PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE APRIL 23, 2017 ***Contact details appear below ***Text and images https://lowell.edu/category/news/ LOWELL OBSERVATORY SOLE TRUSTEE W.. Putnam is th
Trang 1PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
APRIL 23, 2017
***Contact details appear below
***Text and images https://lowell.edu/category/news/
LOWELL OBSERVATORY SOLE TRUSTEE W LOWELL PUTNAM TO RECEIVE
HONORARY DOCTORATE
Northern Arizona University (NAU) is awarding W Lowell Putnam an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree Putnam will also give the commencement address to the Business & Health and Human Services graduates Putnam is the great-grandnephew of Percival Lowell, who founded Lowell Observatory in 1894 He is currently serving as the observatory’s 5th Sole Trustee, having succeeded his father, Bill, in 2013
Putnam is a retired businessman In 1984, he founded Video Communications, Inc (VCI), a software company specializing in business systems for television networks, cable channels and local television stations Clients included The Weather Channel, Comcast, Univision, and about 25% of the television stations in the United States and Canada Putnam sold the company in
2010 and became the Trust Administrator for Lowell Observatory
He is a general partner in Faraway Investments, a former trustee of the Springfield (MA) Nursery and a former director of the Economic Development Council of Western Massachusetts He currently serves as a director of PeopleHedge Corp and one of seven members of the Board of Trustees of the Lowell Observatory Foundation
Putnam and his spouse, Kimberly, have two children and they oversee a 70-year old family-founded scholarship fund He holds a B.S in Psychology from American International College in Massachusetts and is a Life Member of the American Alpine Club and The Nature Conservancy
This award reinforces the century-long association between NAU and Lowell Observatory For years, the observatory has awarded the Lowell Prize to an NAU graduate earning a bachelor’s degree who has maintained the highest average in scholarship during four years of residence It was established in the early 1900s by Percival Lowell’s widow, Constance, as a memorial to her husband NAU annually presents another award, the Vesto M Slipher Scholarship (named after longtime observatory astronomer Vesto Melvin Slipher) to an outstanding junior chemistry major
Trang 2In 1960 the university, then known as Arizona State College, presented an honorary Doctor of Science degree to Clyde Tombaugh, who discovered Pluto at Lowell Observatory in 1930 More recently, NAU serves as one of the partner institutions of Lowell Observatory’s Discovery Channel Telescope, the 5th largest telescope in the continental United States and located 40 miles southeast of Flagstaff
Putnam said, “I am pleased and very appreciative of this honor from NAU, and am happy to accept it on behalf of myself and the four sole trustees who preceded me NAU and Lowell have worked together well through the years and I look forward to even more collaboration and
discovery in the years ahead.”
Putnam will receive the award during NAU’s spring commencement ceremony on May 12 inside the J Lawrence Walkup Skydome
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About Lowell Observatory
Lowell Observatory is a private, non-profit research institution founded in 1894 by Percival Lowell The Observatory has been the site of many important discoveries including the detection
of the large recessional velocities (redshift) of galaxies by Vesto Slipher in 1912-1914 (a result that led ultimately to the realization the universe is expanding), and the discovery of Pluto by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930 Today, Lowell's astronomers use ground-based telescopes around the world, telescopes in space, and NASA planetary spacecraft to conduct research in diverse areas
of astronomy and planetary science The Observatory welcomes nearly 100,000 visitors each year to its Mars Hill campus in Flagstaff, Arizona for a variety of tours, telescope viewing, and special programs Lowell Observatory currently operates four research telescopes at its Anderson Mesa dark sky site east of Flagstaff and the 4.3-meter Discovery Channel Telescope near Happy Jack, Arizona