Andrew P. Sage

Andrew Patrick Sage (August 27, 1933 – October 31, 2014) was an American systems engineer and Emeritus Professor and Founding Dean Emeritus at the School of Information Technology and Engineering of the George Mason University.

[1] After graduation Sage started his academic career in the early 1960s as Associate Professor at the University of Arizona, where he among other things did research on the electronic simulation of biological clocks,[3] and bistable circuits.

[4] From 1964 to 1967 he was Professor of Electrical Engineering at the University of Florida, Gainesville[5] From 1967 to 1974 he was chairman of the Information and Control Sciences Center at the Southern Methodist University in Dallas[6] and Chair of the Electrical Engineering Department.

[7] In 1976 Sage was elected Life Fellow of IEEE "for contributions to engineering education, and to the theory of systems, identification, estimation, and control",[1] and in 2004 he was elected members of the National Academy of Engineering.

Andrew P. Sage published numerous books and articles[8] in the field of systems engineering.