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Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future (1985)

Chapter: Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants

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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants." National Research Council. 1985. Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/582.
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Page 125
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants." National Research Council. 1985. Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/582.
×
Page 126
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants." National Research Council. 1985. Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/582.
×
Page 127
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants." National Research Council. 1985. Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/582.
×
Page 128
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Subcommittee and Panel Membership and Consultants." National Research Council. 1985. Engineering Education and Practice in the United States: Foundations of Our Techno-Economic Future. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/582.
×
Page 129

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APPENDIX A Subcommittee and Panel Members, Consultants, and Liaison Representatives Subcommittee on Educational Systems JORDAN I. BARUCH, Chairman; President, Jordan J. Baruch Associates, Washington, D.C. EDMUND T. CRANCH, President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute JOHN D. KEMPER, Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California at Davis EDWARD T. KIRKPATRICK, President, Wentworth Institute of Technology ERNEST S. KUH, Professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California at Berkeley ROBERT M. SAUNDERS, Professor, School of Engineering, University of California at Irvine (Chairman, Board of Governors, ACES, 1983) CHARLES E. SCHAFFNER, Executive Vice-President, Syska & Hennessy, New York, N.Y. Morris A. STEINBERG, Vice-President, Science, Lockheed Corporation SHEILA E. WIDNALL, Professor, Aeronautics end astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Panel on Undergraduate Education EDMUND T. CRANCH, Chairman; President, Worcester Polytechnic Institute EUGENE M. DELOATCH, Dean, School of Engineering, Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland 125

126 APPENDIX A DoNA~D G. GLOWER, Dean, College of Engineering, Ohio State University WILLIAM R. GROGAN, Dean, Undergraduate Studies, Worcester Polytechnic Institute CHARLES E. SCHAFFNER, Executive Vice-President, Syska ~ Hennessy, New York, N.Y. WILLIAM R. UPTHEGROVE, Regents Professor of Engineering, School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Nuclear Engineering, University of Oklahoma SHEILA E. WIDNALL, Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology DONALD TRITSCHLER, consultant, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Pane! on Technology Education EDWARD T. KIRKPATRICK, Chairman; President, Wentworth Institute of Technology JOHN D. ANTRIM, General Manager, Certification Programs, National Society of Professional Engineers STEPHEN R. CHEsH~ER, President, Southern Technical Institute RICHARD A. KENYON, Dean, College of Engineering, Rochester Institute of Technology LAWRENCE I. WOLF, Dean, College of Technology, University of Houston DONALD TRITSCHLER, consultant, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Pane! on Continuing Education MORRIS A. STEINBERG, Chairman; Vice-President, Science, Lockheed Corporation RALPH T. DOSHER, JR., Manager, Corporate Education, Texas Instruments, Inc. ROD HANKS, Director, College Relations and Technical Development, Lockheed Corporation ROBERT A. HOFSTADER, Manager, Education and Development Unit, Exxon Research and Engineering Company HARorD G. KAUFMAN, Associate Professor of Management, Director of Research Programs in Science, Technology and Human Resources, Polytechnic Institute of New York RussEtt R. OWN, Professor, School of Engineering and Applied Science, University of California at Los Angeles BERNARD M. SALLOT, President, Advanced Technologies Group Services, Farmington Hills, Michigan

APPENDIX A ROBERT F. BORUCH, consultant, Psychology Department, Northwestern University RICHARD DRECHSLER, consultant, New York, N.Y. KENNETH M. REESE, consultant, Washington, D.C. Pane! on Graduate Education and Research JOHN D. KEMPER, Chairman; Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California at Davis JAMES F. MATH~s, Vice-President, Science and Technology, Exxon Corporation IRENE C. PEDEN, Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Washington at Seattle JOSEPH E. ROWE, Executive Vice-President, Research and Defense Systems, Gould Inc. LELAND J. WALKER, Chairman of the Board, Northern Engineering & Testing Pane! on Infrastructure Diagramming and Modeling 127 ER~cH BLOCH, Chairman; Vice-President, IBM Corporation {now Director, National Science Foundation) KAREN C. COHEN, Principal Research Associate, Center for Advanced Engineering Study, Massachusetts Institute of Technology ARNorD R. ESHOO, Program Manager, Technical Resource Statistics, Technical Personnel Development, IBM Corporation JOHN W. GEILS, Director, AAES/ASEE Faculty Shortage Project {ATTEST, Ret. ~ DEAN GILLETTE, Executive Director, Corporate Studies, AT&T, Bell Labs {now Professor, Engineering Department, Harvey Mudd College) L. OWEN Hack, Manager, Site Resource Management, IBM East Fishkill, Hopewell Junction, N.Y. WILLIAM K. LEBorD, Director, Educational Research and Information Systems, Purdue University HARo~D T. SHAP~Ro, President, University of Michigan PATRICK I. SHERIDAN, Executive Director, EMC, American Association of Engineering Societies DONALD G. WEINERT, Executive Director, National Society of Professional Engineers ROBERT P. STAMBAUGH, consultant, Quechee, Vermont M~cHAEt CRowrEY {liaison representative), Staff Associate, Division of Science Resource Studies, National Science Foundation

128 APPENDIX A DANIEL E. HECKER (liaison representatives, Office of Economic Growth and Employment, United States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics Pane! on Engineering Employment Characteristics FRED W. CARRY, Chairman; Vice-President, Corporate Engineering and Manufacturing, General Electric Company JOHN D. CuttEN, Senior Vice-President, Engineering, E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Company DANIEL C. DRUCKER, Dean of Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana {now Graduate Research Professor of Engineering Sciences, University of Florida at Gainesville) HELEN GourDNER, Dean, College of Arts and Science and Professor of Sociology, University of Delaware M. EUGENE MERCHANT, Principal Scientist, Manufacturing Research, Cincinnati Milacron, Inc. (now Director, Advanced Manufacturing Research, Metcut Research Associates Inc. ~ LAWRENCE M. MEAD, OR., Senior Management Consultant, Grumman Aerospace Corp. GORDON H. MILLAR, Vice-President, Engineering, Deere and Company (now retired} RICHARD I. REDPATH, Vice-President, Ralston Purina BATH A. SCHWAN, Assistant Director, Research Laboratories, Eastman Kodak Company STEPHEN TUCKER, Program Manager, Edison Engineering, General Electric Company BERNARD CULLED, consultant, McBer and Company KENNETH M. REESE, consultant, Washington, D.C. JEANNE CARNEY {liaison representative), Staff Specialist, OUSDRE {R&AT}, Office of Research and Lab Management, the Pentagon Pane! on Review of Current Concerns and Responses JOHN W. GEILS, Chairman; Director, ~ES/ASEE Faculty Shortage Project {AT&T, Ret. ~ GEORGE E. DIETER, JR., Dean, College of Engineering, University of Maryland DAVID F. THOMAS, consultant, ManTech International Corp.

APPENDIX A 129 Pane! on Engineering Interactions with Society GEORGE S. ANsErr, Chairman; Dean of Engineering, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (now President, Colorado School of Mines) THOMAS P. CARRorr, Professor, Science ~ Technology Studies Division, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute SAMuEr FtoRMAN, Vice-President, KreisTer, Borg, Florman Construction Company AARON I. GELLMAN, President, Geliman Research Associates, Inc. MELVIN KRANZBERG, Cal]Laway Professor of the History of Technology, School of Social Studies, Georgia Institute of Technology LAWRENCE M. MEAD, JR., Senior Management Consultant, Grumman Aerospace Corp. M. EUGENE MERCHANT, Principal Scientist, Manufacturing Research, Cincinnati Milacron, Inc. (now Director, Advanced Manufacturing Research, Metcut Research Associates, Inc. ~ ARTHUR L. DONOVAN, consultant, Professor and Director, Center for the Study of Science and Society, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University COURTLAND S. LEWIS, consultant, Washington, D.C. Pane! on Support Organizations and the Engineering Community FRANc~s E. REEsr, Chairman; Senior Vice-President, Monsanto {now retired) Dennis CHAMoT, Associate Director, Department for Professional Employees, AFL/CID LLOYD A. DUSCHA, Deputy Director of Engineering and Construction, U.S . Army Corps of Engineers FRED JEROME, Director, Scientists' Institute for Public Information Media Resource Service JOHN E. KING, Director, Engineering Business Operations and Administration, Douglas Aircraft Company CHARrEs A. SORBER, Associate Dean, College of Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin DONALD G. WEINERT, Executive Director, National Society of Professional Engineers PAurA B. WELLS, Executive Vice-President, Wells Engineers, Inc.

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Both sides of the engineering equation—education and utilization—are studied in this unique volume. A brief discussion of the development of engineering in the United States is followed by an examination of the status of engineering today. A specially developed flow diagram, which defines all aspects of the current engineering community, demonstrates how the profession adapts and responds to change. The book then takes a critical look at the strengths and weaknesses of current engineering and evaluates major trends in the composition of the engineering work force. The final section offers a preview of engineering and its environment in the year 2000. Companion volumes in the Engineering Education and Practice in the United States series listed below discuss specific issues in engineering education.

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