Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Obama Honours Two South Asian Science, Math Mentors

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Mar, 2015 03:20 PM
    An Indian-American and a Sri Lankan-origin scientist and teacher are among fourteen individuals and one organization named winners of the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM).
     
    Andhra University graduate Murty S. Kambhampati, a professor of biology at Southern University at New Orleans, and Sri Lankan origin Tilak Ratnanather, an associate professor in the biomedical engineering department of the Johns Hopkins University, Maryland will receive their awards at a White House ceremony later this year.
     
    "These educators are helping to cultivate America's future scientists, engineers and mathematicians," President Barack Obama said announcing the names of the award winners Friday.
     
    "They open new worlds to their students, and give them the encouragement they need to learn, discover and innovate. That's transforming those students' futures, and our nation's future, too."
     
    The PAESMEM is awarded by the White House to individuals and organizations to recognize the crucial role that mentoring plays in the academic and personal development of students studying science and engineering-particularly those who belong to groups that are underrepresented in these fields.
     
    In addition to being honoured at the White House, recipients receive awards of $10,000 from the National Science Foundation. The mentors and organizations announced Fridat represent the winners for 2012 and 2013.
     
    Kambhampati holds a PhD from Jackson State University in Environmental Science and a PhD from Andhra University, India in Ecology.
     
    Over the years, he established excellent collaborations with several instittions to place students for summer internships and ecological field trips. according to his profile.
     
    He is an active research mentor for undergraduates and is Southern University at New Orleans's Beta Kappa Chi/National Institute of Science chapters' sponsor.
     
    He has won several awards for his work as a mentor, including the National Role Model Faculty Award from Minority Access, Inc., in 2008.
     
    His research interests are Phytoremediation, Environmental Toxicology, ecological studies on coastal ponds, and Environmental Biotechnology.
     
    Originally from Sri Lanka, Ratnanather is at the forefront of the relatively new field of computational anatomy, an emerging discipline at the interface of geometry, statistics, and image analysis.
     
    His current research interests include shape analysis of brain structures in schizophrenia, Alzheimer's, depression, and deafness in addition to mathematical and computational problems in cochlear and cardiac physiology, according to his university profile.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian CF-18s destroy Islamic State bomb factory and staging area

    Canadian CF-18s destroy Islamic State bomb factory and staging area
    OTTAWA — Canadian warplanes have gone into action again in Iraq, bombing a militant compound and bomb-making factory in separate raids over the last few days.

    Canadian CF-18s destroy Islamic State bomb factory and staging area

    Man who owned python that killed two boys in New Brunswick arrested: lawyer

    Man who owned python that killed two boys in New Brunswick arrested: lawyer
    CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — The lawyer for a man who owned a python that killed two young boys in New Brunswick in August 2013 says his client has been arrested in the case.

    Man who owned python that killed two boys in New Brunswick arrested: lawyer

    'Their money was never safe:' Crown gives final arguments in massive Ponzi case

    'Their money was never safe:' Crown gives final arguments in massive Ponzi case
    CALGARY — The Crown says two men on trial for what authorities have called the largest Ponzi scheme in Canadian history "misled" and "miseducated" thousands of investors and even their own sales people.

    'Their money was never safe:' Crown gives final arguments in massive Ponzi case

    Indo-Canadian Financial Planner, Arvindbhai Bakorbhai Patel, Charged In $110 Million Ponzi Scheme

    Indo-Canadian Financial Planner, Arvindbhai Bakorbhai Patel, Charged In $110 Million Ponzi Scheme
    An Indian-origin former financial planner has been charged with 32 counts of Securities Act violations in Canada for advising clients to invest in a $110-million fraudulent scheme operated by a former Vancouver notary, a media report said Thursday.

    Indo-Canadian Financial Planner, Arvindbhai Bakorbhai Patel, Charged In $110 Million Ponzi Scheme

    Family-friendly activities planned for BC Family Day Weekend

    Family-friendly activities planned for BC Family Day Weekend
    VICTORIA - The third annual BC Family Day on Monday, Feb. 9, 2015, will anchor a great winter holiday weekend this year with lots of fun things to do in celebration of British Columbia’s diverse families, Community, Sport and Cultural Development Minister Coralee Oakes said today.

    Family-friendly activities planned for BC Family Day Weekend

    Two Injured In Surrey Truck Rollover That Pinned Passenger

    Two Injured In Surrey Truck Rollover That Pinned Passenger
    Police say three people were in the truck when it went off a roadway, turned over and rested next to some train tracks at about 4:15 p.m. Wednesday.

    Two Injured In Surrey Truck Rollover That Pinned Passenger