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John
R. Ryan, Chancellor of the State University of New York, recently
honored two Mechanical Engineering seniors with the 2006 Chancellors
Award for Student Excellence: Andrew Gardner of
Brockport, and David Henann of Wind Gap, Pa.. The
Chancellor's Award is the highest award for student excellence
given by the State. Both were honored at a ceremony in Albany
in April. Recipients must be seniors with a minimum 3.8 GPA and
significant community or University service.
Mechanical
Engineering senior Jordan Peck was selected as the
Student Speaker for the Professional Schools Graduation Ceremony
on May 20 at 9:00 AM. Jordan Peck, of New City, is graduating
with a dual major in physics and mechanical engineering and has
been accepted into a masters program in technology and policy
at MIT. He has served as a physics tutor and a teaching assistant
in addition to his many leadership activities on campus. Starting
as a Student Assembly representative for Roosevelt Hall, he moved
on to become president of Hinman College Council, then Student
Association president. Most recently, he has served as representative
of the university centers to the New York State Student Assembly,
treasurer for the same organization and facilitator for Off Campus
College Meeting, representing off-campus students.
Mechanical
Engineering Professor DC Sun was named as a Fellow
of the Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers.
He received the award at the Society of Tribologists and Lubrication
Engineers annual meeting in May.
Fighting Cancer in a University Lab:
Dan Jordy at SUNY Binghamton
(From Education Update Online)
A
college undergraduate getting an opportunity to work in a lab
with scientists developing a device to detect and monitor cancer
is exciting stuff. The stakes are even higher and the experience
more meaningful when the student has himself been a victim of
the disease. Dan Jordy, a senior at the State University of New
York in Binghamton, was diagnosed with testicular cancer on Christmas
Eve day in 2003. The cancer, one of the rarest overall, is the
most common form of the disease in young men. An athlete, he consulted
a physician when he recognized symptoms similar to those he had
read about on the sports pages concerning Lance Armstrong, the
well known cyclist. Surgery and four rounds of chemotherapy forced
Jordy to drop out of school for a semester, but during that time
he managed to complete two courses over the Internet and now has
just about caught up with his classmates.
A
mechanical engineering major, Jordy explains that engineering
is often used to solve biological problems. Machinery as well
as pills is critical in the health field, examples being dialysis
units and hearing aids. In fact, Binghamton recently began offering
a degree in the subspecialty of bio-engineering.
In
the lab, Jordy worked with mechanical engineering professors Harold
Ackler and Timothy Singler of Binghamtons Thomas J. Watson
School of Engineering and Applied Science, who are attempting
to create a small device that would separate out cancer cells
in the blood for immediate analysis, making diagnosis and treatment
quicker and easier. The mechanism would be portable, making blood
work possible at a patients bedside rather than in a distant
laboratory. Much of the technology is already known; the challenge
is integrating many separate functions into one system. A finished
product is still in drawing board stage and Jordy quickly learned
that research is interesting, lots of hard work and results
do not come quickly. Besides his intelligence (Jordy will
be graduating with a 4.0 GPA), the young student believes his
illness encouraged the professors to have faith in him, Knowing
Id gone through it helped. They knew Id be committed
to the task. To him, the project felt more meaningful.
I know how people feel going through the treatment. It was nice
to know if this worked out, Id be helping someone.
Jordy
is a runner and is on the cross-country and track teams. Similar
to academic adjustments necessitated by the drop out for treatment,
he had to restart his athletic training and slowly rebuild strength.
A well-spoken, focused young man, he is tenacious, courageous,
modest, and mature. The strong support of professors, coaches,
teammates, and classmates has undoubtedly helped him through his
ordeal. He cites the relative small size of the engineering school
and the camaraderie that characterizes the teams and class as
having been important contributors to his recovery
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