James Vaughan Named Interim Director Of Center for Manufacturing Excellence PDF Print E-mail
Written by Edwin Smith   
07/11/2008

OXFORD, Miss. - James G. Vaughan, F.A.P. Barnard Distinguished Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Mississippi, has been appointed interim director of the new Center for Manufacturing Excellence.

UM Provost Morris Stocks announced Vaughan's appointment Friday (July 11). Since the Feb. 2007 announcement that Toyota Motor Corp. will build an assembly plant near Blue Springs, Vaughan has helped plan the facilities and building layout, academic programs and the numerous outreach activities to be associated with CME. The center is to be constructed between Carrier Hall and the Old Chemistry Building on the Oxford campus. 

 

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James Vaughn. UM photo by Robert Jordan
"I am very pleased that Jim has agreed to serve as interim director of the Center for Manufacturing Excellence during this important period," Stocks said. "We are privileged to have someone with his experience and ability to lead us through the creation and development of this center."

Vaughan said he is "honored and excited" at the appointment. "As part of the team that has envisioned this center, I look forward to continuing the development of this unique center into the great potential that it has for the university and state," he said.

Vaughan is to continue his administrative and teaching roles in the School of Engineering, Stocks said.
"From the start, Dr. Vaughan has been instrumental in all the preparatory work on the center," said Kai Fong Lee, dean of the UM School of Engineering. "He is an individual of outstanding capabilities, and we are fortunate to have his service."

Vaughan's appointment comes approximately three weeks after Gov. Haley Barbour and UM Chancellor Robert Khayat announced the creation of the center. CME is to be unique in the nation in its undergraduate curriculum, offering students not only degrees in engineering with an emphasis in manufacturing but also strong cross-disciplinary studies that include business, management, accounting, leadership and human resources.

The $22 million center is being funded through part of a state incentive package that helped attract Toyota to the state. When production begins at Blue Springs in late 2010, the plant is expected to employ about 2,000 workers to build the popular Prius hybrid automobile.

For more information about the Center for Manufacturing Excellence, visit http://www.olemiss.edu/cme

 


 
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