CEO Alan Schriesheim and U.S. President
Ronald Reagan in 1987 during demonstration of high-temperature superconductivity (U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science) While at Exxon, he won the
American Chemical Society's
George Olah award for research in petroleum chemistry in 1969. Schriesheim served on several public corporate boards, many university and government advisory committees, and is a member of the
National Academy of Engineering and holds 22 U.S.
patents. He is a member of the board of directors of publicly traded
HEICO, an aerospace and defense electronics company, and was a former board member of Sun Electric Company and of
Rohm and Haas a
Fortune 500 chemical company. He received several honorary doctorate degrees including a 2001 honorary degree in science from
Penn State, and in 2005 he was named a
Distinguished Alumnus, the highest honor the university can bestow on its graduates. Dr. Schriesheim continues to reside in Chicago and is president of The Chicago Council on Science and Technology. In 1987,
Argonne Director and CEO Alan Schriesheim demonstrated
high-temperature superconductivity to U.S. President
Ronald Reagan at a 1987 superconductor applications meeting. He was elected a member of the
National Academy of Engineering in 1989 for innovative chemical and chemical engineering research and for leadership in both the academic and the industrial sectors. In 1996, Schriesheim became a Lincoln Laureate and was awarded The Order of Lincoln by
The Lincoln Academy of Illinois – the highest honor awarded by the State of Illinois. Other notable Lincoln Laureates include 1981 Laureate U.S. President
Ronald Reagan, artist
LeRoy Neiman,
Olympic Gold Medal winner
Jacqueline Joyner-Kersee, author
Studs Terkel, author
Scott Turow, scientist and
Nobel Laureate Leon M. Lederman, actor
Charlton Heston, writer and
Nobel Laureate Saul Bellow, architect
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, . == Family ==