UCLA Engineering
Receives Gift to establish New Endowed Faculty Term Chair in
Materials Science and Engineering
The UCLA Henry Samueli School of
Engineering and Applied Science has received a $500,000 gift
from Edward K. and Linda L. Rice to establish a new endowed
faculty term chair in materials science and engineering.
The holder of the Edward K. and Linda L. Rice Endowed Term Chair
in Materials Science will have research interests in materials
science and engineering, specifically in the field of cementatious
materials.
"To remain one of the top engineering schools in the country,
it is critical that we continue to recruit and retain junior
faculty with exceptional promise," said Vijay K. Dhir,
dean of UCLA Engineering. "Endowed term chairs help the
school in these efforts, and we are extremely grateful that
the Rices, who are great friends of the university and the school,
have chosen to support this goal with their generous gift."
Edward Rice, chairman of CTS Cement Manufacturing Co., a manufacturer
of innovative cement products, is a longtime and generous supporter
of UCLA Engineering. He is a member of the UCLA Engineering
Dean's Advisory Council and received the UCLA Engineering Alumni
Association Service Award in 2002. Previous gifts from Rice
include a school conference room, funds for the annual UCLA
Engineering Outstanding Student Awards and for annual scholarships
for undergraduate engineering students, and sponsorship of the
school's concrete canoe team. Linda Rice is also involved with
UCLA and is a past president of the UCLA Plato Society.
"Linda and I are proud of our long association with UCLA,
and we are very pleased that this gift for an endowed chair
will benefit UCLA Engineering, its faculty and students,"
Rice said.
Rice began his professional career at UCLA in 1951, when he
joined the engineering faculty as a lecturer. In 1957, he left
UCLA to co-found the engineering firm T.Y. Lin and Associates,
where he was president for 17 years. From 1986 to 1990, he was
a UCLA adjunct professor of materials science and engineering.
Today, as chairman of CTS Cement Manufacturing Co., he holds
18 patents in concrete and building technology.
"There is a great need for research and application in
the science of cementatious materials," Rice said. "Applied
research on the development of new and longer-lasting materials
is needed to provide better infrastructure, especially in our
transportation systems."
This endowed term chair is part
of UCLA Engineering's Enhancing Engineering Excellence (E3)
initiative, a $100 million fundraising effort aimed at generating
new endowed faculty chairs, graduate fellowships and undergraduate
scholarships, as well as funds for capital projects and diversity
initiatives. It is also part of UCLA's Ensuring Academic Excellence
initiative, a five-year effort aimed at generating $250 million
in private commitments, specifically for the recruitment and
retention of the very best faculty and graduate students. The
initiative was launched in June 2004 and its goals include $100
million to fund 100 new endowed chairs for faculty across campus.
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