News
Schwennsen voted AIA president-elect
Kate Schwennsen has been elected first vice president/president-elect of
the American Institute of Architects (AIA). She will be AIA president in
2006. Schwennsen is associate dean of the College of Design at Iowa State
and an associate professor of architecture. She has held several leadership
positions in AIA and is a former president of AIA Iowa. Schwennsen earned
her bachelor's and master's degrees from Iowa State.
AIA release
Proposed FY05 operating budget reallocates $8.5 million for employee
compensation increases
Iowa State University's top funding priority in the fiscal year that
begins July 1 will be increases to the salary and benefits package for
faculty and professional and scientific employees. The university will
self-fund, through internal allocations, $7.1 million in compensation
increases for faculty and P&S staff. It will honor another $2.4 million
in
compensation increases to Merit staff as negotiated in the state bargained
contract.
These details are part of the FY05 budget university leaders will present
to
the Board of Regents, State of Iowa, for approval at the board's June 15-16
meeting in Okoboji. The university's proposed FY05 general fund budget is
$422,510,553, about $3.8 million leaner than it was on July 1, 2003.
Go to news release.
Nancy Knight awarded national recognition for recruiting minority
graduate students
Nancy Knight, manager of graduate programs for Iowa State University's
College of Engineering, has been named 2004 University Member of the Year by
the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering
and Science.
Knight was acknowledged for her efforts to recruit African American,
American Indian and Hispanic American students to Iowa State.
Go to news release.
Akinc to national committee chair
Mufit Akinc, professor and chair of the department of materials science
and engineering at Iowa State University, has been elected vice chair/chair
elect of the University Materials Council (UMC), the official organization
of department chairs, heads and directors of materials science and
engineering programs in the United States and Canada.
Go to news release.
David Holger appointed to new post in provost's office
David Holger, associate dean for academic programs and budget in the
College
of Engineering at Iowa State University, has been appointed associate
provost for academic programs and dean of the Graduate College. The
three-year appointment is effective July 1.
Go to news release.
Business faculty to study European meat tracking
Two College of Business faculty members will visit
England and Germany in June to study technology used for tracking meat
through the production process with the aim of improving food safety in the
United States.
Go to news release.
Thomas named interim Education dean
Provost Benjamin Allen has appointed Jerry Thomas,
professor and chair of health and human performance, as interim dean of the
College of Education effective Aug. 1.
Earlier this year, President Gregory Geoffroy announced a plan to combine
the colleges of Family and Consumer Sciences and Education to reduce
administrative costs and enhance synergies between
the two colleges. Thomas will fill the interim role until a permanent dean
for the combined college is selected.
Go to news release.
Engineering students place in national
bridge-building competition
A team of 25 Iowa State University engineering students recently placed
eighth overall at the annual National Student Steel Bridge Competition,
sponsored by the American Institute of Steel Construction and the American
Society of Civil Engineers. It was Iowa State's highest overall
placing ever at the national competition.
Go to news release.
National hydrology workshop at ISU June 15-16
Iowa State University and the Consortium of Universities for the
Advancement
of Hydrologic Science will bring 45 scientists to campus June 15-16
for a workshop entitled, "Defining Key Scientific Questions on the Hydrology
of Intensively Managed Landscapes in the Glaciated Midwest."
Go to news release.