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Leading Worldwide Health and Wellness Expert and U.S. Surgeon General Regina M. Benjamin Will Speak at 205th Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Commencement May 28
Samuel F. Heffner, Retired Rensselaer Board of
Trustees Member and Chairman, and G. Wayne Clough, 12th
Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Also Will Receive
Honorary Degrees
U.S. Surgeon General and Vice Admiral Regina M. Benjamin —
one of the world’s leading experts on public health and a key
player in the national debate on health care reform — will
deliver the main address at the 205th Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute Commencement on May 28.
Dr. Benjamin will receive an honorary degree, along with
fellow honorands G. Wayne Clough, Secretary of the Smithsonian
Institution, and Samuel F. Heffner Jr. ’56, who recently
retired from the Rensselaer Board of Trustees after 15 years as
chairman and 33 years as a member.
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| REGINA M. BENJAMIN, M.D., MBA |
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G. WAYNE CLOUGH, PH.D. |
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SAMUEL F. HEFFNER JR. ’56,
B.A. |
As “America’s Doctor,” Dr. Benjamin plays a critical role in
providing the American public with the best scientific
information available on how to improve health. Since her
appointment by President Barack Obama in 2009, Dr. Benjamin has
been a forceful leader in the national effort to migrate the
United States health care system from one focused on sick care
to one targeting wellness and prevention of illness. She talked
about the issue earlier this year at the Sixth Annual
Employer Health, Human Capital and Wellness Congress.
From her early days as the founder of a rural health clinic
in Alabama – which she kept running despite damage inflicted by
two
hurricanes and a devastating fire — to her leadership role
in the worldwide advancement of preventive health care, Dr.
Benjamin has forged a career that has been recognized by a
broad spectrum of organizations and publications, ranging from
the MacArthur Fellowship — the “Genius Award” — to
Time and People magazines. Dr. Benjamin also
was named the United States recipient of the Nelson Mandela
Award for Health and Human Rights.
When he nominated her in 2009, President Obama
cited Dr. Benjamin’s passion for providing health care to
everyone, which began with her clinic in Alabama: “When people
couldn’t pay, she didn’t charge them. When the clinic wasn’t
making money, she didn’t take a salary for herself. When
Hurricane Georges destroyed the clinic in 1998, she made house
calls to all her patients while it was rebuilt,” President
Obama said. “When Hurricane Katrina destroyed it again and left
most of her town homeless, she mortgaged her house and maxed
out her credit cards to rebuild that clinic for a second
time.”
“In the course of her distinguished career, Dr. Benjamin has
set an extraordinary example for health care professionals,
becoming a role model for using advanced science and education
in the service of one’s community and those most in need,” said
Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson. “We are pleased to
have the opportunity to honor her and two other distinguished
leaders. They will bring to our graduates and their families at
Commencement noteworthy accomplishments in the diverse and
critically important fields of science, health, history, higher
education, and architecture.
“Leading the office of the Surgeon General involves
not only making sure we all have the best health information
available, but also promoting the highest standards for the
6,500 uniformed health officers who protect health of American
citizens,” President Jackson said. “As the second decade of the
21st century unfolds, the issue of health care is critical to
all of us. Therefore, it is important that among our leaders in
this arena is someone who has raised the bar for service and
dedication, delivering the best possible medical care despite
challenging situations. We look forward to hearing from Dr.
Benjamin.”
The Commencement ceremony begins at 9:30 a.m. on May 28 at
the East Campus Athletic Village on the Rensselaer campus.
Dr. Benjamin biography:
Dr. Benjamin is founder and former CEO of the Bayou La Batre
Rural Health Clinic in Alabama, former associate dean for Rural
Health at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine
in Mobile, and past chair of the Federation of State Medical
Boards of the United States. In 1995, she was the first
physician under age 40 and the first African-American woman to
be elected to the American Medical Association Board of
Trustees. She served as president of the American Medical
Association Education and Research Foundation, and as chair of
the AMA Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs. In 2002 she
became president of the Medical Association of the State of
Alabama, making her the first African-American female president
of a state medical society in the United States.
She has a B.S. in chemistry from Xavier University, New
Orleans, an M.D. degree from the University of Alabama at
Birmingham, and an MBA from Tulane University. She attended
Morehouse School of Medicine and completed her family medicine
residency in Macon, Ga.
In July 1987, Dr. Benjamin established a clinic in a small
fishing village in Alabama to help its uninsured residents. She
persevered through Hurricane Georges in 1998, Hurricane Katrina
in 2005, and a devastating fire in 2006, often putting up her
own money to cover expenses. She also became nationally
prominent for her business acumen and humane approach to
preventive medicine.
Dr. Benjamin is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the
National Academy of Science, and a fellow of the American
Academy of Family Physicians. She was a Kellogg National Fellow
and a Rockefeller Next Generation Leader. Some of her board
memberships have included the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation,
the Kaiser Commission on Medicaid and the Uninsured, the
Catholic Health Association, and the Morehouse School of
Medicine.
In 1998, Dr. Benjamin was the United States recipient of the
Nelson Mandela Award for Health and Human Rights. She was named
by Time Magazine as one of the “Nation’s 50
Future Leaders Age 40 and Under.”
Clough biography:
As the 12th Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Clough
leads the world’s largest museum and research complex with 19
museums, nine research centers, the National Zoo, and research
activities in more than 90 countries.
Since Clough began as Secretary in 2008, he has overseen
several major openings at the Smithsonian, including the
reopening of the National Museum of American History and the
David H. Koch Hall of Human Origins and Sant Ocean Hall at the
National Museum of Natural History.
He received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in civil
engineering from Georgia Tech, and a doctorate in civil
engineering from the University of California, Berkeley.
Clough has been a professor at Duke University, Stanford
University, and Virginia Tech. He served as head of the
department of civil engineering and dean of the College of
Engineering at Virginia Tech, and as provost at the University
of Washington. He served as president of Georgia Institute of
Technology for 14 years.
Clough was elected to the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences in 2010, and serves on its Commission on the
Humanities and Social Science. In 2009, he was inducted into
the Technology Hall of Fame of Georgia, and later that year he
received the Joseph M. Pettit Alumni Distinguished Service
Award that recognizes a lifetime of leadership, achievement,
and service to Georgia Tech. In 2012, Georgia Tech is scheduled
to open the G. Wayne Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons
building to honor his commitment to undergraduate students.
Clough received nine national awards from the American
Society of Civil Engineers, including the 2004 OPAL lifetime
award for contributions to education. He is one of 14 civil
engineers to have been twice awarded civil engineering’s oldest
recognition, the Norman Medal, in 1982 and in 1996. He received
the George Westinghouse Award from the American Society of
Engineering Education in 1986 for outstanding teaching and
research. In 1990, he was elected to the National Academy of
Engineering (NAE), and in 2008 was recognized with the NAE
Bueche Award for his efforts in public policy. He was awarded
the 2002 National Engineering Award by the American Association
of Engineering Societies and in 2004 was named a Distinguished
Alumnus from the College of Engineering at U.C. Berkeley.
Clough chaired the National Research Council Committee on
New Orleans Regional Hurricane Protection Projects and serves
as a member of the National Science Board. He served on the
President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology
(2001-08) and as co-chair of the 2004 National Innovation
Initiative and university vice chair of the U.S. Council on
Competitiveness; he chaired the Engineer of 2020 Project for
the NAE and served as a member of the National Governors
Association Innovate America Task Force (2006-07).
Heffner biography:
Heffner — founder and president of Dickinson-Heffner Inc., a
successful building and land development firm in the
Baltimore-Washington area — graduated from Rensselaer with a
bachelor of architecture degree. Through the years, Heffner has
maintained close ties to his alma mater. He was a Board of
Trustees member for 33 years, and served as board chair for 15
years, retiring in December 2010. During his term as chair,
Rensselaer made significant strides in revitalizing the campus,
including the renovations of many of the core campus buildings
along with the construction of several new buildings,
increasing enrollment and scholastic excellence. Upon his
retirement, he was named honorary chairman and trustee
emeritus.
After his graduation from Rensselaer in 1956, Heffner served
two years in the U.S. Air Force, and then began a career in the
real estate development business that has spanned nearly 50
years and resulted in the development of several million square
feet of office and industrial space in the Baltimore region,
primarily in the vicinity of Baltimore-Washington International
(BWI) Airport.
In addition to a wide range of experience in the real estate
field, Heffner participates in a broad range of outside civic,
business, and educational activities. He has served on numerous
civic boards and is a founder and former chair of the BWI
Business Partnership Inc, devoted to the fostering of economic
development and transportation interests by businesses in the
BWI area.
He served for many years on the board of Mannington Mills
Company, a national flooring manufacturer; the board of the
University of Maryland Medical System; and he is currently a
member of the board of the Greater Baltimore Medical Center
Hospital.
During his tenure on the Rensselaer Board of Trustees,
Heffner chaired two presidential search committees, the
Advancement Committee, and the Rensselaer Technology Park
Committee. He was also chair of Rensselaer’s New Century
Campaign. He is a member of the Stephen Van Rensselaer
Society of Patroons of Rensselaer, and received the Rensselaer
Alumni Association’s Alumni Key Award in 1980, the Albert Fox
Demers Medal in 1984, the Distinguished Service Award in 1987,
and the 1993 Fellows Award from the School of
Architecture. He served as chairman of the Board of
Trustees from December 1995 until December 2010. Another
significant contribution to Rensselaer was his leadership
effort in the construction of the Samuel F. Heffner Jr. ’56
Alumni House — fully designed, constructed, and funded by
Rensselaer alumni/ae.
Heffner has been an avid airplane pilot for over 42 years
and continues to pilot his own airplane.
Honorands and President Jackson To Conduct May
27 Colloquy: “The Architecture of Change: Action to
Impact”
On the eve of Commencement, Rensselaer will convene the 2011
President’s 2011 President’s
Commencement Colloquy, during which all three honorands
will participate in a discussion led by President Jackson. The
title of the event is “The Architecture of Change: Action to
Impact.” According to President Jackson, the Rensselaerean
ideal is to take on the problems of the day and find practical
solutions. But action must be predicated on a clear
understanding of the core mission and values of any endeavor.
With this foundation established, the potential for renewal and
reinvention allows us to build on past achievements, while
adapting to a changing world. All four Colloquy participants
will focus on the question: What can committed innovators
across different sectors teach us about how best to meet the
great challenges of our time? The Colloquy will be held in the
Concert Hall of the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and
Performing Arts Center (EMPAC), on the Rensselaer campus,
beginning at 4 p.m. on Friday, May 27.
For more details on Commencement, go to www.rpi.edu/academics/commencement/index.html.
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Published
April 20,
2011 |
Contact: Mark Marchand
Phone: (518) 276-6098
E-mail: marchm3@rpi.edu |
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