ASIS chapters and leaders honored.At January's Volunteer Leadership Conference in Arlington, Virginia, the I. B. Hale Chapter of the Year and other ASIS International ASIS International (each letter pronounced separately), previously known as American Society for Industrial Security (ASIS) is an international organization for security professionals. Founded in 1955, it has more than 34,000 members in 204 chapters worldwide. yearly awards of achievement and merit were presented by Chairman of the ASIS 1. ASIS - Application Software Installation Server. 2. (language) ASIS - Ada Semantic Interface Specification. Board of Directors Shirley Pierini, CPP cpp - C preprocessor. . I. B. Hale. The legacy of I. B. Hale, past president and chairman of the ASIS Board of Directors, is memorialized each year by the award to an ASIS chapter that has made an outstanding contribution to the Society and its members. Nominations for the award are vetted and forwarded to the Awards Committee by the ASIS regional vice presidents. Among the rigorous judging criteria are efforts by the chapter to improve the image or standing of the Society and the overall security profession, the number and quality of educational programs sponsored by the chapter in a given year, the financial stability of the chapter, the quality of programming and attendance at chapter meetings, and the status of chapter membership. Chapters that compete for the I. B. Hale Award are judged against chapters of similar size. The following chapters received the 2004 I. B. Hale Award: Group I (chapters with 34 or fewer members) -- No award given Group II (chapters with 35 to 99 members) -- Iowa Group III In the periodic table Group III covered what are now called
Group IV (chapters with 200 to 299 members) -- Florida West Coast; Honorable Mention--St. Louis Group V (chapters with 300 to 499 members) -- St. Louis; Honorable Mention--Phoenix Group VI (chapters with 500 or more members) -- San Francisco Bay San Francisco Bay, 50 mi (80 km) long and from 3 to 13 mi (4.8–21 km) wide, W Calif.; entered through the Golden Gate, a strait between two peninsulas. Newsletters. Chapter newsletters provide meaningful information to members of ASIS chapters. Many display a high level of professionalism in design, editorial content, and graphics. The best productions are honored each year with the Chapter Newsletter of the Year Award. Chapters compete against those of similar size. The 2004 Chapter Newsletter of the Year Award winners are as follows: Group I -- No award given Group II -- Iowa; Honorable Mention--Santa Barbara Group III -- Louisville; Honorable Mention--New Mexico Group IV -- Kansas City Kansas City, two adjacent cities of the same name, one (1990 pop. 149,767), seat of Wyandotte co., NE Kansas (inc. 1859), the other (1990 pop. 435,146), Clay, Jackson, and Platte counties, NW Mo. (inc. 1850). Group V -- St. Louis Group VI -- National Capital Web sites. Web sites play an increasing role in helping ASIS Chapters to inform members, promote events, and archive reference and historic material. The winners of the 2004 Chapter Web site of the Year Awards are: Group I -- Panama Group II -- Tulsa; Honorable Mentions -- Toledo and North Mexico Group III -- Omaha; Honorable Mentions--Canadian Pacific and Central Illinois Group IV -- Greater Orlando Greater Orlando, alternatively known as the Orlando Area or Metro Orlando, is third most populated metropolitan region in the state of Florida, and the 27th-largest metro area in the United States. ; Honorable Mention--Greater Kansas City Group VI -- Columbus; Honorable Mention--Long Island Group VI -- San Francisco Bay; Honorable mention--Houston Duty rewarded. The ASIS Council Chair of the Year Award recognizes chairpersons who perform their volunteer leadership positions with exceptional dedication and excellence. ASIS also honors senior regional vice presidents (SRVPs) and regional vice presidents (RVPs) who have made contributions of the highest caliber. The 2004 Council Chair of the Year Award was given to Larry Berenson, CPP, of the ASIS Crisis Management Council; Dana Adams, CPP, of the ASIS Private Security Services Security services are state institutions for the provision of intelligence, primarily of a strategic nature, but also including protective security intelligence. Examples include the Security Service (MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) in the United Kingdom, and the Council; Leslie Cole, CPP, ASIS Crime/Loss Prevention Council; James Shamess, CPP, ASIS Military Liaison Council; and Ray Musser, CPP, of the ASIS Military Liaison Council. The 2004 SRVP SRVP Senior Vice President SRVP Special Reconnaissance Vehicle Program of the Year award was given to Paul Allena, CPP, and Stephen Van Zwieten, CPP. The 2004 ASIS RVP (RendezVous Protocol) A protocol used to broadcast messages within a peer group. Part of the JXTA open source peer-to-peer computing initiative, RVP clients send requests to rendezvous peers, which grants them a connection lease. of the Year Award was given to Bryn Palena and Ronald Sathre, CPP. The Society wishes not only to congratulate all of the 2004 winners, but also to thank all submitters. ASIS also wishes to offer encouragement and support to the competitors for the 2005 awards. |
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