ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, March 20, 1990                   TAG: 9003202632
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: B3   EDITION: EVENING 
SOURCE: DANIEL HOWES HIGHER EDUCATION WRITER
DATELINE: BLACKSBURG                                 LENGTH: Short


TECH PICKS ENGINEERING DEAN

The head of Virginia Tech's civil engineering department for the past seven years has been named dean of the univer Clough sity's College of Engineering, officials announced Monday.

G. Wayne Clough, 48, succeeds Paul Torgersen, who is returning to full-time teaching in the industrial engineering department after 20 years as dean. The appointment is effective July 1.

Provost E. Fred Carlisle called Clough "a man of remarkable achievements" whose record as a teacher and researcher have made him "known nationally and internationally as a real leader in civil engineering."

The 48-year-old specialist in geotechnical engineering - "anything that has to do with civil engineering and the Earth," Clough said - was chosen from four finalists, one of whom was William Stephenson, Tech's associate dean for research and graduate programs.

Clough said he has already told the college's department heads that his new $125,000-a-year post "is a 10-year type of job." More than 50 engineers from across the country applied for the deanship, officials said.

The dean-elect acknowledged Monday that following Torgersen, who's widely credited with enlarging and enhancing the 6,200-student college, will at the same time be a challenge and an opportunity.

"Paul was dean for 20 years and he represents a certain generation, if you will, that accomplished things in engineering," Clough said. "I'm part of a new generation that wants to excel in research funding."

Clough, who received his doctorate from the University of California-Berkeley, taught at Stanford and Duke University before coming to Tech in 1982. He is directing a National Science Foundation-sponsored study of the 1989 San Francisco earthquake.



 by CNB