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TUSCALOOSA, Ala.–Robert N. Davis, a University of Alabama graduate student
in aerospace engineering, recently received a fellowship from the Tau Beta Pi Engineering
Honor Society to continue graduate studies in the aerospace engineering field.
Davis, a Montgomery resident, graduated from UA in May 2004 with a bachelor’s
degree in aerospace engineering. He was awarded the fellowship based on his academic
success, campus leadership, service, and promise of future contributions to the engineering
profession.
Davis received numerous honors during his undergraduate years at the Capstone, including
his selection as a “USA Today” All-USA College Academic Team member. In
2003, Davis was a National Collegiate Honors Council Portz Scholar, one of three scholars
awarded annually and the first recipient in UA history.
In addition to these honors, he was a Blount Presidential Scholar, 1999; was awarded
first place in the annual University of Alabama System Honors Research Day, 2002 and
2003; and won the department of aerospace engineering and mechanics’ Outstanding
Undergraduate Research Award, 2002. Davis also participated in the 2003 summer NASA
Undergraduate Student Research Program at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.
He participated in the University Honors Program and the Computer Based Honors Program,
and he has been the principal author of four papers researching the performance of
projectiles for the U.S. Air Force based on work done at UA with Dr. Stanley Jones,
Cudworth Professor of Aerospace Engineering and Mechanics. His papers have been published
in the Journal of Mechanical Engineering Science and have been presented
at national and international conferences.
Tau Beta Pi annually recognizes graduate students and awarded 35 student fellowships
this year. The engineering honor society was founded at Lehigh University in 1885
and is the world’s largest engineering society. It has collegiate chapters at
228 engineering colleges in the United States and active alumni chapters in 17 cities.
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer engineering classes
and was one of the first five in the nation to do so. Today, the College of Engineering,
with about 1,900 students and more than 95 faculty, is one of the three oldest continuously
operating engineering programs in the country and has been fully accredited since
accreditation standards were implemented in the 1930s.
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