National Capital Area Banquet
The 2017 National Capital Area Awards Banquet will be held at the Washington City Club on Saturday 29 April, 2017. The City Club is located near Metro Center, in the heart of the theater district and near Smithsonian Museums. You can make a day or evening of it!
More about the City Club on their facebook page www.facebook.com/cityclubwash
Directions and a map: http://www.clubcorp.com/Clubs/The-City-Club-of-Washington/Our-Story/Directions-Hours
Getting to the banquet:
Columbia Square
Washington, DC20004
202-347-0818
Metro to Metro center and exit
Enter from 13th street at 555 13th street. Walk across the atrium to the elevators and take the elevator down to the Club.
Park for $10.00 CASH. Drive and park under the building.
Columbia Square Parking Garage is the 3rd opening on the left (just before Subway Cafe awning) There is a brass sign that says “Columbia Square”. The loading dock is the 2nd (middle) opening. Take the elevator up to the concourse level to enter the City Club, Columbia Square is also known as the Hogan and Lovells Building.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
- Date: 29 Apr 2017
- Time: 05:30 PM to 09:30 PM
- All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
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- 533 13th St NW
- Columbia Square
- Washington, District of Columbia
- United States 20004
- Building: The City Club
- Contact Event Host
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Please use your 8-digit IEEE number when registering.
- Co-sponsored by NOVA Section
- Starts 01 March 2017 12:00 AM
- Ends 25 April 2017 11:59 PM
- All times are (GMT-05:00) US/Eastern
- Admission fee ?
- Menu: Chicken Madeira , Cider Roasted Pork Tenderloin , Vegetarian Wild Mushroom Ravioli
Speakers
Dr. John Vig of IEEE President (2009)
Biography:
John R. Vig
Biography
John Vig was born in Budapest, Hungary. When he was two years old, most of his relatives were deported to concentration camps. His father survived the camp at Buchenwald, Germany, but 14 other close relatives were murdered in Auschwitz and in other camps; including his grandmother, aunts, uncles, and cousins. After the Communists took over Hungary, they nationalized his father’s business and the family apartment. They labeled the family as “capitalists” and, therefore, “enemies of the people.” They jailed his father for 1½ years, and then deported the family to Hunya, a small, undeveloped farming community in Eastern Hungary from which the family was not allowed to leave without formal government permission.
The family escaped Hungary during the revolution of 1956; entered the USA, as refugees, in 1957 (when John was 14 years old), and settled in New York City.
He received the B.S. degree from City College New York, in 1964; and the Ph.D. in Physics from Rutgers - The State University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA, in 1969. Upon graduation he joined the Electronic Components Laboratory at Fort Monmouth, NJ, USA. Throughout his professional career, working as a physicist, electronics engineer and program manager, he performed and led research aimed at developing high-accuracy clocks, sensors and low-noise oscillators. He retired in 2006 but continued working as a technical consultant, primarily to Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) program managers. The research programs he supported ranged from micro/nano resonators to low-noise oscillators and chip-scale atomic clocks.
He has served IEEE in many capacities, including: Founding President of the Sensors Council; president of the Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Society (UFFC-S); Division Director; Vice President of Technical Activities; journal associate editor, senior editor and guest editor of special issues; conference general and technical program chair; IEEE Investment Committee member; standards coordinating committee chair, and, in 2009, as IEEE President and CEO. He has written a first-hand history of how he became VP of IEEE Technical Activities
He remained active in IEEE after his term as president ended. He was elected VP, Publications, of both the Sensors Council and of the UFFC-S; served on the MGA Nominations and Appointments Committee; on the Conferences Publications Committee; as General Co-Chair of IEEE SENSORS 2012; and in other positions. In 2012, the UFFC-S AdCom elected him to be an AdCom Member Emeritus, for life.
John Vig has been awarded 54 patents, has published more than 100 papers and nine book chapters, and his publications have been cited more than 2000 times. He has served for more than 40 years as a volunteer in his home area; as an Environmental Commissioner of Colts Neck, NJ, as a member of the Monmouth County Environmental Council and as a trustee of the Colts Neck Friends of the Library. He and his wife of 53 years are avid ballroom dancers.
In 1988, he was elected Fellow of the IEEE "for contributions to the technology of quartz crystals for precision frequency control and timing."
December 2015
Agenda
3:30-5:00 PM Set up (set up for banquet organizers, exhibits, science fair project winners )
5:30-6:15 Registration, bar opens, networking, exhibits and science fair winner displays available
6:15-7:00 Dinner and table “brown bag” contests
7:00-7:30 Guest speaker Dr. John Vig, past President of IEEE
7:30-8:00 Awards
8:00 Formal program ends
8:00-9:30 Live music, drinks, snacks, socializing continues
9:00 Bar closes
9:30 Evening ends, good bye's