Arthur B. Weglein
Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished
Professor of Physics
A University of Houston physicist will join the ranks of a number
of Nobel laureates this fall when he receives the Townsend Harris
Medal, the highest honor awarded alumni of his alma mater, City
College of New York
Arthur B. Weglein, Hugh Roy and Lillie Cranz Cullen Distinguished
Professor of Physics, is one of eight 2008 recipients of the medal
given by the CCNY Alumni Association.
The CCNY class of 1906 established the award, which is given for
outstanding postgraduate achievement, said Donald Jordan, CCNY
Alumni Association executive vice president. A committee of former
awardees considered 100 nominees this year.
Former CCNY Provost, Dean of Science and Physics Chair Harry Lustig,
a leading theoretical nuclear physicist, Mossbauer effect pioneer
and former medal recipient, nominated Weglein, who earned three
degrees from CCNY, including a Ph.D. in physics in 1975.
“It was an amazing urban university — no dorms, no
football team, no endowment funds, — but with professors
and administrators with a very deep understanding, commitment and
visceral sense of the academic enterprise, and instilling integrity
and credibility and never losing sight of the core responsibility
of an institution of higher learning—educating students, “ Weglein
said.
After 22 years in the petroleum industry,
Weglein joined UH in 2000 and directs the Mission-Oriented Seismic
Research Program (M-OSRP), a consortium of the world’s
largest oil and gas companies. M-OSRP identifies and addresses
pressing seismic exploration challenges whose solutions will
have the biggest positive impact on our ability to locate and
produce hydrocarbons.
In 2004, the U.S. House of Representatives Commerce and Energy
Committee invited Weglein to testify as an expert witness about
the challenges in exploration and production of energy sources
in ultra-deep water and whether directed fundamental high-impact
research could address those challenges.
Weglein draws a parallel between Harris’ vision for CCNY
and the Cullen family mandate in establishing the University of
Houston to provide educational opportunity for Houston’s
working men and women.
“I’m humbled and deeply honored by receiving the Townsend
Harris Medal and enormously grateful and privileged to hold the
Cullen Distinguished Chair in Physics at UH,” he said. “We
can never forget the contribution that great visionaries and patriots
like Harris and the Cullens bring to us individually, to our communities
and to our great nation.” |