Marvin H. White received the A.S. in engineering from the Henry Ford Community College (1957), the B.S.E. in physics and math (1960), the M.S. in physics (1961) from the University of Michigan, and the Ph.D. in electrical engineering (1969) from the Ohio State University. 1961 he joined the Westinghouse Solid-State Lab in Baltimore, MD. where he worked on advanced military and NASA imaging systems. 1961-1981 he worked at Westinghouse as an Advisory Engineer in the design of low-power, custom integrated circuits with technologies of CMOS, Bipolar, MNOS and CCDs. During this period he was an adjunct Professor at the EE Dept of the University of MD and a visiting Fulbright Professor at the Catholique Universite' de Louvain in Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. In 1981, he became the Sherman Fairchild Professor in Solid-State Studies and EE at Lehigh University. At Lehigh he has developed a graduate program in microelectronics with research on SONOS nonvolatile memory devices, CMOS device modeling, studies of the Si-Si02 interface, SiC devices, and custom integrated circuits and sensors. He has graduated 23 Ph.D. students in microelectronics. He has served as a Visiting Researcher at the Naval Research Lab (1987) and a Program Director in Solid- State and Microstructures at the National Science Foundation (1995-96). In 1997 he received the Eleanor and Joseph Libsch Research Award at Lehigh University. He is currently the Director of the Sherman Fairchild Center for Solid-State Studies. Prof White is an IEEE Fellow (1974) and the recipient of the J. J. Ebers Award (1997) and the Masaru lbuka IEEE Consumer Electronics Award (2000). In 1982 he was the IEEE Electron Devices Society (EDS) National Lecturer and is presently a Distinguished EDS Lecturer. He has served on IEEE/EDS committees, in particular, membership, and education. He is a member of Eta Kappa Nu and Sigma Xi.