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HIGHL IGHTS

A D V A N C E D

M A T E R I A L S

&

P R O C E S S E S | J U L Y / A U G U S T

2 0 1 6

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AWARD RECIPIENTS

1988, the award recognizes the exemplary efforts of various

outstanding members of ASM International on behalf of the

Society to further its objectives and goals. The purpose of

this award is to recognize those individuals whose contri-

butions have been especially noteworthy and to whom the

Society owes a particularly great debt of appreciation.

Albert Easton White Distinguished

Teacher Award

Prof. David K. Matlock,

FASM,

Armco Foundation Foga-

rty professor, Colorado School of

Mines, Golden, will receive this

year’s award “for his accomplish-

ments in materials education that

have positively impacted genera-

tions of students and the research

and industrial community over

several decades.” The award was

established in 1960 in memory of

an outstanding teacher and research engineer, who was a

founding member and president of ASM in 1921. It recog-

nizes unusually long and devoted service in teaching, as

well as significant accomplishments in materials science

and engineering and an unusual ability to inspire and

impart enthusiasm to students.

Silver Medal Award

Dr. Mark A. Tschopp,

mate-

rials engineer, US Army Research

Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving

Ground, Md., will receive this

year’s award “for distinguished

and sustained contributions in

computational materials science,

solidmechanics, processing-struc-

ture-property relationships, and

materials design for integrated

computational materials engi-

neering (ICME), and for service to ASM International.” Estab-

lished in 2010, the honor of Silver Medal of the Society

recognizes members who are in mid-career positions (typ-

ically 5 to 15 years of experience), for distinguished contri-

butions in the field of materials science and engineering,

and the Society. The purpose of this award is to recognize

leadership at an early stage and encourage individuals to

grow, nurture, and further contribute to the growth of the

profession, as well as the Society.

Bronze Medal Award

Ms. Margaret Bush Flury,

se-

nior materials engineer, Medtron-

ic, PLC, Fridley, Minn., will receive

this year’s award “for contribu-

tions to advancements in medical

devices, commitment to the fail-

ure analysis community, contri-

butions to students, and selfless

participation in ASM.” Established

in 2014, the honor recognizes ASM

members who are in early-career

positions, typically 0 to 10 years of experience, for signifi-

cant contributions in the field of materials science and en-

gineering through technical content and service to ASM and

the materials science profession.

Bradley Stoughton Award

for Young Teachers

Prof. Jennifer L.W. Carter,

assistant professor, materials sci-

ence and engineering, Case West-

ern Reserve University, Cleveland,

will receive this year’s award “for

dedicated and effective instruc-

tion and mentoring of students at

various stages of their educational

experience in addition to impact-

ing undergraduate engineering

education.” This award, accompa-

nied by $3000, was established in 1952 in memory of an out-

standing teacher in metallurgy and dean of engineering who

was president of ASM in 1942. The award recognizes young

teachers of materials science, materials engineering, and

design and processing, by rewarding them for their ability to

impart knowledge and enthusiasm to students. The recipient

must be 35 years of age or younger by May 15 of the year in

which the award is made.

Henry Marion Howe Medal

Sung Bo Lee, Dong-Ik Kim, Yanghoo Kim, Seung Jo

Yoo, Ji Young Byun, Heung NamHan,

and

Dong Nyung Lee

will receive this year’s award for their paper entitled “Effects

of Film Stress and Geometry on Texture Evolution Before and

After the Martensitic Transformation in a Nanocrystalline Co

Lee

Kim

Kim