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Note to the Editor: Photos to accompany this release
are available from Mary Wymer at mwymer@coe.eng.ua.edu.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The University of Alabama College
of Engineering recently honored six alumni and friends of the
College by inducting them into its class of 2003 Distinguished Engineering
Fellows.
Clint Coleman, John W. Covington, James M. Delahay, Merrill Jones,
Marc Bryant Tyson and Terry R. Woods were selected for the top honor
the College bestows.
Clint Coleman is vice president of Carrier Networks Division
Engineering, Loop Technologies for ADTRAN Inc., a manufacturer of
innovative telecommunications projects. After Coleman received his
bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from UA in 1983,
he began his professional career with UDS/Motorola in Huntsville
as a design engineer. During his tenure with UDS/Motorola, he spent
a year in Singapore as resident engineering manager, providing technical
support to various manufacturing subcontractors. In 1987, he joined
ADTRAN as a design engineer. He was a charter member of the design
team that developed ADTRAN’s first HDSL transceiver. Through
his contributions, he helped ADTRAN grow from a small start-up company
to a major telecommunications equipment provider with annual revenues
exceeding $450 million. He resides in Huntsville.
John W. Covington is president of Chesapeake Consulting,
a company he founded in 1988 that gives more than 10 percent of
its pre-tax profits to charities chosen by a committee of employees.
Covington received his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering
from UA in 1972. After years of working in various management roles,
Covington got the chance to follow one of his dreams and he started
Chesapeake Consulting. Through Covington’s leadership, Chesapeake
Consulting has worked with companies around the globe including
Georgia Pacific Corp., 3M Corp., and Wilson Sporting Goods Co. This
past year, the company’s recorded gross profits surpassed
$3 million. Covington was named Small Businessperson of the Year
by the Greater Severna Park (Maryland) Chamber of Commerce in 2002.
A Springfield, Va., native, Covington resides in Millersville, Md.
James M. Delahay, president and CEO of LBYD Inc., has been
the structural engineer of record for hundreds of commercial and
industrial building projects throughout the United States. A few
notable building projects with LBYD include the award-winning Birmingham
Airport additions and renovations and the Mercedes Benz Visitor
and Training Center in Vance. Delahay’s professional accomplishments
are distinctive as he is a leader in some of the most important
and prestigious organizations dealing with structural codes. He
has been the chairman of the Structural Committee of the International
Building Code. He also has served as the vice-chairman of the American
Society of Civil Engineers 7 Wind Load Task Committee. Through his
leadership, this group redefined the procedures for calculating
wind loads and is considered the foremost wind engineering group
in the U.S. Delahay received his bachelor’s and master’s
degrees in civil engineering from UA in 1980 and 1987, and he is
a registered professional engineer in 16 states. A Montgomery native,
Delahay resides in Vestavia Hills.
Merrill Jones, Ph.D., is the project manager for sustaining
engineering, program engineering and program closeout for the NASA
Spacelab and Payloads Carriers Programs for the Boeing Co. He was
the Boeing member on an international team to plan Spacelab use
for educational purposes in the United States and Europe. Jones’
outstanding performance on both the Spacelab and the International
Space Station programs has been widely recognized as a key contribution
to program success for the Boeing Co. and to the U.S. space program.
Jones received his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral
degrees in chemical engineering from UA. He received the H.G. Johnston
Memorial Award for the outstanding UA engineering student in 1961,
and he received a UA Outstanding Chemical Engineering Fellow Award
in 1988. A native of Birmingham, Jones resides in Huntsville.
Marc Bryant Tyson is president and founder of Ready Mix
USA Inc. He has established the company as one of the top ready
mix concrete, concrete block and aggregate producers in the Southeast.
The company employs more than 1,100 people in five states and includes
80 ready mix concrete plants, 18 block plants, seven sand and gravel
operations, and a septic tank plant. Notable projects where Ready
Mix USA products have been instrumental include the Shelby Hall
Interdisciplinary Science Building on the UA campus, the Honda Manufacturing
Plant in Lincoln, and the Mercedes Benz Manufacturing Plant in Vance.
Tyson received his bachelor’s degree in civil engineering
from UA in 1985 and a master’s of business administration
from the Owens Graduate School at Vanderbilt University. Tyson resides
in Birmingham.
Terry R. Woods is the Tennessee Valley Authority’s
Nuclear Power program chief civil and metallurgical engineer, responsible
for providing technical support and strategic guidance to multiple
plant sites on safety and reliability issues. A licensed and registered
professional engineer in Tennessee, Woods received his bachelor’s
degree in metallurgical engineering from UA in 1980. He was recently
featured in Diversity Careers magazine for his involvement
in recruiting and training new college graduates, and he is instrumental
in TVA’s recruiting of UA interns and graduating engineers.
Woods also received a UA Outstanding Metallurgical Engineering
Fellow Award in 1988. A Thomasville native, Woods resides in Chattanooga,
Tenn.
In 1837, UA became the first university in the state to offer engineering
classes and was one of the first five in the nation to do so. Today,
the College of Engineering, with about 1,900 students and more than
90 faculty, is one of the three oldest continuously operating engineering
programs in the country and has been fully accredited since accreditation
standards were implemented in the 1930s.
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