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Chairman's Farewell to Our Graduates

Dear Graduates,

Congratulations on your upcoming graduation from the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at The University of Texas at Austin! You have worked hard to earn your degree and should be proud of your accomplishment. Although you will soon be leaving the halls of WRW and the UT campus, you will remain a Longhorn for life. As a degree holder from this department, you have a wide variety of opportunities to choose from. This will shape your career – whether it is in aerospace engineering or another field. I would like to take a moment to share with you some outstanding examples of our former students’ accomplishments throughout the years.

Dr. Norman Abramson, PhD EM ‘56, for example, retired as Executive Vice President from Southwest Research Institute. Dr. William Powers, BS, MS, and PhD, retired as Vice President of Ford Motor Company. Dr. Felix Fenter who also earned all three of his degrees here, had a distinguished career at Vought/LTV, and among other positions was Chairman of the Board of the Advanced Technology Center and Senior Vice-President, Vought Missiles and Advanced Programs Division. Dr. Richard Smalling, BS ASE ‘70, went on to receive his MD and is board certified in internal medicine, cardiovascular medicine, and interventional cardiology. He was President of the American Heart Association and holds several patents. Six of our alumni are astronauts – three were undergraduates and three were graduate students here.

The Cockrell School of Engineering has named some of our more recent former students Outstanding Young Engineering Graduates (OYEG). Ms. Laura O’Donnell, BS ASE ‘90, has used her business and technology strategy skills to become a top executive (Vice President of Consumer Products) for Contour Inc., the fastest growing personal HD camera company in the world. Michael Webber, BS ‘95, OYEG 2005, is now an Assistant Professor in Mechanical Engineering at UT, and Associate Director of the Center for International Energy and Environmental Policy in the Jackson School of Geosciences. In 2009 Valori Leinmiller, BS ASE ‘04, was selected as a Cockrell School OYEG. Ms. Leinmiller works at NASA-JSC in the Mission Operations Directorate on the Environmental Control and Life Support System of the International Space Station.

These are just a few examples of the accomplishments of former students. There are many other career tracks open in engineering, business, medicine, or law. You will be carving your own path and defining your own future using the skills and applying the fundamentals you have learned here. Whatever career path you choose, I wish you the very best and urge you to keep in touch over the years. You and others in your graduating class will inspire new aerospace students, and we need your stories to keep our archive up to date. Please send us your news and updates online.

Finally, a brief word about giving back to the Department. Money may be tight when you embark on your career, and you might feel bombarded with requests from many worthy causes. However, if every one of our alums gives just $100 per year to the Department, together you would provide essential funds for innovative student projects, as well as several scholarships and fellowships. All this for less than 30 cents a day – less than the tip you might leave at your favorite coffee shop! Giving back is one area where Texas A&M beats UT – their alums contribute at about twice the rate of our alums. Won’t you accept my challenge and make a gift that is generous for you? It will have a bigger impact than you can possibly imagine.

With warm wishes,

varghesesignature

Philip L. Varghese
Chair, Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics
Stanley P. Finch Centennial Professorship in Engineering
Distinguished Teaching Professor