|
Note to the Editor: Photos to accompany this release
are available from Janice Fink at jfink@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 2002 Distinguished Engineering
Fellows.
James C. Bambarger, Norm Harris, John (Jack) H. Horn Jr., John
W. Lewis, Kay Y. Wallace and Colgan H. Bryan were selected for the
top honor the College bestows.
James C. Bambarger is CEO and chairman of the board of
TTL Inc., an environmental consulting, geotechnical and testing
firm in Tuscaloosa. He has also served as project engineer, project
manager, geotechnical engineer and geotechnical consultant for the
company. Among his projects are several UA sites, including Bryant-Denny
Stadium, the Shelby Hall Interdisciplinary Science Building, the
Bruno Business Library and the Sewell-Thomas Baseball Stadium. He
graduated from UA in 1970 with a bachelors degree in civil
engineering and in 1992 was inducted as a UA Department of Civil
Engineering Outstanding Fellow. A registered Professional Engineer,
Bambarger is a native of Fairhope and now lives in Eutaw.
Norm Harris is one of the seven founders of ADTRAN, a supplier
of innovative telecommunications projects. He designed and developed
new products that led to five patents for telecommunications design
and helped lead the company to its debut on NASDAQ. Harris, who
graduated from UA in 1972 with a bachelors degree in electrical
engineering, has served as ADTRANs on-campus recruiter at
the University for more than 10 years. Prior to his work with ADTRAN,
he worked with Universal Data Systems, where he was a senior design
engineer in the high-speed modem development group. His contributions
and innovations ranked him as one of the top design engineers at
UDS. He is now in semi-retirement, but he continues to mentor and
direct many elements of ADTRANs engineering processes. A native
of Tuscaloosa, Harris resides in Huntsville.
John (Jack) H. Horn Jr. specialized in marketing, sales,
operations and strategic planning for numerous projects during a
30-year career with the Coca-Cola Co. He served as director of various
divisions for more than 16 years and was responsible for ensuring
over $3.5 billion in sales. He became group information systems
director, a position in which he was responsible for all information
system products and services supplied to the Coca-Cola Co. Corporate
Headquarters Division. He retired from the company in 2000. Prior
to his time with Coca-Cola, he served as senior operations research
analyst at Lockheed-Georgia Co., where he implemented the dynamic
programming model. Horn received both his bachelors and masters
degrees in industrial engineering from UA, in 1965 and 1966, respectively.
Originally from Louisville, Ky., Horn was raised in Birmingham and
graduated from high school in Florence. He now resides in Marietta,
Ga.
John W. Lewis received his bachelors degree in chemical
engineering from UA in 1942 and then served three years in the U.S.
Navy before he joined Dixie Fire Brick Co. in Birmingham as its
assistant plant manager. In 1949, he became vice president, a position
in which he oversaw the companys merger with A. P. Green Refractories
in 1965. He continued to serve as vice president until his retirement
in 1982. Currently, he devotes his time to serving as a consultant
with the Waste Reduction and Technology Transfer Foundation (WRATT).
A non-profit company, WRATT is composed of retired engineers, scientists
and managers who provide free assessments of businesses, schools
and industries to help with waste reduction. Lewis resides in Birmingham,
where he serves as chairman of the Volunteer Motor Services of the
American Red Cross, and for the past 18 years has delivered blood
to Birmingham area hospitals for the organization.
Kay Y. Wallace received her bachelors degree in chemical
engineering from UA in 1981 and earned a masters degree in
business administration from Harvard University. After eight years
with Dow Chemical Co., she managed the start-up of the Georgia Research
Alliance, a strategic partnership among Georgias six research
universities. She spent three years as deputy chief operating officer
of the Atlanta Committee for the Olympic Games. She then joined
the Coca-Cola Co. as the director of learning strategy in sub-Saharan
Africa. Today, she serves as president and founder of Effective
Solutions, an Atlanta-based firm that offers executive coaching
and strategy development, as well as pro bono consulting to non-profit
organizations. A native of Tuscaloosa, Wallace resides in Atlanta,
Ga.
Colgan H. Bryan is professor emeritus of aerospace engineering
and mechanics at UA, having taught at the University for 60 years.
He came to UA in 1942 to instruct and coordinate a World War II
on-campus training program for American, British and French pilots.
He became head of the aerospace engineering department in 1952 and
served in that position until his retirement in 1980. Although retired,
he still teaches part-time. Bryan received his bachelors degree
in electrical engineering from the University of South Carolina
in 1932, a masters in physics education from Duke University
in 1940, and a masters in aeronautical engineering from the
Georgia Institute of Technology in 1948. He is a registered Professional
Engineer and has provided consulting in aerodynamics for NASA, the
U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Army Missile Command. The National Society
of Professional Engineers named him its 1986 Engineer of the Year.
A native of Trenton, S.C, Bryan resides in Tuscaloosa.
|