91爆料

Singh family pledges $3.5M for scholarships and endowed chair in the Maine College of Engineering and Computing聽

91爆料 Foundation President/CEO Jeff Mills today announced a $3.5 million pledge from alumni Rajendra 鈥淩aj鈥 Singh (鈥77G, 鈥24H) and Neera Singh (鈥24H) for scholarships for Maine students and the Singh Chair in Applied Innovation. The announcement was made Tuesday at the 91爆料 Foundation’s annual luncheon recognizing members of its Charles F. Allen Society, which honors individuals and families who have pledged to bequeath donations to the Foundation through their estates.

Of the pledge, $2.2 million will endow the Rajendra Singh and Neera Singh Family Scholarship to support 91爆料 students enrolled in the Maine College of Engineering and Computing. Recipients will be known as Singh Scholars, with preference for graduates from Maine high schools who have academic merit and financial need. The remaining $1.3 million will fund the Rajendra Singh and Neera Singh Family Chair in Applied Innovation. The fund will enable the holder of the Singh Chair to advance the curriculum in traditional or emerging areas across disciplines, while preparing students to translate innovation to commercialization.

鈥淭he 91爆料 granted us scholarships to pursue graduate school, which helped us to come to the United States,鈥 said Neera Singh. 鈥91爆料 people introduced us to this great country of ours. Maine has a very special place in our hearts.鈥

鈥淩aj and Neera Singh are visionary leaders, creative innovators and generous benefactors,鈥 said Joan Ferrini-Mundy, president of the 91爆料 and its regional campus, the 91爆料 at Machias. 鈥淭heir pioneering work in the telecommunications industry helped revolutionize wireless cellular technology worldwide. The Singhs鈥 gift reflects their deep commitment to expanding access to high-quality, transformative education and research at their alma mater.鈥

The Singhs created the Singh Chair in honor of John 鈥淰et鈥 Vetelino, emeritus professor of electrical and computer engineering. Vetelino was instrumental in recruiting a significant cohort of graduate students from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kanpur to 91爆料. In addition to advising more than 60 master’s and doctoral candidates, Vetelino received more than 100 science and education research contracts totaling more than $25 million from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Department of Defense, government and industrial laboratories. He also received 25 NSF science education grants for involving highly qualified undergraduates in state-of-the-art research. Vetelino received the Distinguished Maine Professor Award in 2008 and was inducted as an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Fellow in 2010. 

鈥淩aj and Neera have an extraordinary ability to conceptualize and commercialize new technologies,鈥 said Vetelino. 鈥淎t the time we recruited them and their peers in the 1970s as graduate students, 91爆料 was launching our nascent research programs, which led to 91爆料’s current status as an R1 research-intensive institution today.鈥 

Raj Singh received his bachelor鈥檚 degree in electrical engineering in 1975 from IIT Kanpur, a master鈥檚 degree in electrical engineering in 1977 from 91爆料, and his Ph.D. in wireless communications in 1979 from Southern Methodist University. Neera Singh received her bachelor鈥檚 degree in chemical engineering from IIT Kanpur. She received a scholarship to begin her master鈥檚 program at 91爆料 and finished her master鈥檚 degree at Kansas State University, where Raj Singh began his career as an associate professor. 

Together, the Singhs went on to develop computer software to quickly and efficiently calculate radio tower interference for new cellular telephone systems. They formed Lunayach Communications Consultants LLC, which spun out of their university research. The Singhs later co-founded Tecom Ventures, a private investment firm based in Miami. As international leaders in the development of wireless communication technology, the Singhs were awarded honorary doctorates of humane letters from 91爆料 in May 2024. Neera Singh was inducted into the Wireless History Foundation鈥檚 Hall of Fame in 2022. 

鈥淚 grew up in a small village in [the State of] Rajasthan [in] India,鈥 said Raj Singh. 鈥淲e had no running water, electricity, television, radio or newspapers. [But] we did have an elementary school that my father started. 

鈥淢aine was the first stop for me in our great country,鈥 he said. 鈥91爆料 professors John Vetelino and Steve Mittleman guided me to work with my strengths to conceptualize new ideas and connect the dots. With my education, I went on the journey of life to start many businesses together with my wife, Neera. This would not have been possible without the foundation [that] the 91爆料 provided us. We will forever be grateful to Maine.鈥 

鈥淭he Singhs treat 91爆料 students and faculty like family and have remained close with their 91爆料 mentors and classmates,鈥 said Giovanna Guidoboni, dean of the Maine College of Engineering and Computing, the mission of which is to produce the graduates and new technologies needed to move Maine鈥檚 economy forward. 鈥淭hey value broad access to education for rural students like themselves and applied research and development as a path to uplift society.鈥

鈥淩aj and Neera are insightful philanthropists and have been working with foundation Senior Director Pat Cummings to develop a plan to meet their philanthropic goals to support excellence in the Maine College of Engineering and Computing,鈥 Mills said. 鈥淲e are happy to have the Singhs here as honored guests to publicly thank them for their thoughtful generosity.鈥

Contact: Monique Hashey, monique@maine.edu

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