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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 and friends of
the College by inducting them into its class of 2005 Distinguished
Engineering Fellows.
Mark E. Cooper, Robert H. Haubein, Norman Hugh Mathews, James
A. McCollum and W. David McGiffert received the top honor the College
presents at a ceremony on March 12 at NorthRiver Yacht Club.
Dr. Mark E. Cooper has utilized his bachelor’s
degree in chemical engineering from The University of Alabama to
advance the field of medicine as managing principal and general
surgeon at the Surgical Clinic PLLC and chief of staff at Centennial
Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn. At the Surgical Clinic, he is
on the board of 16 surgeons and staff and performs approximately
750 surgeries each year.
In addition to chief of staff duties at Centennial Medical Center,
Cooper serves on the surgery advisory committee and the board of
trustees. He also works as the medical director of the surgical
first assistants program at Nashville Technical School. He has
been recognized as a Fellow by the American College of Surgeons
and the Southeastern Surgical Congress.
Through his involvement as a member of the chemical and biological
engineering advisory board, Cooper has stayed active at the Capstone.
He resides in Nashville, Tenn.
Robert H. Haubein retired as executive vice
president of Southern Company Generation in 2002, but he still
plays an active role in the engineering community through his involvement
with The University of Alabama College of Engineering.
As executive vice president of power generation, Haubein was responsible
for 66 plants consisting of 273 units with a rating of more than
24,000 megawatts. These included fossil, hydro and combustion turbine
plants owned by Alabama Power, Georgia Power, Gulf Power, Mississippi
Power and Savannah Electric.
Haubein serves as chair of the Engineering Leadership Board at
The University of Alabama and is a member of The University of
Alabama President’s Cabinet. Haubein and his wife, Lee, also
support UA engineering education through an endowed engineering
scholarship.
Haubein, originally from Kansas City, Mo., received a bachelor’s
degree in electrical engineering from the University of Missouri,
and he resides in Tuscaloosa.
Norman Hugh Mathews, managing principal and president
of England, Thims & Miller Inc., administers the design of
large commercial and residential land development projects which
require his knowledge in areas such as transportation, storm water
design and water resource management.
Mathews received his bachelor’s degree in civil engineering
technology from The University of Alabama in 1981 and began work
for Pan American Engineers Inc. In 1983, Mathews joined ETM and
has since expanded it to a firm of 220 employees with an annual
growth rate of 18 percent over the last 10 years.
Mathews served for two years as the inaugural chairman of the
board of directors in the founding of Seamark Ranch, a Christian
children’s home for abused, orphaned and homeless children
in Jacksonville, Fla. Mathews and his wife, Regina, chose to support
UA civil engineering students by establishing an endowed engineering
scholarship in 2002. Mathews resides in Jacksonville, Fla.
James A. McCollum worked with the Tennessee Valley
Authority National Fertilizer Development Center in Muscle Shoals,
Ala., for 41 years.
After graduating from The University of Alabama in 1940 with
a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, McCollum joined
TVA as a chemical engineering aid assigned to the phosphate branch,
which produced 60 percent of the phosphorus used by the Allies
in World War II and a quarter of a million tons of calcium carbide
used in synthetic rubber production during this period of defense
operations.
McCollum entered the U.S. Navy in 1944 and returned to TVA in
1946. He was then assigned to an operation that produced a chemical
agent for the U.S. Army during the Korean War. McCollum became
chief of the phosphate branch in 1972 and chief of the ammonia
branch in 1976. Though he retired in 1982, McCollum continued to
work with TVA’s office of agricultural and chemical development
for two years as a consultant. McCollum supports the College through
an endowed engineering scholarship to support chemical engineering
students. He resides in Sheffield.
W. David McGiffert, president of McGiffert & Associates
LLC, manages the preparation of engineering designs, economic feasibility
studies, hydraulic studies, wastewater discharge permitting and
preliminary engineering reports for site development and residential
projects.
McGiffert worked for McGiffert & Associates on a part-time
basis for nine years until receiving his bachelor’s degree
in civil engineering from The University of Alabama in 1974. He
then began as project engineer and eventually became president
and manager of McGiffert & Associates.
He leads the company of nine engineers and a total staff of 39
and has played an integral part in the economic development of
the Tuscaloosa area through projects with the city of Tuscaloosa,
the city of Northport, and Mercedes-Benz U.S. International. In
2003, McGiffert & Associates and Price McGiffert Construction
Co. Inc. established the David G. McGiffert Endowed Engineering
Scholarship supporting UA civil engineering students. McGiffert
resides in Tuscaloosa.
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 five 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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