Bravman Leads 1994 Executive Committee
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Bravman Leads 1994 Executive Committee JSlow in its 21st year, with a membership of more than 11,600, the Materials Research Society welcomes a new slate of officers to lead its efforts in 1994. John C. Bravman, associate professor and associate chairman of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Stanford University, is the new 1994 MRS president, a position he assumes automatically from his elected office of first vice president in 1993. He succeeds Tom Picraux, manager of the Semiconductor Physics Research Department at Sandia National Laboratories, who now serves the Society as immediate past president. Joining Bravman and Picraux as newly elected members of the Executive Committee are Julia M. Phillips (AT&T Bell Laboratories), first vice president and president-elect for 1995; Carl V. Thompson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), second vice president; and Carl C. Koch (North Carolina State University), secretary, all elected in the 1993 ballot. A. Kay Hays (Sandia National Laboratories) will continue to serve as treasurer. In addition, Howard K. Birnbaum (University of Illinois), Kevin S. Jones (University of Florida), and Merrilea J. Mayo (Pennsylvania State University) were elected to three-year terms on the MRS Council. They join councillors Bill
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R. Appleton (Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Aaron N. Bloch (State University of New York-Buffalo), R.P.H. Chang (Northwestern University), Russell R. Chianelli (Exxon Research and Engineering), Clifton W. Draper (AT&T-ERC), Merton C. Flemings (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), J. Murray Gibson (University of IllinoisUrbana), Robert Hull (AT&T Bell Laboratories), Carol M. Jantzen (Westinghouse Savannah River Company), June D. Passaretti (Specialty Minerals, Inc.), Paul S. Peercy (Sandia National Laboratories), and Richard W. Siegel (Argonne National Laboratory). John C. Bravman President John Bravman is an associate professor and associate chairman in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Stanford University. He is also senior associate dean for student affairs in the School of Engineering. His research interests focus on the processing and analysis of thin-film materials and structures. Currently, he directs doctoral students in silicon and gallium arsenide process technology, the mechanical prop-
Julia M. Phillips
erties of thin films, high-temperature superconductivity, and transmission electron microscopy. After receiving his BS, MS, and PhD degrees in materials science from Stanford, Bravman worked at the Fairchild Semiconductor Research and Development Laboratories in Palo Alto, California. He also served as a consultant with several Silicon Valley firms, including Lockheed, National Semiconductor, Advanced Micro Devices, and IBM. He has co-authored 90 research publications. Active in many phases of teaching, research, and student advising, Bravman has received numerous awards from Stanford, including the Walter J. Gores Award, the university's highest excellence-in-teaching award. Among other
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