Candidates Sought for MRS Student Awards
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A Compact Electrodialysis-Freezing Low-Level Radioactive Waste Volume Reduction System for Nuclear Power Plants Investigation of Coal-WoodLimestone Pellets as an Industrial Fuel Source Rock Penetration Models of Rocks from Geothermal Areas
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Mildred Dresselhaus Elected AAAS Director
Mildred Dresselhaus
Mildred S. Dresselhaus, Abby Rockefeller Mauz professor of electrical engineering and physics at MIT, has been elected to the Board of Directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Her four-year term will begin June 1, 1985. Dresselhaus is a Councillor of MRS and serves on the Society's Long-Range Planning Committee. She is also the immediate past president of the American Physical Society, council member of the National Academy of Engineering, and serves on the long-range planning committee of IEEE.
The BULLETIN welcomes news about research activities and announcements of promotions, awards and honors for publication in this section.
Candidates Sought for MRS Student Awards 15 Awards to be Given in Conjunction with the 1985 Fall Meeting Students conducting research in materials-related fields are currently being sought as candidates for MRS Student Awards to be presented at the MRS Fall Meeting. Woody White, Chairman of the Awards Committee, indicates that up to 15 awards will be presented at the Meeting. The award consists of a cash grant of $250.00, a commemorative plaque, and waived registration fee for the Meeting, being held December 1-6, 1985 in Boston, MA. Awards will be granted for outstanding research by a student in a topic to be addressed by one of the symposia in the Meeting. Symposia topics include: • fundamentals of solid-beam interactions • rapid thermal processing (materials and devices) • SOI/TFT technology • beam-induced chemical processes • interface phenomena and thin film interactions • transport and excitation in polymers • bio-compatible materials • epitaxy and layered structures • phase transitions in condensed systems • rapidly solidified metastable materials • hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen in silicon • defect properties and processing in high-technology nonmetallic materials • oxides, zeolites, and clays in catalysis • fractal aspect of materials • non-linear optical materials • defects in glasses • electron microscopy in materials • computer-based microscopic description of the structure and properties of materials • cement-based composites: strain-rate effects on fracture • fly ash and coal conversion by-products • carbon-carbon composites These awards are given in recognition of the student's contribution to outstanding research in an area of interest to one or more of the topical symposia included in the Fall Meeting. Individuals of any nationality are eligible f
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