Spring convocation 2015

Friday, June 12, 2015

Congratulations to today's graduates and honorees!

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From the University of Waterloo Daily Bulletin

It's a by-the-numbers situation today as two ceremonies will see 1,079 Mathematics graduates cross the stage to receive their degrees.

At 10:00 a.m., 335 students from St. Jerome's University, Applied Mathematics, Combinatorics and Optimization, Computational Mathematics, Information Technology, Management, Mathematical Economics, Mathematical Finance, Mathematical Physics, Mathematical Studies, Mathematics/Business, Administration, Mathematics/Chartered Accountancy, Mathematics/Financial Analysis and Risk Management, Mathematics/Teaching, Mathematics Three Year General, Operations Research, and Pure Mathematics will receive their degrees.

Professor Noga Alon will receive an honorary Doctor of Mathematics. Professor Alon, of Tel Aviv University, is one of the world’s most prominent researchers in combinatorics and has also made many important and seminal contributions to computer science.

Best known for his work with probabilistic methods in combinatorics, his book on this subject (co-authored with Joel Spencer, now in its 3rd edition) was published in 1992 and endures as one of the standard references on the subject. His work on expanders is also of the greatest importance and has been heavily cited. While renowned for his work using the probabilistic method, he also utilizes ideas from a wide range of areas (coding theory, algebraic geometry, graph spectra, among others) and a number of these ideas have now been accepted as standard tools in combinatorics.

He has given plenary addresses at many important mathematical gatherings, in particular the 1996 European Congress of Mathematics and at the 1990 and 2002 International Congresses of Mathematics. He has held visiting positions at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton, IBM Almaden Research Center, Bell Laboratories, Bellcore and Microsoft Research, and has also served as adjunct professor at Waterloo in combinatorics & optimization. His work has earned him many prizes: the Erdös prize (1989), the Feher Prize (1991), the Polya Prize (2000), the Bruno Memorial Award (2001), the Landau Prize (2005), the Gödel Prize (2005), the Israel Prize (2008), and the EMET Prize (2011). In 2013 he was awarded an honorary doctorate from ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich). Professor Alon will address Convocation after receiving his degree.

Krishna Murali will deliver the morning's valedictory address.

William Cook will be invested with the title University Professor. Cook is professor of combinatorics and optimization at the University of Waterloo.

Professor Cook received his BA from Rutgers University, his MS in operations research from Stanford University and his PhD in combinatorics and optimization from the University of Waterloo. His research interests are in integer programming and combinatorial optimization, and he is renowned for his work on the travelling salesman problem. He is the founding editor of Mathematical Programming Computation. Prior to joining on at Waterloo he was Chandler Family Chair Professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology, and he has twice been visiting professor at Princeton University.

He has been the recipient of numerous awards and honours including the Beale-Orchard-Hays Prize from the Mathematical Programming Society, the Lanchester Prize from the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS) and fellowships in the American Mathematical Society, INFORMS, and the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 2011.

Chris Godsil will receive an Award of Excellence in Graduate Supervision. Professor Godsil, a faculty member in the Department of Combinatorics and Optimization since 1987, has served the department very well over the past 27 years, as instructor of a wide variety of undergraduate and graduate courses, as a researcher and student supervisor, and as Associate Chair for Graduate Studies. 

Chris is a world researcher in algebraic combinatorics with his specialty being algebraic graph theory. He has authored two of the standard textbooks on the topic, and more recently, has been a pioneer in using techniques from algebraic combinatorics to tackle some fundamental questions in quantum information theory. 

Chris has been the department's most active graduate student supervisor, and has also supervised 16 undergraduate research assistants since 1998. He has extremely high standards and demands the best from his students. At the same time, he is encouraging, supportive, and very conscientious about developing his students into capable and independent research mathematicians.

Jason Blais will be awarded the Governor General's Silver Medal.

The Governor General's Gold Medal will go to Abbas Mehrabian.        


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In the afternoon ceremony at 2:30 p.m., 744 students from Actuarial Science, Business Administration and Computer Science, Business Administration and Mathematics, Computer Science, Quantitative Finance, Software Engineering, and Statistics will receive their degrees.

Bearing the mace will be Associate Dean, Undergraduate Studies Steven Furino.

Nancy Reid will receive an honorary Doctor of Mathematics.Reid completed a Bachelor of Mathematics from the University of Waterloo in 1974, followed by a Master's of Science from University of British Columbia (1976) and a doctorate from Stanford University (1979). She has had a long and illustrious career involving groundbreaking and influential contributions to statistical theory through the study of likelihood.

Her research has addressed foundational issues such as the study of the value and rationale for conditioning, the use of high order asymptotics to ensure highly-accurate inferences for small samples, and the importance of robust inferences based on likelihood-based methods for partially specified models through use of composite likelihood. Her contributions feature the highest degree of mathematical rigour and have both deep and broad impact, primarily in the statistical sciences, but also in fields such as physics, genomics and health research. She has also exhibited a consistent and strong commitment to leadership in her scientific community. She has been president of several professional organizations, including the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (1997) and the Statistical Society of Canada (2004-05). She has long been a leading member of scientific boards, including the Fields Institute for Research in Mathematical Sciences and the Banff International Research Station, and has held several leadership positions at the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Professor Reid's crowning achievement in service to the cause of statistics in Canada was serving as chair of the steering committee for the NSERC Long Range Plan for the Mathematical and Statistical Sciences. Under her leadership, this committee developed a shared vision for the future of the statistical and mathematical sciences through careful consultation with the scientific communities across Canada. This exercise has set the course for research funding strategy in two of the most important disciplines for Canada. Moreover, the efforts of the Long Range Planning Committee helped the Statistical Society of Canada to form a new Canadian Statistical Sciences Institute (CANSSI) which was launched in 2013. This was only possible with Reid's leadership, dedication, and ability to bring about this ambitious, timely and shared vision.

Shale Craig will deliver the afternoon ceremony's valedictory address.

Trevor Grove will be named an Honorary Member of the University. Grove retired from the University of Waterloo in November 2014 after being involved at the University in one capacity or another since he started his Bachelor of Mathematics in computer science in 1974. He has been a student, researcher, lecturer, staff member, and president of the staff association and his involvement has covered all the key facets of the University – teaching, research and administration.

As University of Waterloo Staff Association president he helped strengthen the relationship between staff and the university administration in a thoughtful and respectful way, working to preserve the collegial approach to staff relations. He helped drive the revision of Policy 18 (Staff Employment), develop the current campus copyright guidelines and he was very active in campus committees such as the Staff Relations Committee and the UWSA's Member Advisory Committee which works with staff having difficulties in the workplace. As a member of the board for the Hildegard Marsden Co-op Day Nursery, he was instrumental in the process of creating a new building for the daycare.

Beyond his formal relationships, Trevor acquired a strong reputation as an able mediator in solving staff issues without the need to pursue any formal process. This would often require interaction with human resources personnel with whom he maintained a strong working relationship. Through his involvement, many issues crucial to individual staff members were resolved with ease.

Tom Duff will receive the J.W. Graham Medal.

Brett Coburn will be awarded the Alumni Gold Medal. 

Rutger Campbell and Melanie Chanona will receive the Jessie W.H. Zou Memorial Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research.

The Samuel Eckler Medal for Highest Standing in Actuarial Science will be given to Zhiyu Tian.

The Sandford Fleming Foundation Medal for Academic Excellence will be awarded to Murphy Berzish and the Sandford Fleming Foundation Medal for Co-operative Work Term Proficiency will be given to Shival Maharaj.

Hanmeng Zhan will receive the Outstanding Achievement in Graduate Studies award for the master's level.