Tag: CHARLOTTE

  • Indian American Farhan Gandhi named Distinguished Professor at NC State University

    Indian American Farhan Gandhi named Distinguished Professor at NC State University

    CHARLOTTE, NC (TIP): Indian American professor Farhan Gandhi, renowned for his research contributions to eVTOL (electric vertical take-off and landing) aircraft technologies, has been named a Distinguished Professor at NC State University.
    The newly established Hassan A. Hassan distinguished professorship in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering has been named after the late titan of the MAE department and legend in the field of aerospace engineering.
    Hassan helped to establish the professorship shortly before his passing in 2019 alongside his son Basil Hassan and MAE Department Head Srinath Ekkad, according to a press release.
    In 1962, Hassan joined North Carolina State University as a full professor and spent 53 years at NC State before beginning his phased retirement in 2015. While at NC State, he was the major adviser to 34 doctoral students, he authored more than 200 publications, and has been recognized with numerous research awards.
    Hassan died at the age of 87 in 2019, but through his massive contributions to the field of Aerospace Engineering, and through his establishment of both the Dr. Hassan A. Hassan Distinguished Professorship, the Hassan A. Hassan Distinguished Lecture Series, and many more lasting contributions to the department, his legacy lives on.
    Gandhi now plays an important role in carrying out that legacy in the MAE Department and at NC State University as a whole, the release stated.
    According to Basil Hassan and Dr. Ekkad, the committee’s requirements for filling the professorship were as steep as Professor Hassan’s mounting list of contributions to this institution – one such requirement being that the candidate had to be an AIAA Fellow – which with the addition of Gandhi, makes three faculty members who hold that position at MAE, including Ekkad and Angel Family Professor Jack Edwards.
    Gandhi obtained his BTech in Aeronautical Engineering from IIT-Bombay in 1989, and his doctoral degree in Aerospace Engineering from The University of Maryland’s Alfred Gessow Rotorcraft Center in 1995.
    After 17 years on the Penn State Aerospace Faculty, he moved to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 2012 as the Redfern Endowed Chair Professor in Aerospace Engineering.
    With an academic career of more than 29 years, Gandhi has published around 360 technical papers in journals and major conference proceedings and has advised 29 PhD students to graduate. He currently leads a vibrant research group comprising of two research scientists and eight doctoral students.
    On 12 occasions, Gandhi has been a plenary/keynote speaker at major technical conferences and has delivered prestigious named lectures such as the 2022 Royal Aeronautical Society’s Cierva Lecture in vertical lift, and the 2019 AIAA Adaptive Structures Lecture, among others.
    In the area of multi-rotor eVTOL aircraft technologies, Gandhi’s group has conducted cutting-edge research in the areas of multi-rotor/rotor-wing interactional aerodynamics, aeroacoustics, flight controls and eVTOL aircraft flying qualities, fault identification and fault tolerance, vibration reduction, eVTOL aircraft configuration design and analysis, and eVTOL aircraft flight testing, the release stated.

  • Indian-origin town council Sarika Bansal’s campaign sign defaced

    Indian-origin town council Sarika Bansal’s campaign sign defaced

    CHARLOTTE, NC (TIP): The campaign sign of an Indian-origin woman running for a town council in the US state of North Carolina was vandalized, with a photo of a Black person’s face superimposed over her face, according to a media report. Sarika Bansal, the only person of color running for the Cary Town Council this year, found a campaign sign of hers defaced on Thursday, a report said.
    Bansal was attending the town council’s regular meeting when she was informed that her campaign sign was found vandalized in the Highcroft Village neighborhood in West Cary, where she is contesting for the seat.
    Bansal’s head was seemingly scratched off, and a photo of a Black person’s face was superimposed over her face on the sign, the newspaper reported on Friday.
    She termed the incident “shocking” and said she was “truly saddened by the act of vandalism and racism” against her campaign.
    “We must embrace diversity as a means of building strength and unity in our town. There is no place for bigotry and racism against people of color, brown or Black, in the Town of Cary,” she was quoted as saying.
    In North Carolina, it is a class 3 misdemeanor for a person to steal, deface, vandalize or remove a political sign that is lawfully placed.
    In a statement, Mayor Harold Weinbrecht said the town will do “everything we can to get to the bottom of this”.
    “This racist, despicable act stands in stark opposition to the values we hold dear in Cary and will only serve to bring our community closer,” Weinbrecht said.
    According to the report, Asian Americans make up 20 per cent of the 180,000-resident population in Cary.
    “West Cary needs sustainable leadership,” Bansal said.
    “Having diversity on the Town Council is going to help bring the change that we need today,” she added.
    A small business owner and resident of Cary, Bansal started her business, Raj Jewels, in Morrisville five years ago. She has been active in local government in recent years.
    In a statement on Friday, Bansal called on other candidates to “commit themselves to working for a Cary that accepts people of all backgrounds and color.”
    Bansal is in a three-way race with current Councilman Ryan Eades and newcomer Rachel Jordan for the town’s District D seat.
    If elected, Bansal would become the second woman of color and the first Indian American to serve on the town council.
    Cary’s municipal election is on October 10, weeks before the county’s Election Day on November 7.