For release
June 5, 2006
RETIRING CARUTHERS CITES GAINS, POTENTIAL IN FAREWELL
MESSAGE TO INSTITUTE’S FAMILY
Dr. John E. Caruthers, in a farewell
message to students, faculty and staff, cited positive
reasons for believing the future is bright for The
University of Tennessee Space Institute.
“I leave you with UTSI now having the support of the UT
President, the Board of Trustees, the Tennessee
Legislature, the Governor, and our Federal
representatives,” the retiring UTSI leader wrote in an
electronic message.
“You also have the strongest Support Council in my
memory,” the former professor, UT associate vice
president, and chief operating officer of the Space
Institute added.
“This year’s research contract and grant awards and
student population are up,” Caruthers continued,
“meeting or exceeding the growth rate goals set in the
President’s plan established more than a year ago.”
Caruthers joined UTSI’s faculty April 1, 1978 and later
became the first Jack D. Whitfield Professor of High
Speed Flows and then the third Space Institute faculty
member to be chosen as the B.H. Goethert Professor. He
had served in his current leadership position since
April 2001. He and his wife, the former Susan Norred,
plan to move from Tullahoma to Lafayette, Ala.
In his letter, Caruthers congratulated his fellows at
UTSI for their “courage and professionalism in enduring
the difficult times of the previous six years.” He added
that “Those days are now behind us. I wish you all the
very best for the future as you begin to take our
special institution to a new and unprecedented
prominence under the able leadership of Dr. Don Daniel.”
Caruthers noted that “detailed planning” for hiring new
professors and research scientists with as many as ten
searches for seven tenure track and three research
professor positions.
“We will also search for several more staff scientists
and expect to add many more as success accumulates from
these investments and investments of the recent past,”
Caruthers said.
“Partly because of some streamlining we did in earlier
years, and sound financial management led by Dr. George
Jensen,” he continued, “we have most of the necessary
resources for new investment. We already have in place
the leadership we need in Aviation Systems (Dr. Stephen
Corda), Engineering Management (Dr. Gregory Sedrick),
photonic and carbon based materials research (Drs. Bill
Hofmeister and Ahmad Vakili), and with the addition of
Dr. Daniel, the leadership for a strong and successful
propulsion research team. The next several years should
prove to be very exciting ones for the Institute.”
Declaring that he will “miss my friends and colleagues
at UTSI, UTK, and in the community,” Caruthers said, “I
am proud and privileged to have served and led the
Institute that Goethert (the first dean and director of
UTSI) built.”

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