A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, April 30, 2015
Fitting Choice Of M. Sivapalan As UIUC Endowed Professor
By Ciaran Harman -April 30, 2015
I’ve been asked say some words on the topic of “Why Professor Sivapalan?”
I am a former PhD student of Siva, as he is known to his friends. It
might seem unconventional for Siva to ask someone so young and untenured
to give this kind of address. Shouldn’t a more senior colleague be
appropriate? Someone whose own long history of awards and recognition
would impress upon you all Siva’s worthiness for the position of endowed
chair. But to those of us who know him, this choice is quite typical of
Siva.
Now, senior colleagues have given this kind of introduction in the past:
Siva has been well-recognized by his peers for his intellectual
contributions, and for his leadership. He has received the “grand slam”
of hydrology awards: the Dalton Medal from the European Geosciences
Union, the Horton Medal from the American Geophysical Union, and the
International Hydrology Prize from UNESCO. He is one of only three
people to have won all three awards. Perhaps in choosing a former
student this time, he just thought he’d shake things up a little. That
would be quite typical.
*Photo – Dean Cangellaris congratulating Professor Sivapalan
To understand why Siva is so highly regarded, you need to understand a
little history. Hydrology has, in large part, focused on solving
important practical problems, like knowing how much drinking water we
can reliably draw from a dam, or a well.
But for some, hydrologic science is something more.
The transformation of falling rain into a
surging river is, for them, the result of a vast network of
interactions in the landscape: rock and soil, hills and valleys, heat
and light, plants and people. This network is renewed and revised with
each storm, and with each drought. It creates the hydrologic system, and
is sustained by it. Hydrologic scientists have sought to understand
this system deeply. Read More