Faculty
November 2007: Prof. Grace Brush will receive the Estuarine Research Federation's Odum Award for Lifetime Achievement. Grace will receive this award at the ERF November 2007 meeting in Providence, RI.
May 2007: Prof. Hedy Alavi is honored with the Alumni Association Excellence in Teaching Award http://www.epp.jhu.edu/pdfs/news/2007/hedy-alavi.pdf
December 2003: Prof. Charlie O'Melia has been
selected for the 2004 ASCE Award for Achievement in Environmental
Engineering Education.
September 2003: Prof. Grace Brush is awarded the
Mathias Medal. The Medal is to recognize the contributions of outstanding
environmental researchers who have contributed to informed policy in the
Chesapeake Bay region.
February 2002: Prof. M. Gordon Wolman has been
chosen as the recipient of the 2002
Nevada Medal of the National Academy of Engineering.
Prof. Charles O'Melia (May 2000) has
been awarded the Clarke Prize. This award is presented annually for
demonstrated excellence in the fields of water science and technology.
Prof. David Harvey (November 1999) has
been selected to receive an Honorary Doctorate from Uppsala University in
Sweden.
Prof. M. Gordon Wolman (October 1999)
has been chosen as the recipient of the Penrose Medal by the Geological
Society of America. The Penrose Medal recognizes outstanding original
research, contributions, or achievements that mark a decided advance in the
science of geology.
Prof. Bill Ball (May 1999) has been
selected to receive the 1999 Rudolph Hering Medal of the American Society of
Civil Engineers. The Hering medal "is awarded to the author of authors of
the paper which contains the most valuable contribution to the increase of
knowledge in, and to the advancement of, the environmental branch of the
engineering profession. The award will be presented at the July
Environmental Engineering Conference in Norfolk Virginia.
Prof. Lynn Roberts (May 1999) has been
chosen to receive a Student Council Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching
Award.
Prof. M. Gordon Wolman (January 1999)
has been named the recipient of the Robert E. Horton Medal by the American
Geophysical Union. The medal, established in 1974 in honor of Robert E.
Horton's contributions to the study of the hydrologic cycle, recognizes
outstanding contributions to the geophysical aspects of hydrology.
Prof. Edward Bouwer (October 1998) and his former
PhD advisor, Prof. Perry McCarty of Stanford University, have been awarded
the 1998 Association of Environmental Engineering Professors (AEEP)
Outstanding Paper Award for a "landmark paper that has withstood the test of
time". Their 1982 paper (in the journal Environmental Science & Technology,
vol. 16, pages 836-843) is entitled: of Trace Chlorinated Organic
Compounds by Activated Carbon and Fixed-Film Bacteria.
Prof. David Harvey (July 1998) was elected a
Corresponding Member of the British Academy (the humanities version of the
Royal Society in Britain).
Prof. Charles OMelia (July 1998) has become
the first recipient of the Departments Abel Wolman Chair of Environmental
Engineering.
Prof. Erica Schoenberger (July 1998) received the
book of the year award from the Society for the Study of Social Problems,
Labor Studies Division for her book Cultural Crisis of the Firm.
Dr. Hedy Alavi (May 1998) received an Excellence
in Teaching Award from the Part-Time Program in Engineering and Applied
Science, G.W.C. Whiting School of Engineering.
Prof. A. Lynn Roberts (April 1998) was nominated
for an Undergraduate Teaching Award by the Hopkins Undergraduate Student
Council.
Student
Jan Kleissl (July 2002) received a student paper
award at the AMS-Boundary Layers and Turbulence meeting for his presentation
"Statistical analysis of subfilter-scale model coefficients from
field-experimental data"
Lisa Koch (December 2000) received an
Outstanding Student Paper Award at the AGU Fall Meeting for her presentation
on "Lattice Boltzmann Simulations of Flow in Porous Media".
Bill Arnold (June 2000) Received the
AEESP/CH2M Hill Outstanding Doctoral Dissertation Award for his PhD thesis
entitled "Kinetics and Pathways of Chlorinated Ethylene and Chlorinated
Ethane Reaction with Zero-Valent Metals", supervised by Prof. Lynn Roberts.
Bill will receive a plaque and a check for $1000 from the Association of
Environmental Engineering and Science Professors.
Bill Arnold (January 1999) received a
Graduate Student Award from the Environmental Chemistry division of the
American Chemical Society.
Roberta Brown (May, 2000)
Received a 2000 EPA STAR Fellowship for a project entitled "The Role of Black
Carbon in Organic Sorption by Soils." The fellowship includes tuition and
stipend renewable for 3 years.
Felicity Callard (May 2000) Awarded a
Newcombe Fellowship
Richard Carbonaro (May 2000)
Received a 2000 EPA STAR Graduate Fellowship for his research on
"Transformations of Co(III) and Cr(III) Complexes in Heterogeneous Media."
The fellowship includes tuition and stipend renewable for 3 years.
David Cwiertny (May 2000)
Awarded an NSF Graduate Fellowship
Lisa Kim Davis (May 2000)
Awarded a Fulbright Fellowship
Sentho Kagbo (May 2000)
was awarded a GEM Fellowship
Katrice Lippa (January 2000) received a
Graduate Student Award from the Environmental Chemistry division of the
American Chemical Society.
Katrice Lippa (November 1999) was named
first-place winner of the 2000 ACS Agrochemicals Division Young Scientist
Predoctoral Research Award for her work on abiotic transformations of
chloroacetanilide herbicides (supervised by Prof. Lynn Roberts). Katrice
presented her research at the American Chemical Society meeting in San
Francisco in March, 2000 at a special symposium honoring the work of young
doctoral researchers. After her presentation, she was presented a plaque and
a check for $500.
Timothy Strathmann (August 2000)
Received the Procter& Gamble Company Pre-Doctoral Fellowship for completion
of his Ph.D. thesis work on the reduction of oxime carbamate agricultural
chemicals by transition metal ions. Timm was also named recipient of a
Graduate Student Paper Award by the Environmental Chemistry Division of the
American Chemical Society for his paper entitled "Abiotic Reduction of the
Pesticides Oxamyl and Methomyl by Fe(II): Reaction Kinetics and Mechanisms"
(co-authored by Prof. Alan Stone). Timm received a certificate and a check
for $500 at the ACS National Meeting in Washington, DC. This is the highest
award conferred to graduate students by the Environmental Chemistry Division
of ACS.