Sry, it is "Henry T Yang"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_T._Yang
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UCSB
Among U.S. universities, UCSB is frequently listed as one of the "public Ivies". Newsweek named UCSB one of "America’s 25 Hottest Colleges of 2005".[23] UCSB was also ranked #59 of the "Top 100 Global Universities" by Newsweek Magazine in 2006.[24] It is the only campus in the state of California to offer an undergraduate B.S. degree in Pharmacology.
The faculty of UCSB have received five Nobel Prizes since 1998, for landmark research in chemistry, physics, and economics.[25][26][27][28][29]
UCSB has had two Nobel Prize winners in the same year on two separate occasions: In 2000, with Heeger for Chemistry,[27] and Kroemer for Physics,[28] and again in 2004, Kydland for Economics, and Gross for Physics.[25][26]
The Geography graduate program is ranked 4th in the nation by the National Research Council Report on Quality in Ph.D. Education in the U.S.
The UCSB School Psychology program is ranked 2nd in the nation in a study published in The School Psychologist Winter 2007.[31]
In 2004, ISI Essential Science Indicators found that publications by the UCSB Electrical Engineering program were cited more in "Thomson ISI-indexed journals of electrical & electronic engineering between 1998 and 2002." than any other institution's publications.[32]
The UCSB College of Engineering's graduate program was ranked 1st in the nation by the Princeton Review's first ranking of graduate engineering programs.[33] The engineering educational programs were ranked using a combination of quantitative criteria, including GRE scores, undergraduate GPA, percentage of applicants accepted and percentage of top undergraduates applying.
UCSB is active in the interdisciplinary field of nanotechnology and nanoscience. In addition to the California NanoSystems Institute, UCSB also hosts the Center for Nanotechnology in Society, a national center for research in the humanities and social sciences.