2015 annual meeting - National Academy of Engineering
Transcription
2015 annual meeting - National Academy of Engineering
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING 2015 ANNUAL MEETING October 4–5, 2015 Washington, DC NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING 2015 ANNUAL MEETING October 4–5, 2015 Washington, DC CONTENTS Quick Reference Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Sunday, October 4 Public Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chair’s Remarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President’s Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Induction Ceremony . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Awards Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plenary Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E4U2 Awards Presentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . 4 5 6 . 6 10 13 Monday, October 5 Business Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Public Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Section Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reception/Dinner Dance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 13 19 19 General Information Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shuttle Bus Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Guest Tour Bus Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NAS Building Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Section Chairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Guest Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Area Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Meeting Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2014 Honor Roll of Donors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 20 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE Sunday, October 4 All events take place at the NAS Building, 2101 Constitution Avenue NW, unless otherwise noted. 10:00 am–4:00 pm Registration NAS 120 10:30–11:45 am Brunch West Lawn 10:30–11:45 am Estate Planning Seminar (with brunch) Members’ Room 12:00 noon– 5:30 pm PUBLIC PROGRAM Chair’s Remarks President’s Address Induction Ceremony for NAE Class of 2015 Awards Program Auditorium Plenary Speakers: Addressing the Grand Challenges Dr. Robert S. Langer David H. Koch Institute Professor Massachusetts Institute of Technology Engineer Better Medicines Dr. Dawn C. Meyerriecks Deputy Director, Directorate of Science and Technology Central Intelligence Agency Secure Cyberspace Dr. Thomas C. Katsouleas Executive Vice President and Provost University of Virginia Grand Challenge Scholars Program 5:30–6:00 pm Engineering for You 2 (E4U2): Grand Challenges Video Award Presentation 6:00–7:30 pm Reception 6:30–9:00 pm Reception and Dinner for the Golden Bridge Society (by invitation) West Lawn Monday, October 5 7:00 am–2:00 pm Registration NAS 120 7:00–8:30 am Continental Breakfast Great Hall Foreign Secretary’s Breakfast (by invitation to the foreign members) Members’ Room Home Secretary’s Breakfast (by invitation) Room 125 8:30–9:30 am NAE Business Session Auditorium 2 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE 9:30–12:30 pm Forum: NAE GRAND CHALLENGES FOR ENGINEERING: IMPERATIVES, PROSPECTS, AND PRIORITIES Welcome: C. D. Mote, Jr., President National Academy of Engineering Lord Alec N. Broers House of Lords Parliament of the United Kingdom Professor Farouk El-Baz Center for Remote Sensing Boston University Dr. Wesley L. Harris Charles Stark Draper Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dr. Calestous Juma Professor of the Practice of International Development Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs John F. Kennedy School of Government Harvard University Auditorium Mr. Dean Kamen President DEKA Research and Development Corporation Dr. Robert H. Socolow Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Princeton Environmental Institute Princeton University Dr. Jackie Y. Ying Executive Director Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology Moderator: Dan Vergano Science Reporter, BuzzFeed News 12:30–1:30 pm Lunch West Lawn 12:45–1:30 pm Testifying before Congress: A Tutorial Lunch provided Room 125 2:00–5:00 pm Section Meetings NAS Building and Keck Center 6:30 pm Reception Grand Ballroom, JW Marriott 7:30 pm–midnight Dinner and Dancing Grand Ballroom, JW Marriott NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 3 S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 10:30–11:45 am Brunch Buffet 10:30–11:45 am Financial, Estate, and Gift Planning in the Changing Economy (advance registration requested) Brunch included Tent on West Lawn Members’ Room The current economy has created many fiscal and philanthropic opportunities. This talk will focus on ways to maximize these benefits, blending your financial needs with your philanthropic goals to make a difference. Cindy Sterling, the presenter, is the principal of Sterling Financial Planning, a fee-for-service financial planning firm in New York City, founded in 2004. She is also the planned giving consultant for Washburn & McGoldrick, LLC, a comprehensive development consulting firm. A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania with a bachelor’s degree in economics and master’s degree in psychological services, Cindy received her chartered financial consultant (ChFC) certification in 1997. She is also one of a small number of advisors who earned the Registered Life Planner (RLP) certification from the Kinder Institute. A published author on women’s philanthropy and nontraditional financial, estate, and gift planning, Cindy speaks frequently at financial, educational and gift planning conferences around the country. Noon–1:30 pm PUBLIC PROGRAMAuditorium Chair’s Remarks Charles O. Holliday, Jr. Chair, National Academy of Engineering Charles O. Holliday, Jr., has served as chairman of Royal Dutch Shell PLC since May 2015, having previously served as a nonexecutive director since September 2010. He is the former chair of the board of directors (1999–2009) and chief executive officer (1998–2008) of E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Co., where he began his career in 1970 as an engineer. Under Mr. Holliday’s direction, DuPont established the mission to achieve sustainable growth—increasing shareholder and societal value while decreasing the company’s environmental footprint. He coauthored Walking the Talk, which details the business case for sustainable development and corporate responsibility. Mr. Holliday was elected to the NAE in 2004 for his leadership in DuPont’s transformation to sustainable growth through biotechnology, high-performance materials, improved safety, and consumer protection. He was elected chair of the National Academy of Engineering in 2012. He chaired the NRC Committee on Research Universities and served on the NRC Committee on America’s Climate Choices. Mr. Holliday is former chair of the Bank of America Corporation, a presiding director of Deere & Company, and a founding member of the International Business Council. He also previously chaired the following organizations: the Business Roundtable’s Task Force for Environment, Technology and Economy; the World Business Council for Sustainable Development; the Business Council; and the Society of Chemical Industry–American Section. He served on the National Infrastructure Advisory Council. He is a licensed professional engineer (PE) and graduated with a BS degree in industrial engineering from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville in 1970. He has also received three honorary doctorates. 4 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 President’s Address C. D. Mote, Jr. President, National Academy of Engineering Vice Chair, Governing Board of the National Research Council . D. Mote, Jr. is president of the National Academy of Engineering and Regents’ Professor on C leave from the University of Maryland, College Park. Dr. Mote is a native Californian who earned his BS, MS, and PhD degrees at the University of California, Berkeley in mechanical engineering between 1959 and 1963. After a postdoctoral year in England and three years as an assistant professor at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh, he returned to Berkeley to join the faculty in mechanical engineering for the next 31 years. He and his students investigated the dynamics, stability, and control of high-speed rotating and translating continua (e.g., disks, webs, tapes, and cables) as well as biomechanical problems associated with snow skiing. He coined the area called “dynamics of axially moving materials” encompassing these systems. Fifty-eight PhD students earned their degrees under his mentorship. He held an endowed chair in mechanical systems at Berkeley and chaired the Mechanical Engineering Department from 1987 to 1991, when the National Research Council (NRC) ranked its graduate program effectiveness highest nationally. Because of his success at raising funds for mechanical engineering, in 1991 he was appointed vice chancellor expressly to create and lead a $1 billion capital campaign, which raised $1.4 billion. In 1998 Dr. Mote was recruited to the presidency of the University of Maryland, College Park, a position he held until 2010 when he was appointed Regents’ Professor. His goal for the university was to elevate its self-expectation of achievement and its national and global positions through proactive initiatives. During his tenure the number of Academy members on the faculty tripled, three Nobel laureates were recognized, and an accredited school of public health and a new department of bioengineering were created. He also founded a 130-acre research park next to the campus, faculty research funds increased by 150 percent, and partnerships with surrounding federal agencies and with international organizations expanded greatly. The number of students studying abroad tripled, and he created an annual open house day that attracts over 100,000 visitors, founded a charitable foundation for the campus whose board of trustees launched and led a successful $1 billion capital campaign, and took to lunch every student that wanted to go. The Academic Ranking of World Universities ranked the campus #36 in 2010 and its Engineering School #13. The NAE elected him to membership in 1988 and to the positions of Councillor (2002–2008), Treasurer (2009–2013), and President for a six-year term beginning July 1, 2013. He has served on the NRC Governing Board Executive Committee since 2009. He chaired the NRC Committee on Global Science and Technology Strategies and Their Effects on US National Security (2009–2010), and cochaired the National Academies Government-University-Industry Research Roundtable (2007–2013) and Committee on Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Workforce Needs for the US Department of Defense and the US Industrial Base (2011–2012). He was vice chair of the NRC Committee on Department of Defense Basic Research (2004) and served on the National Academies committee that authored the Rising Above the Gathering Storm reports of 2005 and 2010. He was also a founding member of the FBI’s National Security Higher Education Advisory Board (2005–2010). Dr. Mote’s recognitions include the NAE Founders Award, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Medal, and the Humboldt Prize of the Federal Republic of Germany. At the University of California, Berkeley, he was honored with the Distinguished Teaching Award, Distinguished NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 5 S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 Engineering Alumnus Award, Berkeley Citation, and Excellence in Achievement Award. He is an honorary fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, honorary member of the American Society for Engineering Education, and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Academy of Mechanics, Acoustical Society of America, and American Association for the Advancement of Science. He holds four honorary doctorates and two honorary professorships. Induction Ceremony for the NAE Class of 2015 Alton D. Romig, Jr. Executive Officer, National Academy of Engineering lton D. Romig, Jr. is the NAE executive officer, responsible for the program, financial, and A membership operations of the Academy, reporting to the president. Before joining the Academy, he served as vice president and general manager of Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company Advanced Development Programs, better known as the Skunk Works®. He spent most of his career at Sandia National Laboratories, operated by the Lockheed Martin Corporation. He joined Sandia as a member of the technical staff in 1979 and moved through a succession of R&D management positions to his appointment as executive vice president in 2005. He served as the deputy laboratories director and chief operating officer until 2010 when he transferred to the Skunk Works. Dr. Romig earned a BS, MS, and PhD in materials science and engineering from Lehigh University in 1975, 1977, and 1979, respectively. He is a fellow of ASM International, TMS, IEEE, AIAA, and AAAS, and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2003 and the Council of Foreign Relations in 2008. He was awarded the ASM Silver Medal for Materials Research in 1988. 1:30–2:00 pm Break (NAE Class of 2015 and Anniversary Members group photo) Class of 2015 and 25th Anniversary Members (Class of 1990) proceed with NAE staff guidance through the Constitution Avenue Lobby 2:00–2:40 pm Awards Program 2015 Simon Ramo Founders Award Recipient Linda P.B. Katehi Chancellor, University of California, Davis The Simon Ramo Founders Award, the oldest award presented by the National Academy of Engineering, was established in 1965 to honor an outstanding NAE member or foreign member who has upheld the ideals and principles of the NAE through professional, educational, and personal achievement and accomplishment. L inda P.B. Katehi, recipient of the 2015 Simon Ramo Founders Award, is being honored “for visionary leadership in engineering research, entrepreneurship, and education, and for national advocacy of higher education as a major driver of the US economy.” Dr. Katehi is chancellor of the University of California, Davis, where, as chief executive officer, she oversees all aspects of the university’s teaching, research, and public service mission. She came to UC Davis in 2009, during the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, but has effectively moved the university forward through a number of important initiatives. 6 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 The university is progressing with its 2020 Initiative to add up to 5,000 new students by the end of the decade, along with 300 new faculty, 2,500 graduate students, and needed facilities. The plans allow UC Davis to achieve greater financial stability and increase its national and international diversity, so all of its students are better equipped to compete in the global economy. In 2013 Chancellor Katehi established the UC Davis World Food Center to tackle critical issues such as how to feed a growing planet in an environmentally friendly way and to study the nexus between food and human health. As these initiatives were advancing, UC Davis successfully completed its first-ever comprehensive campaign, raising $1.13 billion for student scholarships, programs, facilities, and other academic support from 110,000 individual donors. In addition to her role as chancellor, Dr. Katehi holds UC Davis faculty appointments in electrical and computer engineering and in women and gender studies. She chaired the President’s Committee for the National Medal of Science and the Secretary of Commerce’s committee for the National Medal of Technology and Innovation. She is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of many other national and local organizations. Dr. Katehi was previously provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; John A. Edwardson Dean of Engineering and professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue University; and associate dean for academic affairs and graduate education in the College of Engineering and professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Michigan. Since her early years as a faculty member, she has focused on expanding research opportunities for undergraduates and improving the education and professional experience of graduate students, with an emphasis on underrepresented groups. She has mentored more than 70 postdoctoral fellows, doctoral and master’s students in electrical and computer engineering, and 23 of the 44 doctoral students who graduated under her supervision have become faculty members at research universities in the United States and abroad. Her work in electronic circuit design has led to numerous national and international awards, both as a technical leader and educator, and 19 US patents. As chancellor of UC Davis, she has used her expertise as an electrical engineer to improve both the success of the universities’ transfer of technology and relations between the patent office and universities. She is the author or coauthor of 10 book chapters and about 650 refereed publications in journals and symposia proceedings. She earned her bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, in 1977, and her master’s and doctoral degrees in electrical engineering from UCLA in 1981 and 1984, respectively. Arthur M. Bueche Award Recipient William F. Banholzer Research Professor, Chemical and Biological Engineering University of Wisconsin–Madison The Arthur M. Bueche Award of the National Academy of Engineering recognizes an engineer who has been actively involved in determining US science and technology policy, promoting technological developments, and contributing to the enhancement of relations between industries, government, and universities. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 7 S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 illiam F. Banholzer, recipient of the 2015 Arthur M. Bueche Award, is being honored “for W his extraordinary record of new products commercialization and improvement in universityindustry relationships through innovative intellectual property treatment and joint industryacademic funding.” Dr. Banholzer joined the University of Wisconsin–Madison in fall 2013 as a research professor in the Chemical and Biological Engineering Department, honorary fellow in the Chemistry Department, and senior advisor with the Wisconsin Energy Institute. He has a strong history of technical excellence and innovation, spanning more than 30 years of industrial experience. At Dow Chemical he was an executive vice president, leading venture capital, new business development, and licensing activities, and chief technology officer. He managed a portfolio of research programs with an annual budget of $1.7 billion and set and executed the company’s vision for science and technology. He also served on the board of directors for the Dow Corning Corporation, chairing the Corporate Responsibility Committee, and on Dow AgroScience’s members committee and the Dow Foundation board of directors. Under Dr. Banholzer’s leadership the value of Dow’s innovation pipeline tripled from $10 billion to over $32 billion. In addition, he initiated a $250 million university research collaboration and championed the Dow Safety Academy to help improve university safety, efforts that were recognized with the 2013 Chemical Engineering and ChemInnovations Award. His work to accelerate the company’s technology development has been recognized by R&D Magazine, where Dow was ranked in the top ten for R&D in all industries; a recent Booz Allen study that rated Dow’s innovation portfolio management as “Best in Class”; and Thomson Reuters, which for the third year in a row ranked Dow among the top 100 Innovators. For his accomplishments Dr. Banholzer was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2002, and in 2006 he was elected to serve a 3-year term on the NAE Council. He has also received the Industrial Research Institute’s Holland Award for R&D management, the Council of Chemical Research’s Pruitt Award for his innovative approach to research collaborations, the American Chemical Society’s Earl B. Barnes Award, and the AGILE Award of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Before joining Dow Dr. Banholzer had a 22-year career with General Electric Company (GE). At the time of his departure he was vice president of Global Technology at GE Advanced Materials, where he was responsible for worldwide technology and engineering. He joined GE in 1983 as a staff chemical engineer in the company’s Corporate Research and Development Laboratory, where he held several leadership positions before joining the superabrasives business. He was elected a company officer, moved to GE Lighting as vice president of global engineering in 1997, and in 1999 transferred to Advanced Materials business as vice president of global technology. During his GE career he was honored with the company’s Bronze, Silver, and Gold Patent Awards; GE Superabrasives’ Leadership Award; GE Plastics’ CEO Six Sigma Award; and election to the Whitney Gallery of Technical Achievers. In addition to membership in the American Chemical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Dr. Banholzer is a certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt, holds 16 US patents, has over 85 publications (with 2,300 citations and an h-index of 27), and has presented numerous invited lectures around the world. He earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Marquette University and master’s and doctoral degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Illinois. 8 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 2:40–3:30 pm Bernard M. Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education Lecture The Bernard M. Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education recognizes new modalities and experiments in education that develop effective engineering leaders. It focuses on innovations such as curricular design, teaching methods, and technologyrelated learning that strengthen students’ capabilities and desire to grow into leadership roles. This year’s Bernard M. Gordon Prize for Innovation in Engineering and Technology Education recognized Mr. Simon Pitts and Professor Michael B. Silevitch “for developing an innovative method to provide graduate engineers with the necessary personal skills to become effective engineering leaders.” Simon Pitts is director of Northeastern University’s Gordon Institute of Engineering Leadership and professor of practice in engineering leadership. On joining the program he further developed the curriculum, introducing a focus on character development, using 14 specific leadership capabilities taught and then mastered using leadership laboratories. A focus on product development, delivering products and processes to market “on time, on budget, and to specification,” was also added. These enhancements are included in five fundamental “pillars” of the program that integrate into a complete educational experience that was broadened include all disciplines in the College of Engineering. He also expanded the program faculty, adding members with military and high-technology product development experience, while scaling up the program and building new relationships with companies and adding industry-based mentors. Additionally, he has been instrumental in developing a community of practice among universities to share best practices in engineering leadership education. Before joining Northeastern University in this role Mr. Pitts most recently directed the Ford-MIT Research Alliance. As a senior executive with Ford Motor Company, he led cross-functional teams across three continents as director of global product development operations for Ford, Jaguar, Land Rover, Mazda, and Volvo. During his time with Ford, based in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany, he led engineering and cross-functional teams as vehicle line director, director of manufacturing operations, director of powertrain strategy and planning, and chief engineer powertrain systems engineering. Educated at Loughborough University in England and INSEAD in France, Mr. Pitts is a fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (CEng, FIMechE). ichael B. Silevitch is the Robert D. Black Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering M at Northeastern University and an elected life fellow of the IEEE. His training has encompassed both physics and electrical engineering disciplines. An author or coauthor of over 65 journal papers, his research interests include laboratory and space plasma dynamics and nonlinear statistical mechanics. He is the founder and initial director (2007–2009) of the Northeastern University Gordon Engineering Leadership Program, which was sparked by the need to enhance the dwindling number of engineers who can effectively lead major engineering projects from conception to completion. He is also director of the Bernard M. Gordon Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems (Gordon-CenSSIS), a graduated NSF Engineering Research Center (ERC). Established in 2000, the center’s mission is to unify the methodology for finding hidden structures in NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 9 S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 diverse media such as the underground environment or the human body. This multidisciplinary ERC helped lay the foundation for the research and education programs in the Department of Homeland Security Center of Excellence for Awareness and Localization of Explosives-Related Threats (ALERT). Established in 2008, the ALERT Center seeks to conduct transformational research, develop technology, and provide education and workforce development to improve the effective characterization, detection, mitigation, and response to explosives-related threats. In addition to his role as the director of ALERT, Dr. Silevitch served on the NSF Engineering Directorate Advisory Committee (2010–2014). Beyond plasma science and subsurface sensing and imaging research, Professor Silevitch has worked on K–12 science and mathematics curriculum development and implementation to improve the education of young scientists and engineers. In 1987 he was the founder and, until 1996, director of the Center for the Enhancement of Science and Mathematics Education (CESAME), funded by grants from NSF and the Noyce Foundation. The center helped empower teacher leaders and developed mechanisms to implement exemplary K–12 mathematics and science curricula in innercity schools. He was also the principal investigator for two major NSF grants that resulted in the implementation of these exemplary curricula in 500 New England school districts, and co-PI, with the Massachusetts Commissioner of Education, on the NSFfunded $20 million 10-year (1990–2000) Massachusetts Statewide Systemic Initiative–Project PALMS (Partnerships Advancing the Learning of Mathematics and Science). Other activities/hobbies include ham radio (call sign K1PEV) and service as the trustee of and advisor to the Northeastern University amateur radio club, W1KBN, the oldest club on campus (established ~1931), as well as long-distance walking through the countryside and raising standard poodles. Currently another major activity is helping with his 3-year-old twin grandchildren. 3:30–4:00 pm Break 4:00–5:30 pm Plenary Speakers Introduction C. D. Mote, Jr. President, National Academy of Engineering Engineer Better Medicines Robert S. Langer David H. Kock Institute Professor Massachusetts Institute of Technology obert S. Langer is the David H. Kock Institute Professor at MIT. He served as a member of R the US Food and Drug Administration’s SCIENCE Board, the FDA’s highest advisory board, from 1995 to 2002 and as its chairman from 1999 to 2002. Dr. Langer has received over 220 major awards. He is one of four living individuals to have received both the US National Medal of Science (2006) and National Medal of Technology and Innovation (2011). He also received the 2002 Charles Stark Draper Prize, considered the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for engineers; the 2008 Millennium Prize, the world’s largest technology prize; the 2012 Priestley Medal, the highest award of the American Chemical Society; and the 2013 Wolf Prize in Chemistry, the 2014 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, and the 2014 Kyoto Prize. He is the only engineer to receive the Gairdner Foundation International Award; 82 recipients of this award have subsequently received a Nobel Prize. In 2015 he received the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering. Among numerous other 10 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 awards Dr. Langer has received are the Dickson Prize for Science (2002), the Heinz Award for Technology, Economy and Employment (2003), the Harvey Prize (2003), the John Fritz Award (2003) (given previously to inventors such as Thomas Edison and Orville Wright), the General Motors Kettering Prize for Cancer Research (2004), the Dan David Prize in Materials Science (2005), the Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research (2005), the largest prize in the US for medical research, induction into the National Inventors Hall of Fame (2006), the Max Planck Research Award (2008), the Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research (2008), the University of California–San Francisco Medal (2009), the Warren Alpert Foundation Prize (2011), and the Terumo International Prize (2012). In 1998 he received the Lemelson-MIT prize, the world’s largest prize for invention, for being “one of history’s most prolific inventors in medicine.” In 1989 he was elected to the Institute of Medicine, in 1992 he was elected to both the National Academy of Engineering and to the National Academy of Sciences, and in 2012 he was elected to the National Academy of Inventors. Forbes Magazine (1999) and BioWorld (1990) have named Dr. Langer one of the 25 most important individuals in biotechnology in the world. Discover Magazine (2002) named him one of the 20 most important people in this area, and Forbes Magazine (2002) selected him as one of the 15 innovators worldwide who will reinvent our future. Time Magazine and CNN (2001) named him one of the 100 most important people in America and one of the 18 top people in science or medicine in America. Parade Magazine (2004) selected him as one of 6 “heroes whose research may save your life.” Dr. Langer has received honorary doctorates from Harvard University, the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine, Yale University, University of Western Ontario (Canada), the ETH (Switzerland), the Technion, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Université Catholique de Louvain (Belgium), Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Willamette University, the University of Liverpool (UK), Bates College, the University of Nottingham (UK), Albany Medical College, Pennsylvania State University, Northwestern University, Uppsala University (Sweden), Tel Aviv University, Boston University, Ben Gurion University, Drexel University, Hanyang University (South Korea), and University of New South Wales (Australia). He received his bachelor’s degree from Cornell University in 1970 and his ScD from MIT in 1974, both in chemical engineering. Dr. Langer has written over 1,300 articles and has over 1,080 patents worldwide. His patents have been licensed or sublicensed to over 300 pharmaceutical, chemical, biotechnology, and medical device companies. He is the most cited engineer in history (h-index 213). Secure Cyberspace Dawn C. Meyerriecks Deputy Director, Directorate of Science and Technology Central Intelligence Agency Dawn C. Meyerriecks was appointed Deputy Director for Science and Technology effective June 17, 2013. Prior to this appointment, she served as the Assistant Director of National Intelligence for Acquisition, Technology & Facilities since 2009. In this role, she explored and delivered complex technologies underpinning national missions. From 2006 to 2009 Ms. Meyerriecks was an independent consultant providing senior leadership business and technology consulting direction to government and commercial clients. In addition to consulting, she served on a number of government and commercial advisory boards, including the STRATCOM C2 Advisory Group, the Defense Science Board, the NCTC Advisory Board, the National Academy of Sciences, the Unisys Federal Advisory Board, and the SunFed Advisory Board. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 11 S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 In 2004 –2006 Ms. Meyerriecks was senior vice president for product technology at AOL. She was responsible for full lifecycle development and integration of all consumer-facing AOL products and services, including the relaunch of aol.com, AOL Instant Messenger, and the open client platform. Prior to AOL, she worked for nearly ten years at the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), where she was the chief technology officer and technical director for the Joint Interoperability and Engineering Organization (JIEO). Her last assignment was to charter and lead a new Global Information Grid (GIG) Enterprise Services organization. She worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) as a senior engineer and product manager before her tenure at DISA. In addition to being named the Government Computer News Department of Defense Person of the Year for 2004, Ms. Meyerriecks has been honored with numerous other awards, including InfoWorld 2002 CTO of the year; Federal Computer Week 2000 Top 100; InfoWorld 2001 CTO of the year for the government sector; the Presidential Distinguished Service Award, November 2001; the Senior Executive Service Exceptional Achievement Awards in 1998, 1999, 2000; and the National Performance Review in August 1996. In November 2001, she was featured in Fortune magazine as one of the top 100 intellectual leaders in the world. Ms. Meyerriecks earned a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering with a double major in business from Carnegie Mellon University and a master of science in computer science from Loyola Marymount University. Grand Challenge Scholars Program Thomas C. Katsouleas Executive Vice President and Provost University of Virginia T homas C. Katsouleas is executive vice president and provost of the University of Virginia and was most recently the dean of Duke University’s Pratt School of Engineering from 2008 to 2015. He is also the Robert C. Taylor Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Professor of Physics at the University of Virginia. A specialist in the use of plasmas as novel particle accelerators and light sources, Dr. Katsouleas previously served on the faculty of the University of Southern California’s Viterbi School of Engineering and is a graduate and former faculty member of UCLA. His inventions or co-inventions include the plasma wakefield accelerator concept, the plasma afterburner, plasma lens, surfatron, and novel radiation sources including Cherenkov wake radiation in magnetized plasma. He received the Plasma Science Achievement Award from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) in 2011. He has given more than 50 major invited talks and authored or coauthored more than 200 publications, including several highlighted on the covers of Nature, Physical Review Letters and the CERN Courier. Dr. Katsouleas organized, along with Yannis Yortsos at USC and Richard Miller at Olin College, the first NAE Grand Challenges Summit in Durham in 2009, and coorganized a series of regional, national, and now global summits (most recently in Beijing, September 2015) that have helped transform an extraordinary list into a national and now international movement. He formed the first NAE Grand Challenge Scholars program at Duke, and it has now spread to 20 active programs around the country. In March, he led a delegation of 50 deans to the White House to present a commitment by 122 deans of engineering across the US to form similar Grand Challenge Scholar Programs at their institutions and to graduate some 20,000 engineers over the next decade with the special skills and motivation to tackle the Grand Challenges. He cochairs the NAE Grand Challenges Advisory Committee. 12 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting S U N D A Y, O C T O B E R 4 5:30–6:00 pm Engineering for You 2 (E4U2): Grand Challenges Video Award Presentation Auditorium 6:00–7:30 pm Reception Tent on West Lawn 6:30–9:00 pm Reception and Dinner for the Golden Bridge Society (by invitation) Monday, October 5 7:00–8:30 am Continental Breakfast Great Hall Foreign Secretary’s Breakfast (by invitation only to the foreign members) Members’ Room Home Secretary’s Breakfast (by invitation) Room 125 8:30–9:00 am NAE Business Session (members and foreign members only) Auditorium 9:30 am–12:30 pm Forum: NAE GRAND CHALLENGES FOR ENGINEERING: IMPERATIVES, PROSPECTS, AND PRIORITIES Auditorium Welcome: C. D. Mote, Jr., President National Academy of Engineering Lord Alec N. Broers House of Lords Parliament of the United Kingdom Lord Broers, FREng FRS, was president of the Royal Academy of Engineering (2001−2006) and played a significant role in the University of Cambridge’s rise as a major economic force and center of excellence for high technology and was vice chancellor from 1996 to 2003. He has always expressed strong views about the role of engineers in society, considering that any artificial barrier between engineering and the rest of science is just as damaging as the perceived division between the arts and sciences. He sees engineering and science as two sides of the same coin and believes that national engineering academies are ideally placed to drive home this message. Lord Broers spent nearly 20 years of his career in research with IBM, working at the Thomas J. Watson Research Center in New York, the East Fishkill Development Laboratory, and corporate headquarters. When he arrived back in Cambridge, he set up a nanofabrication laboratory to extend the technology of miniaturization to the atomic scale. He also developed his research on using electrons, X-rays, and ultraviolet light in microscopy and on making microelectronic components. Lord Broers has served on numerous national and international committees, including the UK government’s Council for Science and Technology, the NATO Special Panel on Nanoscience, NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 13 M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 and the NAE panel that selected the fourteen Grand Challenges for Engineering. He is a fellow of the Royal Society and the Royal Academy of Engineering, a foreign member of the US National Academy of Engineering and Chinese Academy of Engineering, and an honorary fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Science and Engineering. He has served on the board of directors of Lucas Industries, Vodafone, Plastic Logic, RJ Mears LLC, and Bio Nano Consulting and is currently on the board of FlexEnable. On June 21, 2004, Her Majesty the Queen made him a life Peer in recognition of his contributions to engineering and higher education. He serves as a cross-bench member of the House of Lords and has chaired the select committee for Science and Technology and the Diamond Light Source, and was president of the Royal Academy of Engineering. Lord Broers received a first degree in physics from Melbourne University in 1959, a degree in electrical sciences from the University of Cambridge (after arriving initially as a choral scholar), and his PhD at the University of Cambridge in 1965. Professor Farouk El-Baz Center for Remote Sensing Boston University 14 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting Farouk El-Baz is director of the Center for Remote Sensing at Boston University and research professor in its Departments of Archaeology, Earth and Environment, and Electrical and Computer Engineering. He taught geology at Asyut University in Egypt (1958–1960) and the University of Heidelberg in Germany (1964–1966). From 1967 to 1972, he joined NASA’s Apollo program as supervisor of Lunar Science Planning and served as secretary of the Lunar Landing Site Selection Committee, chair of the Astronaut Training Group, and principal investigator for Visual Observations and Photography. From 1973 to 1982 he established and directed the Center for Earth and Planetary Studies at the US National Air and Space Museum and was selected by NASA as the principal investigator for Earth observations and photography on the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project of 1975. In 1982 he became vice president for science and technology of Itek Optical Systems (Lexington, MA) until he joined Boston University in 1986 to apply remote sensing technology to archaeology, geography, and geology. He was science advisor (1978–1981) to the late Anwar Sadat, president of Egypt. He is known for pioneering work in the applications of space images to groundwater exploration in the arid lands of Egypt, Libya, Oman, Darfur, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). He served on the board of trustees of the Library of Alexandria, Egypt, and the Geological Society of America Foundation. The latter established the Farouk El-Baz Award for Desert Research and a companion Student Research Award to encourage and reward excellence in arid land studies. He is the recipient of numerous honors and awards, including the Nevada Medal of the Desert Research Institute, NASA’s Apollo Achievement Award, Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal, and the Arab Republic of Egypt Order of Merit, First Class. He presently serves on the Advisory Council of Senior Scientists and Technologists of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi of Egypt. M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 Dr. Wesley L. Harris Charles Stark Draper Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics Massachusetts Institute of Technology esley L. Harris is Charles Stark Draper Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics and W housemaster of New House Residence Hall at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he was previously associate provost (2008–2013) and head of the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics (2003–2008). Before coming to MIT he was a NASA associate administrator, responsible for all programs, facilities, and personnel in aeronautics (1993–1995); vice president and chief administrative officer of the University of Tennessee Space Institute (1990–1993); and dean of the School of Engineering and professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Connecticut, Storrs (1985–1990). In his early career at MIT (1972–1985) he held several faculty and administrative positions, including professor of aeronautics and astronautics. Dr. Harris has done academic research associated with unsteady aerodynamics, aeroacoustics, rarefied gas dynamics, sustainment of capital assets, and chaos in sickle cell disease, and made seminal contributions in each field. In academia he worked with industry and governments to design and build joint industry–government–university research and development programs, centers, and institutes and transferred technology effectively. He is credited with more than 135 technical papers and presentations and has held a number of distinguished, endowed professorships and lectureships. In addition, he has served as chair or member of various boards and committees of the National Research Council (NRC), National Science Foundation (NSF), US Army Science Board, and several state governments as well as committees of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), American Helicopter Society (AHS), and National Technical Association (NTA). He was a member of the board of trustees of Princeton University (2001–2005) and has been an advisor to other universities, colleges, and institutes. He is an elected fellow of the AIAA, AHS, and NTA for personal engineering achievements, engineering education, management, and advancing cultural diversity, and has been further recognized by election to membership in the National Academy of Engineering, Cosmos Club, and Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin as well as several honorary doctorate degrees. He earned a bachelor of science degree (with honors) in aerospace engineering from the University of Virginia in 1964, and master’s and PhD degrees in aerospace and mechanical sciences from Princeton University in 1966 and 1968 respectively. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 15 M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 Dr. Calestous Juma Professor of the Practice of International Development Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs John F. Kennedy School of Government Harvard University Calestous Juma is a professor of the practice of international development and director of the Science, Technology, and Globalization Project at Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, where he also directs Agricultural Innovation Policy in Africa and Health Innovation Policy in Africa projects, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In addition, he is faculty chair of the Innovation for Economic Development and Technology, Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Africa executive programs as well as the Mason Fellows Program. Dr. Juma is a former executive secretary of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity and founding director of the African Centre for Technology Studies in Nairobi. He cochaired the African Union’s High-Level Panel on Science, Technology, and Innovation and was a jury member for the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering. He has won several international awards for his work on sustainable development and has been elected to the Royal Society of London, the US National Academy of Sciences, the World Academy of Sciences, the UK Royal Academy of Engineering, and the African Academy of Sciences. In addition, he serves on the boards of several international bodies including the Aga Khan University and the Pan-African University. Dr. Juma has written widely on science, technology, and environment. He is editor of the International Journal of Technology and Globalisation and the International Journal of Biotechnology, and his next book, Innovation and Its Enemies: Why People Resist New Technologies, will be published by Oxford University Press in 2016. Pending book projects concern regional integration in Africa and innovation for economic development. He holds a doctorate in science and technology policy studies. Mr. Dean Kamen President DEKA Research and Development Corporation Dean Kamen is an inventor, entrepreneur, and tireless advocate for science and technology. As an inventor, he holds more than 440 US and foreign patents, many of them for innovative medical devices that have expanded the frontiers of health care worldwide. As an undergraduate he invented the first wearable infusion pump, and in his mid-20s he founded his first medical device company, AutoSyringe, Inc., to manufacture and market the pumps; within 5 years he had added a number of other infusion devices, including the first wearable insulin pump for diabetics. In 1981 he founded DEKA Research & Development Corporation to develop internally generated inventions and to provide R&D for major corporate clients. He led the company’s development of the HomeChoice™ peritoneal dialysis system, which enables patients’ dialysis in the privacy and comfort of their home. Other notable developments include the Hydroflex™ surgical irrigation pump, the iBOT™ mobility device, and the Segway® Human Transporter. An advanced prosthetic arm currently in development for DARPA should advance the quality of life for returning injured soldiers. 16 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 Mr. Kamen has received many awards for his efforts. In 2000 he was awarded the National Medal of Technology for inventions that have advanced medical care worldwide, and for innovative and imaginative leadership in awakening America to the excitement of science and technology. In 2002 he was awarded the Lemelson-MIT Prize. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1997 and inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2005. He is a fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering. In addition to DEKA, one of his proudest accomplishments is the founding in 1989 of FIRST® (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), an organization dedicated to motivating the next generation to understand, use, and enjoy science and technology. This year FIRST will serve more than 300,000 young people, ages 6–18, in more than 50 countries. High school–aged participants can apply for more than $15 million in scholarships from colleges, universities, and corporations. Studies have shown that FIRST alumni are highly motivated to pursue careers in science and engineering, thus fulfilling Mr. Kamen’s goal of inspiring the next generation of technological leaders. Dr. Robert H. Socolow Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Princeton Environmental Institute, Princeton University Dr. Robert Socolow is professor emeritus and (full-time) senior research scientist in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University. He is the coprincipal investigator (with ecologist Stephen Pacala) of Princeton’s Carbon Mitigation Initiative (www.princeton.edu/~cmi/), a 20-year (2001–2020) project supported by BP. Dr. Socolow seeks new conceptual decade-scale frameworks useful for climate change policy. He and Pacala authored “Stabilization wedges: Solving the climate problem for the next 50 years with current technologies” (Science, August 13, 2004). With colleagues, he introduced the concept of “one billion high emitters,” the worldwide upper and middle class whose lifestyles dominate global change. He has championed CO2 capture and storage, energy efficiency in buildings, technological “leapfrogging” by developing countries, and policies that address the dangers of climate change “solutions,” notably nuclear weapons proliferation and misuse of the land. He currently is interested in “committed emissions” and “unburnable carbon”—implications of never producing attractive fossil fuels. Dr. Socolow was a member of the NAE’s Grand Challenges for Engineering committee and the National Academies’ Committees on America’s Climate Choices and America’s Energy Future. He chaired the Panel on Public Affairs of the American Physical Society (APS), and was editor of Annual Review of Energy and the Environment (1992–2002). In 2014 he became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a fellow of the APS and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. His awards include the 2009 Frank Kreith Energy Award from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers; the 2005 Axelson Johnson Commemorative Lecture award from the Royal Academy of Engineering Sciences of Sweden (IVA); and the 2003 Leo Szilard Lectureship Award from the APS (“for leadership in establishing energy and environmental problems as legitimate research fields for physicists, and for demonstrating that these broadly defined problems can be addressed with the highest scientific standards”). Dr. Socolow received his BA (summa cum laude, 1959) and PhD in theoretical high energy physics (1964) from Harvard University. He was an assistant professor of physics at Yale University from 1966 to 1971. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 17 M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 Dr. Jackie Y. Ying Executive Director Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology Jackie Y. Ying received her BE and PhD from the Cooper Union and Princeton University, respectively. She joined the MIT faculty in 1992, where she was a professor of chemical engineering until 2005. She has served as the founding executive director of the Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology in Singapore since 2003. For her research on nanostructured materials, she has been recognized with the American Ceramic Society Ross C. Purdy Award, David and Lucile Packard Fellowship, Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award, NSF Young Investigator Award, Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award, American Chemical Society Faculty Fellowship Award in Solid-State Chemistry, Technology Review’s Inaugural TR100 Young Innovator Award, American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE) Allan P. Colburn Award, Singapore National Institute of Chemistry–BASF Award in Materials Chemistry, Wall Street Journal Asia’s Asian Innovation Silver Award, International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Jubilee Medal, Materials Research Society Fellowship, Royal Society of Chemistry Fellowship, American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering Fellowship, and Crown Prince Grand Prize in the Brunei Creative, Innovative Product and Technological Advancement (CIPTA) Award. Professor Ying was elected a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader and a member of the German National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina. She was named one of the One Hundred Engineers of the Modern Era by AIChE in its Centennial Celebration. She was selected by The Muslim 500 in 2012, 2013, and 2014 as one of the world’s 500 most influential Muslims, and an inaugural inductee to the Singapore Women’s Hall of Fame in 2014. She is the editor in chief of Nano Today, which has an impact factor of 15.000. Moderator: Dan Vergano Science Reporter, BuzzFeed News Dan Vergano is a science reporter for BuzzFeed News, where he covers science happenings in Washington DC. He was formerly a senior writer-editor at National Geographic and before that, the senior science writer at USA TODAY. He is an adjunct professor at NYU’s Washington DC campus, where he teaches journalism. He was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard in 2007, where he concentrated on the intersection of science and politics. He has a BS in aerospace engineering from Penn State and an MA in science, technology, and public policy from George Washington University. 18 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting There will be a 20-minute break during the program. M O N D A Y, O C T O B E R 5 12:45–1:30 pm Testifying before Congress: A Tutorial Lunch Buffet served in the East Court Room 125 It is essential that congressional policymakers hear a clear and objective interpretation of what science and technology bring to the policy agenda. This communication is a special type of oral presentation, and several elements that are key to its success will be reviewed in this tutorial. James E. Jensen is executive director of the Office of Congressional and Government Affairs of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. From 1987 to 1995 Mr. Jensen was the director of Congressional and public affairs at the US Congress Office of Technology Assessment. In the decade before that he worked on a variety of science and technology issues as a member of the professional staff of the House Committee on Science and Technology and the Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, working most of that time for Senator and Rep. Albert Gore, Jr. He also worked as a fellow at the National Center for Atmospheric Research for a year and was an adjunct faculty member in the Advanced Academic Programs for Graduate Studies at Johns Hopkins University. Mr. Jensen received his AB in American political history from the University of California at Berkeley. He has a daughter and is an avid sailor. 2:00–5:00 pm Section Meetings NAS Building, 2101 Constitution Avenue NW, and The Keck Center, 500 Fifth Street NW 6:30–7:30 pm Reception Grand Ballroom, JW Marriott Hotel 7:30–midnight Grand Ballroom, JW Marriott Hotel Dinner and Dancing (black tie optional) This event will be held at the JW Marriott Hotel, at 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW in downtown Washington. The reception begins at 6:30, followed by dinner and dancing to the Odyssey Band. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 19 G E N E R A L I N F O R M AT I O N Registration Check-In On Sunday, October 4, and Monday, October 5, meeting registration will be located in Room 120 at the NAS Building. Please be sure to check in to receive your registration materials. Registration and Information Desk Hours Sunday, October 4, 10:00 am–4:00 pm Monday, October 5, 7:00 am–2:00 pm Shuttle Bus Service Sunday, October 4 Morning Departs at 10:00 am every 15 minutes, last bus departs at 11:45 am From To JW Marriott NAS Building Afternoon Departs at 1:30 pm every 15 minutes, last bus departs at 2:15 pm NAS Building JW Marriott Evening Departs at 5:30 pm, every 15 minutes, last bus departs at 7:45 pm NAS Building JW Marriott Monday, October 5 Morning Departs at 6:45 am every 15 minutes, last bus departs at 8:15 am JW Marriott NAS Building Afternoon Departs at 1:35 pm and 1:45 pm NAS Building Keck Center Evening Departs at 5:00 pm, 5:15 pm, and 5:30 pm Departs at 5:00 pm, 5:15 pm, and 5:30 pm NAS Building Keck Center JW Marriott JW Marriott Guest Tour Bus Service Monday, October 5 Departs at 9:30 am Departs at 9:45 am From NAS Building NAS Building To Freer|Sackler Galleries Textile Museum After the luncheon at the Cosmos Club, buses will run return trips to the JW Marriott Hotel, the NAS Building, and the Keck Center. 20 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting UP MEMBERS' ROOM MEETING ROOM 114 ROTUNDA CONFERENCE ROOM 118 CONFERENCE ROOM 120 UP UP MEMBERS' CENTER WEST COURT MEN WOMEN ELEV 5 UP WEST CORRIDOR NORTH COURT DN C STREET LOBBY UP UP DOWN GALLERY DN LIFT 1 UP UP DN UP UP LOBBY GREAT HALL UP DN DN AUDITORIUM DN DN ELEV 2 UP ELEV 1 ELEV 3 CONSTITUTION AVENUE LIFT 2 UP UP UP UP UP UP DN DN GALLERY UP LIFT 3 UP UP DN UP WOMEN LECTURE ROOM MEN DN EAST CORRIDOR EAST COURT ELEV 4 DN UP UP DN MTG ROOM 119 UP DN BOARD ROOM EAST ANTEROOM UP CONFERENCE ROOM 125 MTG ROOM 123 DN NAS BUILDING MAP NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 21 SECTION CHAIRS Section 1: Aerospace Engineering Paul D. Nielsen (2010) Retired Major General, USAF Director and CEO Software Engineering Institute Section 2: Bioengineering Nicholas A. Peppas (2006) Cockrell Family Regents Chair #6 in Engineering, Professor, Departments of Chemical Engineering, and Biomedical Engineering and College of Pharmacy The University of Texas at Austin Section 3: Chemical Engineering Pablo G. Debenedetti (2000) Dean for Research and Class of 1950 Professor in Engineering and Applied Science Princeton University Section 4: Civil Engineering David J. Nash (2007) President Dave Nash & Associates, LLC and Senior Vice President MELE Associates, Inc. Section 5: Computer Science & Engineering William J. Dally (2009) Chief Scientist and Sr. Vice President of Research NVIDIA Corporation Section 6: Electric Power/Energy Systems Engineering Adrian Zaccaria (2007) Retired Vice Chairman Bechtel Group, Inc. Section 7: Electronics, Communication and Information Systems Engineering Robert W. Tkach (2009) Director Bell Labs, Alcatel-Lucent Section 8: Industrial, Manufacturing & Operational Systems Engineering William R. Pulleyblank (2010) Professor of Operations Research Department of Mathematical Sciences United States Military Academy, West Point Section 9: Materials Engineering Enrique J. Lavernia (2013) Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor University of California, Irvine Section 10: Mechanical Engineering Sidney Leibovich (1993) Samuel B. Eckert Professor of Mechanical Engineering Cornell University Section 11: Earth Resources Engineering R. Lyndon Arscott (2006) Retired Executive Director International Association of Oil & Gas Producers) Section 12: Special Fields & Interdisciplinary Engineering Soroosh Sorooshian (2003) UCI Distinguished Professor and Director, Center for Hydrometeorology and Remote Sensing Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of California, Irvine 22 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting GUEST PROGRAM Sunday, October 4 On Sunday, October 4, guests are invited to join NAE members and foreign member for brunch, followed by the public program including the induction of new members and foreign members of the Class of 2015. They are invited to stay for the afternoon program of the awards ceremonies, the plenary speakers addressing the Grand Challenges of Engineering—the topic for this year’s meeting—and the presentation of awards to the winners of the NAE’s E4U2 video contest. Monday, October 5 — Registration for the Monday Guest Program is required. Continental Breakfast from 7:00 am until 8:30 am in the Great Hall. On the morning of Monday, October 5, guests are invited to the public forum, NAE Grand Challenges for Engineering: Imperatives, Prospects, and Priorities (see page 13 for more information), or may choose to participate in one of the guest tours described below. Lunch will be provided at the Cosmos Club for those who participate in the Monday Guest Program. After the luncheon, bus transportation will be available from the NAS Building and the Cosmos Club to the JW Marriott Hotel. For those attending the Forum or choosing to learn (with the iPad app) about the ceiling of the Great Hall in the NAS Building, a buffet luncheon will be available in the tent on the West Lawn. Tour of the Freer | Sackler Galleries — Comfortable walking shoes are recommended. Buses will leave the NAS Building at 9:30 for the drive to the Freer |Sackler Galleries. The Freer Gallery of Art opened to the public in 1923 and is home to an important collection of 19th century American art, including James McNeill Whistler’s Peacock Room. The tour will start in the Peacock Room, where a docent will give the history of the room and talk about the relationship between the artist and his patron. This room is considered one of the earlier and most controversial art installations on record. The tour will then move to the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery to view the installation of the Peacock Room REMIX: Filthy Lucre by painter Darren Waterson. Mr. Waterson plays to the tension of the relationship of the artist and patron and highlights the complicated relationship between art and money, patronage and ego. The two rooms contrast the difference between creativity in the 19th century and today. After the hour-long tour, guests will have time to visit other galleries recommended by the docent and to visit the museum shops. Tour of the Textile Museum — Comfortable walking shoes are recommended. Buses leave the NAS Building at 9:45 am for the short drive to the Textile Museum, which is now just up the street in the heart of George Washington University’s Foggy Bottom campus. The visit to the museum starts with a docent-led tour of China: Through the Lens of John Thomson. Thomson was a Scottish photographer and travel writer who made several trips across China in the late 1800s, and the museum writes that his photographs provide “a lasting record of nineteenth-century China’s landscapes, architecture, communities, and customs.” The colorful textiles and accessories from the Qing Dynasty will bring to life the black and white photographs. After the approximately hour-long tour, guests will have time to take in the museum’s Washingtoniana Collection, which documents the formation, development, and history of Washington, DC, from the 18th to the mid-20th century. The collection includes nearly 1,000 manuscripts, books, newspapers, broadsides, photographs, postage stamps, paper currencies, and prints and maps. Tour of the NAS Building — Please register for this tour in Room 120. Alana Quinn, of the Cultural Programs of the National Academy of Sciences, will take participants on a tour of the NAS Building. Starting in the foyer, she will talk about the bronze and glass doors and then visit the Members’ Center, Members’ Room, and Lecture Room. Find out about the painting of President Lincoln signing the charter for the National Academy of Sciences in the Board Room. Utilizing our new Great Hall Dome Explorer iPad App, the tour will end with an in-depth look at the Great Hall and its beautifully restored ornate decorations. This program will last approximately 45 minutes. Guests are invited to bring their own iPad (although this is not required). The tour will begin in the West Court at 9:00 am. Lunch will be provided afterward in the tent on the West Lawn. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 23 AREA MAP P NIA AV P NN SY LVA N I STREET I PE NU E K STREET AA VE G STREET YO RK E AV H STREET W Renwick Gallery PAR K LAFAYETTE THE WHITE HOUSE NE W YO RK E AV NU E G STREET METRO CENTER I STREET JW MARRIOTT K STREET Washington Convention Center H STREET F STREET E STREET 9th STREET SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION Smithsonian American Art Museum 7th STREET I STREET Verizon Center 6th STREET IND IAN VE AA National Air and Space Museum National Gallery of Art D STREET KECK CENTER 500 FIFTH STREET, NW National Archives Arts and Hirshhorn Industries N ATI ON A L MA L L MADISON DRIVE National National Museum Museum of Natural History Old Post Office Tower PENNSYLVANIA AVE NORTH National Museum of American History CONSTITUTION AVENUE PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE 11th STREET Freer Gallery 5th STREET 5th STREET H STREET Textile Museum F STREET NE Corcoran Gallery of Art D STREET EL L I PSE 15th STREET Washington Monument 10th STREET WA S HING TO N CIRCLE GI E STREET E STREET C STREET WASHINGTON MONUMENT 14th STREET 14th STREET FOGGY BOTTOM METRO VIR EN C STREET NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES BUILDING CONSTITUTION AVENUE CONSTITUTION G ARDENS 18th STREET WWII Memorial 13th STREET JEFFERSON DRIVE 12th STREET 12th STREET UE NAE STATE DEPARTMENT 50 REFLECTING POOL Vietnam Veterans Memorial LINCOLN MEMORIAL 15th STREET 19th STREET WEST POTOMAC PARK 17th STREET 17th STREET 21st STREET Korean War Veterans Memorial 24 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 20th STREET 22nd STREET 22nd M P 23rd STREET MEETING SERVICES Food Service Efforts are made to provide healthy, nutritionally balanced meals at all meetings. If you have any questions about food service or if you have special dietary restrictions, please contact Michaela Curran in registration (Room 120). Information Desk The NAE Information Desk is located in the Great Hall of the NAS Building. Staff will be available to provide assistance and answer questions about the Annual Meeting and the NAE membership. Logo Items and Rosettes NAE logo items will be available for purchase during the Annual Meeting in Room 120. Lost and Found Lost and found is located in registration (Room 120). Medical Assistance For medical assistance go to the Information Desk in the Great Hall of the NAS Building. A registered nurse will be onsite. Smoking Policy Smoking is not permitted in any building of the National Academies. It is permitted only in designated outdoor areas. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 25 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS ANNUAL GIVING SOCIETIES The National Academy of Engineering gratefully acknowledges the following members and friends who made charitable contributions to the NAE, and NAE members who supported the Committee on Human Rights, a joint committee of the three academies, during 2014. The collective, private philanthropy of these individuals has a great impact on the NAE and its ability to be a national voice for engineering. We acknowledge contributions made as personal gifts or as gifts facilitated through a donor-advised fund, matching gift program, or family foundation. Ursula Burns (’13), chair and CEO of Xerox, generously gave $100,000 to the NAE in celebration of the 50th Anniversary and to encourage philanthropy among newer NAE members. She challenged members of the classes of 2012, 2013, and 2014 to collectively give $100,000 to enable a stronger, more proactive NAE. The members who participated in the Burns Challenge are noted with the ◊ symbol. CATALYST SOCIETY $100,000 to $500,000 Joan and Irwin Jacobs Mary and Howard* Kehrl Asta* and William W. Lang Raymond S. Stata Friends John F. McDonnell Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Jonathan J. Rubinstein David E. Shaw◊ John C. Wall Ken Q. Xie◊ Clayton Daniel and Patricia L. Mote Jaya and Venky Narayanamurti Richard F. and Terri W. Rashid Richard P. Simmons Arnold and Constance Stancell Gary and Diane Tooker Hugh D. Hibbitt◊ Chad and Ann Holliday Michael W. Hunkapiller Ray R. Irani◊ Jane and Norman N. Li Frances and George Ligler Robin K. and Rose M. McGuire Narayana Murthy and Sudha Murty John Neerhout, Jr. Roberto Padovani Larry* and Carol Papay Simon Ramo Henry M. Rowan Henry and Susan Samueli Maxine L. Savitz David B. and Virginia H. Spencer◊ Charlotte and Morris Tanenbaum James M. and Ellen Weston Tien James A. Trainham and Linda D. Waters Ghebre E. Tzeghai◊ Adrian Zaccaria Elias A. Zerhouni◊ $50,000 to $100,000 Bharati and Murty Bhavaraju◊ James O. Ellis, Jr.◊ Elisabeth Paté-Cornell ROSETTE SOCIETY $25,000 to $50,000 Olivia and Peter Farrell ◊ George and Ann Fisher Kent Kresa Asad M., Gowhartaj, and Jamal Madni CHALLENGE SOCIETY $10,000 to $25,000 Gordon Bell Daniel and Frances Berg Becky and Tom Bergman Barry W. Boehm Lewis M. Branscomb Lenore and Rob Briskman◊ Lance and Susan Davis Nicholas M. Donofrio Dotty and Gordon England◊ Nan and Chuck Geschke Martin E. and Lucinda Glicksman Robert W. Gore John O. Hallquist ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased 26 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS CHARTER SOCIETY $1,000 to $10,000 Linda M. Abriola Rodney C. Adkins Ronald J. Adrian Alice Merner Agogino John L. Anderson John C. Angus Seta and Diran Apelian Frank F. Aplan Kenneth E. Arnold Wm. Howard Arnold* Thomas W. Asmus Kamla and Bishnu S. Atal Daniel and Monica Atkins◊ David Atlas Nadine Aubry Ken Austin Wanda M. Austin Arthur B. Baggeroer William F. Baker Martin Balser◊ Margaret K. Banks◊ James E. Barger Harrison H. and Catherine C. Barrett◊ Forest Baskett III Craig H. Benson◊ Leo L. Beranek Howard Bernstein◊ Peter J. Bethell◊ Lorenz T. Biegler◊ Mark P. Board◊ Mark T. Bohr Rudolph Bonaparte Dushan Boroyevich◊ Paul F. Boulos◊ Kathleen and H. Kent Bowen Craig T. Bowman◊ Stephen P. Boyd◊ Corale L. Brierley James A. Brierley Andrei Z. Broder Andrew Brown, Jr. John H. Bruning George* and Virginia Bugliarello Ursula Burns◊ and Lloyd Bean Xianghong Cao Federico Capasso Stuart K. Card François J. Castaing Corbett Caudill Sigrid and Vint Cerf Selim A. Chacour Jean-Lou A. Chameau Chau-Chyun Chen Josephine Cheng Stephen Z.D. Cheng Weng C. Chew◊ Sunlin Chou Uma Chowdhry Richard M. Christensen John and Assia Cioffi Philip R. Clark G. Wayne Clough James J. Coleman◊ Joseph M. Colucci Harry M. Conger Stuart L. Cooper Ross and Stephanie Corotis Gary L. Cowger Alan W. Cramb◊ Natalie W. Crawford Robert L. Crippen◊ Steven L. Crouch◊ Glen T. Daigger David E. Daniel Ruth A. David L. Berkley Davis Carl de Boor Pablo G. Debenedetti Raymond F. Decker Thomas B. Deen Anne and Thomas Degnan Robert H. Dennard George E. Dieter Daniel W. Dobberpuhl Earl H. Dowell Elisabeth M. Drake Robert M. Drake, Jr. James J. Duderstadt Susan T. Dumais Robert and Cornelia Eaton Thomas F. Edgar◊ Charles Elachi Farouk El-Baz Iraj Ershaghi◊ James L. Everett III Robert R. Everett Thomas E. Everhart James A. Fay Robert E. Fenton Gregory L. Fenves◊ Katherine W. Ferrara◊ Leroy M. Fingerson Tobie and Daniel J.* Fink Bruce A. Finlayson Anthony E. Fiorato Robert E. Fischell Edith M. Flanigen Samuel C. Florman Robert C. and Marilyn G. Forney Heather and Gordon Forward Curtis W. Frank◊ William L. and Mary Kay Friend Douglas W. Fuerstenau Theodore V. Galambos Huajian Gao◊ Donald P. Gaver Arthur Gelb Arthur and Helen Geoffrion Penny and Bill George,◊ George Family Foundation Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Paul H. Gilbert Richard D. Gitlin Eduardo D. Glandt Earnest F. Gloyna Arthur L. and Vida F. Goldstein Mary L. Good Joseph W. Goodman W. David Goodyear◊ Paul E. Gray Hermann K. Gummel John C. Hancock James S. Harris, Jr. Kenneth E. Haughton Janina and Siegfried Hecker Robert W. Hellwarth Larry L. Hench Chris T. Hendrickson John L. Hennessy Narain G. Hingorani David and Susan Hodges Grace and Thom Hodgson Lester A. Hoel Urs Hölzle◊ Edward E. Hood, Jr. Leroy E. Hood ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 27 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Edward E. Horton John R. Howell John R. Huff◊ J. Stuart Hunter Mary Jane Irwin Kenji Ishihara Leah H. Jamieson George W. Jeffs Barry C. Johnson David W. Johnson, Jr. Michael R. Johnson G. Frank Joklik Anita K. Jones James W. Jones◊ Chandrashekhar Joshi◊ Norman P. Jouppi◊ David L. Joyce◊ Eric W. Kaler Paul and Julie Kaminski Melvin F. Kanninen John and Wilma Kassakian Jon E. Khachaturian Diana S. and Michael D. King James L. Kirtley Geraldine Knatz◊ Albert S. Kobayashi Robert M. and Pauline W. Koerner Charles E. Kolb, Jr.◊ Demetrious Koutsoftas Lester C.* and Joan M. Krogh David J. Kuck Thomas F. Kuech Richard T. Lahey, Jr. Louis J. Lanzerotti Cato and Cynthia Laurencin Enrique J. Lavernia◊ Hau L. Lee Raphael Lee◊ and Kathy Kelley James U. Lemke Ronald K. Leonard Frederick J. Leonberger Burn-Jeng Lin Jack E. Little Robert G. Loewy Gerald H. Luttrell◊ Lester L. Lyles William J. MacKnight Thomas and Caroline Maddock Artur Mager Arunava Majumdar George C. Maling, Jr. Henrique S. Malvar◊ Hans Mark ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased 28 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting David A. Markle W. Allen Marr Robert D. Maurer Dan Maydan Jyotirmoy Mazumder◊ Larry V. McIntire Kishor C. Mehta Edward W. Merrill◊ Richard A. Meserve Robert M. Metcalfe◊ R.K. Michel James J. Mikulski Richard B. Miles Richard K. Miller Charles A. Mistretta◊ James K. and Holly T. Mitchell Nandita and Sanjit K. Mitra John A. Montgomery◊ Edward and Stephanie Moses Cherry A. Murray Dale and Marge* Myers Cynthia J. and Norman A. Nadel Albert Narath David Nash Robert M. and Marilyn R. Nerem Robert E. Nickell* Paul D. Nielsen William D. Nix Ronald and Joan Nordgren Matthew O’Donnell Susan and Franklin M. Orr, Jr. Kwadwo Osseo-Asare Bernhard O. Palsson Bradford W. and Virginia W. Parkinson Claire L. Parkinson Neil E. Paton John H. Perepezko Thomas K. Perkins Pete Petit Emil Pfender Craig E. Philip◊ Julia M. Phillips William P. Pierskalla Franz F. Pischinger Stephen M. Pollock H. Vincent Poor William F. Powers Donald E. Procknow William R. Pulleyblank Henry H. Rachford, Jr. Prabhakar Raghavan Doraiswami Ramkrishna Ekkehard Ramm Bhakta B. Rath Buddy D. Ratner Raj Reddy Kenneth and Martha Reifsnider Gintaras V. Reklaitis Eli Reshotko Thomas J. Richardson Ronald L. Rivest Anne and Walt Robb Richard J. and Bonnie B. Robbins Bernard I. Robertson C. Paul Robinson Thomas E. Romesser Julie and Alton D. Romig, Jr. Howard B. Rosen Murray W. Rosenthal William B. Russel Andrew P. Sage Vinod K. Sahney Steven B. Sample John M. Samuels, Jr. Linda S. Sanford Robert E. Schafrik◊ Richard Scherrer Jan C. Schilling◊ John H. Schmertmann Ronald V. Schmidt Henry G. Schwartz, Jr. Lyle H. Schwartz Charles L. Seitz Martin B. and Beatrice E. Sherwin Daniel P. Siewiorek Krishna P. Singh◊ Alvy R. Smith Alfred Z. Spector and Rhonda G. Kost Robert F. and Lee S. Sproull Jery R. Stedinger◊ Richard J. Stegemeier Gunter Stein Gregory Stephanopoulos Kenneth E. Stinson William D. Strecker Ivan E. Sutherland John and Janet Swanson James M. Symons Eva Tardos Ratan N. Tata◊ George Tchobanoglous Matthew V. Tirrell John J. Tracy◊ Richard H. Truly 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS A. Galip Ulsoy Raymond Viskanta Thomas H. Vonder Haar Robert and Robyn Wagoner John E. Warnock Darsh T. Wasan Michael S. Waterman◊ Julia and Johannes Weertman Robert J. Weimer Andrés Weintraub Pohorille◊ Robert M. and Mavis E. White Willis S. White, Jr. Sheila E. Widnall Sharon L. Wood ◊ Herbert H. Woodson Edgar S. Woolard, Jr. Richard N. Wright Wm. A. Wulf Israel J. Wygnanski Beverly and Loring Wyllie William W-G. Yeh Yannis C. Yortsos A. Thomas Young William and Sherry Young Zarem Foundation Xingdong Zhang◊ Steven J. Zinkle◊ Mary Lou and Mark D. Zoback Stacey I. Zones◊ Friends Jo F. Berg Kristine L. Bueche Neil and Natasha Chriss Marilyn Heebner Evelyn S. Jones Isabelle M. Katzer Douglas Larson Toby Wolf Anonymous (1) OTHER INDIVIDUAL DONORS Hiroyuki Abe H. Norman Abramson Hadi Abu-Akeel Kurt Akeley and Jenny Zhao Montgomery M. Alger Charles A. Amann Cristina H. Amon John G. Anderson Stig A. Annestrand George E. Apostolakis Ali S. Argon Robert C. Armstrong Frances H. Arnold R. Lyndon Arscott James R. Asay Jamal J. Azar Donald W. Bahr Rodica A. Baranescu Grigory I. Barenblatt Mark A. Barteau Jordan* and Rhoda Baruch James B. Bassingthwaighte Ray H. Baughman Zdenek P. Bazant Georges and Marlene Belfort Marsha J. Berger Toby Berger Philip A. Bernstein Vitelmo V. Bertero John R. and Pierrette G. Birge Harvey W. Blanch Jack L. Blumenthal Alfred Blumstein F. Peter Boer William J. Boettinger Lillian C. Borrone Frank Bowman Peter R. Bridenbaugh James P. Brill Frederick P. Brooks, Jr. Alan C. Brown Howard J. Bruschi Jack E. Buffington Ned H. Burns Anne and John Cahn Robert Calderbank James D. Callen Joe C. Campbell Max W. Carbon◊ E. Dean Carlson Albert Carnesale John R. Casani William Cavanaugh Don B. Chaffin A. Ray Chamberlain Douglas M. Chapin Vernon L. Chartier Gang and Tracy Chen Shu and Kuang-Chung Chien Anil K. Chopra Andrew R. Chraplyvy Virginia S.T. Ciminelli◊ Paul Citron and Margaret Carlson Citron John L. Cleasby Seymour B. Cohn Richard A. Conway Esther M. Conwell* Richard W. Couch, Jr. Arthur Coury Eugene E. Covert James Q. Crowe Lawrence B. Curtis Ernest L. Daman Paul D. Dapkus Edward E. David, Jr. Delbert E. Day Morton M. Denn Joseph M. DeSimone Robert C. DeVries Frederick H. Dill Robert H. Dodds John E. Dolan Albert A. Dorman David A. Dornfeld◊ Irwin Dorros E. Linn Draper, Jr. T. Dixon Dudderar James M. Duncan Floyd Dunn Ira Dyer David A. Dzombak Peter S. Eagleson Lewis S. Edelheit Elazer R. Edelman◊ Daniel C. Edelstein Helen T. Edwards Bruce R. Ellingwood Richard E. Emmert Joel S. Engel John V. Evans Charles Fairhurst Robert M. Fano Essex E. Finney, Jr. Millard and Barbara Firebaugh John W. Fisher Peter T. Flawn Christodoulos A. Floudas ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 29 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Maria Flytzani-Stephanopoulos◊ Robert E. Fontana G. David Forney, Jr. Harold K.* and Betty Forsen Judson C. French Eli Fromm Shun Chong Fung Zvi Galil Ronald L. Geer John H. Gibbons Don P. Giddens Maryellen L. Giger Jacqueline Gish George J. Gleghorn Fred Glover Richard J. Goldstein Steve and Nancy Goldstein John B. Goodenough James A. Gosling Roy W. Gould Robert K. Grasselli Irene Greif Gary S. Grest Ignacio E. Grossmann Karl A. Gschneidner Laura M. Haas Donald J. Haderle Carol K. Hall William J. Hall Thomas L. Hampton John M. Hanson Alan J. Heeger Adam Heller Martin Hellman Arthur H. Heuer and Joan Hulburt George J. Hirasaki John P. Hirth J. Brent and Margaret Hiskey Allan S. Hoffman Richard Hogg◊ Stanley H. Horowitz Charles L. Hosler, Jr. Salim M. Ibrahim Izzat M. Idriss Akira Ishimaru Tatsuo Itoh Andrew Jackson and Lillian Rankel Linos J. Jacovides Paul C. Jennings Klavs F. Jensen Marvin E. Jensen James O. Jirsa Donald L. Johnson ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased 30 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting James R. Johnson Keith P. Johnston Marshall G. Jones Angel G. Jordan Aravind K. Joshi Ahsan Kareem Kristina B. Katsaros Michael C. Kavanaugh Edward Kavazanjian◊ Leon M. Keer Chaitan Khosla Timothy L. Killeen Sung Wan Kim Judson and Jeanne King Paul C. Kocher U. Fred Kocks Bernard L. Koff Max A. Kohler Jindrich Kopecek Bill and Ann Koros Richard W. Korsmeyer ◊ Roger B. Krieger ◊ Derrick M. Kuzak Stephanie L. Kwolek* Bruce M. Lake James L. Lammie David A. Landgrebe Robert S. Langer Carl G. Langner Robert C. Lanphier III Ronald G. Larson Alan Lawley Edward D. Lazowska Sidney Leibovich Margaret A. LeMone Johanna M.H. Levelt Sengers Milton Levenson Herbert S. Levinson Salomon Levy Paul A. Libby Peter W. Likins Yu-Kweng M. Lin Kuo-Nan Liou Nathan and Barbara Liskov Andrew J. Lovinger William R. Lucas Verne L. Lynn John W. Lyons J. Ross and Margaret Macdonald Malcolm MacKinnon III Alfred U. MacRae Thomas J. Malone James W. Mar William F. Marcuson III Robert C. Marini John L. Mason David K. Matlock William C. Maurer William J. McCroskey M.D. McIlroy Ross E. McKinney Diane M. McKnight ◊ Robert M. McMeeking Alan L. McWhorter Harry W. Mergler Angelo Miele Antonios G. Mikos and Lydia Kavraki◊ James A. Miller Warren F. Miller, Jr. Keith K. Millheim Arthur L. Money◊ Carl L. Monismith Francis C. Moon William B. Morgan John W. Morris Walter E. Morrow, Jr. A. Stephen Morse Joel Moses Jose M.F. Moura◊ Jan and E. Phillip Muntz Earll M. Murman Devaraysamudram R. Nagaraj R. Shankar Nair Tsuneo Nakahara Hyla S. Napadensky Alan Needleman Stuart O. Nelson William New, Jr. Joseph H. Newman Elaine S. Oran Julio M. Ottino David H. Pai Athanassios Z. Panagiotopoulos Stavros S. Papadopulos Louis C. Parrillo David A. Patterson Donald R. Paul Harold W. Paxton Donald W. Peaceman P. Hunter Peckham Nicholas A. Peppas George M. Pharr◊ Mark R. Pinto Karl S. Pister Stephen and Linda Pope 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Harry G. Poulos◊ William N. Poundstone Priyaranjan Prasad Michael Prats Ronald F. Probstein Charles W. Pryor, Jr. Roberta and Edwin Przybylowicz Robert A. Pucel Rajagopal S. Raghavan Vivian and Subbiah Ramalingam Eugene M. Rasmusson Jean-Michel M. Rendu John R. Rice Bruce E. Rittmann Jerome G. Rivard Leslie E. Robertson and Sawteen See Lloyd M. Robeson Stephen M. Robinson Robert K. Roney Kenneth M. Rosen Gerald F. Ross Hans T. Rossby Yoram Rudy Joseph C. Salamone Gurmukh S.* and Harriet Sarkaria Peter W. Sauer Thorndike Saville, Jr.* Robert F. Sawyer George W. Scherer Geert W. Schmid-Schoenbein Fred B. Schneider Jerald L. Schnoor William R. Schowalter Walter J. Schrenk Albert and Susan Schultz Mischa Schwartz Norman R. Scott Bal Raj Sehgal◊ Terrence J. Sejnowski Hratch G. Semerjian Robert J. Serafin F. Stan Settles Don W. Shaw Thomas B. Sheridan Ben A. Shneiderman Michael L. Shuler Neil G. Siegel Arnold H. Silver Peter G. Simpkins Kumares C. Sinha Jack M. Sipress R. Wayne Skaggs Henry I. Smith Gurindar S. Sohi Stuart L. Soled ◊ Soroosh Sorooshian Pol D. Spanos George S. Springer Dale F. and Audrey Stein Dean E. Stephan George Stephanopoulos Thomas G. Stephens Kenneth H. Stokoe II Henry E. Stone Howard and Valerie Stone Lawrence D. Stone Brian Stott Richard G. Strauch Gerald B. Stringfellow Stanley C. Suboleski Rodney J. Tabaczynski Robert L. Taylor Lewis M. Terman Spencer R. Titley Neil E. Todreas Alvin W. Trivelpiece Stephen D. Umans John M. Undrill Andries van Dam Theodore Van Duzer Moshe Y. Vardi Walter G. Vincenti Harold J. Vinegar Irv Waaland Wallace R. Wade Steven J. Wallach C. Michael Walton John D. Warner Warren and Mary Washington John T. Watson Wilford F. Weeks James Wei Sheldon Weinbaum Sheldon Weinig Jasper A. Welch, Jr. David A. Whelan Margot and David C.* White Robert M. White J. Turner Whitted David A. Woolhiser Eli Yablonovitch Les Youd Laurence R. Young Paul Zia Ben T. Zinn Charles F. Zukoski Anonymous (3) Friends John Arganian Harriet Bogdonoff Steve S. Chen Kwang Chin Kim Richard Colman James Dixon Clara K. Ellert Frances P. Elliott Harold and Beverly Frost Sharon P. Gross Tina Hedrick Paul Hertelendy Theodore Irra Arthur Kaufman Edward Kinner Kin Ping Lee Deborah Levey Kathleen Lynch Mills Catherine McGraw Shannon Meyer Michele H. Miller Radka Z. Nebesky John Noel Andrew Oakley Sallie O’Neill Ryszard Pryputniewicz Marlin and Dorothy Ristenbatt Georgia Scordelis Verna W. Spinrad Elizabeth W. Toor Katherine Tracy David Wilkie Carol and David Williams Peter, Denise, Amy, and Heather Williams ◊ Ursula Burns Challenge *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 31 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS CHARLES M. VEST PRESIDENT’S OPPORTUNITY FUND In recognition of NAE members and friends who gave generously to the Charles M. Vest President’s Opportunity Fund in 2014 to honor and remember NAE’s tenth president, Chuck Vest. We acknowledge contributions made as personal gifts or as gifts facilitated by the donor through a donor-advised fund, matching gift program, or family foundation. Linda M. Abriola Alice Merner Agogino Seta and Diran Apelian Wm. Howard Arnold* Daniel and Monica Atkins Zdenek P. Bazant Daniel and Frances Berg Howard Bernstein John H. Bruning Ursula M. Burns and Lloyd Bean Sigrid and Vint Cerf Jean-Lou A. Chameau Gang and Tracy Chen Weng C. Chew Neil and Natasha Chriss Edward E. David, Jr. James J. Duderstadt Elazer R. Edelman Olivia and Peter Farrell George and Ann Fisher Tributes Harold and Beverly Frost Arthur L. and Vida F. Goldstein Paul E. Gray James S. Harris, Jr. Janina and Siegfried Hecker Andrew Jackson and Lillian Rankel Joan and Irwin Jacobs Michael R. Johnson Leon M. Keer Sidney Leibovich Robert M. Metcalfe Richard K. Miller Edward and Stephanie Moses Cherry A. Murray William D. Nix Ronald and Joan Nordgren Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Kwadwo Osseo-Asare Bernhard O. Palsson Larry* and Carol Papay David A. Patterson Stephen M. Pollock Ryszard Pryputniewicz William R. Pulleyblank Marlin and Dorothy Ristenbatt Howard B. Rosen Charles L. Seitz Ben A. Shneiderman Richard P. Simmons George S. Springer Arnold and Constance Stancell Raymond S. Stata Richard H. Truly John C. Wall Sheila E. Widnall David Wilkie Carol and David Williams Laurence R. Young In memory of Jordan Baruch – Rhoda Baruch and the Baruch Fund In memory of Robert R. Berg – Jo F. Berg In memory of Marjana Boroyevich – Dushan Boroyevich In memory of Esther M. Edelman – Elazer R. Edelman In memory of John Frank Elliott – Frances P. Elliott In memory of Howard S. Jones, Jr. – Evelyn S. Jones In memory of Charles C. Ladd – Craig H. Benson, Kwang Chin Kim, Richard Colman, James Dixon, Edward Kinner, Douglas Larson, Deborah Levey, Kathleen Lynch Mills, W. Allen Marr, Catherine McGraw, James K. and Holly T. Mitchell, Katherine Tracy, Peter Williams In memory of Shakunthala – Devaraysamudram R. Nagaraj In memory of Ernest Smerdon – Soroosh Sorooshian In memory of Chang-Lin Tien – Arunava Majumdar In memory of Baranimir von Turkovich – Subbiah Ramalingam In honor of Martin Balser – Arthur Kaufman In honor of Lester C. Krogh – Joan Krogh In honor of Robert Langer – Cato and Cynthia Laurencin In honor of Gretchen Meyer – Shannon Meyer In honor of C.D. (Dan) Mote, Jr. – Cato and Cynthia Laurencin In honor of George Stegemeier – Harold J. Vinegar *Deceased 32 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS LOYALTY SOCIETY In recognition of members and friends who have made gifts to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, or Medicine for at least 20 years. We acknowledge contributions made as personal gifts or as gifts facilitated through a donor-advised fund, matching gift program, or family foundation. Names in bold are NAE members. Herbert L. Abrams H. Norman Abramson Andreas and Juana Acrivos Bruce and Betty Alberts Clarence R. Allen Charles A. Amann Wyatt W. Anderson Edward M. Arnett Wm. Howard Arnold* Daniel L. Azarnoff Jack D. Barchas Jeremiah A. Barondess Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr. John C. Beck Gordon Bell Paul Berg Diane and Norman Bernstein Lewis M. Branscomb John and Sharon Brauman Alan C. Brown Donald D. Brown Harold Brown Kristine L. Bueche George* and Virginia Bugliarello William B. Carey Purnell W. Choppin James McConnell Clark John A. Clements Michael D. Coe Pedro M. Cuatrecasas Irwin Dorros W.G. Ernst Harold J. Fallon Harvey V. Fineberg and Mary E. Wilson Tobie and Daniel J.* Fink Robert C. and Marilyn G. Forney Harold K.* and Betty Forsen T. Kenneth Fowler Hans and Verena Frauenfelder Carl Frieden Theodore V. Galambos Joseph G. Gall David V. Goeddel Paul E. Gray Robert B. Griffiths Adam Heller Ernest M. Henley David and Susan Hodges Joseph F. Hoffman William N. Hubbard, Jr. J. David Jackson Andre T. Jagendorf Samuel L. Katz and Catherine M. Wilfert Max A. Kohler James S. and Elinor G.A. Langer Louis J. Lanzerotti Gerald and Doris Laubach Judith R. Lave Robert G. Loewy Thomas and Caroline Maddock Anthony P. Mahowald Vincent T. Marchesi Hans Mark James F. Mathis Christopher F. McKee Mortimer Mishkin Arno G. Motulsky Elaine and Gerald* Nadler Jaya and Venky Narayanamurti Philip and Sima Needleman Robert M. and Marilyn R. Nerem Elena and Stuart Nightingale Ronald and Joan Nordgren Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling George W. Parshall Gordon H. Pettengill Frank Press Simon Ramo Janet and Lester Reed Jerome G. Rivard Maxine L. Savitz R. Duncan* and Carolyn Scheer Luce William R. Schowalter Maxine F. Singer Louis Sokoloff Raymond S. Stata Rosemary A. Stevens Lubert and Andrea Stryer F. William Studier Paul and Pamela Talalay Charlotte and Morris Tanenbaum Anita and George Thompson George H. Trilling Roxanne and Karl K.* Turekian Martha Vaughan Raymond Viskanta Andrew and Erna* Viterbi Peter K. Vogt George D. Watkins Julia and Johannes Weertman Herbert Weissbach Robert M. and Mavis E. White Catherine M. Wilfert Gerald N. Wogan Anonymous (1) *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 33 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS LIFETIME GIVING SOCIETIES We gratefully acknowledge the following members and friends who have made generous charitable lifetime contributions. Their collective, private philanthropy enhances the impact of the Academies to advise the nation on issues of science, engineering, and medicine. EINSTEIN SOCIETY In recognition of members and friends who have made lifetime contributions of $100,000 or more to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, or Medicine. We acknowledge contributions made as personal gifts or as gifts facilitated through a donor-advised fund, matching gift program, or family foundation. Names in bold are NAE members. $10 million and above Arnold and Mabel Beckman* Bernard M. Gordon Daniel E. Koshland, Jr.* George P. Mitchell* Fred Kavli* Peter O’Donnell, Jr. Dame Jillian Sackler Joan and Irwin Jacobs Kenneth A. Jonsson* Tillie K. Lubin* John F. McDonnell The Ambrose Monell Foundation Gordon and Betty Moore Robert* and Mayari Pritzker Richard L. and Hinda G. Rosenthal* Jack W. and Valerie Rowe Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize Fund of the Russ College of Engineering and Technology at Ohio University Raymond and Beverly Sackler Bernard* and Rhoda Sarnat Leonard D. Schaeffer Sara Lee and Axel Schupf Anonymous (2) Penny and Bill George, George Family Foundation William T.* and Catherine Morrison Golden Thomas V. Jones* Cindy and Jeong Kim Ralph and Claire Landau* Asta* and William W. Lang Ruben F.* and Donna Mettler Dane* and Mary Louise Miller Philip and Sima Needleman Oliver E. and Gerda K. Nelson* Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling Shela and Kumar Patel William J. Rutter Herbert A. and Dorothea P. Simon* Raymond S. Stata Roy and Diana Vagelos Alan M. Voorhees* Anonymous (1) Theodore Geballe Jerome H.* and Barbara N. Grossman William R. Jackson* Robert L. and Anne K. James Mary and Howard* Kehrl Janet and Richard M.* Morrow Ralph S. O’Connor $5 million to $10 million Donald Bren William R. and Rosemary B. Hewlett* $1 million to $5 million Bruce and Betty Alberts Richard and Rita Atkinson Norman R. Augustine Craig and Barbara Barrett Jordan* and Rhoda Baruch Stephen D. Bechtel, Jr. Harry E. Bovay, Jr.* Harvey V. Fineberg and Mary E. Wilson Cecil H. Green* $500,000 to $1 million Rose-Marie and Jack R. Anderson John and Elizabeth Armstrong Kenneth E. Behring Gordon Bell Elkan R.* and Gail F. Blout Carson Family Charitable Trust Charina Endowment Fund Ralph J. and Carol M. Cicerone James McConnell Clark Henry David* Richard Evans* Eugene Garfield Foundation $250,000 to $500,000 The Agouron Institute W.O. Baker* Warren L. Batts Clarence S. Coe* *Deceased 34 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS Kenneth H. Olsen* Ann and Michael Ramage Simon Ramo Anne and Walt Robb Stephen* and Anne Ryan Henry and Susan Samueli H.E. Simmons* Judy Swanson Ted Turner Leslie L. Vadasz Charles M.* and Rebecca M. Vest Estate of Avram Goldstein Robert W. Gore Paul and Judy Gray Corbin Gwaltney John O. Hallquist Margaret A. Hamburg and Peter F. Brown William M. Haney III George and Daphne Hatsopoulos John L. Hennessy Jane Hirsh Chad and Ann Holliday M. Blakeman Ingle Richard B. Johnston, Jr. Anita K. Jones Trevor O. Jones Thomas Kailath Yuet Wai and Alvera Kan Leon K. and Olga Kirchmayer* Frederick A. Klingenstein William I. Koch Gail F. Koshland Jill Howell Kramer Kent Kresa John W. Landis* Janet and Barry Lang Gerald and Doris Laubach David M.* and Natalie Lederman Bonnie Berger and Frank Thomson Leighton Frances and George Ligler Whitney and Betty MacMillan Asad M., Gowhartaj, and Jamal Madni Davis L. Masten and Christopher Ireland Roger L. McCarthy Robin K. and Rose M. McGuire William W. McGuire Burt and Deedee McMurtry G. William* and Ariadna Miller Stanley L. Miller* Joe and Glenna Moore David and Lindsay Morgenthaler Clayton Daniel and Patricia L. Mote Ellen and Philip Neches Susan and Franklin M. Orr, Jr. David Packard* Charles and Doris Pankow* Larry* and Carol Papay Jack S. Parker* Edward E. Penhoet Allen E.* and Marilynn Puckett Richard F. and Terri W. Rashid Henry M. Rowan Joseph E. and Anne P. Rowe* Maxine L. Savitz Wendy and Eric Schmidt David E. Shaw Richard P. Simmons Robert F. and Lee S. Sproull Georges C. St. Laurent, Jr. Arnold and Constance Stancell Edward C. Stone John and Janet Swanson Charlotte and Morris Tanenbaum Peter and Vivian Teets Gary and Diane Tooker Martha Vaughan Andrew and Erna* Viterbi John C. Wall Robert and Joan Wertheim Robert M. and Mavis E. White John C. Whitehead Wm. A. Wulf Ken Q. Xie Tachi and Leslie Yamada Adrian Zaccaria Alejandro Zaffaroni* Janet and Jerry Zucker Anonymous (1) $100,000 to $250,000 Holt Ashley* Francisco J. and Hana Ayala William F. Ballhaus, Sr.* Thomas D.* and Janice H. Barrow H.H. and Eleanor F. Barschall* Elwyn and Jennifer Berlekamp Diane and Norman Bernstein Bharati and Murty Bhavaraju Erich Bloch David G. Bradley Lewis M. Branscomb Sydney Brenner George* and Virginia Bugliarello Malin Burnham Ursula Burns and Lloyd Bean John and Assia Cioffi Paul Citron and Margaret Carlson Citron A. James Clark* W. Dale and Jeanne C. Compton John D. Corbett* Lance and Susan Davis Roman W. DeSanctis Robert and Florence Deutsch Paul M. Doty* Charles W. Duncan, Jr. George and Maggie Eads Robert and Cornelia Eaton Dotty and Gordon England Olivia and Peter Farrell Michiko So* and Lawrence Finegold Tobie and Daniel J.* Fink George and Ann Fisher Harold K.* and Betty A. Forsen William L. and Mary Kay Friend William H. and Melinda F. Gates III Nan and Chuck Geschke Jack and Linda Gill George and Christine Gloeckler Christa and Detlef Gloge Listed below are individuals who became members of the Einstein Society between January 1 and September 1, 2015. Robert C. and Marilyn G. Forney *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 35 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS GOLDEN BRIDGE SOCIETY In recognition of NAE members and friends who have made lifetime contributions totaling $20,000 to $100,000. We acknowledge contributions made as personal gifts or as gifts facilitated through a donor-advised fund, matching gift program, or family foundation. Names in bold are NAE members. $50,000 to $100,000 William F. Allen, Jr. Jane K. and William F. Ballhaus, Jr. Barry W. Boehm Kristine L. Bueche William Cavanaugh Joseph V. Charyk Lester and Renee Crown Ruth A. David Nicholas M. Donofrio James O. Ellis, Jr. Thomas E. Everhart Michael W. Hunkapiller Robert E. Kahn Paul and Julie Kaminski Rita Vaughn and Theodore C.* Kennedy Johanna M.H. Levelt Sengers Joan M. and Frank W.* Luerssen Darla and George E. Mueller Cynthia J. and Norman A. Nadel Jaya and Venky Narayanamurti John Neerhout, Jr. Ronald and Joan Nordgren Roberto Padovani Elisabeth Paté-Cornell Ronald L. Rivest Ellen and George A.* Roberts Jonathan J. Rubinstein Warren G. Schlinger Leo John* and Joanne Thomas Julia and Johannes Weertman Sheila E. Widnall James J. Duderstadt Stephen N. Finger Edith M. Flanigen Samuel C. Florman Bonnie and Donald N.* Frey Elsa M. Garmire and Robert H. Russell Richard L. and Lois E. Garwin Arthur and Helen Geoffrion Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Martin E. and Lucinda Glicksman Arthur L. and Vida F. Goldstein Mary L. Good Joseph W. Goodman Paul E. Gray Delon Hampton Wesley L. Harris Janina and Siegfried Hecker Robert and Darlene Hermann David and Susan Hodges Bettie and Kenneth F.* Holtby Edward E. Hood, Jr. Edward G.* and Naomi Jefferson Min H. Kao John and Wilma Kassakian James R.* and Isabelle Katzer Robert M. and Pauline W. Koerner James N. Krebs Lester C.* and Joan M. Krogh Charles C. Ladd Cato and Cynthia Laurencin Yoon-Woo Lee Jane and Norman N. Li Jack E. Little Thomas and Caroline Maddock Artur Mager Thomas J. Malone James F. Mathis James C. McGroddy Richard A. Meserve James K. and Holly T. Mitchell Van and Barbara Mow Cherry A. Murray Narayana Murthy and Sudha Murty Dale and Marge* Myers Robert M. and Marilyn R. Nerem Simon Ostrach Arogyaswami J. Paulraj Paul S. Peercy Donald E. Petersen Dennis J. Picard John W. and Susan M. Poduska Joy and George* Rathmann Eberhardt* and Deedee Rechtin Kenneth and Martha Reifsnider Jerry Sanders III Linda S. Sanford Roland W. Schmitt Donald R. Scifres Martin B. and Beatrice E. Sherwin David B. and Virginia H. Spencer Joel S. Spira Richard J. Stegemeier Henry E. Stone Stanley D. Stookey Daniel M. Tellep David W. Thompson $20,000 to $50,000 Andreas and Juana Acrivos Rodney C. Adkins Alice Merner Agogino Clarence R. Allen Valerie and William A. Anders Seta and Diran Apelian Wm. Howard Arnold* Kamla* and Bishnu S. Atal Clyde and Jeanette Baker William F. Banholzer David K. Barton Daniel and Frances Berg Becky and Tom Bergman R. Byron Bird Diane and Samuel W. Bodman Kathleen and H. Kent Bowen Corale L. Brierley James A. Brierley Rodney A. Brooks Harold Brown Corbett Caudill Selim A. Chacour Josephine Cheng Sunlin Chou Uma Chowdhry G. Wayne Clough Joseph M. Colucci Ross and Stephanie Corotis Malcolm R. Currie Ruth M. Davis* and Benjamin Lohr Mary P. and Gerald P.* Dinneen E. Linn Draper, Jr. Mildred S. Dresselhaus *Deceased 36 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS James M. and Ellen Weston Tien James A. Trainham and Linda D. Waters Raymond Viskanta Robert and Robyn Wagoner Daniel I. Wang Albert R.C. and Jeannie Westwood Willis S. White, Jr. John J. Wise Edgar S. Woolard, Jr. A. Thomas Young Listed below are individuals who became members of the Golden Bridge Society between January 1 and September 1, 2015. Rosemary L. and Harry M. Conger Evelyn L. Hu and David L. Clarke James J. Mikulski Julie and Alton D. Romig, Jr. Ronald V. Schmidt Elias A. Zerhouni HERITAGE SOCIETY In recognition of members and friends who have included the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, or Medicine in their estate plans or made some other type of planned gift to the Academies. Names in bold are NAE members. Andreas and Juana Acrivos Gene M. and Marian Amdahl Betsy Ancker-Johnson John C. Angus John and Elizabeth Armstrong Norman R. Augustine Jack D. Barchas Harrison H. and Catherine C. Barrett Stanley Baum Clyde J. Behney Daniel and Frances Berg Paul Berg Elkan R.* and Gail F. Blout Enriqueta C. Bond Daniel Branton Robert and Lillian Brent Corale L. Brierley James A. Brierley Lenore and Rob Briskman Kristine L. Bueche Dorit Carmelli Peggy and Thomas Caskey A. Ray Chamberlain Linda and Frank Chisari Rita K. Chow John A. Clements D. Walter Cohen Morrel H. Cohen Stanley N. Cohen Colleen Conway-Welch Ross and Stephanie Corotis Ellis and Bettsy Cowling Molly Joel Coye Barbara J. Culliton Malcolm R. Currie Peter N. Devreotes Mildred S. Dresselhaus Gerard W. Elverum Emanuel and Peggy Epstein Tobie and Daniel J.* Fink Robert C. and Marilyn G. Forney Arthur and Helen Geoffrion Paul H. Gilbert Martin E. and Lucinda Glicksman George and Christine Gloeckler Christa and Detlef Gloge Joseph W. Goodman Chushiro* and Yoshiko Hayashi Larry L. Hench Thomas S. Inui Richard B. Johnston, Jr. Anita K. Jones Jerome Kagan Diana S. and Michael D. King Norma M. Lang Asta* and William W. Lang Daniel P. Loucks R. Duncan* and Carolyn Scheer Luce Thomas and Caroline Maddock Artur Mager Jane Menken Arno G. Motulsky Van and Barbara Mow Guido Munch Mary O. Mundinger Philip and Sima Needleman Norman F. Ness Ronald and Joan Nordgren Gilbert S. Omenn and Martha A. Darling William* and Constance Opie Bradford W. and Virginia W. Parkinson Zack T. Pate Frank Press Simon Ramo James J. Reisa, Jr. Alexander Rich Emanuel P. Rivers Richard J. and Bonnie B. Robbins C. Ruth and Eugene Roberts James F. Roth Esther and Lewis Rowland Sheila A. Ryan Paul R. Schimmel Stuart F. Schlossman Rudi* and Sonja Schmid Kenneth I. Shine Robert L. Sinsheimer Arnold and Constance Stancell H. Eugene Stanley Rosemary A. Stevens John and Janet Swanson John A. Swets Esther S. Takeuchi Paul and Pamela Talalay John C. Wall Robert and Joan Wertheim Maw-Kuen Wu Wm. A. Wulf Tilahun D. Yilma Michael Zubkoff Anonymous (2) Listed below are individuals who became members of the Heritage Society between January 1 and September 1, 2015. Pat and Jim McLaughlin *Deceased NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 37 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS FOUNDATIONS, CORPORATIONS, AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS LIFETIME In recognition of foundations, corporations, and other organizations that have given gifts or grants totaling $1 million or more to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, or Medicine. Names in bold have supported the NAE. $25 million or more Carnegie Corporation of New York The Ford Foundation The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation W.M. Keck Foundation W.K. Kellogg Foundation The Koshland Foundation The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Howard Hughes Medical Institute The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation The Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation Alfred P. Sloan Foundation The Irvine Company Kaiser Permanente The Kavli Foundation The Pew Charitable Trusts The Rockefeller Foundation E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company Eastman Kodak Company The Ellison Medical Foundation ExxonMobil Corporation ExxonMobil Foundation Ford Motor Company General Electric Company General Motors Company GlaxoSmithKline William T. Grant Foundation Great Lakes Protection Fund The Greenwall Foundation The John A. Hartford Foundation Hewlett-Packard Company Intel Corporation International Business Machines Corporation Johnson & Johnson The JPB Foundation JSM Charitable Trust Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation The Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation Daniel E. Koshland, Jr. Family Fund The Kresge Foundation Eli Lilly and Company Lockheed Martin Corporation Richard Lounsbery Foundation Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation Merck & Company, Inc. Merck Company Foundation Microsoft Corporation The Ambrose Monell Foundation Monsanto Company Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation National Multiple Sclerosis Society Northrop Grumman Corporation Nuclear Threat Initiative O’Donnell Foundation The David and Lucile Packard Foundation Peter G. Peterson Foundation Pfizer, Inc. Robert Pritzker Family Foundation Research Corporation for Science Advancement Rockefeller Brothers Fund Richard & Hinda Rosenthal Foundation Raymond & Beverly Sackler Foundation Sanofi-Aventis The Spencer Foundation The Starr Foundation Robert W. Woodruff Foundation Xerox Corporation $10 million to $25 million Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory $5 million to $10 million Michael and Susan Dell Foundation The Grainger Foundation $1 million to $5 million American Board of Family Medicine American Cancer Society, Inc. American Legacy Foundation American Public Transportation Association America’s Health Insurance Plans Foundation Amgen, Inc. Association of American Railroads AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP AT&T Corporation Atkinson Family Foundation The Atlantic Philanthropies (USA) Craig & Barbara Barrett Foundation Battelle S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation Blue Shield of California Foundation The Boeing Company Bristol-Myers Squibb Company Burroughs Wellcome Fund The California Endowment California HealthCare Foundation Margaret A. Cargill Foundation Chevron Corporation Chrysler Group LLC The Commonwealth Fund The Dow Chemical Company 38 NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 2014 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS ANNUAL In recognition of foundations, corporations, or other organizations that made gifts or grants to support the National Academy of Engineering in 2014. Ruth and Ken Arnold Family Fund at the Houston Jewish Community Foundation Arnold Charitable Fund at Schwab Charitable Fund Avid Solutions Industrial Process Control Hood Family Fund of the Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund The Baruch Fund Bell Family Foundation David and Sharon Kuck Family Fund of the Bessemer National Gift Fund The Boeing Company Card Family Foundation Castaing Family Foundation Cornell University Foundation Cummins, Inc. Carl de Boor Advised Fund of the Orcas Island Community Foundation The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory E.I. du Pont de Nemours and Company Ellis Family Charitable Fund at Schwab Charitable Fund Employees Charity Organization of Northrop Grumman ExxonMobil Corporation ExxonMobil Foundation Fortinet GE Foundation General Aero-Science Consultants, LLC Geosynthetic Institute Gerstner Family Foundation The Geschke Foundation at the Silicon Valley Community Foundation Google, Inc. The Grainger Foundation Gramp Foundation Gratis Foundation Greater Cincinnati SMPS Indo-US Science and Technology Forum Innovyze International Business Machines Corporation Joan and Irwin Jacobs Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation W.M. Keck Foundation Kresa Family Foundation Lockheed Martin Corporation Margaret and Ross MacDonald Charitable Fund of the Triangle Community Foundation Massachusetts Institute of Technology Mayden Philanthropic Fund of the Jewish Federation of Silicon Valley Medtronic Foundation Microsoft Corporation Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Dale and Marge Myers Fund at the San Diego Foundation National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering National Financial Services Newmont Mining Corporation Pfizer, Inc. Philanthropic Ventures Foundation PJM Interconnection The Procter & Gamble Company Qualcomm, Inc. Robbins Family Fund at the Seattle Foundation Henry M. Rowan Family Foundation Samueli Foundation Southwest Research Institute Ray & Maria Stata Family Charitable Fund Ken and Ann Stinson Fund of the Omaha Community Foundation Morris & Charlotte Tanenbaum Family Foundation The Engineering Center Education Trust University of Toronto USG Foundation Weinig Foundation The White Family Trust Xerox Corporation Xie Foundation Zarem Foundation Zerhouni Family Charitable Foundation We have made every effort to list donors accurately and according to their wishes. If we have made an error, please accept our apologies and contact the Development Office at 202.334.2431 or [email protected] so we can correct our records. NAE 2015 Annual Meeting 39 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING 2015 ANNUAL MEETING October 4–5, 2015 Washington, DC