
Jim Maser, President of Pratt & Whitney
Rocketdyne
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne’s
Jim Maser
advises UCLA Engineering
graduates to be leaders
in eco-friendly solutions.
Nearly 6,500 guests and students from the UCLA Henry Samueli
School of Engineering and Applied Science gathered at Pauley Pavilion
in Westwood Saturday to hear Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne president
Jim Maser deliver the 2007 commencement address.
Maser heads the world’s leading liquid rocket
propulsion and power technology company. Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
powers the Space Shuttle, commercial launch vehicles and future
crafts that will return humans to the moon.
Maser said that while he may not be as memorable
as Bill Gates, he hoped that the approximately 1,000 undergraduate
and graduate students will remember his advice.
Maser first spoke about a recent sea change in
the business world, where corporate ethics and a growing consciousness
on global climate change and environmental impacts are becoming
top priorities for many companies. He then said that engineers
and scientists will be at the forefront in helping make these
changes.
“Using your education and creativity to
find new ways to provide eco-friendly solutions to business challenges,
while contributing to the community and always doing the right
thing will create a competitive advantage for you and your company,”
Maser said.
Maser then shared several key points with the
graduates on having a successful career, including being passionate
about your work; always doing the right thing; doing your best;
treating others with respect; having an open mind; not being afraid
to take risks and to have fun.
Maser has extensive experience in the spaceflight
business. Prior to his appointment as president of Pratt &
Whitney Rocketdyne, Maser was the president and chief operating
officer of SpaceX, a startup company that aims to decrease the
cost and increase the access and reliability to space.
Prior to that, Maser spent 18 years with the Boeing
Company. His last position was as the president and general manager
of Sea Launch, LLC, an international partnership led by Boeing.
Maser also served as Sea Launch’s chief systems engineer
and was the chief engineer on the Delta program, where he worked
extensively with Rocketdyne.
Maser graduated magna cum laude from the University
of Akron (Ohio) with a Bachelor's degree in Engineering, followed
by a Master's degree in Engineering. He later received a Master's
degree in Business Administration from UCLA.
In 2000, the American Institute for Aeronautics
and Astronautics (AIAA) honored Maser with the George M. Low Space
Transportation Award for his contributions to space transportation.
The award is named in memory of the former president of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute and NASA deputy administrator who played
leading role in planning and executing all of the Apollo missions,
and who originated the plans for the first manned lunar orbital
flight - Apollo 8.
###
06.19.07
-M. Chin
Photo: Bob Knight Photography
|