| 2006 TTU Engineers and Technologist of Distinction Honored | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (March 9, 2006) — Three engineers who have taken
the lead on global and national stages in their fields received accolades
where their success took shape at the College of Engineering's annual
awards banquet last week. David W. Swindle Jr., president
of IAP Worldwide Services, and Dudley Garner
Jr., chairman of Symetrics Technology Group, were honored
as 2006 Engineers of Distinction, and Paul
E. Trussell, owner of Trussell Brothers Construction Co.,
received the 2006 Technologist of Distinction Award during Engineering
Week. The Engineers of Distinction program recognizes alumni and others whose careers have contributed to or reflected credit on the College of Engineering’s academic program, and the Technologist of Distinction award was created to annually recognize the distinguished career of a TTU Manufacturing and Industrial Technology Department graduate. The awards banquet serves as the culmination of Engineering Week, a national week celebrated at TTU by highlighting engineering student and faculty activities. During times of conflict and peace, the U.S. military must keep its focus
on the job at hand, and Swindle assists the U.S. military and other government
branches with civilian expertise few can match. As president of IAP Worldwide Services Inc., a government contractor
providing services for the federal government across the globe, Swindle
oversees a broad spectrum of projects at more than 50 international locations.
Projects include the operation of military bases, support of overseas
military operations and implementation of domestic projects that require
specialized technical and professional support. Swindle shares responsibilities with IAP’s CEO for day-to-day business
operations and program management of worldwide activities that exceeded
$1.25 billion in 2005. Specific focus areas include business operations
and development, strategic planning, government affairs, public relations
and corporate communications. Typical company projects include transporting
U.S. Army equipment in Iraq and Afghanistan, maintaining security and
facilities management such as heating and cooling operations for military
bases, finding highly qualified personnel to conduct science projects
for the Department of Energy and procuring timely disaster relief. Before joining IAP in 2005, Swindle, vice president of business acquisition
and national security programs for KBR’s Government and Infrastructure
Division, led a team of more than 80 specialists in development, communications
and government relations that worked on worldwide projects exceeding $10
billion. In addition to the his current responsibilities, Swindle is also
a technical advisor for several key national and homeland security programs
performed directly for senior leadership of the Department of Defense,
Department of Energy, Department of Homeland Security and the intelligence
community. Swindle earned a bachelor's degree in 1976 in engineering science from TTU, where he won the Derryberry Award and served as SGA president for two consecutive years. He received a master's degree in nuclear engineering from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and an MBA in industrial management from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Swindle is a registered professional engineer in seven states. He has two daughters, Mary-Louise and Caroline, and he and his wife, Carolyn, live in Leesburg, Va. Now chairman of Symetrics Technology Group, Garner has distinguished
himself as a design engineer, manager and entrepreneur. Symetrics, a customer-oriented
aerospace company that he rebuilt starting in 1977, has operations in
Florida and Texas, employs 165 people and has annual revenues of $35 million.
Symetrics designs, manufactures and markets worldwide cutting-edge electronic
and electro-optical products for telemetry, digital video recording, countermeasures
dispensing, aircraft health monitoring, micro unmanned aerial vehicles
and modems for digital and compressed imagery data. Prior to Symetrics, Garner worked for Chance Vought Aircraft, Texas Instruments,
International Data Systems, and Harris Corp. He contributed electrical
product designs for the F-8U Crusader and F-4 Phantom Jet aircraft, Bomarc,
Titan II, and Saturn V missiles and the Lunar Orbiter Spacecraft; program
management for products for Titan III and Advanced Minuteman missiles
and laser-based photographic quality facsimile; and general management
as vice president of a Harris scientific computer subsidiary. A staunch Tennessee Tech supporter, Garner, along with his friend Lt.
Gen. Ret. Don Rodgers, contacted their classmates and started the EE Class
of 1957 Scholarship Endowment in 1995. Garner has served on the ECE Industry
Advisory Board since its inception in 1996 and through the IAB has challenged
ECE alumni to establish similar endowments. In 2005, he helped start the
ECE Seminar and ECE Undergraduate Research Endowments. He is a member
of the President’s Club. Garner and his wife have also established three college scholarships
through two churches and a high school for deserving students needing
financial assistance. Through Symetrics, and individually, they contribute
annually to many charities. After earning an industrial technology degree in 1967, Trussell left
Tennessee Tech with a wife, child, a job at General Motors as a design
engineer, and a legacy from his father — a passion for hard work
and cars. He later went to work for a company that contracted work for
General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Trussell followed his entrepreneurial spirit and began his own company
before moving from Ohio to South Carolina. There, he established Trussell
Brothers Construction Co., a city, county and state contract construction
company in Columbia. He oversees dozens of crewmen, including his two
sons, Anthony and Michael, and he longs to work in the field more, but
bids and orders take up most of his time, along with visits to every job
site. With contracts for small job bids at $15,000 and large job bids that
soar as high as $7 million, the company's success has allowed him to follow
his true passion — cars and racing. His '32 Ford Roadster, a show car valued around $500,000 that travels
around the world but has never hit the road, won the Oakland Roadster
show and finished first runner-up for the prestigious Ritler Award at
the Detroit AutoRama. He became partners with "Fast Eddie" Hoover, a drag racer in
the Pro Modified series, and their teamwork has made them champions in
the International Hot Rod Association and the National Hot Rod Association.
The sponsor and driver have won six major events and are driven by the
pursuit of the NHRA World Championship. Trussell and his wife, Peggy, live in Columbia, S.C. All of his brothers — Ray Gene, James Ronald and Billy F. Trussell, as well as his sister, Ellen Joann Smith, attended TTU. James and Billy are TTU alumni, as are his niece, Amy Trussell, and his brother-in-law, Jimmy Smith.
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