Engineering News - George R. Brown School of Engineering

Halas and Doerr elected to Academy of Arts & Sciences

Naomi Halas, the Stanley C. Moore Professor in Electrical and Computer Engineering and professor of chemistry and biomedical engineering, and John Doerr ’73, venture capitalist with Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, have been named to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, along with Karen Davis, ’65, president of The Commonwealth Fund, a Washington-based health-care think tank and former Rice assistant professor of economics.

halas09Halas is an expert in photonics and plasmonics whose lab deals in biomedicine, advanced display technology, solar power and many other applications that depend on the nanoscale manipulation of light. Recent breakthroughs have led to human trials of a novel cancer treatment and have suggested the possibility of an invisibility cloak.

She’ll certainly make tracks for Cambridge, Mass., to be among the inductees in October. “A friend who is also a member told me I can’t miss it,” Halas said. “I’ll never get another chance to see Kenny Barron, Nelson Mandela and Dustin Hoffman all in the same place.”

Other marquee names among this year’s group of 212 new fellows and 19 foreign honorary members are James Earl Jones, Marilyn Horne and Emmylou Harris.

Doerr earned undergraduate and master’s degrees in electrical engineering at Rice. His interests as an entrepreneur and philanthropist include innovative green technology, urban public education, fighting poverty and the advancement of women as leaders. He was an early champion of Google and Amazon, among many other companies.

johndoerr01Doerr, Rice’s commencement speaker in 2007, and his wife, Ann, also an alum, recently donated $15 million through their Beneficus Foundation to establish the Rice Center for Engineering Leadership.

Halas wasn’t aware she’d been nominated to join the academy, which was established in 1780 by John Adams, James Bowdoin, John Hancock and other scholars and patriots. Inductees over the years have included George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Daniel Webster, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Albert Einstein and Winston Churchill.

She admitted she didn’t know the particulars of how her name rose to the top of the list. “But certainly the area we work in—nanoparticles and light—has become a hot topic in nanoscience,” she said. “It’s really exploded in the last year or two. I think that probably played an important part.”

Halas appreciates the challenge of keeping pace with her peers, especially since being named an associate editor of Nano Letters, the most highly cited journal in nanoscience and nanotechnology. “This area has absolutely caught on fire across a bunch of different disciplines because it’s very useful,” she said. “So I get to enjoy the burden of the success of this field. There’s a lot of great new work coming out every single week.”

According to its 1780 charter, the academy’s mission is “to cultivate every art and science which may tend to advance the interest, honor, dignity and happiness of a free, independent and virtuous people.”

Mike Williams, Rice News

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