For release August 23,
2006DR. ARTHUR MASON, PIONEER UTSI
PROFESSOR, DIES;
HELD VARIOUS POSITIONS DURING LENGTHY CAREER
Dr. Arthur A. Mason of Manchester, World War II naval aviator
and one of the first faculty members chosen to open The
University of Tennessee Space Institute in 1964, died Aug. 22
after a season of illness.
Visitation and services for the professor emeritus of physics
are set for Aug. 24 at First Baptist Church, Manchester, where
the Masons have been active members for more than 40 years.
Visitation will be from 1 to 3 p.m. with services starting at 3
with Dr. Mason’s pastor, Dr. Brenton Cox, presiding. Manchester
Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.
Dr. Mason retired from UTSI May 31, 1995, after a long career
that included serving in various positions including Director of
Academic Programs and Assistant and Associate Dean of the Space
Institute.
“All of us at UTSI are deeply saddened to hear of the loss of
our dear colleague and friend, Art Mason,” said Dr. Donald C.
Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief operating officer
of the Institute.
“Without pioneers like Art, there would be no University of
Tennessee Space Institute, nor would we have achieved the
prominence that we enjoy on a worldwide basis in the aerospace
community. Art was a treasure, and we will always be grateful
for his and Helen’s many contributions and support of UTSI.”
In May 1964, while a research assistant in the Physics
Department at UT-Knoxville, Dr. Mason accepted an offer to join
UTSI in September as assistant professor of physics. He had
married Helen Burnette, executive secretary of the Physics
Department earlier that year.
Dr. Mason was the third faculty member specifically chosen for
UTSI, which began first classes Sept. 24, 1964, in spaces
provided by AEDC until the Institute was built.
One of the first three UTSI students to receive doctorates in
Physics – J.D. Trolinger – was one of Dr. Mason’s students. In
July 1967, Dr. Mason was promoted to associate professor, and he
was granted tenure a year later.
Soon after the Institute opened, the first director, the late
Dr. B.H. Goethert, persuaded Helen Mason to serve as the
Institute’s first librarian, and she assembled the first books
in their Manchester home. She held that position until retiring
in 1987.
In May 1970 Dr. Mason was faculty advisor of a newly formed
chapter of Sigma Pi Sigma, a Physics honor society, and he later
established a chapter of the Society of Physics Students and a
Sigma Pi science honor society. He was promoted to full
professor in July 1974.
Two years later, in August 1976, he was named as assistant dean
of UTSI and in January 1980 was appointed as Director of
Academic Programs. For the next decade, Dr. Mason served either
as assistant or associate dean and returned to the classroom in
1986. An experimental molecular spectroscopist, Professor
Mason’s research ranged throughout the electromagnetic spectrum
from the far infrared to the vacuum ultraviolet. Early in his
career, Dr. Mason established an active cooperative research
effort with engineers and scientists at AEDC. His effort played
a significant role in the development of several important
techniques in the area of spectroscopic diagnostics of
high-temperature non-equilibrium gas flows.
At the conclusion of Dr. Reimar Luest’s Quick Goethert Lecture
at UTSI on Oct. 31, 1989, Dr. Mason said that scientists and
engineers were shaping “the way we live and the way our children
live.” He concluded that, “It is in the work that we leave
something behind for future generations.”
He and his wife taught Sunday school and Dr. Mason was a
long-time deacon at First Baptist. He also was active in the
Manchester Rotary Club.

DR. ARTHUR A. MASON
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu |