WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — The largest alumni gift in the history of Pennsylvania College of Technology has manufactured a new machining lab that will benefit students for generations.
A $1 million-plus donation from alumnus Larry Ward financed the revamping of the 14,299-square-foot facility, one of the oldest instructional spaces on campus. The lab features fresh lighting, flooring, fixtures and, most importantly, new equipment in the recently christened Larry A. Ward Machining Technologies Center.
“I have done very well, so I want to give it back for the next generation,” said Ward, a 1966 graduate. “A lot of people helped me over the years, and I just feel I’m paying it forward.”
“Mr. Ward with this donation has set up the Penn College machining program for the next 50 years,” said Bradley M. Webb, dean of engineering technologies. “I think Mr. Ward’s donation is critical to our ability to continue to put out skilled machinists for all of society.”
About 90 students from five manufacturing-related programs receive vital hands-on experience in the lab each semester.
“This gift is truly transformational, and that is the very best word I can use to describe it,” said Loni N. Kline, vice president for college relations. “The new lab sets us apart from other programs and is really leading us into the next generation.”
The machining lab is home to about 50 new mills and lathes, as well as cabinets stocked with drill bits, end mills, micrometers, wrenches and other required tools.
“I’m extremely grateful,” said manufacturing engineering technology student Christopher M. Schweikert, of Jamison. “These new machines really make a difference to our program.”
“It looks amazing. It’s better than what I was ready to walk into,” added Dakota C. Harrison, of Lewisberry, also seeking a bachelor’s degree in manufacturing engineering technology. “It’s just completely transformed the entire lab, and we really couldn’t have done it without Mr. Ward.”
Ward credits Penn College’s predecessor Williamsport Technical Institute for positioning him on a path to bestow such a gift. Ward enrolled at WTI in the mid-1960s to study engineering drafting technology, which required work in the same machine shop transformed by his donation.
“I got a skill I could actually use, and they offered a full-rounded education,” Ward said. “All through my working career, I have thought back when I’m doing something, ‘Oh yeah, I remember covering this at Tech.’ I can still draw on things I learned here, today. I just can’t say enough about the education I got here.”