Frederick Seitz has had a long and beneficial association with the Physics
Department and the Materials Research Laboratory at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign. Dr. Seitz received his education at Stanford University
(mathematics) and at Princeton University (physics) where he studied with
Professor Wigner. He taught physics at the University of Rochester, the
University of Pennsylvania, and at Carnegie Institute of Technology before
coming to the University of Illinois in 1949. His arrival at Illinois as a
Professor of Physics occurred during the F. W. Loomis era in the Physics
Department and began the period of the great growth in the solid state physics
in the department with the arrival also of Professors David Lazarus, James
Koehler, and John Bardeen, Charles Slichter, John Wheatley, Dillon Mapother,
and David Pines. The infusion of great talent made Illinois the major center
of solid state physics in the U.S. Professor Seitz became the Physics
Department Head in 1957, serving in that position until 1964. During that
period, the growth of solid state physics and metallurgy was nurtured by Fred
Seitz who, along with the excellent faculty in the Physics Department,
attracted a succession of world renowned physicists and metallurgists to the
Illinois prairie. A particularly notable event in 1940 was the publication of
Professor Seitz's book, Modern Theory of Solids, from which generations
of students learned their solid state physics and which served to define the
field.
In 1959, Professor Seitz, in cooperation with Professor Robert Sproul of
Cornell, Professor Harvey Brooks of Harvard, Dr. Charles Yost of the ONR, and
Dr. Donald Stevens of the AEC (presently known as the DOE) conceived of and
worked to establish the Materials Research Laboratories at several universities
in the U.S. It is no exaggeration to state that the concept of Materials
Science as a discipline arose from the efforts of these individuals. The first
Materials Research Laboratories were established at three universities in 1960
by ARPA. Illinois was not among them due to a political dispute between the
congressional delegations of Michigan and Illinois. The Atomic Energy
Commission did establish a program at Illinois and in 1961, ARPA established
the Materials Research Laboratory at Illinois. This accounts for why the
Materials Research Laboratory at Illinois has both DOE and NSF programs to
this day. While Professor Seitz was instrumental in establishing the Materials
Research Laboratory, the first Director was Professor Robert Maurer.
Professor Seitz served as Dean of the Graduate College and Vice-Chancellor for
Research at Illinois until 1965 at which time he became the first full time
President of the National Academy of Sciences. He became President of
Rockefeller University in 1968 and served until 1978. Throughout his career,
Professor Seitz served on numerous governmental panels and committees, and
advised major political figures of the period on important scientific
issues. He has made numerous scientific contributions to the understanding of
the physics of solids; contributing significantly to the understanding of
quantum mechanics, defect properties of solids, radiation damage, color
centers, and transport properties of solids.
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