Sunday, August 2, 2020

Remembering ASME Past President Richard Rosenberg

Recalling ASME Past President Richard Rosenberg Recalling ASME Past President Richard Rosenberg Recalling ASME Past President Richard Rosenberg Sept. 8, 2017 Richard Rosenberg, P.E. Richard Rosenberg, P.E., a long-term individual from ASME and previous leader of the Society, died on Aug. 26. An inhabitant of San Diego, Calif., Rosenberg was 90 years of age. Rosenberg, who filled in as the 106th leader of ASME from 1987 to 1988, was a functioning individual from ASME for almost 60 years. An individual from the Board of Governors from 1982 to 1984, Rosenberg was an individual from the Alexander Holley Society and an agent to the Archimedes Club at the hour of his passing. Beforehand, he had served the Society in various influential positions, including executive of the ASME Foundation governing body from 1995-2001, seat of the Committee on Legal Affairs from 1999-2001, seat of the Committee on Staff from 1992-1997, seat of the Committee of Past Presidents from 1991-1992, individual from the Committee on Honors from 2006-2012, and counsel to the Nominating Committee from 1989-1992. He likewise filled in as VP of ASMEs previous Region IX, which enveloped California, Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii, from 1978-1980, and seat of the San Diego Section from 1966-1967. An ASME Fellow, Rosenberg was named an Honorary Member of ASME in 2003 and got the ASME Dedicated Service Award in 1992. Rosenberg was a representative of GA Technologies in San Diego for a long time, working essentially in the structure and advancement of segments for atomic force reactors, before resigning as chief of frameworks and segments in 1986. He quickly left GA Technologies from 1971 to 1972 to work for the Atomic Energy Commission in Washington, D.C. Prior to joining GA Technologies, he had recently been utilized at Advanced Technology Laboratories in Mountain View, Calif., Westinghouse Bettis Laboratories in West Mifflin, Pa., and Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. He got his lone rangers degree in mechanical designing from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville in 1954, in the wake of learning at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.

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