Kansas Engineer - Fall 2020

Page 38

ALUMNI NEWS

Endowed Professorship to Honor Legend in Environmental Engineering by Joel Mathis

A

longtime KU environmental engineering professor is being honored with an endowed professorship in his name. The friends and family of Ross McKinney, who developed and directed the university’s environmental engineering program during a tenure that lasted more than three decades (1960–1993), raised the funds to honor McKinney’s career and legacy. “Professor McKinney is extremely deserving of this recognition. He has left an indelible mark at the KU School of Engineering and in his field. A named professorship in his honor helps elevate the stature of KU Engineering, and I thank the alumni who took the initiative to make this a reality,” said Arvin Agah, dean of engineering. After a recent trip to meet McKinney in North Carolina, Agah remains “deeply impressed by Professor McKinney’s professional and academic accomplishments, as well as his warm and generous nature.” McKinney came to KU to develop the Environmental Engineering Graduate Program, which grew into an internationally recognized degree program. The program integrated science and engineering — a “multidisciplinary” approach decades before such cross-disciplinary practices were common. “He is a legend — well-liked, well-loved by his students and many professors on the campus,” said Murli Tolaney, a former student of McKinney who — along with fellow classmate Bob Agnew — led efforts to raise funds for the professorship. “We should have done this many years ago.” McKinney’s research focused on the biological treatment method for industrial and municipal wastewater known as “activated sludge,” and he helped the profession move from more of a trial-and-error method of sizing wastewater treatment facilities to a method that produced consistent and repeatable optimized results. Those results led international technical journals to name him the “Father of Activated Sludge.”

He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a Fellow of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the American Association for Advancement of Sciences. “If you had to pick five people as legends in the environmental engineering field, he would be one of them,” said Tolaney, who earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees in environmental and civil engineering at KU. “He invented a lot of things in the environmental engineering field.” Among students and faculty at KU, he was also known for his humor and mentorship of young engineers. In 1992, he was recognized for his career contributions to KU when he was awarded the Chancellor’s Club Career Teaching Award. In 2016, he received a Distinguished Engineering Service Award, the highest honor bestowed by the engineering school. “The way he taught his students molded them. Many of his students went on to be environmental directors, CEOs, chief operating officers, all kinds of things,” Tolaney said. “At times, he was tough and opinionated. We would laugh and challenge him, but it was a good way to learn.” “My dad’s life work was focused on his curiosity to learn new information as it pertained to environmental engineering,” said Margo McKinney-Kane. “He loved nothing more than encouraging his students to push their boundaries to explore new ideas. He liked applying these ideas to real-world solutions. And it was the

Ross McKinney 36 | FALL 2020


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Articles inside

Donor and Industry Recognition

33min
pages 43-52

Scholarship Created to Honor Late

3min
pages 41-42

Orth Stresses Mentoring, Positivity at Tiberti Lecture

2min
page 40

Ross McKinney Honored with Endowed Professorship

3min
pages 38-39

Aerospace Grad Launches Successful Standup Comedy Career In His Native Mongolia

3min
pages 36-37

Firm Aims To Cheaply Produce Hydrogen for Consumers Via ‘Water Splitting’ Breakthrough

5min
pages 31-32

New Technology Could ‘Transform

7min
pages 33-35

Aerospace Engineering Unveils Satellite Design and Development Lab

2min
page 30

Research Center Planned to Protect the Internet of Things More Effectively

3min
page 29

Engineering Lands $3M Interdisciplinary Grant from National Science Foundation

3min
page 28

Engineering Students Design Adaptation to Help Kayaker Who Uses Wheelchair

5min
pages 26-27

Student Achievements

3min
pages 24-25

Aerospace Engineers Claim Top Honors at International Design Competition

3min
page 20

Hackathon’ Earns National Ranking

2min
page 21

KU Student Works to Solve Challenges at International Engineering Competition

3min
page 22

KU Engineers Without Borders Assists Two Bolivian Villages

2min
page 23

Crocheting Engineering Student Becomes Viral Sensation

3min
pages 18-19

Faculty Achievements

4min
pages 16-17

Engineering Professor Appointed To President’s Science Advisory Board

3min
page 15

Securing the Internet for the Digitally Homeless in a Pandemic

4min
pages 9-10

O’Reilly Honored with 2019 H.O.P.E. Award for Teaching

1min
page 14

Five KU Researchers Earn Career Awards from the National Science Foundation

6min
pages 11-12

KU Engineering Alumnus Helps Develop App to Assist with Responsibly Reopening Campus

3min
page 8

Researchers Trace COVID-19 in Wastewater to Provide Early Warning of Virus Spread

2min
page 5

New Associate Dean, Department Chairs Selected

2min
page 13

KU Engineering Produces Personal Protective Equipment to Aid Health Care Workers

2min
pages 6-7
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