9/15/2015 Mike Koon, Marketing and Communications Coordinator
The University of Illinois College of Engineering will induct five new members into its Hall of Fame: : Martin F. Eberhard, John A. Georges, Robert D. Kern, David J. Kuck, and Sir Anthony J. Leggett. The Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place on Friday, September 18 at 10 a.m. at the Beckman Institute.
Written by Mike Koon, Marketing and Communications Coordinator
The University of Illinois College of Engineering will induct five new members into its Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame ceremony will take place on Friday, September 18 at 10 a.m. at the Beckman Institute. Visit: Engineering at Illinois Hall of Fame Site
Tesla first gained notoriety following the production of the first fully electric sports car, the Tesla Roadster. Even before the first Tesla Roadster shipped in 2008, Eberhard’s vision had transformed the way consumers think of electric vehicles. The auto industry was also inspired. A General Motors executive publicly commented that their electric car program was restarted as a direct response to the Tesla Roadster, hence the Chevy Volt.
During his tenure, International Paper's sales quadrupled to $20 billion, 1995 net income of $1.2 billion was 10 times the 1984 level, and the market value of the company's outstanding stock increased by nearly 800 percent. Georges was a driving force behind the company’s modernization of its mills and product line as well as its numerous acquisitions within the industry. Under Georges watch, the company acquired the Hammermill Paper Company and expanded its manufacturing operations to Europe and the Pacific Rim.
In nearly 50 years of Kern ownership, Generac grew to about 2,000 employees with revenues topping $700 million. During the 1970s, the company expanded its offerings to recreational vehicle markets, and in the 1980s to the commercial and industrial markets.
Kuck was a professor of both computer science and electrical and computer engineering at the University of Illinois from 1965-1993. The Center for Supercomputing Research and Development at Illinois, which he created in 1983, was extraordinarily influential in developing parallel computing technology (from hardware to algorithms) in the era of vectorization and symmetric multiprocessing. Every compiler in use today incorporates techniques pioneered by Kuck, targeting parallelism in its many forms and managing locality. As an outgrowth of his compiler work, he initiated efforts that led to the development of OpenMP, the most common solution for incorporating threads into scientific applications.
Leggett, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor and Center for Advanced Studies professor, has been a member of the University of Illinois faculty since 1983 and still has a passion for teaching both technical graduate and interdisciplinary undergraduate courses. His illustrious career has shaped the theoretical understanding of normal and superfluid helium liquids and other strongly coupled superfluids. He set directions for research in the quantum physics of macroscopic dissipative systems and use of condensed systems to test the foundations of quantum mechanics.
The Hall of Fame ceremony is a part of Impact Day, which celebrates the ways in which University of Illinois engineering students, faculty and staff drive the economy, reimagine engineering education, and bring revolutionary ideas to the world.
For more information on Impact Day or to register, visit http://impact.engineering.illinois.edu