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For release November 17, 2006
SPACE INSTITUTE NAMES CIRCLE
FOR PROFESSOR ROBERT YOUNG
The large circle in front of The University
of Tennessee Space Institute has been named “The Robert L. Young
Circle,” Dr. Donald C. Daniel announced during a program
honoring Professor Young, who died Oct. 31.
“We will invite the public to come back this spring when the sun
is shining for another ceremony to formally dedicate the
circle,” promised Daniel, UT associate vice president and UTSI’s
chief operating officer.
Five speakers, including two professors who helped Dr. Young get
classes started at the Institute after it opened on Sept. 24,
1964, joined Daniel in the “Celebration of Life” held Nov. 16
for the first academic director, associate dean, and professor
of aeronautics and mechanical engineering. The Rev. Bill
Starnes, a friend and fellow Rotarian with Dr. Young, gave the
invocation.
Ronnie Young of Franklin, oldest of the Tullahoma professor’s
three children, responded on behalf of the family. He said he
learned from his father that “you love family, friends, and your
work” and remember that family and friends wouldn’t “always be
on your side.” His father also taught him that “it is better to
give than receive,” Ronnie said, adding that after retiring in
1990 Dr. Young stayed busy for 16 years “doing things for other
people.”
Dr. William Snyder, one of the first professors hired for the
Institute and later Dean of Engineering and Chancellor at UT
Knoxville, and Dr. Jimmy Wu, professor emeritus, recalled
challenges they shared with Dr. Young when classes were held at
AEDC while the UTSI building was under construction. An
accomplished organist, Snyder, recalling “six wonderful years
working with Bob,” whom he likened to a “brother,” also played
some of Dr. Young’s favorite songs during the program.
“Bob was a leader who made us want to be the best we could be,”
Snyder said.
Dr. William Kimzey, former chairman of the UTSI Support Council
who earned two degrees at UTSI, read from a letter he wrote to
Bob Young the morning of the celebration. He recalled their
first meeting in 1962 while Young was in charge of the UT-AEDC
graduate program at AEDC before UTSI was established.
John Rampy, one of three lieutenants sent from the Air Force
Institute of Technology as full-time students in the fall of
1964, recounted Dr. Young’s tireless efforts to get the academic
program off the ground. Rampy praised him as an educator who
helped his students grow. Dr. Young used “reverse logic” in
formulating his tests, Rampy recalled, making them complex and
challenging.
Dr. K.C. Reddy, professor emeritus and former academic dean,
recalled a friendship extending over 40 years and remembered
that Dr. Young was well-liked and respected at the Institute as
well as at UT Knoxville because of his integrity.
Numerous friends and former colleagues attended the ceremony
including Dr. Ken Tempelmeyer, one-time head of UTSI’s Energy
Conversion Program and professor of engineering science at the
Institute, Dr. Kenneth Harwell, former UTSI dean, professor and
once dean of the Institute’s Gas Diagnostic Division, Robert
Dietz, former director of the von Karman Institute in Belgium
and long-time Support Council member and Mrs. Dietz, and Dick
Farrar, chairman of the Support Council.
At the conclusion, Dr. Young was given “the last word” when a
recording was played in which he spoke of having had the rare
opportunity of being “involved in something which started from
very little, but has become quite significant…”
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Scott Alan Young
talks with Dr. Donald C. Daniel
after a program celebrating the life
of Scott’s father Dr. Robert L.
Young.
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Dr. Joel W. Muehlhauser,
left, introduces Dr. Ken Tempelmeyer to Dick
Farrar, chairman of the UTSI Support Council.
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Dr. Bill Snyder and Mrs.
Snyder visit with Scott Alan Young at the UTSI
ceremony honoring his father.
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Chatting after
the ceremony for Dr. Robert L. Young
are, from left, Dr. Bill Kimzey,
Dick Farrar, and John Rampy.
-- UTSI Photos
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Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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