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September
27, 2001
- Olé,
olé for art
A quiet little gallery makes a splash with its latest
show of Mexican art. Dilys Winegrad, director/curator at the Arthur Ross
Gallery, has had plenty to show over the last 20 years.

Office
of University Communications home page
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STAFF Q&A/ An inventor
won this year's SEAS staff-recognition award.
Its just a
knack that you have
a different way of thinking.
BY TRINH TRAN
Kientz
with one of his creations, a cooling system that maintains cell
slides at a temperature of minus 10 degrees Celsius.
TERRY
KIENTZ
Position:
Electronics
engineer, School of Engineering and Applied Science
Length
of service:
4
years
Other
stuff:
The 35-year-old engineer once specialized in rehabilitation
equipment and enjoys carpentry.
Photo
by Candace diCarlo
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Looking at the devices strewn about Terry Kientzs office, it soon
becomes obvious why he won this years School of Engineering and
Applied Science (SEAS) staff recognition award.
For example, one invention Kientz built and designed, called a thermo-chamber,
is especially clever. Constructed for a research experiment at the Monell
Chemical Senses Center, the device resembles a box which contains a self-heating
knob. Patients put their hands through an opening on the side and grab
the knob, allowing researchers to sample blood at a controlled temperature.
Before this invention, heating pads were wrapped around the wrists of
patients. A once clumsy procedure is now suddenly made simple.
Luckily, Monell doesnt have a monopoly on Kientzs talent.
Since 1997, Kientz has designed and fabricated lab equipment for Penns
Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics (MEAM) and Systems Engineering
departments. Whether helping undergraduates with their senior projects
or fashioning equipment for faculty research projects, this electronics
engineer is a proven indispensable part of SEAS. On a recent visit to
his lab in the Towne Building, Kientz wowed us with all kinds of neat
gadgets.
Q. How did you get started at Penn?
A. I interviewed here [with R. Vijay Kumar, professor of Mechanical
Engineering and deputy dean for research] because the job was posted and
I thought this was a great fit. His [Kumars] interests are also
in equipment design for the disabled.
We kind of hit it off and thats how I came to Penn. Ive worked
half MEAM and half Systems [Engineering] since I started, which was in
October 1997.
Q. A researcher has a project and needs equipment to carry it out. What
do you do from there?
A. Most times Ill try to research to see if theres something
commercially available so we dont have to design it from scratch.
But most times when they come to me, there isnt anything out there
that they can use. Or if there is something, then we can modify it. We
can take a piece of equipment and tweak it to make it work the way they
want it.
Q. How different is it to work with students versus faculty?
A. Well, the faculty is nice because usually theyll say I need
this and they wont come back to you. You make what they want and
thats cool. With the students, I interact with them more because
they are trying to figure out what youre doing. Most of them dont
want to just give it to you and say here fix it for them. Its interesting
to work with undergrads because they always want to interact with you.
Q. Whats the best part of your job?
A. The best part is coming up with unique designs and to actually
get it to work. I think thats one of the reasons why I like this
job. Its not just sitting at a desk doing engineering. For example,
when I used to work at Hamilton Standard, the engineers would just sit
there and do the designsthey didnt do any fabrication. But
with this job, I get to do the design but I also get to do the fabrication
because then I can refine my design when Im doing my fabrication.
I kind of put the two together. I get to see it work at the end. Thats
really satisfying.
Q. Do you think this skill comes naturally?
A. My wife tells me its just a knack that you have. She says
that its a different way of thinking. I can usually just figure
out something just by looking at it. I dont know what it is, I cant
explain it. A lot of times I think of other mechanisms in the past that
Ive seen or Ive made or I think I can do it with this or with
that. So its like having a databank of information from the past.
Q. Have you ever built something for your own personal use?
A. No, but for rehab engineering I did a lot of work for people. For
example, I had this lady who had multiple sclerosis, and the only thing
she could do was blink her eyes. She was at the last stages of it. She
lived on this hill and her deck went out and she loved to watch her birds,
but she couldnt get up. I made this device that had a video camera
on it, kind of like a tripod. It connected to the television that was
in front of her bed and the camera was out her sliding door. I made it
so that she could control the pan and tilt of her camera with her eye.
There was a switch that adhered to her eye and she could blink her eyes
and it would trigger the switch. Q. Did you know you were being nominated for this award?
A. No, not at all, not until I won it. They said, Hey you won
it. And I was like, Wow, this is impressive. After I
did win, I got a lot of great feedback from students and staff, which
is very nice because you dont always get that feedback, and its
nice to know that youre appreciated by people and that you helped
them.
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