For release October 13, 2005UTSI
GLIDER SHOW AT AIRPORT TO PRECEDE
QUICK-GOETHERT LECTURE, BANQUET OCT. 20
A glider “fly-In” at Tullahoma Airport on the
morning of Oct. 20 will precede the Quick-Goethert Lecture at 4
p.m. and banquet at 6 p.m. at The University of Tennessee Space
Institute.
Glider enthusiasts who will be displaying and flying their
aircraft will include Dr. Gary A. Flandro, UTSI professor who
also will deliver this year’s lecture, Richard W. (Dick) Butler
of Manchester, UTSI graduate who holds world and U.S. glider
championship titles, and Leo Benetti-Longhini of Tullahoma.
“Leo holds an FAI world distance record for a recent flight in
his Silent self-launching glider,” Flandro said, “and he is the
U.S. representative for the Italian company that produces this
beautiful machine.”
The UTSI soaring club will fly their two-place machine and may
offer rides to the public if time and weather permit, said Dr.
Peter Solies, an Aviation Systems professor and founder and
chief flight instructor for the club.
Flandro’s and Butler’s friend, Gerhard Waibel, a world-renowned
sailplane designer for the Schleicher glider manufacturing
company in Germany, will attend. He and Butler are “creating the
best glider in the world and are perfecting it in Manchester,”
Flandro said.
Enthused that the glider event “ties in perfectly” with his
lecture, Flandro said that Butler, who received his master’s
degree in aerospace engineering at UTSI in 1972, is preparing
for yet another world championship competition.
“We invited Gov. Phil Bredesen, an avid glider enthusiast, to
bring his powered glider, and he said he really wanted to
participate but his schedule forced him to decline,” said Dr.
John E. Caruthers, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of the Institute.
“We are calling this the Miller Wilder Glider Event in honor of
a former UTSI student who was killed last year in an accident at
a flight school in Arizona,” added Caruthers. He invited the
public to attend the exhibition 10 a.m. until noon to see the
gliders take to the air via automobile tow launch and then to
attend Flandro’s lecture in UTSI’s auditorium as guests of the
Institute. Dr. Peter Solies, associate Aviations Systems
professor and founder and chief flight instructor of UTSI’s
Soaring Club, said as time permits, he hopes to offer a few free
glider rides during the celebration.
Flandro, a professor in the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace
and Biomedical Engineering, has held UTSI’s Boling Chair of
Excellence in Space Propulsion since 1991. He has stressed that
his lecture, titled: “Spaceflight: New Pathways” will be “down
to earth,” and he is hopeful that area high school science
students will be among those attending the free lecture. About
100 persons have made reservations for the 6 p.m. banquet in the
Industrial Student Center. No reservations are required to
attend the lecture.
Flandro sees harnessing “the energy and resources that are
available in abundance within our reach just outside the
atmosphere” as key to man’s survival. First, he says, “we must
identify new and more efficient pathways into space.” He will
explore these possibilities in his lecture, which he will
deliver again next year in Aachen, Germany. He visualizes man
going beyond “merely exploring space to actually utilizing it to
solve many of our growth problems here on Earth.” He sees the
average person soon traveling into space “recreationally” as
private industry assumes a greater role in man’s reach beyond
Earth.
The lectures were established in 1974 by UT and the Technical
University of Aachen in honor of the late Dr. B.H. Goethert,
first UTSI director, and the late Dr. Ing. A.W. Quick from
Aachen. Representing Aachen at this lecture will be Professor
Dr.-Ing Wolfgang Alles, Flight Dynamics Chair.
Flandro received the NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal in 1998
for his contributions “to the design and engineering of
multi-outer-planet missions, including the Grand Tour
opportunity of the epic Voyager explorations.”
A Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics, Flandro received the 1970 M.N. Golovine Award from
the British Interplanetary Society in recognition of his
discovery of the Voyager’s multiple outer planet mission
opportunity. The U.S. Air Force gave him the 1981 Edward M.
Glass Award for “outstanding propulsion research.” UT alumni and
the National UT Alumni Association sponsor the lectures.

DR. GARY A. FLANDRO

This
glider in flight is similar to Dr. Gary Flandro’s glider
that will be flying in the show at Tullahoma Airport at
10 a.m. Oct. 20.
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393 - 7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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