Research Analyst Beau Holladay was honored by UAlbany’s School of Criminal Justice with the Eliot Lumbard Award, which is given each year to the School’s most outstanding graduate student. First awarded in 1981, it was established through a gift by Eliot Lumbard, who as an advisor to then-Governor Nelson Rockefeller, “helped establish what became known as the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Albany” (https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/14/nyregion/eliot-h-lumbard-who-investigated-the-apalachin-mob-meeting-is-dead-at-88.html). The awardee is selected by a vote of the School’s faculty. Institute Director Rob Worden said, “The School’s faculty collectively affirmed what we at the Institute knew – that Beau is exemplary. We’re pleased to see his accomplishments recognized in this way.”