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Five professors begin Center for Advanced Study appointments Craig
Chamberlain, News Editor 9/5/03 CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Five professors at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
begin their appointments this fall as professors in the Center
for Advanced Study – one of the highest form of recognition
the campus bestows on faculty members for outstanding scholarship. The new CAS professors are Leon Dash, journalism; Thomas S. Huang, electrical and computer engineering; Marianne Kalinke, Germanic languages and literatures; Vijay Pandharipande, physics; and Abigail Salyers, microbiology. The permanent appointments, which took effect Aug. 21, were approved by the UI Board of Trustees during its May 15 meeting in Urbana.
(Kalinke
will present the 13th Annual CAS Lecture, on the rise of vernacular
fiction in Germany during the 12th century, at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the
Colwell Playhouse Theatre, Krannert Center for the Performing Arts,
500 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana.)
Huang,
the William L. Everitt Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer
Engineering, has been recognized for important contributions in the
broad field of multidimensional signal processing, analysis, synthesis,
visualization and understanding. Textbooks in the field include a description
of “Huang’s Theorem,” related to his work on digital
filters, and his pioneering work on the compression of images laid the
groundwork for international image-compression standards.
Kalinke
is recognized as an international authority on cultural and literary
relations between Scandinavia and the European continent during the
medieval and early modern periods. Her study of the transmission of
the Arthurian legend to Norway and Iceland led to a reconsideration
of the impact of continental romance literature on the development of
indigenous Icelandic saga genres. Her research also has demonstrated
the important role played by Iceland in preserving medieval German literature
that has otherwise been lost.
Kalinke is the author or editor of 10 books, and in addition to her work on literary history has done extensive work in editing and translating medieval sagas – including three volumes published in 1999 on medieval Icelandic, Norwegian and Swedish Arthurian literature. She has been a Fulbright Fellow, has served as president of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study, and is head of the department of Germanic languages and literatures.
Salyers began her academic career as a physicist, then made the transition, after nearly 10 years, to microbiology. Her research has focused on the bacteria normally found in the human intestinal tract, and in particular on the mechanisms by which these bacteria become resistant to antibiotics. She has published more than 150 scientific papers and two textbooks for undergraduate courses. Salyers recently served as president of the American Society for Microbiology, and has provided expert testimony on genetically modified plants and antibiotic use in agriculture for a variety of regulatory agencies in Europe and the United States. She also has testified before a congressional subcommittee on genetically modified plants.
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