

Alumni Association honors five faculty members
Faculty Award recipients for 1996 include, from left, aerospace engineering professor Joe Thompson, service award; chemistry professor William Wilson, research award; psychology instructor Nancy McCarley, freshman and sophomore teaching award; chemistry professor Thomas Fisher, graduate teaching award; and English professor Peter Shillingsburg, junior and senior teaching award. |
Faculty members from aerospace engineering, chemistry, English, and psychology are recipients of the Alumni Association's 1996 Faculty Awards.
At a May 2 campus banquet, the annual honors program recognized "significant contributions to the welfare of humankind and the stature of Mississippi State University" in the categories of classroom teaching, research, and service.
Receiving awards this year were Dr. Thomas H. Fisher, Dr. Nancy G. McCarley, Dr. Peter L. Shillingsburg, Dr. Joe F. Thompson, and Dr. W. William Wilson. Each recipient received a plaque and a monetary award.
Since the program's inception in 1965, 141 Mississippi State faculty members have been honored. Selections are made by committees of faculty, students, and alumni.
Honored this year were:
- Thomas Fisher, Graduate Level Teaching Award. The chemistry professor was praised by his students as a "gifted teacher and a real asset to the university." Colleagues say he's an "excellent classroom teacher and that his teaching philosophy is clearly student based." Fisher holds degrees from Westminster College and the University of Illinois.
- Nancy McCarley, Lower Level (freshman and sophomore) Teaching Award. The psychology instructor's students say her "eagerness to further academic achievement outside of class is what separates her from the rest." Her colleagues say that she "brings herself so genuinely to the teaching relationship that learning takes place which would not otherwise occur." McCarley holds three degrees from Mississippi State University.
- Peter Shillingsburg, Upper Level (junior and senior) Teaching Award. Colleagues say the English professor believes that "the emphasis should be on learning, not teaching, and that all students should be treated as adults." His students say he "pushes them to learn, yet he teaches them to love and appreciate the newfound knowledge instead of simply expecting them to plow through the mass of work." Shillingsburg holds three degrees from the University of South Carolina.
- William Wilson, Research Award. The chemistry professor is described by colleagues as an "excellent scientist whose dedication and commitment have helped him develop an outstanding research program that has provided significant visibility for the university." His current work is "pioneering the investigation of mechanisms for protein crystal growth that will eventually lead to a more efficient discovery and characterization of new medicinal agents." Wilson holds degrees from Northeast Louisiana State College and the University of North Carolina.
- Joe Thompson, Service Award. The special assistant to the vice president for research on high performance computing is said to have "significantly raised the level of visibility and respect for the university through his work with congressional delegations, federal agency directors, and leaders in the corporate world." He was one of three principals who "held the vision for Mississippi State's Engineering Research Center and helped secure its funding." Thompson holds degrees from The Georgia Institute of Technology and Mississippi State. He also is a Giles Distinguished Professor of aerospace engineering at Mississippi State.


This World Wide Web version of Alumnus was marked up by Chris Brown <brownc@ur.msstate.edu>.
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