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The awards committee of the Richard Tapia Celebration of Diversity in
Computing Conference 2003 is seeking nominations for the Richard A.
Tapia Achievement Award for Scientific Scholarship, Civic Science, and
Diversifying Computing. This award recognizes an individual with
outstanding achievements in scientific scholarship, a strong civic
presence within the scientific community, and a dedication to the
attainment of true ethnic diversity in computing and related
disciplines. The ideal recipient will be devoted to the principle of
equity in both theory and practice, and will have demonstrated
leadership in applying creative solutions to the difficult social,
cultural, technical and political problems of diversifying computing.
The award will be given at the 2003 Richard Tapia Celebration of
Diversity in Computing conference, which will take place October 15-18,
2003 in Atlanta, Georgia. The Tapia conference is a biennial event that
provides a unique forum at which researchers and students can come
together to share technical advances while honoring and celebrating
diversity. This year's theme is "Building Diverse Leadership in
Computing," which will be a focus in all aspects of the conference.
Nominating letters for the Richard A. Tapia Achievement Award for
Scientific Scholarship, Civic Science, and Diversifying Computing
should include the following information:
- Nominee's name
- Nominee's affiliation
- A summary of the nominee's scientific contributions (300 words)
- A summary of the nominee's civic contributions (300 words)
- A summary of the nominee's leadership in diversifying computing (300 words)
- Nominator's name, affiliation, e-mail address and contact phone number
Nominations should be sent by the deadline of August 15, 2003:
- E-mail: Mail pdf-formatted nominations as an attachement to Bryant York, Portland State University (york@cs.pdx.edu)
Celebrate Diversity in Computing
Researchers and students in computing and computational science are
encouraged to participate in this year's conference. Submissions are
still being accepted for posters and the Doctoral Consortium
(submissions due June 20). The Doctoral Consortium, new this year, is a
full-day event that provides an opportunity for Ph.D. students to
present, discuss, and explore their research interests and career
objectives with a panel of established researchers. Limited support for
participants may be available, with preference given to those who are
presenting at the conference. Submission information can be found at
the conference website, http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Conferences/Tapia2003/. The conference early registration deadline is September 12, 2003.
The conference honors the contributions of Richard A. Tapia of Rice
University to the growth of diversity in computing and related
disciplines. Tapia, an internationally acclaimed scientist, is a member
of the National Academy of Engineering, the first recipient of the
Computing Research Association's A. Nico Habermann Award for
outstanding contributions to aiding members of underrepresented groups
within the computing community, a member of the National Science Board,
and recipient of the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science,
Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring from President Clinton.
The Richard Tapia Celebration of Diversity in Computing 2003 conference
is being planned by the Coalition to Diversify Computing (CDC)—http://cdc-computing.org/—whose
mission is to increase the visibility of people of color in computing
research. CDC is a joint organization of the Association for Computing
Machinery (ACM), the Computing Research Association (CRA), and the IEEE
Computer Society (IEEE-CS). Tapia 2003 is sponsored by the ACM and CRA
in cooperation with IEEE-CS. It is supported by Silver Supporters ACM,
AGEP Program at Rice University, Microsoft, Inc., National Center for
Supercomputing Applications, National Computational Science Alliance;
Bronze Supporters AAAI, EOT-PACI, and Contributors Portland State
University and Ohio Supercomputing Center.
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