For release November 11, 2005CARUTHERS
RETIRING JUNE 30
Dr. John E. Caruthers announced today that he will retire
effective June 30 as Associate Vice President of The University
of Tennessee and chief operating officer of The UT Space
Institute.
“It has been a challenge to lead the Institute through the
stormy seas of change,” said Caruthers, who was named to the
leadership post in April 2001.
“We have made progress in recent months toward getting
positioned for a new era at the Space Institute. I am
particularly pleased with the recent success of securing new
research leadership that will be instrumental in our growth.”
Caruthers joined the UTSI faculty in September 1978 as an
assistant professor of Engineering Science and Mechanics. He had
previously worked with the Allison Division of General Motors in
Indianapolis.
Caruthers later became a full professor and was named Dean of
Academic Affairs in 2000. He became the first Jack D. Whitfield
Professor of high speed flows in 1995 and two years later became
the third UTSI faculty member to be selected as the B.H.
Goethert Professor.
“It has been a privilege to have had the career I’ve had at UTSI,”
Caruthers said. “To have held two chaired professorships and
especially to have been chosen as a Goethert Professor has been
most rewarding. Even as a student at Auburn University, studying
aerodynamics, I knew who Dr. Goethert was and admired his work.
It has been very much of an honor for me to one day lead the
institution that he founded – this has been like a dream for me.
I am deeply appreciative of the history and contributions of the
Space Institute to the community and to the nation’s aerospace
accomplishments.”
Caruthers said he was pleased to have known many of the major
figures who helped establish the Space Institute in 1964.
Specifically, he named former state Senator Dr. Ewing J. Threet
of Manchester, and the late Dr. Goethert of Manchester, first
director of UTSI, the late Morris L. Simon of Tullahoma and the
late Senator Ernest Crouch of McMinnville.
“After a long period of uncertainty,” Caruthers said, “UTSI is
now well along the path to prosperity again. I am satisfied that
I played a major role in bringing that about with the help of
many others here, in Knoxville, and around the state. It was my
goal to see UTSI around the corner and headed in the right
direction. I believe that is the case now, and it is time for me
to make plans to move on to other things while I still have the
energy and vitality left to do them.”
Caruthers said he enjoyed and was privileged “to have worked
alongside some of the most brilliant and creative scientific and
mathematical minds in their respective fields. Perhaps the
greatest reward has been to observe the success of our former
students over the years.”
He plans to remain at UTSI through UT’s search for a replacement
and “to be available to help in the transition to new
leadership.”
A native of Lanett, Ala., Caruthers earned bachelor’s and
master’s degrees at Auburn and his Ph.D. at Georgia Tech. He and
his wife Susan reside in Tullahoma. They have three grown
children, Brian, Ben and Jana.

DR. JOHN E. CARUTHERS
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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