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For release October 17, 2006
SHORT COURSE PROGRAM PLAYS MAJOR ROLE AT
UTSI, DANIEL TELLS TULLAHOMA ROTARIANS
A year-round short course program plays a
major role in The University of Tennessee Space Institute’s
educational mission, Dr. Donald C. Daniel told Tullahoma
Rotarians in a speech Oct. 13.
This self-supporting program each year reaches from 250 to 500
graduate engineers needing special training in subjects ranging
from aero propulsion and solid propelled rocket motors to
numerous computer courses and in-depth aviation related
sessions, Daniel said. Becky Stines heads the short course
program.
Daniel mentioned his first-hand experience in flying a Navion
rigged to “make students think their plane is iced over” – a
crucial aircraft for an in-flight icing course in progress at
UTSI’s Flight Research Center this week under direction of Rich
Ranaudo, UTSI research professor.
“I recently flew that plane, and it is very difficult to get it
to respond,” said Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of the Space Institute.
UTSI’s largest programs at the present are in Aviation Systems,
led by Dr. Stephen Corda, and Engineering Management chaired by
Dr. Greg Sedrick, Daniel said.
UTSI receives “millions of dollars” in pursuit of its research
mission, Daniel said, while offering Ph.D.’s and master’s
degrees in a variety of technical areas.
UT sponsored a graduate school at Arnold Engineering Development
Center (AEDC) for eight years before UTSI was established on
Sept. 24, 1964.
“We have awarded nearly 2,000 degrees,” Daniel said, “and about
a third of these graduates have been with AEDC, one of our
reasons for being here.”
The Institute has recently begun research in bio-medicine
physics, which Daniel noted “is a “big deal in the national
growth area.”
“We are recruiting people to join Dr. Ahmad Vakili’s research
into carbon-based materials,” Daniel said, citing this work
along with UTSI’s Center for Laser Applications, propulsion,
computational mechanics, gas dynamics, and materials
laboratories. Several professors – tenured and research – are
being hired, and a national search is under way for an assistant
vice president of research and development to succeed Dr. Joel
W. Muehlhauser, who retires Dec. 31.
The speaker cited plans to build a new Flight Research Center at
Tullahoma Airport, noting that “it may take two years to get
this funded for about $11 million.” Such a facility not only
would provide a hangar capable of housing UTSI’s five fixed-wing
and three rotary-wing aircrafts, he said, but also accommodate
new research.
Stressing the Institute’s dedication to UT’s strategic plan for
UTSI, Daniel said “student access and success, research and
economic development,” and “outreach and globalization” are
vital parts of the plan.
“We’ve got to get more people to stay in school and to go to
graduate school,” he said. He pledged UTSI’s help in economic
development.
Sam Mann was chairman of the Friday 13th program, and introduced
Daniel.

Sam Mann, program
chair, visits with Dr. Donald C. Daniel
(right).
-- UTSI Photo
Writer: Weldon Payne
(931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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