front and center:
Civil Engineering Professorship Honors Life of Alumnus:
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Leslie D. Martin
Photo courtesy of University Photography. |
An alumnus of the University of Nebraska–
Lincoln will be remembered by his
family and colleagues through the creation of
an endowed professorship in civil engineering.
The Leslie D. Martin Civil Engineering
Professorship has been established as a
permanently endowed fund at the University
of Nebraska Foundation to honor Martin
while providing annual resources to a faculty
member in the UNL Department of Civil
Engineering.
The fund of $470,000 was established with
gifts from Martin’s family, including his wife
Vera Martin of Bella Vista, Ark., and brother
Lanny Martin of Denver.
The Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute,
an organization
to which
Martin belonged
and served, also
provided a $10,000
gift to the fund
through memorial
gifts made by its
members.
“My brother
Les loved the state
of Nebraska, the
university and civil
engineering,” Lanny Martin said. “He would
be so pleased to know we have commemorated
his life in this way.”
David H. Allen, dean of the College of Engineering,
said he is grateful for the generosity
of Martin’s family and colleagues.
“Civil engineering is one of the college’s
foremost research areas,” he said. “The creation
of the Leslie D. Martin Civil Engineering
Professorship, as the first for our civil
engineering program, is a fitting tribute to
Mr. Martin’s life and the work he enjoyed.”
The college will award the professorship
to an individual who demonstrates teaching,
research and academic leadership in the field
of civil-structural engineering, Allen said.
The recipient will receive an annual stipend.
Leslie Martin received a bachelor’s of science
in civil engineering from the University
of Nebraska in 1954. In 1970 he joined
the Consulting Engineers Group where he
worked for 25 years and served as president
of its Chicago office. In addition to managing
numerous design projects for public and private
clients, Martin held leadership positions
with the professional associations Precast/
Prestressed Concrete Institute and American
Concrete Institute.
In 1992, Martin won the Precast/Prestressed
Concrete Institute’s Robert J. Lyman
Award for authoring an article about the
design and construction of the Connecticut
Tennis Center, and in 2002 he was awarded
its highest honor for his longtime professional
contributions.
Leslie Martin and his wife of 52 years,
Vera Martin, who also attended the University
of Nebraska, lived in various places but
“felt their hearts were always with Nebraska,”
Lanny Martin said.
— Robb Crouch, NU Foundation