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Note to Editors
and Reporters: For more information about the State of Alabama Engineering
Hall of Fame, visit http://aehof.eng.ua.edu/.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The State of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame
will induct six individuals and honor two projects and one corporation/institution
during a ceremony on Saturday, Feb. 23, 2002 at The Club in Birmingham.
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, projects, corporations
and institutions that have brought and continue to bring significant
recognition to the state.
Joining the 79 individuals already inducted into the Hall of Fame
will be:
Joe W. Forehand, the chairman and CEO of Accenture, who
has dedicated his 30-year career to make Accenture the worlds
leading provider of management and technology consulting services
and solutions.
A native of Alexander City and a graduate of Auburn University,
Forehand is Consulting Magazines Most Influential Consultant
and was named by Information Week as one of the 15 most inspirational
figures in information technology. He currently serves on the Business
Steering Committee of the Global Business Dialogue on E-Commerce.
Tom D. Kilgore, president of Progress Ventures, a part
of a Fortune 250 company - Progress Energy. A leader in the energy
industry, Kilgore pursues the answers to energy challenges by bringing
to fruition his vision for ground-to-grid operations.
A University of Alabama alumnus, Kilgore has been named a Distinguished
Engineering Fellow by the UA College of Engineering, the Colleges
highest honor, and a Distinguished Mechanical Engineering Fellow.
He is responsible for establishing the Progress Energy Mechanical
Engineering Corporate Scholars Program at UA, which provides financial
aid to future engineers.
A native of Sand Mountain, Kilgore has served on the Harvard Electricity
Policy Group and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce, among other groups.
T. Keith King, president, CEO and board chairman of Volkert
& Associates, a firm ranked in the top one percent of engineering
design firms in America. As principal of the I-10 Twin Bridges over
Mobile Bay, the Cochrane/Africatown U.S.A. Bridge over the Mobile
River, and the state coal-export facility in Mobile, Kings
projects have been recognized three times by the Hall of Fame.
A native of Frisco City and graduate of Auburn University, King
received that universitys Distinguished Service Award and
was honored as the Auburn College of Engineerings Outstanding
Alumnus. He currently serves on the Board of Advisors and Board
of Directors of Mobiles Chamber of Commerce.
William H. Lawler, who directed and designed the development
of the B-2 Stealth Bomber from initial flight to delivery
to the U.S. Air Force as an operational weapon system. Today, Lawler
serves as vice president and general manager of strategic operations
and planning for The Boeing Co. in Missouri.
A native of Russellville and a graduate of The University of Alabama,
Lawler has authored numerous technical papers on structural dynamics,
and has appeared in television documentaries on the B-2 Bomber,
including History Channel specials.
Lawler currently serves as a member of the UA Aerospace Engineering
Department Advisory Board.
Ed L. Reynolds, president of network operations for Cingular
Wireless, who began his career as an Auburn University co-op student
at South Central Bell. In 1989, Reynolds began the task of bringing
cellular services to rural areas in five states, including Alabama.
For a time, he served concurrently as president of BellSouth Mobility,
BellSouth Mobility DCS and American Cellular Communications Corporation.
Reynolds, who received a bachelors degree in electrical
engineering from Auburn University and an M.B.A from The University
of Alabama, currently serves on Auburns Electrical and Computer
Engineering Industrial Advisory Board and as director of the Atlanta
College of Art. He is a native of Montgomery.
Jim S. Voss, a retired U.S. Army colonel, who has logged
202 days in space as a NASA astronaut. Voss recently carried out
a five-and-a-half month mission on the International Space Station,
in summer 2001.
Voss served more than 15 years in the Army and is a Distinguished
Graduate of his Infantry Officer Basic Course. He is the recipient
of the NASA Outstanding Leadership Award and Distinguished Service
Medal.
A native of Opelika, Voss is a graduate of Auburn University and
was recently awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of
Colorado.
Also to be honored at the induction are two projects: American
Cast Iron Pipe Companys 65-megawatt Contiarc furnace and
the Mercedes-Benz M-Class plant.
ACIPCOs 65-megawatt Contiarc furnace is the only one of
its kind in the world for melting iron. The electric furnace is
designed to save energy, reduce pollution and accommodate raw materials
other than increasingly scarce coke and clean scrap, which are used
in standard production of ductile iron pipe. The Contiarcs
electricity is supplied by its own substation located across the
street from the ACIPCO plant in Birmingham. Its power supply is
the largest of its kind in the world.
The Contiarc furnace was constructed as a test facility in Birmingham
in 1997 by ACIPCO foundry experts with assistance by Alabama Power
Company engineers and the German design/engineering firm SMS Demag.
Located near Tuscaloosa, the Mercedes-Benz M-Class manufacturing
plants million square feet houses the plants body, paint
and assembly shops, along with its administrative facilities,
under one roof. The open layout was designed to foster a team approach
and make the 1,900 employees feel at home, as more than 300 vehicles
are produced daily. Since its completion in summer 1996, the plants
M-Class vehicle has won more than 40 automotive awards. It is now
sold in 135 countries.
A recent contribution of $1.5 million was given by Mercedes-Benz
to The University of Alabama and Stillman College to create co-op
opportunities and scholarships for students. A $600 million plant
expansion, expected to be complete in late 2003, will create 2,000
new jobs in Alabama.
In the corporation/institution category, Jones, Blair, Waldrup
and Tucker Inc. will be honored.
Jones, Blair, Waldrup and Tucker Inc., a consulting engineering
corporation in Gadsden since 1944, serves as city engineer of 14
Northeast Alabama municipalities across seven counties. JBWT provides
services in traditional civil engineering matters such as street
and highway design, but the preservation of clean water supplies
have become its specialty.
In Calhoun, Etowah and Marshall counties, JBWT is responsible for
expanding public water service to more than 60,000 citizens. The
firm engineered Calhoun Countys direct filtration plant, which
enabled the county to begin treating raw water from two existing,
but previously untapped, sources. JBWT also increased Gadsdens
pumping capacity threefold.
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