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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 five alumni of the College by inducting them into
its class of 2004 Distinguished Engineering Fellows.
Marce Fuller, Dr. Mohammad A. Karim, G. William Quinby, Alfred J. Saliba and Edward
F. Tatum were selected for the top honor the College presents.
Marce Fuller, president, chief executive officer and director of
Mirant, has reached the ultimate dream of many business women today. Under her guidance,
Mirant, a Fortune 500 company, has emerged as a global energy company with an extensive
portfolio of power assets. Because of her dedication and hard work, Fuller ranked fifth
in Fortune magazine’s annual list of the 50 Most Powerful Women in Business
in 2001. She ranked 37th in 2002 and was listed among Fortune’s People
to Watch. After graduating with a degree in electrical engineering from UA, Fuller
began her career in 1983 as an applications engineer for General Electric Co. She later
went to work for Southern Company as a staff engineer in electric system planning.
In 1994, she received her master’s degree in power system engineering from Union
College in Schenectady, N.Y. That same year, she was named senior vice president and
later executive vice president of Mirant’s North America division. Fuller resides
in Atlanta, Ga.
Dr. Mohammad A. Karim is dean of engineering at the City College
of New York (CCNY) of the City University of New York (CUNY) system. As dean of engineering,
he has led the development of a multi-campus flagship initiative in photonics research
that involved six different campuses. He has also steered the formation of two new
research entities known as the CUNY Institute of Urban Systems and the Center for Information,
Telecommunications and Networking, as well as creating a new Department of Biomedical
Engineering. Karim received his master’s degrees in physics and in electrical
engineering and his doctorate in electrical engineering from UA. Karim has written
nine books, 12 journal special issues, and has been published in more than 130 conference
publications and more than 170 journals. He resides in Pleasantville, N.Y.
G. William Quinby is the national director of contract management
for Kellogg, Brown & Root in Houston, Texas, and is responsible for business practices
in KBR’s infrastructure projects throughout the Americas. After earning bachelor’s
and master’s degrees in mineral engineering at UA, Quinby began an Army career
in the 27th Airborne Engineer Battalion, where he served in project engineer assignments
for U.S. Coast Guard stations in Italy and Saudi Arabia. While in the Army, he earned
his master’s degree in management at the University of South California. In 1990,
Quinby worked in private practice as civil engineer for Sain Associates in Birmingham
and worked again in the Middle East with E-Systems Inc. He held chief financial officer
and COO positions with Paragon Project Resources Inc., a construction management firm
in Dallas, Texas, and in 1996, Quinby served as vice president of program management
and construction for Qwest Communications. He resides in Golden, Colo.
Alfred J. Saliba is founder and president of Alfred Saliba Homes
Inc., Coldwell Banker Alfred Saliba Realty Corp., Alfred Saliba Development Corp.,
and Houston Properties Inc. He acts as founding partner of London International Group
LLC, the largest U.S. manufacturer of latex products, SAF Yeast, formerly Columbia
Yeast, and Behavioral Health Systems, one of the Southeast’s leading providers
of corporate mental health managed care. After graduating in 1953 from UA with a bachelor’s
degree in civil engineering, Saliba joined the U.S. Air Force. While stationed at Haneda
Air Force Base, he was the chief engineer responsible for all new construction and
renovations at the airport. In 1989, Saliba was elected mayor for the city of Dothan
and served for eight years. Because of his excellent managerial skills as mayor, former
Gov. Fob James proclaimed Nov. 21, 1997, as “Alfred Saliba Day.” Saliba
resides in Dothan.
Edward F. Tatum, director of corporate development for Albemarle
Corp., has dedicated his career to the petrochemicals business. With Albemarle, he
led a project due diligence team on acquisition of a $65-million phosphorus flame retardant
business. With a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering and a master’s
degree in business administration from UA, Tatum started his career as a manager in
industrial chemicals for Ethyl Corp. In 1993, Ethyl formed Albemarle Corp. and Tatum
became the business director of olefins and alcohols. After three years with Albemarle,
the company sold its olefin and alcohol division to Amoco, where Tatum kept the same
job. Amoco was later sold to BP, and again Tatum led the growing olefins and alcohols
division. In 1999, Tatum decided to return to Albemarle, where he served as global
business director before assuming his current position. In addition to his leadership
skills, Tatum excels at research and received two U.S. patents on novel compounds for
advanced polymer applications. Tatum, a native of Tuscaloosa, resides in Baton Rouge,
La.
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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