NEWS RELEASE

 

For Immediate Release

 

For more information contact:

Valerie Wylie

Paper Industry International Hall of Fame & Paper Discovery Center

(920) 380-7491

val@paperhall.org

 

 

Six Remarkable Industry Innovators Named to Paper Industry International Hall of Fame

 

Robert C. Buchanan, Professor Johan Erik Gullichsen, Dr. Michael J. Kocurek, James Kress, Bruce Purdy and the late Dr. W. Howard Rapson chosen as Paper Hall’s 11th Induction Class

 

APPLETON, WI—(August 4, 2005)—The Paper Industry International Hall of Fame’s membership roster will grow to 70 on Thursday, October 13th with the induction of six more remarkable paper industry innovators who have been chosen as the 11th annual induction class.  Unique in 2005, two of the six are the sons of past Hall of Fame inductees.

Robert C. Buchanan, Professor Johan Erik Gullichsen, Dr. Michael J. Kocurek, James Kress, Bruce Purdy and the late Dr. W. Howard Rapson will join the 64 previous members of the Paper Hall during induction ceremonies at the Radisson Paper Valley Hotel in Appleton, Wisconsin, U.S.A.  Leading paper industry executive Peter H. Vogel, Jr. will deliver the keynote presentation for the 11th induction ceremony.  Vogel is chief executive officer, president, and a member of the board of directors of  NewPage™ Corporation, formerly part of MeadWestvaco Corporation.

The Paper Industry International Hall of Fame recognizes individuals who pioneered and /or helped the world’s paper and allied industries to flourish.

Two from this year’s class of inductees are being recognized for technology; one for leadership; one for academic; one in the categories of R&D, entrepreneur and academic; and one for leadership and entrepreneur.

The 2005 inductees are:  (more detailed information follows): 

              •  Robert C. Buchanan, non-executive chairman, Fox River Paper Co., U.S.A.; 

             •  Professor Johan Erik Gullichsen, president & owner, Arhippainen, Gullichsen & Company, Finland;      

             •  Dr. Michael J. Kocurek, professor and department head, Department    of Wood & Paper Science, North Carolina State University, U.S.A.;

             •  James Kress, chairman, Green Bay Packaging Inc., U.S.A.;

             •  Bruce Purdy, vice-president and director (retired) Appleton Wire Works, Albany International Corporation, U.S.A.;

             •  Dr. W. Howard Rapson, professor of chemical engineering (deceased), University of Toronto, Canada.

 The 11th annual ceremony will begin with a reception at 5 p.m. on Thursday, October 13th, followed by dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the ceremony at 8 p.m., all at the Radisson Paper Valley Hotel in downtown Appleton.  Following the ceremony, honorees and their guests are invited to enjoy dessert at the Paper Discovery Center, the new paper-related interactive science and technology museum, located along the banks of the Fox River at 425 W. Water Street in Appleton.  The Center is also home to the Paper Industry International Hall of Fame.  

More information about the 11th annual induction ceremony is available through the Paper Industry International Hall of Fame office by calling:  (920) 380-7491.

 

 

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2005 Inductees - Paper Industry International Hall of Fame



Robert C. Buchanan

Non-Executive Chairman 

Fox River Paper Company

Appleton, Wisconsin, U.S.A.


Bob Buchanan was born May 13, 1940, in Appleton, Wisconsin.  A 1962 graduate of Lawrence College of Appleton, he also attended Dartmouth College earning his master of business administration in 1967.  


Mr. Buchanan joined Fox River Paper Co. as assistant to the president in 1967.  Gaining experience in the paper industry as he moved from mill superintendent to company president in 1974, he immersed himself in all aspects of the business, guiding marketing and sales strategies and running the mill in Appleton.


Fox River Paper’s position as a manufacturer of premium paper products was enhanced through Mr. Buchanan’s approach to internal expansion and product positioning.  Beginning in 1989 he undertook a program of investment in technology and the purchase of existing mills.  Fox River Paper has grown from $6 million in revenue to more than $200 million and is among the market leaders in the premium writing, text, and cover papers market.


Mr. Buchanan’s management style and his focus on the importance of employer/employee relations have been significant factors in the growth of Fox River Paper. 

In its October, 2000 issue of Papermaker, PIMA (Paper Industry Management Association) named Buchanan Executive of the Year.  PIMA observed that a small paper company can prosper in a land of ever-consolidating giants.


Mr. Buchanan and his wife of 44 years, Bonnie, have two sons, Gus and Philip, and one daughter, Emily.






Professor Johan Erik Gullichsen, Doctor h.c. (Honorary Doctor)

President & Owner

Arhippainen, Gullichsen & Company

Hirsjärvi, Somero, Finland


Johan Gullichsen was born on June 28, 1936, in Pihlava, Finland.  He received a master of science degree in 1962.  In 1988, he was awarded a Doctor h.c. in Technology (Honorary Doctor) from Åbo Akademi University.


Professor Gullichsen started his career as a research assistant at the Finnish Pulp and Paper Research Institute from 1962-1964.  He then became a project engineer at Ekono until 1970, at which time he co-founded Arhippainen, Gullichsen & Co., serving as president. In 1989 he was appointed professor, Pulping Technology, Helsinki University of Technology, serving until the end of 1999.  He also served as department head of Forest Products Technology from 1990-1992 and dean of the faculty of Process Engineering and Material Science, 1993-1996.


Professor Gullichsen is an innovator in the processing of pulp fiber suspensions at medium consistency.  Medium consistency processing allows a three-fold reduction in water usage. This technology, created and developed by him, provides significant benefits to pulp quality, reduces environmental impact, and thereby, improves the profitability in pulp and paper production. It results in reductions in chemical usage, fiber losses, effluent and energy.  It has been especially valuable in the processing of recycled waste paper. 


He is the recipient of more than 60 patents and has over 180 publications around the world.  In addition, he currently holds chairmanships with the Ahlstrom Corporation, the Walter Ahlstrom Foundation, the Runar Bäckströom Foundation and the Viapori Warf Foundation.


Professor Gullichsen and his wife Anna have two daughters, Maria Gullichsen and Maire Gullichsen-Ehrnrooth, and a son, Johan Gullichsen.






Michael J. Kocurek, Ph.D.

Professor and Department Head, Department of Wood and Paper Science

North Carolina State University

Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.A.


Dr. Michael Kocurek was born on January 6, 1943, in New York City.  He was educated at the State University of New York and received his doctorate degree in Paper Science and Engineering in 1970. He is one of the world’s most recognized educators in pulp and paper.


In 1970, Dr. Kocurek led the creation of a new academic program oriented to pulp and paper processes at the University of Wisconsin at Stevens Point.  The Department of Paper Science and Engineering at the UW-Stevens Point rapidly gained national recognition.                                        


In 1986, Dr. Kocurek became executive director of the Herty Foundation in Savannah, Georgia.  During Dr. Kocurek’s ten years with this applied research and development foundation, he brought about significant expansions and improvements.

 

Since 1997, Dr. Kocurek has been department head of the pulp and paper science program at North Carolina State University. Dr. Kocurek has refortified the academic program and the research activities within the Department of Wood and Paper Science.


Since 1970, Dr. Kocurek has taught over 5,000 paper industry employees from more than 50 corporations in regional and in-mill short courses.  He is the editor and/or author of numerous other written and video paper industry publications.


Dr. Kocurek and his wife, Margaret Carol Hatton, have daughters, Monica and Anne, and one son, Michael, Jr.






James F. Kress 

Chairman 

Green Bay Packaging Inc. 

Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA


James Kress was born on June 11, 1929, in Green Bay, Wisconsin.  He received his bachelor degree in business administration from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1951.


In 1958 Mr. Kress assumed leadership of operations for Green Bay Packaging.  He became president and director in 1963, taking over the company founded by his father, George F. Kress.  He then became chairman in 1995.   During his 54-year tenure, Green Bay Packaging grew from 640 employees and four divisions to 2,632 employees and 24 divisions.  Today he continues as chairman of the board of the largest privately-held corrugated manufacturer in the United States.


During Mr. Kress’ tenure, he believed that the company’s products could be produced in a more ecologically-responsible manner.  The Green Bay Mill closed its pulp mill in 1991 and began production of linerboard and corrugated medium from 100% recycled fiber.  The conversion allowed the company to recycle more than 400,000 tons of wastepaper annually.  Numerous other companies have followed Green Bay Packaging’s lead in the production of linerboard made with wastepaper.

 

The company’s Green Bay Mill permanently converted to a closed water system in 1992, making it one of the first mills in the world to have such a system.


James Kress is married to Julie-Anne Kress.  He has four children (William, John, Meg Kress Grunwald, and Ginny Kress) and five step-children (Michael Van Laanen, Allain Van Laanen, Jennifer Christie, Susan Reinfeldt, and Mary Smith).






Bruce Barton Purdy

Vice President (retired) 

Appleton Wire Works Director (retired)

Albany International Corporation Incline Village, Nevada, U.S.A.


Bruce Purdy was born November 2, 1917, in Appleton, Wisconsin.  He attended Appleton public schools and Northwestern Military Academy.  He graduated in 1940 from the University of Michigan with a degree in mechanical/industrial engineering.  He enrolled for several years in the Harvard Business School before leaving to join Douglas Aircraft to help with the World War II effort.


In 1944 Mr. Purdy joined Appleton Wire Works.  He retired in 1973, but remained active in the company as a director of Albany International Corporation (the result of a merger of Appleton Wire Works with Albany Felt Company) until 1990. 


In 1944, Mr. Purdy transformed the wire weaving technology of the early 1900s for papermachine clothing with the revolutionary development of an automated wire looming operation.  Prior to the development of the automated loom, it took four years of training as an apprentice to become a weaver.  On the first official day running the automated loom at Appleton Wire Works, May Tournow, the forelady of the winding department, successfully ran the largest loom in the plant, with the most expensive wire and with no problem in that first run.  She had never run a loom before.

 

Purdy was instrumental in creating significant other paper machine clothing manufacturing and performance improvements. 


He and his wife, Barbara, have five children, ten grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.






W. Howard Rapson, Ph.D.

Professor of Chemical Engineering (deceased)

University of Toronto

Toronto, Ontario, Canada


W. Howard Rapson was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada on Sept 15, 1912.


His studies at the University of Toronto Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry earned him a doctorate degree in applied science in 1941.


Dr. Rapson was a research chemist at Canadian International Paper Company prior to joining the University of Toronto as a professor of chemical engineering in 1953.  He became a professor emeritus in 1981 until his retirement in 1997.


Dr. Rapson can be considered to be the father of chlorine dioxide bleaching, one of the major developments in the history of the pulp and paper industry.  The ability of chlorine dioxide to successfully bleach kraft pulp to high brightness without sacrificing strength was a significant advancement.  It led to the wide-spread use of elemental chlorine free (ECF) bleaching sequences that are much friendlier to the environment. This advancement also broadened the use of kraft pulp in making white papers.


His leadership in the field of bleaching is illustrated by the fact that he was editor of the industrial textbook of the day, The Bleaching of Pulp (1963).  He also has over 117 publications.


Dr. Rapson died on March 16, 1997.  He and his wife, Mary Campbell Rapson, also deceased, had four children: three daughters (Margaret, Lorna, and Linda) and a son William, Jr.