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From the President:
Remarkable Progress
(2/19/08)
Engineers Week 2008, Feb. 1723,
focuses on ensuring a diverse and well-educated future engineering
workforce as well as pre-college literacy in math and science. Bringing
together more than 75 engineering, professional and technical societies
and more than 50 corporations and government agencies, Engineers
Week brings public attention to the excellence and innovation that
engineers contribute through their work and volunteer efforts. This
year, coalitions have formed to create a diversity council to strengthen
commitments to underrepresented groups and to run another successful
24-hour global marathon on women in engineering.
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Sam Zamrik, ASME President
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Many more programs continue, including Introduce a Girl to Engineering
Day, New Faces in Engineering, the Future City Competition now in
its 16th year, a new season of PBS's Design Squad with a
theme of Trash to Treasure, and a sixth season of PBS's Cyberchase,
which focuses on math in building and sports. Every year the activities
keep building on previous years, and the online and year-round competitions
contribute greatly to meeting the broad challenges across all engineering
disciplines in education and public awareness. New to this year's
E-Week program will be IBM's launch of a 3-D virtual world game
called PowerUp, which provides lessons in alternative energy. For
more details about Engineers Week activities, visit their Web site
at www.eweek.org.
What I am celebrating this year is the progress that ASME is making
in several of its own goals. ASME sections have been expanding their
activities beyond traditional dinner meetings, to better meet member
needs. Some have been sponsoring technical short courses to meet
local industry needs and some have offered other professional development
courses. Since they began in 2006, ASME has more than doubled the
number of technical "awareness talks" offered to sections
in collaboration with the National Insulation Association. Another
great example of bringing technical expertise to an engineering
community was demonstrated by the Saudi Arabia Section sponsorship
of the Middle East Mechanical Expo in Bahrain last November (co-sponsored
with the Bahrain Society of Engineers).
From July through December 2007, the Global Community units have
held 24 student or early career activities (including one Early
Career Forum) - nearly as many as last year's total. Also, seven
divisions held technical conferences that included sessions specifically
designed for graduate students and early career engineers. The total
midyear student and early career attendance at Knowledge & Community
events and programs is 3,379. ASME's commitment to early career
engineers also is supported by increases in volunteer activity:
22 percent of section officers are under 35 (up from 18 percent
last year) and 6.25 percent of division officers are under 35 (up
from 5.2 percent last year).
This month, ASME is launching a pilot program for student liaisons,
one that will train early career engineers some who have
never been involved in leadership activities to "put
a face on engineering" at local schools, as former ASME governor
Bill Cousins says. This is a cross-sector initiative with K&C
and Centers in helping provide resources and reporting support for
sections.
Since the reorganization in 2005, ASME strategic goals for global
growth have shown increases in key areas of students (with a 16
percent increase), young engineers (9 percent increase) and non-U.S.
membership (63 percent increase). As of December 2007, ASME membership
exceeded 127,000, of which 22 percent were students and 16 percent
were outside the United States. More than being statistics on a
page, this means we are delivering on the potential of our mission
to serve member needs, particularly in the strategic markets we've
focused on.
Coming up, we'll continue to build on our successes. The Leadership
Training Conference (LTC), March 69 in Atlanta, will ask invited
volunteers from all sectors of ASME to exchange ideas, share operational
strategies and best practices, and take advantage of workshops on
the workings of ASME. The theme, "Moving to the Next Level
of Excellence: Commitment to Purpose," is one of seven principles
coming out of a four-year study by the American Society of Association
Executives that resulted in a book titled "7 Measures of Success:
What Remarkable Associations Do That Others Don't," by the
Center for Association Leadership. That list begins with a commitment
to purpose that ensures volunteers and staff listen to the wants
and needs of members and aligns products and services with the mission.
It's an ongoing discussion to stay current and responsive to those
needs. ASME volunteers will have an opportunity at LTC and throughout
the year, especially online. And as the numbers bear the message,
ASME intends to be remarkable well into our future. I thank all
who make that possible throughout the world.
Sam Zamrik
ASME President, 20072008
ASME Honors Codes and Standards Volunteer Tahara
with Three Awards
Takayasu Tahara, an active international
volunteer in ASME activities, recently received three awards from
the Society for his involvement in Codes and Standards activities.
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| Dr. Takayasu Tahara with
his three ASME awards. |
These included two Certificates of Acclamation from the Codes and
Standards sector for outstanding service and technical excellence
in the development of ASME pressure vessel and fitness-for-service
codes, and one from the ASME Pressure Vessels and Piping Division
for his work in the PVP Operations, Applications and Components
Technical Committee.
Tahara is a technical advisor at the Petroleum Association of Japan.
Annmarie Connor is ASME's New Face of Engineering
for 2008
Annmarie Connor has been selected
to represent ASME as its New Face of Engineering for 2008. Connor,
an ASME member from Orlando, Fla., was one of 14 early career engineers
nominated by the various engineering associations for the New Faces
of Engineering program, which highlights the interesting and important
work of young engineers and the resulting impact on society.
Each year, the National Engineers Week Foundation, a coalition
of engineering societies, major corporations and government agencies,
asks its members to nominate colleagues 30 years old and younger
who have shown outstanding abilities and leadership. The names of
the honorees then selected by the foundation are announced during
Engineers Week.
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Annmarie Connor
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As a mechanical design engineer in the Launch Site Design Engineering
directorate at United Space Alliance at the Kennedy Space Center,
Connor supports design efforts for the Space Shuttle's Orbiter and
External Tank Ground Support Equipment.
Connor, 28, is also the system design engineer for Orbiter Access
and Multi-Use Ground Handling Equipment. In that role, she will
lead and organize design projects which include cost estimates,
researching and selecting equipment and materials, preparing engineering
analyses and drawings, and certifying modifications and new designs.
Previously at United Space Alliance, Connor was a reliability engineer
responsible for guaranteeing a safer Space Shuttle mission by performing
criticality assessments and failure modes and effects analyses to
identify risk to personnel, damage to flight hardware, and loss
of life for the Space Shuttle program.
For Connor's full New Face of Engineering bio, visit www.eweek.org/site/Engineers/newfaces2008/first_tier_bios.shtml#Connor.
To read about the other New Faces of Engineering for 2008, visit
www.eweek.org/site/Engineers/newfaces2008/index.shtml.
For more about Engineers Week, visit www.eweek.org.
Abstracts for Congress Papers are Due March 3
Organizers of ASME's 2008 International
Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition have issued a call
for papers to be presented during the weeklong event, which will
take place from Oct. 31Nov. 6 in Boston.
Technical paper abstracts are due March 3.
The conference's technical papers will be categorized into 20 tracks,
covering such areas as recent advances in engineering, sustainable
products and processes, emerging technologies, biomedical and biotechnology
engineering, design and manufacturing, aerospace technology, and
engineering education and professional development.
Other tracks will deal with topics such as nano-manufacturing technology,
mechanical systems and control, new developments in simulation methods
and software for engineering applications, processing and engineering
applications of novel materials, and safety engineering, risk analysis
and reliability methods.
For the full list of Congress technical tracks, and for more information
on submitting an abstract, visit www.asmeconferences.org/Congress08/CallForPapers.cfm.
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