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For release June 15, 2006
UT
PRESIDENT STRESSES COOPERATION IN DAY-LONG VISIT TO SPACE
INSTITUTE
Communicating, cooperating, and coordinating
are among Dr. John Petersen’s formula for success and
“transformational growth” for The University of Tennessee Space
Institute.
“We want transformational – not just incremental growth,” he
said.
The UT president shared these and other ideas June 13 in a
luncheon speech at UTSI for Support Council members and other
guests, and earlier in an open forum for the Institute family.
“Communications is our weakest link – with each other and with
our partners,” Petersen said. “We must communicate what we mean
to Tennessee and to the United States. Everybody – not just the
administration and faculty – must understand UTSI’s missions,
goals, and how to get there.”
While saying UTSI has unique strengths and “does things that no
one else can do,” Petersen cautioned that “We must focus on
things that we can do well. We must ask ‘How can we help each
other be more successful?’ We are not in competition. We must
not think microscopic; we cannot do it all alone.”
State Senators Douglas Henry and Jerry Cooper, state Rep. George
Fraley, Ralph Barnett, assistant commissioner of education,
Tullahoma Mayor Troy Bisby, Coffee County Mayor-Elect David
Pennington, and Jody Baltz, Tullahoma city administrator, were
among public officials at the luncheon.
Dr. Donald C. Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of UTSI, said there is “a great potential for
partnership” and predicted that Federal research funding for the
Space Institute “will get better.”
With plans to hire several new faculty members, Daniel said, “We
are building teams with folks who know research. Personal
contact is very important in seeking research funding.”
Stressing his vision of the Space Institute as “the UT flagship
in Middle Tennessee,” Daniel said he sees “a very bright future”
for UTSI’s distance education programs, with both the Aviation
Systems and Engineering Management programs gaining students.
Senator Henry said that while UTSI is “outside my senatorial
district and might be considered as local, as a citizen of
Tennessee, I want to say that this Space Institute is of great
value to the entire State of Tennessee.”
Reeling off a list of partners ranging from AEDC to Oak Ridge
National Laboratory and from Georgia Tech to Wright-Patterson
Air Force Base, Petersen warned that “we should not try to be
all things to all people; we must pick and choose, do the things
we do best, and remember we are not in a vacuum. Focus is the
key.”
Noting that the “locus of the automotive industry is no longer
in Michigan but in this area of the country,” Petersen
recommended “looking ahead to where we should be in 20 years.”
Petersen said UTSI’s current search for additional tenure-track
and research professors timely as the Institute seeks to
“recruit the best faculty in the world.”
The president stressed the importance of cooperation between UT
Knoxville and the Space Institute, including perhaps an exchange
of students for specific classes. As for Gov. Phil Bredesen’s
plans to locate a high school at UTSI for exceptional math and
science students, Petersen asked, “What better place than
here…where the best and the brightest can explore the real
world?”
“Our most precious resource is people,” the president said.
“More than 70 percent of our investment is in people. This is
much higher than in industry.”
Petersen was accompanied by a host of UT officials including
Executive Vice President Dr. Jack Britt, Dr. Dan Stewart,
Britt’s special assistant, Dr. David Millhorn, UT vice president
for research, Hank Dye, UT vice president for public and
government relations, Gina Stafford, UT director of
communications, and Anthony Haynes, UT director of state
relations, and UT Knoxville Chancellor Loren Crabtree and Dr.
Way Kuo, dean, UT Knoxville College of Engineering.
Navy Captain Christopher Flood, vice commander of AEDC, Dr.
David Elrod, ATA General Manager at AEDC, Dan J. Marcum, UT
Development Council president, Dr. Ed Kraft, AEDC chief
scientist, Dr. Craig A. Blue, deputy division director of
technology, Materials Science and Technology Division, Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, and David Whitfield, director, UT
Chattanooga Sims Center, were also among those at the luncheon.
In the afternoon, the visitors toured UTSI’s Center for Laser
Applications and carbon fiber spin laboratory before visiting
AEDC.

Drs. John Petersen and Donald Daniel
visit with Tullahoma Mayor Troy Bisby,
left, and Coffee County Mayor-Elect
David Pennington of Manchester at UTSI
luncheon
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Dr. John Petersen, right,
greets Sen. Douglas Henry at the luncheon.
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State Sen. Jerry Cooper, left,
visits with UT President Dr. John Petersen.
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Dr. Ahmad Vakili, left,
discusses carbon fiber technology in UTSI’s
spin laboratory with UT President Dr. John
Petersen, center, and Dr. Ed Kraft, AEDC
chief scientist.
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UTSI Professor Lloyd Davis, right, discusses single
molecule detection with, from left, Drs. Dan
Stewart, Donald Daniel, Ed Kraft,
and UT President John Petersen.
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Visiting after the UTSI luncheon
are, from left, Drs. Craig Blue, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, Naren Dahotre and Joel W. Muehlhauser,
and Jack Britt, UT.
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Dr. Donald Daniel,
right, chats with UTSI visitors,
from left, Drs. Ed Kraft, Way Kuo,
and Chancellor Lauren Crabtree.
-- UTSI Photos
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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