Clifford Furnas


Clifford Cook Furnas was an American author, Olympic athlete, scientist, expert on guided missiles, university president, and public servant. He was first cousin of the author Evangeline Walton. Furnas participated in the 5,000-meter event at the 1920 Olympic Games in Antwerp, Belgium.
He taught chemical engineering at Yale University, and directed the airplane division of Curtiss-Wright during World War II. He became the ninth chancellor of the private University of Buffalo in 1954. After guiding the University through the merger process with the State University of New York in 1962, Furnas became the first president of the State [University of New York at Buffalo]. Between 1955 and 1957 he was on a leave of absence to serve as Assistant Secretary of Defense during the Eisenhower administration.
He retired from the University of Buffalo in 1966 and died in 1969 at age 68.

Athletic career

Education

Academic career

Government career

Publications

  • 1932 America's Tomorrow: An Informal Excursion Into the Era of the Two-hour Working Day
  • 1935 The Unfinished Business of Science
  • 1936 The Next Hundred Years
  • 1937 Man, Bread and Destiny
  • 1937 Technological Trends and National Policy
  • 1939 The Storehouse of Civilization
  • 1940 The Individual and the World
  • 1940 Excerpts from Our Intellectual World Sections 9-13, Division II of The Individual and the World
  • 1948 Research in Industry
  • 1957 "Sputnik: Why did the US lose the race? Critics speak up", Life Magazine, October 21, 1957
  • 1966 ''The Engineer''