James P. Riehl, Dean of the UMD College of Science and
Engineering, has been awarded the McKnight Presidential Leadership Chair.
This award, newly established by the University of Minnesota and the
McKnight Foundation, was created to recognize the contributions of unique
and gifted leaders among deans and executive officers. Dean Riehl presented
a seminar of his current research titled "Chemistry and Life in
a Right-handed World" on October 21. He was also honored for his
award by the U of M Board of Regents at their October 8 meeting held
at UMD.
Recipients were chosen for their leadership qualities
at the university, their ability to inspire others in their work and
their commitment to establishing the university as a world-class institution
of research and learning.
"This award recognizes the contributions of unique and gifted
leaders among our deans and executive officers," said U of M President
Robert Bruininks. "They have been recognized not only for their
extraordinary scholarly achievements but also for their role as respected
leaders and mentors."
The McKnight Leadership Chairs are funded through a gift of 15 million
from the McKnight Foundation that was made in 1999. Besides the McKnight
Leadership Chairs, it has been used for McKnight Presidential Chairs,
Professors and Fellows, to attract and retain top faculty at key stages
in their careers.
Brief Biography UMD Dean James P. Riehl:
James P. Riehl grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and received a
B.S. degree in Chemistry from Villanova University, and a Ph.D. in Physical
Chemistry from Purdue University in 1975. After a postdoctoral fellowship
at the University of Virginia, he joined the faculty in Chemistry at
the University of Missouri-St. Louis where he progressed through the
academic ranks, being promoted to Professor of Chemistry in 1991. In
1992 he was awarded the St. Louis Award of the American Chemical Society
for his "outstanding contributions to the chemistry profession".
In 1993 he accepted the position as chairman of the Department of Chemistry
at Michigan Technological University, and in 2000 he was appointed to
his current position as Dean of the College of Science and Engineering
and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Minnesota Duluth. He
has also held visiting faculty positions at Kings College, London, and
the University of Leiden, The Netherlands.
The other recipients are from the U of M, Twin Cities campus. They
include: Frank Cerra, senior vice president for health services; Charles
Muscoplat, vice president for agricultural policy and dean of the College
of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Sciences; Deborah Powell, dean
of the Medical School; and Steven Rosenstone, dean of the College of
Liberal Arts.
Dr. Riehl is the author or coauthor of more than 90 research publications.
He has lectured extensively throughout the United States, and has presented
numerous seminars describing his research in Europe and Japan. He is
recognized by the international scientific community as an expert in
the use of optical spectroscopy to probe the structure of so-called
"chiral" molecules. These are molecules which may occur in
non-superimposable mirror-image forms. Almost all biological molecules
and pharmaceuticals are chiral, and an understanding of the relationship
between chiral molecular structure and biological function is of fundamental
interests to chemists and biologists. Dr. Riehl's special area of expertise
is the measurement and interpretation of the luminescence from chiral
molecules. This research area has resulted in productive international
collaborations with scientists in the United Kingdom, France, Switzerland,
Poland, and Japan. His recent research efforts have been assisted by
funding from the National Science Foundation, and the National Institutes
of Health.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, see:
www.d.umn.edu/cse or
www.d.umn.edu/cse/jpriehl.html.
Posted Oct 25, 2004