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For release September 21, 2005
UTSI Grad and Wife
Back in Coffee County after Katrina Flattens Mississippi House
Paul Gloyer, an aeronautical engineer, and his
artist wife Connie Dorris Gloyer are back in Coffee County,
sorting out the pieces after Katrina destroyed their house in
Waveland, Miss.
Sadness over their loss is offset by their knowledge that they
easily could have been in the house on Sunday, Aug. 28, when
wind and waves shattered it. They would have been in the thick
of the storm had they followed their plans, Paul says, adding,
“But God said ‘no.’”
From Topeka, Kansas, Paul earned a master’s degree in
aeronautical engineering at The University of Tennessee Space
Institute in 1993 with Dr. Roger Crawford as his major professor
and did considerable work toward a Ph.D. with Dr. Gary A.
Flandro before leaving the Institute in 1995. He and Connie
married in Tullahoma and lived in Estill Springs before leaving
the area.
Recently he worked for Aero-Astro Company before buying out the
firm’s rocket lab and going into high technology business for
himself as a partner with Zach Taylor of California. Connie,
daughter of Francis Dorris and the late Harold Dorris of
Hillsboro, painted murals for the Marine Life Mainline
Oceanarium in Gulfport, which also was wiped out in the storm.
Doctors thought that her mother, who now lives in Chattanooga,
had cancer, so Connie flew there to be with her. After tests, it
was determined that Mrs. Dorris had an ulcer, not cancer, so
Paul rented a mini-van – since his car was being repaired – and
headed to Chattanooga on Friday morning before the hurricane.
“It was only a category one at that time, so I planned to bring
Connie home on Sunday. By Saturday, it was a category five
hurricane, and the next day it demolished our house, which was
on the water side of the railroad, a long block from the beach.
“Our house was 18 feet above sea level and storm waves surged 40
feet high. Our church, nearby, is 35 feet above sea level and
took five feet of water. Diana, our cat, and our bird Jen took
refuge inside the church and survived. A brand new rocket engine
was in our garage. I have since retrieved it. We’ve loaded five
mini-vans with our stuff so far. I almost left my laptop at
home, but I’m a workaholic, so I took it with me to
Chattanooga.”
Paul and Connie set up a tent across the road from the wreckage
of their house. Their friend James Cleghorn, a fellow graduate
of UTSI and an Air Force major in Nebraska, flew down and helped
with the clean-up. News reporters “pestered us a lot,” Paul
said, noting that he appeared on Fox news several times.
The couple is staying in a Manchester motel while they
contemplate the future. Encouraged by Professor Flandro, Paul is
considering finishing his Ph.D in Aerospace Engineering. “I feel
led to come back,” he says.
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While visiting with Dr. Gary
A. Flandro, Paul Gloyer holds a photo of his
house before Katrina destroyed it.

Paul and Connie Gloyer, right, take time
out from scavenging the ruins of their shattered house to
talk with a reporter in a tent just behind their former
dwelling.

Paul Gloyer surveys the wreckage of
his and Connie’s house in Waveland, Miss. The railroad
is in the background on the right; the beach a long
block away.
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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