Van Cleef Memorial Medal

The Van Cleef Memorial Medal was established in 1970 by Dr. Van Cleef, in honor and memory of his wife, Frieda. This medal, designed by Joseph DiLorenzo is awarded by the American Geographical Society to honor “scholars who have done outstanding original work in the field of urban geography, preferable, though not necessarily in applied rather than theoretical aspects”.[1]

History

Dr. Eugene Van Cleef was a Professor Emeritus of Geography at Ohio State University. He holds the distinction of having taught the first course in urban geography at an American university. Throughout his career Van Cleef sought to apply geography to the business world. With his book, 'Trade Centers and Trade Routes', Van Cleef became the first American Geographer to publish a book on urban themes.

Recipients

The following people received the award in the year specified:[2]

gollark: Of course. It's Haskell.
gollark: *sigh*
gollark: Although Python does let you use unicode characters in identifiers.
gollark: In Haskell variable naming is easy, because there are *tons* of letters of the alphabet and you can use `'` too.
gollark: Linear programming isn't even NP-hard or whatever!

See also

References

  1. "Van Cleef Memorial Medal". American Geographical Society. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  2. "The Van Cleef Geographical Medal". American Geographical Society. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  3. "Van Cleef Memorial Medal Press Release". American Geographical Society. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
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