Meet the Author |
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Doris
Lloyd Grosh studied at the
University of Chicago (B.S., mathematics and physics), the
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, at Purdue University, She
has been a contributor and referee for Technometrics, Journal of the
American Statistical Society, and IEEE Transactions on
Reliability. She has belonged
to the Society of Women
Engineers, American Society for Quality Control, American Statistical
Association, American Association of University Professors, Sigma Xi,
Tau Beta Pi, and Pi Mu Epsilon. Her
first book, A Primer of Reliability Theory, was published in 1988 by
John Wiley & Sons. She
has been a consultant or
Dr.
Grosh received the Hollis Award for Excellence in Teaching from the
Kansas State College of Engineering in 1975, where she was for many years
the only woman on the engineering faculty. The students voted
her the best teacher in the Department of Industrial Engineering in
1981 and 1990. As she retired they created a special award
to reflect the role she had played for so many of them. In 1990 she
became the first and so far only recipient of the Industrial Engineering
department Mother Hen Award.
In
the year 2000 she
and her husband celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary;
they have three grown daughters. He
died in October 2003 and she has recently moved from the beloved
family home of 35 years to the Meadowlark Hills Retirement
Community. [No, it is not an "old folks home!" but a
classy place with congenial people -- many of whom are retired
professors like her] and all the amenities including high-speed internet
connections. Since retirement she has been active in community organizations,
so active, that she has earned recognition for community service.
In 2000 the University for Man Community Learning Center gave her their
Grassroots Community Education Award. She was also included in the
list of "Most Admired" by the Manhattan Mercury, for
her work with the Manhattan Arts Center, who recently appointed her as
their first lifetime honorary director. In 2001 the local Sertoma Club
gave her their award for Service to Mankind. |