| Alabama
Engineering Hall Of Fame To Hold 2001 Ceremony
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The State of Alabama Engineering Hall of Fame
will induct seven individuals and honor one project and one corporation/institution
during a ceremony on Saturday, Feb. 24, 2001 in Huntsville.
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.
The following will join the 72 individuals already inducted into
the Hall of Fame:
L. Owen Brown launched his career in the U.S. Navy, where he served
25 years and retired as a captain. His distinguished career is characterized
by renowned skills in management and engineering that have given
him the ability to see emerging technologies that will have pervasive
influences on people's lives.
Today Brown is CEO of Owen Brown Enterprises and a managing partner
of Technology Strategies & Alliances. Brown is also a member
of Silicon Valley's Band of Angels, 80 entrepreneurs united to share
their expertise, where Brown focuses on turning engineering dreams
into market reality by sponsoring local start-up companies.
A graduate of Auburn University, Brown and his family are noted
philanthropists for schools, hospitals and cancer research. Brown
serves on the Auburn College of Engineering's Alumni Council and
its executive committee.
N. Jan Davis, a native of Huntsville, has traveled on three shuttle
missions and has spent nearly 700 hours in space. Dr. Davis is director
of flight projects directorate at Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville.
Davis holds a master's degree from the University of Alabama in
Huntsville and has served as team leader in development of both
the Hubble and Chandra telescopes. She holds NASA's Outstanding
Leadership Medal, Exceptional Service Medal and three Space Flight
Medals, as well as the Marshall Space Flight Center's Director's
Commendation.
Robert E. Hails, a retired U.S. Air Force general, is responsible
for incorporation of the "Head Up Display," or HUD, first
used in the A-7D Corsair. Variants of Hails' windscreen HUD are
used today in most military aircraft and have been applied by Southwest
and Delta airlines.
A graduate of Auburn University, he has been honored with Auburn's
Engineering Achievement Award and serves on the college's Alumni
Engineering Council. A graduate of Harvard University's Graduate
School of Business, Hails is a charter member of the National Aviation
Hall of Fame.
W. George Hairston III, president and chief operating officer of
Southern Nuclear Operating Co., has dedicated his career to the
safety and health of the Southern Company system.
A native of Birmingham and a graduate of Auburn University, Hairston
is a generous patron and promoter of minority programs at Auburn
and The University of Alabama. He is responsible for helping to
significantly increase the funding for the minority engineering
program at UA.
William W. Moss, best known for designing the Talladega Super Speedway
(now the Alabama International Motor Speedway), Moss wrote the book
on designing radically faster tracks for stock car racing. He became
president of the Moss Thornton Co. in 1973, which, under his leadership,
became one of the largest earth-moving/construction firms in the
United States.
A UA alumnus, Moss has been named a Distinguished Engineering Fellow
by the UA College of Engineering, the College's highest honor.
Stephen F. Thornton, last year's Ernst and Young's Entrepreneur
of the Year, is responsible for the success of Cybex computer products
of Huntsville. Thornton recently engineered a merger with Apex INC.,
a leader in server console management and switching technology,
to form Avocent Corp. where he serves as chairman, president, and
chief executive officer.
Thornton holds a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering from
Auburn University.
Francis Erskine White, a graduate of Auburn University, has contributed
his life's work to engineering remarkable innovations in steel fabrications.
He has also founded several successful firms in the Birmingham area
with his brothers.
White holds a patent for building new equipment for bending structural
steel shapes. To date, he has designed and built six different models
of his bending machinery, each reflecting improvements on the previous
model.
Also to be honored at the induction is one project.
The Hubble Space Telescope was named for Edwin P. Hubble who confirmed
the "expanding" universe, laying the foundation for the
Big Bang Theory.
The telescope's rate of discovery is unprecedented. With five to
10 years' worth of observations yet anticipated, the Hubble Space
Telescope has already studied 13,670 astronomical objects; made
271,000 individual observations; and returned 3.5 terabytes of information,
archived on optical disks in a treasure trove for coming generations
of scientists. Some 2,800 scientific papers have resulted from the
work of this telescope.
The solar powered Hubble space craft is the world's most serviceable
space craft, with replacement of scientific instruments and flight-critical
components providently included in Marshall Space Flight Center's
system design.
In the corporation/institution category, ADTRAN, in Huntsville,
will be honored at the induction. ADTRAN implements digital telecommunications
services over existing telephone networks, and also provides products
to a large number of corporate end-users and to a growing number
of international customers. The company develops custom-designed
products for many well-known original equipment manufacturers.
ADTRAN is committed to supporting engineering education in the
state of Alabama and has endowed a number of engineering scholarships
at UA, Alabama A&M, Auburn University, and the University of
Alabama in Huntsville.
GTE has twice named ADTRAN as a Best in Class Supplier and once
awarded the company its Supplier of the Year award.
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