. Keep in mind for future consideration that IEEE-USA will serve as lead engineering society sponsor for E-Week 2014.

LEARN MORE ABOUT E-WEEK

National Engineers Weekis a week-long celebration of all-things engineering, which features the Discover-Eprogram, a year-long educational outreach program for engineer volunteers to communicate how “Engineers Make a World of Difference.” A handy toolkitis available, which includes suggestions for outreach opportunities, graphics to include on your websites or in print announcements, postcards, and posters; and much more. An estimated 45,000 engineers work with five and a half million students and teachers in elementary through secondary school each year through classroom visits and extracurricular programs, using educational materials provided by E-Week.

Volunteer to help a local middle school participating in the E-Week Future City Competition™. Or, you can help sponsor a prize or judge a local contest. You may even win a trip to the national finals, which will be held during E-Week in Washington, DC! IEEE-USA Precollege Education Committee will be presenting a $1,000 prize to the Future City Team that offers the best communications system. The IEEE Huntsville Section sponsor Alabama Regional Future Cities Competition was held January 21, 2012. The winning team participates in Washington, D.C. during E-Week.

What is National Engineers Week?

National Engineers Week (EWEEK), founded in 1951 by the National Society of Professional Engineers (NSPE), is a formal coalition of more than 70 engineering, educational, and cultural societies and more than 50 corporations and government agencies. This coalition is dedicated to raising public awareness of engineers’ positive contributions to quality of life. EWEEK promotes recognition among parents, teachers, and students of the importance of a technical education and a high level of math, science, and technology literacy; and motivates youth to pursue engineering careers in order to provide a diverse and well-educated future engineering workforce.

Each year the National Engineers Week Foundation reaches thousands of schools, businesses, and community groups across the United States. Their community outreach programs, including the Foundation’s K-12 DiscoverE classroom visits, depend on grassroots organizations and local volunteers for success.

EWEEK 2012

7 billion people. 7 billion dreams. 7 billion chances for engineers to turn dreams into reality…

The theme for 2012 is based on the projected world population of 7,000,000,000. There are many challenges facing our world that require immediate engineering solutions. The National Engineers Week Foundation delivers programs and resources used by partners locally, nationally, and internationally to help the next generation of talent to meet and overcome these challenges.

National Engineers Week Foundation Portfolio of Programs

ENGINEERS WEEK®(19-25 February 2012)

The Foundation’s signature program, Engineers Week, celebrates the positive contributions engineers make to society and is a catalyst for outreach across the country to kids and adults alike. Engineers Week is part of many corporate and government cultures and is celebrated on every US engineering college campus.

Hosted Events

Discover Engineering Family Day (18 February 2012)

Held each year at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC, this action-packed event consistently draws 6,500+ attendees. Over 29 exhibitors and 300+ volunteers, kids, and their families build ziplines to safely deliver marbles, explore buoyancy via tinfoil boats, learn about waves via a giant wave tank, and much, much more.

New Faces of Engineering and New Faces of Engineering-College Edition

Reflecting the increasingly important role engineers play in today’s society, National Engineers Week Foundation is broadening its annual New Faces of Engineering program, which, for eight years, has honored the nation’s most promising young engineering professionals. Now, for the first time, the popular initiative will also recognize the best and brightest college engineering students, whose academic successes and contributions to the industry are already poised to make an impact.

ONGOING PROGRAMS

DiscoverE Classroom Visits®
More than 45,000 engineers work with 5,500,000 students and teachers in elementary through secondary school each year through classroom visits and extracurricular programs, using educational materials provided by the National Engineers Week Foundation. Our latest offering, this new site is a rich searchable database filled with engineering events, workshops, and camp programs that will become the go-to place for families looking for opportunities in their area. (www.eweek.org/engineersweek/DiscoverE.aspx)

Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day®(23 February 2012) is a year long effort, culminating on 18 Feb., to identify volunteers who are mentors and role models for young women to build and sustain their interest in engineering careers. Each year “Girl Day” gives thousands of women engineers, with support from their male counterparts, the chance to directly mentor more than one million girls and young women in grades K through12.

Next February, thousands of kids and their parents will descend on the National Building Museum in Washington, DC for the IEEE-USA-sponsored E-Week Family Day, a full day of hands-on activities and demonstrations designed to introduce kids to the excitement of engineering.

The Global Marathon for, by and about Women in Engineering in Technology (5-10 March 2012) is a 24-hour “conversation,” done through a combination of live Internet chats, webcasts, teleconferences and pre-recorded sessions on issues for, by and about women in engineering and technology, which are accessible to a worldwide audience. Imagine getting the chance to talk to women engineers from around the world for four hours each day over a 6-day period. Women (and men) from North America, South America, China, India, South Africa, and UK/Europe discuss universal topics—how to encourage girls and young women to consider engineering as a career, advice on career paths for young engineers, achieving a life/work balance, and benefits of networking. The Marathon happens each March via live Internet chats, telephone conversations, and Webcasts. (http://www.globalmarathon.net/)

Sightseers Guide to Engineering

Visit the engineering marvels in all 50 states—while not leaving your house. From the subtle to the spectacular, visitors not only get to learn more about America’s rich engineering feats but are encouraged to submit their own favorites. (http://www.engineeringsights.org/)

HOW YOU CAN HELP

  • Get Involved by organizing an event designed to celebrating engineers and their achievements or raise awareness of the profession and technology in your local community, place of work or IEEE section.
  • Volunteer to help IEEE-USA support national E-Week programs. Contact Chris McManes for details.
  • Make a tax deductible giftthrough the IEEE Foundation to the IEEE-USA E-Week Fund to financially support our EWeek Activities.

Nominate an Outstanding IEEE Member for Professional of the Year

Do you know an outstanding person in our technical community?  This is a great opportunity to show your appreciation by recognizing his or her excellence.  Your nomination will be reviewed by our Awards Committee to select a winner of the IEEE Huntsville Section Professional of the Year (POY).   The Awardee will be recognized at the 2010 HATS POY Banquet.  To submit a nomination, please email the candidate’s name to my attention, on or before May 18.  Please contact me via telephone with any questions about this award.

Professional Of the Year Criteria

The Huntsville Association of Technical Societies (HATS)  provides criteria for recipients of the award.

He or she has:

1. Retained membership in the professional organization that is a member in good standing of HATS.  To be eligible for the IEEE nomination, this means that the candidate must be an IEEE member in our Huntsville Section.

2. Demonstrated excellence in some professional (technical or managerial) work or activity that is concerned with broad and beneficial technical, scientific, social, or economic consequences.  This excellence shall be exemplified in his or her workplace, in the professional organization in which they are participant members of, and/or in volunteer efforts.

3. Exhibited an extraordinary dedication, creativity, or leadership in that work or activity that results in excellent contributions to the technical and economic development of the City of Huntsville and the surrounding areas.

HATS POY Awards Banquet Details

Date: Tuesday June 22, 2010

Time: 5:00 – 8:00 PM

Location: The Westin Huntsville at Bridge Street Town Centre

Master of Ceremonies:  Greg Screws, WHNT NEWS ANCHOR

Program

Featured Speaker

Professional of the Year (POY) Award Presentations

Moquin Award Announcement and Presentation

More details may be found on the HATS POY website.

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Ron Ogan
May 5th, 2010

Winners of the 2010 E-Week Awards

Awards for the Huntsville IEEE Section National Engineers Week Awards Banquet held on February 20, 2010

Congratulations to all of our 2010 National Engineers Week award winners.  Once again we received wonderful nominations from our volunteers, student members and local IEEE members; and once again, we gather to honor the very cream of the crop.  Those that we honor today are recognized by their peers as truly outstanding individuals.  On behalf of the IEEE Huntsville Section, please allow me to express our gratitude for your leadership and your commitment to excellence.

Sincerely,

Ron Ogan, Awards Chair – IEEE Huntsville Section

Courtney Spivey, Chair – IEEE Huntsville Section

Student of the Year – AAMU IEEE Student Branch

Brandon Lewis is a junior in Electrical Engineering at Alabama A&M. He served five years in the U.S Army as a sniper. His assignments include serving in Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom. He  co-oped at International Paper for one year and saved the company over $70,000 by programming touch screens for PLC’s. He enjoys building his own electric guitar pedals and enjoys building robots in his spare time.  Brandon wants  to work in the development of robotic prosthetics for injured soldiers. He is currently the Vice President of A&M’s IEEE Student Branch.

Student of the Year – UAH IEEE Student Branch

Renée is an IEEE Student Member and active with the UAH Student Branch, senior in Electrical Engineering who is excited to graduate in May 2010. She has been very involved with several organizations at UAH – Society of Women Engineers, National Society of Leadership and Success, Engineering Student Council. She is member of the UAH Hardware team and assisted in building all of the practice and competition fields for the Hardware competition.  She also has been able to compete with the Hardware team at SoutheastCon 2009 and again this year in 2010.

Outstanding Service

Buddy Bishop, PhD, IEEE Senior Member

Senior Technical Consultant, Systems Studies and Simulation, Inc. (2002-Present):  Provides technical advice in the areas of missile system engineering with primary emphasis on missile system integration activities, design and development on missile seekers and sensors, system level counter-countermeasures, and technical liaison with the threat community.

B. S. Electrical Engineering, Auburn University

M. S. Electrical Engineering, University of Alabama in Huntsville

M. S. Administrative Science (Public Policy), University of Alabama in Huntsville

Ph.D.  Electrical Engineering, University of Alabama in Huntsville

Outstanding Engineer – Joint Award

Allen Stults, IEEE Member

Allen has been the lead AMRDEC researcher on explosive pulsed power.  Explosive pulsed power is the conversion of the chemical energy of high explosives into electrical energy.  This enables the development of ultra compact pulsed power sources for munitions.

He graduated from West Point in 1979 with a BS in Applied Sciences and Engineering (Nuclear Engineering) and was commissioned into the Ordnance Corps. He obtained a MBA from the Florida Institute of Technology in 1987.He obtained a MS from UAH in 1998. He has worked the past 5 years at AMRDEC developing pulsed power and High Power Microwave sources

Larry Altgilbers, PhD, IEEE Senior Member

US Army Space & Missile Defense Command Research Engineer and leading developer and with his independent collaborator, Allen Stults in the field of RF munitions.  This small, but very interesting field basically replaces the explosive fill of a bomb, shell, or cartridge with a high-power RF single-pulse generator.

B.S. Physics, Northeast Missouri University

M.S. Mechanical Engineering, University of Alabama at Huntsville

Ph.D. Semiconductor Physics Institute, Vilnius, Lithuania

Outstanding Educator Award

Charles Corsetti, PhD, Professor UA-Huntsville

IEEE member for 40 years

Assistant Chair and a Lecturer in the Electrical and Computer UAH Engineering Department Dr. Corsetti served as a commissioned officer in the Air Force for 24 years in the Development Engineering career field.

Bachelor, Electrical Engineering Degree (EE) at Manhattan College.

M.S. and Ph.D. in EE the Air Force Institute of Technology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio.

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Ron Ogan
May 5th, 2010

Honoring Past E-Week Awardees

In celebration of National Engineers Week, we are honoring those who have received E-Week Awards from the IEEE Huntsville Section over the past decade.

2009

  • Outstanding Engineer:  Dr. Annie Saylor
  • Outrstanding Educator: Dr. David Gross
  • Outstanding Service: Dr. Willie J. Fitzpatrick
  • Outstanding Student UAH: Tony Luchner
  • Outstanding Student A&M: Augusta Johnson

2008

  • Outstanding Engineer: Sonya Hutchinson
  • Outstanding Educator: Laurie L. Joiner
  • Outstanding Service: Courtney Spivey
  • Outstanding Service: Glenn Shelby
  • Outstanding Student UAH: John Grimm
  • Outstanding Student A&M Angelo J. Manuel

2007

  • Outstanding Engineer:  Keith A. Jadus
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Kaveh Heidary
  • Outstanding Service: Bob Robinson
  • Outstanding Student UAH: Justin Watson
  • Outstanding Student A&M Tiffany Tarver

2006

  • Outstanding Engineer: Dr. Glenn W.  Cox
  • Outstanding Educator: Nagendra Singh
  • Outstanding Service: Wayne Wolfe
  • Outstanding Student UAH: Josh Eliser
  • Outstanding Student A&M Ebonee Walker
  • Special 40 Years Service: Dr. Carroll Johnson

2005

  • Outstanding Engineer: Robert A. Robinson
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Fat Duen Ho
  • Outstanding Service:Ronald D. Hackett
  • Outstanding Student UAH: Matt McDougal
  • Outstanding Student A&M: Christopher J. Payne
  • (this was first year for UAH and A&M awards)

2004

  • Outstanding Engineer: Dennis Miller
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Bob Berinato
  • Outstanding Service: Keith Jadus

2003

  • Outstanding Engineer: David A. Hardaker
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Mervin C. Budge
  • Outstanding Service: Dr. Venkata S. Atluri

2002

  • Outstanding Engineer: Willie J. Fitzpatrick
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Jorge L. Aunon
  • Outstanding Service: Eric R. Grigorian

2001

  • Outstanding Engineer:  “Buddy” Bishop
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Reza Adhami
  • Outstanding Service:  Willard G. Preussel
  • Outstanding Service: Sonya Hutchinson

2000

  • Outstanding Engineer: Larry Fullerton
  • Outstanding Educator: Dr. Trent Montgomery
  • Outstanding Service: Scott D. Trites

Will Preussel
February 15th, 2010

Engineers Week Awards Banquet

UPDATE: The E-Week Awards Banquet has been rescheduled for 6:30 P.M. on Saturday, February 20th, at the Marriott Tranquility Base, next to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center.

February 14-20 is National Engineers Week, and the E-Week Awards Banquet is one of the highlights.  Join the us as we honor our members with the following awards:

Outstanding Engineer – for advancing engineering technology
Outstanding Educator – for excellence in engineering education
Outstanding Service – for dedicated service to the IEEE Huntsville Section in promoting Engineering technology

The 2010 E-Week Awards Banquet will be Friday, February 19 at 6:30 P.M. at the UAHuntsville University Center Exhibit Hall.  The cost for the banquet is $25 per person.

To register to attend, submit the completed registration form along with payment to by February 12th.

Woody Williams
February 7th, 2010

Nominate Someone for an IEEE Award

Know an outstanding engineer, educator or IEEE volunteer?  Recognize our local talent by nominating him or her for an IEEE Engineers Week Award.

In celebration of National Engineers Week, the Huntsville IEEE Section will present three Engineers Week Awards.  The honorees will be announced during National Engineers Week, February 14-20, 2010.  Award recipients will be invited to attend the Huntsville Engineering Societies’ Engineers Week Awards Banquet on Friday, February 19, 2010, at UAHuntsville Exhibit Hall.

We are seeking candidates for these three awards:

Outstanding Engineer – for advancing engineering technology

Outstanding Educator – for excellence in engineering education

Outstanding Service – for dedicated service to the IEEE Huntsville Section in promoting Electrical Engineering technology

Please send your nomination for any or each of the awards, and provide a brief statement of why this person should receive recognition.  Also, please provide a telephone and email contact for yourself and for your nominee.  Please email your nomination to my attention on or before January 29, 2010.

Candidates must be IEEE members.

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Ron Ogan
January 17th, 2010

Huntsville EMC Wins Prestigious Award

Congratulations to the IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Huntsville Chapter!  They have been selected from among all EMC chapters worldwide as the recipient of the Most Improved Chapter Award from the international IEEE EMC Society.  This award signifies outstanding improvement in membership services and establishing goodwill for the EMC Society.  It was presented to the EMC Huntsville Society Chair, Doug Parker, at the International EMC Symposium in Austin, Texas in August of this year.
Under the leadership of Doug and many other local volunteers, the Huntsville EMC Chapter has made a huge impact in the local technical community.  Each year, they host frequent technical meetings that are free of charge and open to everyone in the community.  EMC brings renowned IEEE Distinguished Lecturers to share their technical knowledge in training sessions and hosts a bi-annual tabletop event that links industry, academia and professionals in the EMC discipline.
Our EMC Society also supports other local organizations and events.  This year, they reached out to engineering students by supporting IEEE UAH Student Branch events, speaking to the UAH engineering students, and purchasing EMC technical books as a donation to the UAH library.  They donated heavily to the HATS STEDTRAIN grant, a program that links local K-12 school projects with much needed funding.  They also co-sponsored the IEEE 125th Anniversary Celebration at the United States Space and Rocket Center.
The IEEE Huntsville EMC Society was chartered in 2006, and under the care of its first Chair, Glenn Shelby, it has consistently provided outstanding technical events to the community.  Through the past several years, the EMC Society has continued to gain momentum.  Let’s all congratulate Doug and the other volunteers Huntsville’s IEEE EMC Society on this lucrative award.
For information about the IEEE EMC Huntsville Chapter, please visit: http://ewh.ieee.org/r3/huntsville/emc/
For information about the IEEE EMC 2009 Symposium, please visit: http://www.emc2009.org/
For information about the HATS STEDTRAIN Seed Grant, please visit http://www.hats.org/STEDTRAIN/stedtr.shtml

Congratulations to the IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Huntsville Chapter!  They have been selected from among all EMC chapters worldwide as the recipient of the Most Improved Chapter Award from the international IEEE EMC Society.  This award signifies outstanding improvement in membership services and establishing goodwill for the EMC Society.  An award certificate and $250 were was presented to the EMC Huntsville Society Chair, Doug Parker, at the International EMC Symposium in Austin, Texas in August of this year.

Under the leadership of Doug and many other local volunteers, the Huntsville EMC Chapter has made a huge impact in the local technical community.  Each year, they host frequent technical meetings that are free of charge and open to everyone in the community.  EMC brings renowned IEEE Distinguished Lecturers to share their technical knowledge in training sessions and hosts a bi-annual tabletop event that links industry, academia and professionals in the EMC discipline.

Our EMC Society also supports other local organizations and events.  This year, they reached out to engineering students by supporting IEEE UAH Student Branch events, speaking to the UAH engineering students, and purchasing EMC technical books as a donation to the UAH library.  They donated heavily to the HATS STEDTRAIN Seed Grant, a program that links local K-12 school projects with much needed funding.  They also co-sponsored the IEEE 125th Anniversary Celebration at the United States Space and Rocket Center.

The IEEE Huntsville EMC Society was chartered in 2004, and under the care of its first three Chairmen, Paul Stover, Glenn Shelby and Doug Parker, it has consistently provided outstanding technical events to the community.  Through the past several years, the EMC Society has continued to gain momentum.  Let’s all congratulate Doug and the other volunteers of Huntsville’s IEEE EMC Society for this prestigious award.

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Courtney Spivey
September 1st, 2009

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