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UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at Annual Awards Dinner

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  • UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at Annual Awards Dinner

    UCLA Engineering

    Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
    News Center
    http://www.engineer.ucla.edu/news/2006/Awar ds%20Dinner%202006.htm


    [Photo]
    2006 Alumnus of the Year Linda Katehi and Dean Vijay K. Dhir


    UCLA Engineering Celebrates Accomplishments at
    Annual Awards Dinner


    The UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science
    celebrated the accomplishments of alumni, students, and faculty at this
    year's annual awards dinner, held on Friday, November 3, at the Four
    Seasons' Beverly Wilshire Hotel ballroom.

    With nearly 450 colleagues and friends in attendance, awards were
    presented to 13 individuals, including provost and vice chancellor for
    academic affairs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
    Linda Katehi, honored as the 2006 Alumnus of the Year.

    KNBC 4 reporter and engineering alumnus Patrick Healy, along with UCLA
    Engineering Dean Vijay K. Dhir, emceed the event.

    `We're proud of the work our faculty and students do. The work we do
    today makes a difference in the world tomorrow,' Dhir told the crowd.
    `In the past, they used to say the sun never set on the British Empire.
    I say that the sun is always shining on UCLA Engineering, through its
    exceptional alumni living and working all over the world.'

    The evening's big honor was given to Katehi, Alumnus of the Year, for
    distinguishing herself in both academia and in integrated circuits and
    systems.

    `Linda Katehi's work has been described as visionary, pioneering, and
    innovative,' said Dhir in his introduction. `She is a truly
    extraordinary researcher and educator.'

    Katehi, provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs at the
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, thanked the school for
    honoring her achievements and talked of her journey to the United States
    to attend school early in her career.

    A humble Katehi said she was simply an average student who had an
    extraordinary mentor during her time at UCLA. Her successes at UCLA, she
    said, led her on to even greater things.

    Dwight Streit, vice president of electronics technology at Northrup
    Grumman and Ronald Sugar, chairman and chief executive officer of
    Northrop Grumman took the stage together to present the 2006 Northrup
    Grumman Excellence in Teaching Award to computer science assistant
    professor John Cho and civil and environmental engineering assistant
    professor Steven Margulis. The award honors junior faculty who
    demonstrate a commitment to high teaching standards, reflected in the
    positive course evaluation scores from students, as well as the
    professor's contributions to the curriculum.

    Electrical engineering professor Behzad Razavi received the 2006
    Lockheed Martin Excellence in Teaching Award from Lockheed's
    Aeronautical Engineering Director Larry Pellett. The award was given to
    Razavi for dedication to his students; a vigorous commitment to high
    academic standards; and his many contributions to electrical engineering
    education.

    James Plummer (BS '66), dean of the Stanford School of Engineering,
    received the Alumni Achievement in Academia Award from Associate Dean
    Steve Jacobsen for his many contributions to engineering education.
    Plummer was honored for his major contributions to the field of silicon
    devices and technology, including the integration of CMOS logic and high
    voltage lateral DMOS devices on a single chip, the development of
    silicon process modeling standards, and designing nanoscale silicon
    devices for logic and memory.

    Associate Dean Greg Pottie introduced the Lifetime Contribution Award,
    which he presented to computer science Professor Emeritus Gerald Estrin.
    Dean Boelter recruited Estrin in 1956 to develop a computer engineering
    research program. Estrin was honored for leading substantial research
    activities in computer architectures, parallel processing, computer
    instrumentation and computer networks, and importantly, for laying the
    groundwork for the development of what is now the department of Computer
    Science.

    Last year's winner of the 2005 Professional Achievement Award, Jeff
    Lawrence, founder, president and CEO of Clivia Systems (BS '79), this
    year presented the 2006 award to the founders of Blizzard Entertainment:
    Allen Adham(BS '90), Michael Morhaime (BS '90), and Frank Pearce (BS
    '90). The three were honored for founding Blizzard Entertainment
    (originally Silicon & Synapse) in 1991, just a year after they received
    their bachelor degrees from UCLA Engineering. The company has since
    become one of the most successful game development studios in the world.

    Asad Madni, president of the Engineering Alumni Association, presented
    the Distinguished Young Alumnus Award to Ani Garabedian (BS '99) with a
    heartfelt introduction. He cited Garabedian's exceptional technical
    skills, as well as an extraordinary drive to give back to UCLA. She
    currently serves as chair of the UCLA Society of Women Engineers Alumnae
    Advisory Committee, a member of the electrical engineering alumni
    advisory board, and is active in the UCLA Alumni Association.

    Friend of the school Edward K. Rice himself presented this year's Edward
    K. Rice Outstanding Student honors, which recognize excellence both in
    and outside the classroom: 2006 Outstanding Undergraduate Student, Baley
    Akemi Fong, 2006 Outstanding Master's student, Christine Lee, and 2006
    Outstanding Doctoral Student, Alireza Mehrnia.

    The evening also included a video showcasing innovative faculty research
    and new developments over the past year, featuring mechanical and
    aerospace engineering professor Greg Carman and his work with thin film
    nitinol heart valves for children, research on beach sand bacteria
    conducted by civil and environmental engineering professor Jennifer Jay,
    and electrical engineering professor Abeer Alwan's efforts to develop a
    computer speech program for kids whose native language is not English.

    The film shared innovative new work by computer science professor Majid
    Sarrafzadeh on computerized medical treatment devices, and focused on
    two new interdisciplinary research centers headquartered at the School,
    the Western Institute of Nanoelectronics and the NIH Nanomedicine Center
    for Cell Control.

    ###

    11.06.06
    -M.Abraham
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