Nicol invested as Woeltge Professor

3/26/2013 Jamal Collier, ECE Illinois

Nicol, director of ITI, is considered a leading expert on the modeling and simulation of discrete event systems.

Written by Jamal Collier, ECE Illinois

ITI Director David Nicol, a professor of electrical and computer engineering and in the Coordinated Science Laboratory, was invested as Franklin W. Woeltge Professors in Electrical and Computer Engineering on February 26, 2013, at the Beckman Institute. Being invested with a professorship is one of the highest honors a faculty member can receive.

 

Zhi-Pei Liang (left) and David Nicol
Zhi-Pei Liang (left) and David Nicol
Zhi-Pei Liang (left) and David Nicol

Chancellor Phyllis Wise was in attendance and said she was excited to be able to attend such a historic event, where Nicol was inducted alongside ECE colleague Zhi-Pei Liang.

 

"To be able to have a double investiture is triple the joy," Wise said during her opening speech.

Nicol was introduced by ECE Professor Bill Sanders, who praised Nicol for always being "extremely capable of applying his strengths to whatever application needs it."

"It means more to me than you can imagine, to be recognized by this faculty at a leading research university," Nicol said after receiving his medal.

Nicol is considered a leading expert on the modeling and simulation of discrete event systems, and is frequently called upon to consult with industry and government, particularly in the use of these techniques to assess the trustworthiness of systems that monitor and control critical infrastructure. Nicol joined the ECE faculty in 2003.

About 75 people attended the honor including faculty members, professors and the faculty's family members. Nicol's wife, children and mother attended the event. Zhi-Pei's wife and children were in attendance as well including one child who came all the way from Boston.

The Franklin W. Woeltge Professorships were established in the ECE Department thanks to a $4 million gift from alumnus Franklin Woeltge (BSEE ’26), who died in 1998 at age 95.

As an engineer, Woeltge worked in the Avionics and Space Division of Emerson Electric, retiring in 1963. He accumulated much of his wealth by investing in the stock market—a favorite passion of his, along with reading and ballroom dancing. Woeltge had no surviving relatives, so he made his bequest to the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering because, he once said, that is where he spent some of the best days of his life.


Share this story

This story was published March 26, 2013.