43rd Annual | Distinguished Engineer Awards Luncheon | April 3, 2009 Texas Tech University | Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering Distinguished Engineer Award Program Information The measure of a college’s distinction and influence depends greatly upon the achievement of its alumni and the positions they earn for themselves in their respective communities and fields of endeavor. To recognize some of the most outstanding alumni of Texas Tech University, the Whitacre College of Engineering has established the Distinguished Engineer Award. This year’s awards mark the 43rd anniversary of the program, initiated by Dean John R. Bradford in the 1966-67 academic year Purpose and Philosophy The purpose of the program is to recognize and honor engineering alumni who have made significant contributions to society and whose accomplishments and careers have brought credit to the Whitacre College of Engineering of Texas Tech University and to the engineering profession as a whole. This program does more than honor these former students. It spotlights the accomplishments of the Whitacre College of Engineering of Texas Tech, and thereby increases the pride of alumni, students, faculty, and staff. It likewise presents to the people of Texas and the nation tangible evidence of the effectiveness of the progress of engineering at Texas Tech. In establishing this program, it was recognized that these awards were to be given for outstanding achievement both inside as well as outside the profession and that no compromises diminishing the significance of the awards would be made. To be eligible for the Distinguished Engineer Award, an individual must: • Be distinguished in their profession, life work, or other worthy endeavors, and have received recognition from contemporaries. • Be a person of such integrity, stature, and demonstrated ability that the faculty, staff, students, and alumni will take pride in and be inspired by their recognition. • Have demonstrated a continuing interest in areas outside the field of engineering such as to bring honor and prestige to the profession. • Have received a degree from the Whitacre College of Engineering at Texas Tech University. 2009 Distinguished Engineer Awards Luncheon Frazier Alumni Pavilion | April 3, 2009 |11:30 a.m. Welcome and Introduction of Guests Will Hagood '69 Senior Vice President, HDR Engineering, Inc. 2007 Distinguished Engineer Invocation Allen Howard '78 CEO and President, NuTech Energy Alliance Presentation of 2009 Distinguished Engineers Blake W. Augsburger '87, '89 Introduction by Jason Durbin Senior, Electrical Engineering Chi-Ming Chang, Ph.D. '83, '86 Introduction by Eren Palmer Senior, Chemical Engineering James A. Edmiston '82 Introduction by Nikki Davis Senior, Petroleum Engineering Shelby Johnson '86 Introduction by Joseph Wilson Senior, Civil Engineering and Math Minor J. G. “Greg” Soules, P.E. '79 Introduction by Richard Greyson Geer Senior, Civil Engineering and Architecture Engineering Presentation of Awards Robert Smith, Ph.D. Provost and Senior Vice President, Texas Tech University Pamela A. Eibeck, Ph.D., P.E. Dean, Whitacre College of Engineering Closing Remarks Pamela A. Eibeck, Ph.D., P.E. Blake W. Augsburger Distinguished Engineer – 2009 B.S., M.S., Electrical Engineering, Texas Tech University, 1987, 1989 President and CEO, Harman Professional Group President, Harman International Industries, Inc., North America Wife: Children: Laura Philip, Daniel, and Maddie Blake W. Augsburger is the President and CEO of the Harman Professional Group and the President of Harman International Industries, Inc. in North America. Harman International is a Fortune 500 company that designs and manufactures branded audio and infotainment products and systems for the automotive, consumer, and professional customer. He manages business units in North America, Canada, Mexico, UK, Switzerland, and Austria. Blake was born in Beaumont, Texas. He attended Westfield High School in Houston and came to Texas Tech in 1982 because several friends were attending. Majoring in mechanical engineering, then business, he worked in a refinery for Tenneco Oil the summer following his freshman year and enjoyed the technical aspects of the opportunity. The experiences at Tenneco encouraged him to return to engineering and choose electrical engineering during his sophomore year. Taking a job in the laboratory of the Center for Pulsed Power and Power Electronics, he began to learn and understand the applications. For Blake, electrical engineering was more than challenging, but he enjoyed the learning process. While working in the laboratory he met many of his life-long friends and school partners that helped him through the degree program like Brett Smith, Randy Copper, and Richard Ness. Blake stayed at Texas Tech after completing a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering in 1987, studying pulsed power under Dr. Kristiansen, and earning a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering in 1989. The thesis for his master’s degree was entitled “The Design of a High Power Electron Beam Generator.” The project involved the assembly of a 1MV Marx Generator to drive a virtual cathode oscillator developed by then-Ph.D. candidate Steve Calico. The principles learned for the project in electric fields and pulsed power are applicable to his current business and in sound acoustics. His experience in grounding and shielding for his thesis has also proven to be very useful in understanding the installation of sound systems for live music and large installed venues such as sports stadiums. Following the completion of his master’s degree, Blake worked at Maxwell Laboratories and Hubbell. He worked as a design engineer for a short time and moved quickly into program management and then onto executive management. He was vice president and general manager of High Voltage Test Business, a division of Hubbell Inc., an international manufacturer of electrical and electronic components for industrial, commercial, and utility industries. Blake worked for Hubbell from 1994 until 2001. During this time, he served in several capacities, including the business unit vice president of Hipotronics. From 2001-2006, Blake was the president and CEO of Crown International, a division of the Harman Professional Group, specializing in audio amplifiers. At Harmon, his engineering background plays a key role in product and technology positioning. Blake is married to Laura, they have three children; Philip, Daniel, and Maddie. The Augsburgers live in Mishawaka, Indiana. It is a privilege and a pleasure for Texas Tech University’s Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering to select this outstanding alumnus for honor and recognition. Blake W. Augsburger is declared a DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER. Chi-Ming Chang, Ph.D. Distinguished Engineer – 2009 M.S., Ph.D., Industrial Engineering, Texas Tech University, 1983, 1986 President Ardentec Corporation Wife: Children: Michelle Oliver, Chris Dr. Chi-Ming Chang is co-founder of and President of Ardentec Corporation, a semiconductor testing company headquartered in Taiwan and founded in 1999. Chi-Ming earned a Ph.D. from the Department of Industrial Engineering at Texas Tech University in 1986. He received a Master of Science in Industrial Engineering at Texas Tech in 1983 and a Bachelor of Science from Tunghai University in 1980. While a graduate student at Texas Tech, he served as a part time instructor for the department. From 1986 to 1990, he was an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering at Louisiana Tech University. In 1990, Chi-Ming joined the Electronics Research and Service Organization at the Industrial Technology Research Institute in Taiwan. He was the Deputy Director of Semiconductor Manufacturing for the Engineering Division and was responsible for the operations management of a 4-inch R&D wafer fab from 1990 to 1993, and Taiwan’s first pilot 8-inch wafer fab from 1993 to1994. He accepted a position with Vanguard International Semiconductor Corporation in 1994 as the Division Director of Product Manufacturing Engineering. In this role, he was responsible for DRAM and SRAM backend manufacturing and product engineering. In 1996, he was transferred to Division Director of Operations Planning and Control and was responsible for production planning and supply chain management. In 1999, Chi-Ming helped co-found Ardentec Corporation, and from 1999-2001, he served as Vice President of Operations. In this capacity, he was responsible for team organization, operation system establishment, and delivery performance. He became Vice President of Operations and Sales in 2001 and was in charge of the alignment of operation resources with target customers. In 2003, he was promoted to senior Vice President of Sales, Marketing, and IT in charge of business development in new market segments. Chi-Ming was appointed to Executive Vice President in 2005, managing the Finance, Information Technology, and Human Resource groups. The company achieved an average of 19% ROE for the three-year period from 2005 to 2007. In 2006, Chi-Ming was named as Chairman of Ardentec Singapore Pte. Ltd. – a 100% owned subsidiary company of Ardentec Corporation, which had consolidated revenue of $116 million and post tax profit of $30 million in 2007. He was later appointed as President of Ardentec Corporation in June 2008. In this capacity, he is responsible for overall corporate operations and business profit and loss. Chi-Ming has served professionally as a Reviewer/Auditor for Industrial Engineering, ABET-Taiwan Higher Education Foundation; Board Member of the Chinese Institute of Industrial Engineers-Taiwan; Grant Reviewer, Industrial Engineering Discipline, National Science Council, Taiwan; and Co-Chair of the Technical Program, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Workshops. Chi-Ming resides in Taiwan with his wife, Michelle, and two sons, Oliver and Chris, and enjoys mountain hiking, travel, and reading. It is a privilege and a pleasure for Texas Tech University’s Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering to select this outstanding alumnus for honor and recognition. Dr. Chi-Ming Chang is declared a DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER. James A. Edmiston Distinguished Engineer – 2009 B.S., Petroleum Engineering, Texas Tech University, 1982 President and CEO Harvest Natural Resources Wife: Children: Rebecca Katie, Madalene James A. Edmiston is the President and Chief Executive Officer of Harvest Natural Resources, an international exploration and production company with operations and assets in Venezuela, Indonesia, Gabon, China and the United States. James was born and raised in San Angelo, Texas graduating from San Angelo Central High School in 1977. James began “kicking around the oilfield” at an early age accompanying his father who dealt in used oilfield tubulars. After high school graduation, he was introduced to the “wrong end of rod wrenches” working on a pulling unit for Pool Company. After a year at Baylor University contemplating his future life as a lawyer, he came to his senses and back to the oilfield when he transferred to Texas Tech to study Petroleum Engineering. During his summers at Texas Tech, he worked as a roughneck and ultimately as a derrickman for Gene Sledge Drilling and Santa Fe Drilling. He graduated from Texas Tech with a Bachelor of Science in Petroleum Engineering in May of 1982 with very little distinction but a lot of dreams. Before he joined Harvest in September of 2004, James was with Conoco and ConocoPhillips for 22 years in various management positions including President of Dubai Petroleum Company (2002-2004), a ConocoPhillips affiliate company in the United Arab Emirates and General Manager of Petrozuata, C.A., in Puerto La Cruz, Venezuela (1999-2001). Petrozuata was the first fully integrated exploitation of Venezuela’s 8.5 degree API gravity bitumen resources in the Orinoco Belt with “cold production”. James was Conoco’s top executive on the $4.5 billion dollar project throughout construction and full commissioning leading a workforce in excess of 6,000 at peak. The project was completed on time producing 120,000 barrels of extra heavy crude oil and converting it to 104,000 barrels per day of 20-degree syncrude, petroleum coke, and sulfur. Before his time in Venezuela, James also served as Vice President and General Manager of Conoco Russia and then as Asset Manager of Conoco’s South Texas Lobo Trend gas operations, one of the earliest large-scale gas resource plays to use a manufacturing model for operations. James has been a member of the Society of Petroleum Engineers since 1978. In mid-career, he went back to school and received a Master of Business Administration from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University. He serves on the Industry Advisory Board of the Bob L. Herd Department of Petroleum Engineering at Texas Tech, and he serves on the Advisory Board of the M.B.A. Program at the Mays College of Business at Texas A&M University. James has been married to Rebecca Wolking Edmiston for 17 years and they have two daughters; Katie and Madalene. The Edmiston family lives on a small ranch near Cat Springs, Texas, which is 50 miles west of Houston. It is a privilege and a pleasure for Texas Tech University’s Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering to select this outstanding alumnus for honor and recognition. James A. Edmiston is declared a DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER. Shelby Johnson Distinguished Engineer – 2009 B.S., Construction Engineering Technology, Texas Tech University, 1986 President Theodore Williams Construction Company, Inc. Husband: Children: Rich Richard, Garrett, Brenden Shelby Johnson is owner and president of Theodore Williams Construction Company, Inc., (TWCC), a high quality client-centered New York City construction firm that specializes in corporate interiors Shelby was raised in Staten Island, New York and other than the three-years she attended Texas Tech University, Shelby has made her life in the Northeast. It was the fall semester of 1983 when Shelby walked into her first engineering class at Texas Tech University. Her response to that day sums up her successful philosophy in life. “My first reaction was one of surprise,” noted Shelby. “I was the only woman in the classroom. Back then, I had no idea that women didn’t do this type of work.” She earned a Bachelor of Science in Construction Engineering Technology from Texas Tech in 1986. Fast forward almost 30 years and that pioneering spirit continues to propel Shelby to new heights. Not only is Shelby one of the only women to own and preside over a highly successful construction company in New York City, she is one of only a handful of leading women to do so across the nation. Shelby was hired as a project manager for TWCC in 1991, where she established and maintained construction management contracts for a number of well-known clients like Bristol-Myers Squibb and Scudder Kemper Investments. She also managed projects, with values of more than $10 million, from start to finish. As she continued to distinguish herself at TWCC, she was promoted to vice president in 1995, to senior vice president in 1998, and to president in 2001. Under Shelby’s leadership, Williams became a certified Women’s Business Enterprise in 2004 and continues that distinction to this day. The annual revenues for TWCC consistently exceed $12 million, with some years approaching $25 million. The company’s clients include such well known Fortune 500 companies as Smith Barney, Estee Lauder, Citigroup Global, and Reuters. In 2002, the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce awarded TWCC their Annual Building Award for Exterior, Interior, Craftsmanship and Interior Design. An active volunteer, Shelby partnered with Harlem Children’s Zone to give members of the community a chance to explore opportunities in the construction field. When not working, Shelby supports the Staten Island Horseman’s Association. She has been an avid rider since her formative years and enjoys that hobby to this day. Shelby implemented a program for children with special needs to participate in the Island-wide Championship horse shows at no cost to their family. She also arranged for year-end recognition and trophies to be awarded to the young riders. Shelby has been married to her husband, Rich Johnson for 11 years. Rich is the Senior Vice President in charge of Estimating at TWCC and is an Account Executive on major projects. Shelby has three sons—Richard, Brenden, and Garrett. It is a privilege and a pleasure for Texas Tech University’s Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering to select this outstanding alumnus for honor and recognition. Shelby Johnson is declared a DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER. J.G. “Greg” Soules, P.E. Distinguished Engineer – 2009 B.S., M.S., Civil Engineering, Texas Tech University, 1979, 2009 Principal Civil/Structural Engineer Chicago Bridge & Iron Company Wife: Children: Karen Christine, Michael J.G. “Greg” Soules is a Principal Civil/Structural Engineer for the Chicago Bridge and Iron Company (CB&I) in The Woodlands, Texas, a worldwide engineering and construction company. Greg was born in Norfolk, Virginia in 1957 eventually moving to Hamilton, Texas where he graduated from high school in 1975. He received a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Texas Tech in 1979, a Master of Business Administration from the University of Houston in 1991, and will receive a Master of Science in Civil Engineering from Texas Tech in May 2009. While at Texas Tech for his undergraduate degree, Greg became involved in campus life by becoming a member of the “Goin’ Band from Raiderland” and a member of the national service fraternity, Alpha Phi Omega. It was in Alpha Phi Omega where he was introduced to his wife, Karen Grisham. After graduating from Texas Tech University and spending a short time employed by the Texas Department of Transportation, Greg was hired as an engineer trainee in 1980 by CB&I. As an engineer trainee, Greg progressed through the CB&I training program serving in various assignments in engineering, manufacturing, and as part of construction crews in various refineries and chemical plants in Texas. After completing his field assignments, Greg was assigned to CB&I’s corporate headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois in 1981. While in Oak Brook, Greg gained extensive experience in the design of the plate structures designed and constructed by CB&I. He designed these structures for clients and locations all across the globe. In 1983, Greg received the first of his 20 professional engineering licenses. In 1986, Greg was assigned to CB&I’s Houston Engineering Office where he progressed from Senior Design Engineer, to Engineering Team Leader, to Design Engineering Manager, and finally to Principal Civil/Structural Engineer. In these roles, Greg acted as the Engineer of Record for over 240 projects within the United States and was responsible for the engineering of numerous projects in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Canada, and the Caribbean. During this time, CB&I sponsored Greg’s membership on the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 7 Committee, which produces the standard “Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures.” Service on the ASCE 7 Committee eventually led Greg to become highly involved in the development of earthquake design provisions for industrial structures. Greg led the introduction of earthquake design provisions for industrial structures into the 2002 Edition of ASCE 7. Greg is currently the chair of three committees responsible for defining the earthquake design provisions and design procedures for industrial structures and is a nationally recognized expert in the seismic design of industrial structures. Having earned the rank of Eagle Scout, Greg currently serves in several adult leadership positions within the Boy Scouts of America. His service to the Boy Scouts has been recognized recently by being awarded the District Award of Merit and elected a Vigil Honor member in the Order of the Arrow. Greg recently completed six years as a member of the Advisory Council of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Texas Tech and is a past chair of the Advisory Council. Greg is also a member and past chair of the Texas Tech Civil Engineering Academy. Greg and his wife, Karen, reside in Spring, Texas with their two children: Christine and Michael. It is a privilege and a pleasure for Texas Tech University’s Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering to select this outstanding alumnus for honor and recognition. J.G. “Greg” Soules is declared a DISTINGUISHED ENGINEER. The Edward E. Whitacre Jr. College of Engineering Texas Tech University The Whitacre College of Engineering is one of the nation’s largest engineering colleges and is ranked as one of the top 100 undergraduate programs by U.S. News & World Report. The college is one of only 16 colleges nationally that offer petroleum engineering degrees. Graduates of the Whitacre College of Engineering, with their exceptional skills, combined with a strong work ethic, are heavily recruited by national and international organizations. Two research centers within the college have international acclaim: the Wind Science and Engineering Research Center and the Center for Pulsed Power and Power Electronics. The college also features thriving, nationally renowned research programs in nanophotonics, medical image processing, semiconductor materials, water remediation, energetic materials, polymer materials, and intelligent software systems. In step with national energy needs and programs, researchers in the college are studying ways of improving production, utilization, distribution, and storage of energy produced by both conventional fossil-based fuels as well as alternative energy sources. These research areas include petroleum engineering, biomass and biofuels, wind power generation and storage, optoelectronics, and photovoltaic capture devices. Research and academic programs are being built in bioengineering, with emphases in biomolecular engineering, tissue engineering, human factors, and medical image analysis. Through partnerships with the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center and other colleges on our campus, the college is able to apply this expertise to meet the technical needs for improved health care and for advancements in biotechnology. With recent gifts of $25 million from AT&T and friends of Edward E. Whitacre Jr. and $15 million from petroleum engineering alumnus Bob L. Herd, the college has a strong fiscal foundation and is building an even stronger future. Distinguished Engineers 2008 Duffer B. Crawford Thomas J. Zachman 1997 Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering 1941 1974 Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1971 1970 1969 1950 Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering 1983 1965 1981 Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Engineering Technology 1976 1967 1961 1975 Civil Engineering Industrial Engineering Petroleum Engineering Electrical Engineering Business Administration 1968 1978 1976 1978 1982 2007 David H. Barr G. Kemble “Kem” Bennett William B. Hagood Harold R. Inman 2006 Ajay M. Marathe Jerry L. Morgensen Travis A. Simpson 2005 J. Gregory Boyd Francisco “Frank” A. Figueroa Gerald C. Murff Alvin Dale Williams 2003 Roy A. Battles William M. Marcy Fredrick S. Yeatts Mechanical Engineering 1969 Electrical Engineering 1964,1966 Interdisciplinary Engineering 1972 Electrical Engineering 1970 2002 Douglas E. Barnhart Joseph C. Martz Jerry S. Rawls Richard D. Smith Cloyce A. Talbott Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Industrial Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1969 1986 1967 1966 1958 Electrical Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1978 1960 Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering 1967 1948 1970 1972 2001 Ming Chiang Enoch L. Dawkins 2000 Robert C. “Bob” Banasik Robert R. Click W. R. “Rick” Hamm Jimmy D. Williams 1999 Dale Courtney Julie Spicer England Dain M. Hancock Raymond C. Vaughn Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Engineering Technology Mechanical Engineering 1971 1979 1966 1973 1976 1998 William “Bill” Hervey David L. Hirschfeld Raymond B. Ince Thomas S. Moore Steven W. Nance Garth Nash Bill M. Sanderson David E. Sharbutt Charles F. Winder Woodrow W. Hitchcock Rick D. Husband Herbert A. Mang Jeff D. Morris Harry L. Tredennick, III Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering 1969 1980 1974 1974 1970 Electrical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering 1969 1964 1970 1974 1964 Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Mechanical Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1971 1964 1957 1970 1964 Industrial Engineering Petroleum Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering 1969, 1970 1958 1974 1968 1939 1979 1996 Keh-Shew Lu James H. Posey Wolfgang Vogel Margaret R. Walker C. Clayton Yeager 1995 William G. Burnett Patrick R. Gallagher Bob L. Herd Larry D. McVay David G. Wight 1994 2004 Joseph J. Beal Philip L. Frederickson Louis D. Jones Chung-Shing “C.S.” Lee Textile Engineering Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering 1949 1962 1948 1964,1965 1978 1963 1960 1971 1979 Raymond E. Goff William R. “Bob” Herrin, Jr. Karen S. Hogg Mary Jo Poindexter Louis “Jack” Powers Arati Prabhakar 1993 Charles A. Bassett, II Jack L. Clem L. D. “Buddy” Sipes, Jr. J. Rex Vardeman Gary B. Wood Electrical Engineering 1960 Mechanical Engineering 1975 Petroleum Engineering 1957 Civil Engineering 1961 Electrical Engineering 1973,1975,1977 1992 Jack L. Byrd R. D. Cash F. Max Merrell James G. Renfro Petroleum Engineering Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering 1956 1966 1957 1959 1991 Arnold Maeker E. Dave Newman Albert A. “Pete” Smith John Michael Stinson Bill G. W. Yee Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering 1946 1964 1966 1966 1961, 1964 Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering 1949 1971 1962 1964 1957 Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Civil Engineering Industrial Engineering 1947 1959 1931 1974 1962 1990 William A. Blackwell R. David Damron Robert E. Dragoo Bill D. Helton Allen P. Penton 1989 Chester A. Green Jerry D. Holmes Charles E. Houston Joseph E. Minor L. Homer Moeller 1988 Melvin Bobo E. R. Brooks Larrie F. Judd H. Bennett Reaves Noel D. Rietman Mechanical Engineering 1949 Electrical Engineering 1961 Electrical Engineering 1965, 1967,1969 Civil Engineering 1948 Petroleum Engineering 1957 1987 George C. Beakley, Jr. James A. McAuley J. Garland Threadgill D. Wyman Tidwell 1977 Mechanical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering 1947 1953 1950 1961 Chemical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Civil Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1942 1957 1950 1948 1976 Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Textile Engineering Petroleum Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering 1949 1960 1947 1947 1949 1949 1951 1949 1957 1964 1933 1975 Electrical Engineering Textile Engineering Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1963 1948 1964 1969 1963 1943 1986 Gerald L. Farrar T. Scott Hickman Robert E. Hogan George F. Watford 1985 Glenn C. Bandy James W. Clifton Jesse L. George, Jr. Charles L. Harris James W. Lacy Robert J. Lewis Russell H. Logan Wendell Mayes, Jr. William D. Trammell Edward E. Whitacre Jr. Alpha M. Wiggins 1984 Jerry C. Edmonson Robert L. Hale John C. Mihm James P. Myers Thomas J. Reeves Kenneth W. Robbins Gary E. Frashier Harley D. Henry Leon Ince E. Carlyle Smith, Jr. Joe A. Stanley Walter D. Warren Chemical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Mechanical Engineering Architecture & Civil Engineering Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering 1958 1959 1936 1963 1939 1959 Industrial Engineering Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1957 1943 1960 1948 Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering 1948 1952 1957 1954 Petroleum Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering 1958 1950 1957 1942 1982 Larry R. Byrd Paul B. Crawford Robert B. Dyer Joseph W. Luckett, Jr. 1981 Roger K. Owen Richard I. Robinson Ben R. Stuart Allan J. Tomlinson, Jr. 1980 Charles Robert Black James L. D’Acosta Hugh R. Fewin James Harold Yeager Scott G. Arbuckle Lynn H. Elliott Norman M. Jasper H. Alan Nelson Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Petroleum Engineering 1957 1958 1960 1947 Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Civil Engineering 1940 1928 1959 1948 1978 Richard W. Hurn T. A. Rogers Gerald R. Seemann Horace L. Smith Mack Atcheson Ray Butler George Raymond Coffman George W. Dupree Herbert S. Erskine Howard Houston Hinson Guillermo E. Perea Berl M. Springer Louis Dixie Stevens David Charles Williams John R. Bradford Henry H. Meredith, Jr. John W. Sheehan R. L. Williams 1934 1959 1950 1939 Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering Architectural Engineering Industrial Engineering 1939 1938 1948 1949 Chemical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Petroleum Engineering Geological Engineering Textile Engineering Industrial Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering 1942 1949 1936 1938 1950 1934 1951 1943 1948 1947 Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering 1942 1939 1939 1941 Textile Engineering Industrial Engineering Mechanical Engineering Chemical Engineering 1935 1942 1947 1948 Engineering Physics Civil Engineering 1951 1950 Petroleum Engineering Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering Textile Engineering 1949 1946 1948 1934 Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Textile Engineering 1933 1946 1929 Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering 1932 1938 1937 Mechanical Engineering Textile Engineering 1936 1930 Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Textile Engineering 1943 1943 1940 1935 1973 James W. Harrell A. M. L. Kube Paul C. Nail James H. Wright 1972 J. Fred Bucy Arthur W. Busch 1971 Roy Butler Earnest F. Gloyna Edwin B. Locke Donovan Maddox 1970 Miles Roger Clapp Lester Lynne Kilpatrick Jack F. Maddox 1969 R. Trent Campbell W. Lyle Donaldson Dysart E. Holcomb 1968 W. Austin Davis Charles W. Woolridge 1979 Charles Ovid Baker Dan T. McDonald Evan E. Roberts Billie J. Whitworth Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering Mechanical Engineering 1974 1983 John S. Ball Donald R. Clark A. L. Kincheloe Orval L. Lewis 1967 William W. Akers Byron J. Bennett Charles H. Feltz H. Elliott Knox Box 43103 | Lubbock, TX | 79409-3103 | 806.742.3451 | www.coe.ttu.edu