Phillips Leads MRS in 1995
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Phillips Leads MRS in 1995 With Thompson, Hull, Koch, Hays, and Bravman in the Executive Committee Julia M. Phillips, supervisor of the Thin Film Research Group at AT&T Bell Laboratories, is the new president of MRS for 1995, an automatic move from her elected position as First Vice President in 1994. She succeeds John C. Bravman, associate professor and associate chair of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at Stanford University, who is now the MRS immediate past president. The other elected members of the Executive Committee are Carl V. Thompson (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), first vice president and president-elect for 1996; Robert Hull (University of Virginia), second vice president; Carl C. Koch (North Carolina State University), serving his second year in a two-year term as Secretary; and A. Kay Hays (Sandia National Laboratories), re-elected for a two-year term as Treasurer. The newly elected councillors, Charles B. Duke (Xerox Webster Research Center), Ronald Gibala (University of Michigan), James M.E. Harper (IBM T.J. Watson Research Center), Gabrielle G. Long (National Institute of Standards and Technology), Manfred Riihle (Max-Planck-Institut fur Metallforschung), and Alan I. Taub (Ford Research Laboratory), join current councillors Bill R. Appleton (Oak Ridge National Laboratory), Howard K. Birnbaum (University of Illinois—Urbana), Clifton W. Draper
Julia M. Phillips
(AT&T Bell Laboratories), Merton C. Flemings (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), J. Murray Gibson (University of Illinois—Urbana), Kevin S. Jones (University of Florida), Merrilea J. Mayo (Pennsylvania State University), June D. Passaretti (Minerals Technologies), and Richard W. Siegel (Argonne National Laboratory).
Julia M. Phillips President Julia M. Phillips is technical manager of the Thin Film Research Group at AT&T Bell Laboratories. Her research centers on heteroepitaxy, with a concentration in thin film growth of diverse materials, including magnetic oxides, transparent conducting materials, and other oxides. Phillips' other interests include epitaxial insulators and metals on semiconductors, and structural and electrical characterization of these heterostructures; ion beam analysis; and application of rapid thermal processing techniques to heteroepitaxy. Phillips received her BS degree in physics from the College of William and Mary and her PhD degree in applied physics from Yale University. She is a fellow of the American Physical Society and a member of Sigma Xi. Phillips has served as MRS secretary (1987-89), as second vice president (1993), as a councillor (1991-93), and as first vice pres-
Carl V. Thompson
ident (1994). She has been a symposium organizer, has chaired the 1991 Fall Meeting, and has chaired several MRS committees, including the Program, Publicity and Public Relations membership and Corporate Participation committees. Phillips is a principal editor of Journal of Materials Research and has been a member of the editorial board of Applied Physics Letters/journal of Applied Physic
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