Akron, Ohio, April 11, 2007 - The University of Akron College of
Engineering will honor four outstanding alumni on Thursday, April 19
at the college's 2007 Distinguished Engineering Alumni Awards
breakfast. The event will be held at 7:30 a.m. at the Martin
University Center.
The 2007 honorees include Lynn M. Cavalier ('81) of Richfield,
senior vice president of human resources, FirstEnergy; David
J. Celik ('76, '82) of West Akron, city engineer, City of Akron
Engineering Bureau; Gary E. Starr ('76) of Doylestown, president,
Starr & Sons Ltd.; and David P. Tschantz, P.E. ('75) of West Akron,
Peters, Tschantz & Bandwen Inc.
In addition, an honorary award will be presented to Chun-Fu "C.F."
Chen of Bath, president of Savile Lane and president of Azova. The
College of Engineering Alumni Board and the College of Engineering
are recognizing these individuals for their achievements in
engineering, professional development and community service.
Lynn Cavalier received a bachelor of science
degree in engineering from The University of Akron and a bachelor of
science degree in medical technology from Northwestern
University.
She began her career with Ohio Edison - which merged with Centerior
Energy in 1997 to form FirstEnergy - in 1981 as an associate
engineer at the company's Gorge Plant in Akron. She held numerous
engineering positions prior to being promoted to operations
supervisor at the W.H. Sammis Plant in l988. In 1990, she became
superintendent of the plant's Units 1-4.
After other assignments, she was promoted to president of
FirstEnergy's Eastern Region-Ohio in 1997; vice president of human
resources in 2001; and senior vice president in 2005.
Cavalier is a member of the board of trustees of Archbishop Hoban
High School and a member of the Conference Board's Advisory Council
on Human Resources Management and the Organization Resources
Counselors Senior Human Resources Officer Network.
A native of Lorain, Ohio, David Celik received his
bachelor's degree in civil engineering and master's degree in
business administration from The University of Akron. During his
30-year career with the City of Akron, he has worked on significant
projects that have affected the quality of life for the
community. Included in these projects are the Y-bridge, Akron
Innerbelt, East Expressway major upgrading, J.S. Knight Convention
Center, Ohio Canal Towpath and Bikeway, and the Mud Run Golf Course
and Clubhouse. He also was responsible for the design and
construction of Canal Park baseball stadium, home of the Akron
Aeros.
Celik is chairman of The University of Akron Engineering Alumni
Association and a member of UA's Civil Engineering Department
Advisory Board and the Akron Metropolitan Area Transportation Study
Policy Committee. A certified baseball umpire by the Ohio High
School Athletic Association, he has coached summer baseball for many
years.
Gary Starr began his career as a sales and
application engineer at York Air Conditioning in York, Pa., after
receiving a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering
from The University of Akron. He joined the South Carolina
architectural engineering firm of Cummings and McCrady in 1978, and
returned to Ohio in 1980 to join the consulting engineering firm of
Scheeser & Buckley. He became partner in 1983; executive vice
president in 1987 - the year the firm became Scheeser Buckley
Mayfield Inc. - and president and chairman of the board in 1998.
After retiring in 2002, he founded Starr & Sons Ltd., a mechanical
engineering consulting practice.
Starr has designed heating, air conditioning, plumbing and other
mechanical systems for such notable facilities as the Pro Football
Hall of Fame in Canton, Akron General Medical Center, The Cleveland
Clinic, University Hospitals of Cleveland, Kent State University,
Cleveland State University and Marshall University, as well as
several buildings on The University of Akron campus.
After graduating from The University of Akron in
1975, David Tschantz joined the Goodyear Tire &
Rubber Co. In 1981, he joined the electrical engineering consulting
firm of Kucheman & Varvaro in Bath. The firm's name was changed to
Peters, Tschantz & Bandwen in 1997.
The firm established the UA Kucheman and Varvaro Scholarship in
Electrical Engineering to honor retired founding partners Kent M.
Kucheman and Joe Varvaro. The scholarship provides annual, renewable
tuition assistance to qualified undergraduates in electrical
engineering.
Tschantz is licensed in many states and is a member of the National
Society of Professional Engineers, Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers and the International Association of
Electrical Inspectors. He and his business partner and former UA
classmate James Peters serve on the Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering Advisory Council, which they formed in
2001.
Chun-Fu Chen is the 2007 recipient of the
college's Honorary Alumni Award. A 1960 graduate of the National
Taiwan University Department of Electrical Engineering, he
immigrated to the United States in 1963 to pursue a master's degree
in electrical engineering from the University of Tennessee and a
doctoral degree from Vanderbilt University. He taught for one year
at Southern University before joining the faculty at The University
of Akron in 1968, where he retired in 1994.
While teaching at UA, Chen obtained permission from former College
of Engineering Dean Dr. Louis Hill to set up Quatech Inc., a company
specializing in designing data acquisition and data communication
for the personal computer. The company grew and was sold to a
venture capital firm in 2000. Chen went on to form two new
companies, Quatronix and Azova. As president of Quatronix, Chen led
the company in computer-based data acquisition, measurement
instrumentation and data communication until 2002. Currently, Chen
holds the position of president of Azova, a provider of temperature
and humidity monitor and control devices. Recently, he launched
Savile Lane, a retail operation that specializes in affordable
handmade clothes for men.
Chen and his wife, May Juan, support the Dr. C.F. Chen Student
Award for Design Excellence for UA electrical and computer
engineering students. In addition, in 1988, Chen and his colleague
C.S. Chen funded the Louis A. Hill Jr. Award to encourage faculty
research efforts.