|
Note to Editors: For more information about the
State of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame, visit the Web site at
http://aehof.eng.ua.edu.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The State
of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame will induct five individuals
and honor two corporations/institutions during a ceremony on Feb.
21, 2004, at the Grand Hotel in Point Clear.
The State of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame was founded by proclamation
of the governor in 1987 to honor, preserve and perpetuate the outstanding
accomplishments and contributions of individuals and corporations/institutions
and projects that have brought and continue to bring significant
recognition to the state.
Joining the 92 individuals already inducted into the Hall of Fame
will be:
Chester C. Carroll, president of Lyman Ward Military
Academy, began his electrical engineering career as an Auburn University
professor in 1965. During his 17-year tenure at Auburn, Carroll
served as vice president of research and dean of engineering. In
1986, he returned to his alma mater, The University of Alabama,
to teach as a Cudworth Professor. On retiring from UA in 1993, he
had most recently served as inaugural holder of the Drummond Endowed
Chair of Computer Architecture.
Before receiving his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral
degrees at UA, Carroll served in the army in the 1950s. After his
tenure at the Capstone, he assumed such posts as director of Resident
Scientist Program at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, chair of the
USAF Aero-propulsion Laboratory’s High Power Advisory Group,
and senior research scientist at the Army Aviation and Missile Command
at Redstone Arsenal.
Carroll has been elected repeatedly to the top posts in the Southeastern
Center for Electrical Engineering Education as well as in several
regional societies for research administrators. Because of his successful
teaching, dedication to students and continuing ground-breaking
research, Carroll was elected a Distinguished Engineering Fellow
by UA in 1987, and was later elected a Fellow of the IEEE in 1990.
Carroll is also the holder of numerous patents on embedded architecture
and highly parallel-embedded architecture using coefficient polynomial
arithmetic.
T. Michael Goodrich, chairman, president and
CEO of BE&K Inc., has combined his civil engineering and law
knowledge together to become one of the top leaders in the construction
industry.
With his engineering degree from Tulane University and law degree
from The University of Alabama, Goodrich started with BE&K in
1972 as the company’s legal counsel and assistant secretary.
Under Goodrich’s leadership, BE&K has developed pathways
for minorities and women in all aspects of the engineering and construction
industry, with minority-student internships and a construction camp
for young women. Also, Goodrich helped to develop BE&K’s
School of Industrial Construction, designed to teach high-school
students construction skills, which has given BE&K recognition
in Fortune and Working Mother magazines.
Goodrich has made many contributions to the construction industry
including his efforts to develop the Associated Builders and Contractors.
He also has served as a member of the Construction Industry Institute
Board of Advisors, a director of the Construction Industry Round
Table, and a trustee of the National Building Museum.
Goodrich has served his Alabama community as Mountain Brook city
councilman, and as the director of the University of Alabama at
Birmingham Health System and the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.
The Boy Scouts of America recognized Goodrich’s contributions
by awarding him the Silver Antelope Award in 2003.
Oliver D. Kingsley Jr., an engineering physics
graduate of Auburn University, continues to contribute to the nuclear
power industry as the president and chief operating officer of the
Exelon Corp., and president and CEO of Exelon Generation, the largest
nuclear fleet in the United States and third largest in the world.
Kingsley is a member of the board of directors of the Institute
of Nuclear Power Operations, the Executive Committee of the Nuclear
Energy Institute, and the Council of Advisors of the World Nuclear
Association. He also serves on the Auburn University Alumni Engineering
Council.
In June 2000, he received the Walter Zinn Award of the American
Nuclear Society, recognizing his leadership in nuclear power. In
2003, Kingsley was elected to the prestigious National Academy of
Engineering, and he received the World Association of Nuclear Operators’
Nuclear Excellence Award.
After graduation in 1966, Kingsley joined the United States Navy
Nuclear Submarine Force and later held various positions at Southern
Co. Kingsley’s other leadership positions include vice president
of nuclear operations for Middle South Utilities in 1985, chief
nuclear officer at the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in 1988,
president and chief nuclear officer of Unicom/ComEd in 1997, and
president and chief nuclear officer of Exelon Nuclear in 2000.
Forrest S. McCartney earned a spot in aerospace
history through dedication to space programs. Retired Gen. McCartney’s
35-year Air Force career culminated in assignment to NASA as director
of the Kennedy Space Center.
McCartney received a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering
from Alabama Polytechnic Institute in 1952, now Auburn University,
and a master’s degree in nuclear engineering from the Air
Force Institute of Technology. With the Air Force Space Systems
Division, he became deputy for space communications systems, vice-commander
and commander of the Ballistic Missile Office, and then vice-commander
and commander of the Space Systems Division.
In 1986, McCartney became director of the Kennedy Space Center
where he presided over nearly 20 shuttle launches and landings with
a $1.3 billion annual budget. Brought there by the loss of the Space
Shuttle Challenger, McCartney was a guiding force in return-to-flight
procedures. After retiring in 1991, he became vice-president for
launch operations at Lockheed Martin Astronautics, and later was
re-summoned by NASA to serve on the Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel.
He is now on the Stafford-Covey Task Group overseeing NASA’s
efforts to return to flight from the Space Shuttle Columbia accident.
McCartney’s performances garnered three Distinguished Service
Medals and two Legion of Merit decorations. He received a Presidential
Rank Award and belongs to the Air Force Missile and Space Pioneers
Hall of Fame. McCartney’s other awards include the National
Geographic Society’s Gen. Thomas D. White Space Trophy, the
National Space Club’s Goddard Memorial Trophy, and the American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics’ von Braun Award
for Excellence in Space Program Management.
Douglas L. McCrary spent his career in the electric
power industry bringing innovations which strongly benefit Alabama
electric consumers.
After receiving his bachelor’s and master’s degrees
from Auburn University, he worked through many engineering jobs
and challenges and was promoted to engineering assistant manager
at Alabama Power in 1967. In 1971, he was appointed Alabama Power’s
vice president for construction. He later became Southern Company
Services’ executive vice president and CEO of Gulf Power in
Florida where he retired in 1994.
Since McCrary’s 41-year career with Southern Co., owner of
Alabama Power and Pensacola-based Gulf Power, he currently serves
as president-emeritus of Gulf Power Co.
Because of McCrary’s hard work and dedication to engineering,
he has received several awards including Auburn’s Outstanding
ME Alumnus Award, the Silver Knight of Management from the National
Managers Association and Industrial Leader of the Year from the
Pensacola Chamber of Commerce.
The corporations/institutions to be inducted into the State of
Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame will be:
COLSA Corp. began in the garage of an ordinary
Huntsville home in 1980. Within seven years, this provider of electrical
engineering support to military and commercial clients had been
named the nation’s best minority-owned high-tech firm.
Started by Puerto Rican immigrants Francisco and Carmen Collazo,
COLSA Corp. was one of the first small businesses to make the top
100 R&D testing and evaluation firms nationally, and the company
now boasts 700 employees and $90 million in annual revenue.
In 1988, COLSA Corp. was named National Small Business Prime Contractor
of the Year. It was the first contractor in the award’s history
to be nominated independently by three district agencies: the U.S.
Army Space and Strategic Defense Command (SMDC), Army Missile Command
(AMCOM), and Army Air Defense Artillery School.
COLSA Corp. was awarded the James S. Cogswell Award by the Defense
Security Service in 1997, one of only four firms in the Southeast
and 50 nationwide to receive this award.
The company received ISO 9001 certification in 1999 and the following
year received an American Business Ethics Award. In 2001, the property
management team of COLSA Corp. received the Silver Award from the
Alabama Productivity Center.
COLSA Corp. has endowed scholarships at the University of Alabama
in Huntsville and at Auburn University and is a generous contributor
to the Hispanic College Fund.
Vulcan Materials Co. is the nation’s largest
producer of construction aggregates and a leader in the production
of other construction materials. The company is also a major manufacturer
of chemicals with its chemical branch called Vulcan Chemicals.
Based in Birmingham, the S&P 500 company has supplied materials
to such projects as O’Hare International Airport and Navy
Pier in Chicago, the Chesapeake Bay Tunnel, the Lenox Tower, and
Hartsfield Airport in Atlanta.
Vulcan Materials participates in the environmental program Wildlife
Habitat Council, a non-profit organization comprised of corporate
and environmental groups set up to help companies inventory wildlife
species on corporate lands and then to provide habitat enhancements
for those species. Because of their dedication to these environmental
programs, Vulcan has received many awards from the Environmental
Eagle Awards program of the National Stone, Sand and Gravel Association.
Vulcan Chemicals has received awards from the American Chemistry
Council for its participation in the Council’s Responsible
Care program, designed to bring about continuous improvement in
the safety, health and environmental performance of the chemical
industry.
Vulcan’s charitable contributions include more than 100
adopt-a-school programs, 98 scholarships, and facility tours for
approximately 27,000 children. The company has also established
30 certified wildlife habitats, which is more than any other company
in the United States.
|