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  Purdue erects statue for alum Neil Armstrong

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Author Topic:   Purdue erects statue for alum Neil Armstrong
Robert Pearlman
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From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 01-10-2007 01:05 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
From the Pittsburgh Tribute-Review:
North Carolina artist and Ligonier native Chas Fagan, 40, recently was granted a $150,000 commission to create a bronze statue of American astronaut Neil Armstrong for Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.

The larger-than-life statue of Armstrong as a young man will be placed at the entrance of the Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering, a 210,000-square-foot building being constructed on the northeast corner of Purdue's campus at a cost of more than $51 million.

...Fagan's piece, which will be placed at the building's entrance under a dramatic cantilevered canopy, is to be unveiled during Purdue's June 30 "victory celebration" marking the completion of the successful Campaign for Purdue — a $1.5 billion fundraising campaign. There is no word as of yet as to whether Armstrong will be available for the statue's unveiling.

...the concept, Fagan says by telephone from his studio in Charlotte, N.C., is to show Armstrong during his student years at Purdue in the 1950s. That explains why the completed 8-foot-tall figure will be set on a stone plinth and depicted with legs dangling.

"This casual pose will hopefully invite students to hop up and join him between classes or on sunny days," Fagan says. "Fittingly, Armstrong has a student-like demeanor in his era — appropriate windbreaker jacket and khaki pants, and he has the requisite notebook, textbook and slide-rule at his side."

As Fagan tells it, he envisions the figure of Armstrong gazing out to the main campus walkway, toward a line of footprints — actually stone moon-boot prints — in the nearby grass. This, says the artist, would evoke Armstrong's transition from student to astronaut.

ejectr
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From: Killingly, CT
Registered: Mar 2002

posted 01-10-2007 04:33 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for ejectr   Click Here to Email ejectr     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
My son has an Aeronautical/Astronautical Engineering degree from Purdue. His first year there he was assigned to the same dorm that Neil Armstrong lived in when he attended Purdue. They engrave the name of each student who stayed in a room on a brass plate above the outside of the door to each room.

When I went to visit him, he showed me his name on the plate and then scanned several names up the list to "Neil Armstrong"!

You might think that would be incentive for a 17 year old to stay on campus in a dorm. No way....he blew it off for an apartment with his buddies off campus the following year.

Duke Of URL
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From: Syracuse, NY
Registered: Jan 2005

posted 02-21-2007 08:53 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Duke Of URL   Click Here to Email Duke Of URL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
The idea of Armstrong as a student is brilliant.

Duke Of URL
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From: Syracuse, NY
Registered: Jan 2005

posted 02-21-2007 08:57 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Duke Of URL   Click Here to Email Duke Of URL     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Didn't Gene Cernan and Roger Chaffee also attend Purdue? Does anybody know which other astronauts went there and if there will be a memorial of some sort?

KSCartist
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From: Titusville, FL USA
Registered: Feb 2005

posted 02-22-2007 07:05 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for KSCartist   Click Here to Email KSCartist     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Actually I read a few years ago that Purdue has the most astronaut/alumni than any other college (or did at the time the article came out).

Eric Rodenberg
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From: Indiana
Registered: Feb 2007

posted 02-22-2007 11:26 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Eric Rodenberg   Click Here to Email Eric Rodenberg     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I believe the current number stands at 22 for Purdue alumni selected to be astronauts and/or astronaut candidates. The following list was accessed here:
  • Neil Armstrong
  • John Blaha
  • Roy Bridges, Jr.
  • Mark Brown
  • John Casper
  • Gene Cernan
  • Roger Chaffee
  • Richard Covey
  • Andrew Feustel
  • Guy Gardner
  • Gus Grissom
  • Gregory Harbaugh
  • Michael McCulley
  • Gary Payton
  • Mark Polansky
  • Jerry Ross
  • Loren Shriver
  • Janice Voss
  • Charles Walker
  • Mary Weber
  • Donald Williams
  • David Wolf
I attended a banquet sponsored by Purdue earlier this month. Jim Lovell and Gene Kranz shared the stage as they gave the keynote address. At this banquet, it was announced that Purdue is currently tied with M.I.T. in graduating the highest number of alumni that went on to join the astronaut corps, aside from the military academies. This statistic is purely anecdotal; I have not confirmed whether Purdue and M.I.T. are currently tied for having the most astronauts among non-military institutions, so I apologize if this is incorrect.

The state of Indiana and its citizens derive a great benefit from several top-rate academic institutions, and Purdue University is among those. I am a third-generation Purdue University graduate. During my undergraduate studies at Purdue in the late 1990's, I witnessed first-hand the outstanding pride Purdue and its alumni exhibit for Purdue's astronaut alumni.

The Purdue astronauts have devoted a good deal of their personal time in giving back to the university. Neil Armstrong and Gene Cernan - probably the two most widely recognizable names of living astronauts on the above list - have been active participants in many Purdue events. Most notably were a major Purdue University fundraising campaign in the early-to-mid 1990's in which they served as co-chairs, and the astronaut reunion gala on campus in October 1999 in which all living astronaut alumni returned to campus for multiple events coinciding with Purdue's Homecoming weekend. Betty Grissom and Martha Chaffee were also present to honor their husbands' legacies and ties to the Purdue family. I was a senior that fall in 1999, and I must say there was quite a buzz on campus leading up to Homecoming.

From my own observations, Purdue guards the astronauts' privacies very well. In fact, I can recall two instances in the past 2-4 years when Neil Armstrong has returned to campus without any prior announcement by the university. As most of the readers on these forums can attest, Mr. Armstrong enjoys his anonymity, and I feel that the Purdue community respects such concerns admirably.

In regards to the upcoming dedication of the Neil A. Armstrong Hall of Engineering in June 2007, I do not know if Mr. Armstrong and/or any of the other Purdue astronauts will be on hand. However, I do know from personal corresponence with one of Purdue's former administration executives that Mr. Armstrong had reservations about having the building named in his honor. I inferred from these conversations that the process of gaining his approval and the final designation of the hall in his name by the university board of trustees spanned several years.

In all, Purdue has been blessed with a wonderful connection to the U.S. manned space program over the past five decades. I'm sure it will continue to be a leader in the years to come.

Robert Pearlman
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From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 10-26-2007 09:29 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Purdue University release
Neil Armstrong sculpture, lunar footprints, unveiled at Purdue

Purdue University unveiled a bronze sculpture of alumnus Neil Armstrong on Friday (Oct. 26) as a prelude to Saturday's (Oct. 27) dedication ceremony for a new engineering research and education building named for the first astronaut to walk on the moon.

The statue, accompanied by a trail of sculpted moon boot impressions and other symbolic features, is situated in front of the new Neil Armstrong Hall of Engineering, located at Stadium and Northwestern avenues on Purdue's West Lafayette campus.

Artist Chas Fagan, from Charlotte, N.C., created the work. The sculpture of Armstrong, depicted as an undergraduate student in the 1950s, sits on a stone plinth in front of the building. Armstrong gazes over his left shoulder in the general direction of the lunar moon boot impressions.

"When our students see this sculpture, I hope they'll believe that they, like Mr. Armstrong, can achieve the unimaginable," said Purdue President France A. Cordova. "I hope it will inspire them to reach for the stars."

The bronze statue, an 8-foot-tall, 125 percent scale likeness of Armstrong, recreates the image of a clean-cut college student wearing a windbreaker, button-down Oxford shirt, cuffed khaki pants and penny loafers. His right hand rests on a small stack of books, and his slide rule is removed from its case as though ready for action.

Mary Jo Kirk and her husband, Purdue alumnus Bob Kirk of Washington, D.C., donated the money for the sculpture. In recognition, the area in which it is located has been named Kirk Plaza.

An elliptical stone arc resembling a spacecraft trajectory is embedded flush with the ground in Kirk Plaza next to the statue. An inscription in the arc reads: "One small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."

The arc leads toward the lunar footprints, which were molded from an impression made using a moon boot provided by the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum. The 20 boot impressions trail away from the sculpture, running parallel to a walkway and spaced far apart to replicate the bounding gait of an Apollo astronaut. A few of the lunar prints are farther apart than others, as though created by a leaping moon walker.

Fagan said the sculpture presented several challenges.

"The moon boot prints are definitely an interesting feature," Fagan said. "Now students are really able to walk in the footsteps of Neil Armstrong."

Fagan consulted with Armstrong to ensure that he was on the right track before creating the sculpture's final design.

"I met with him privately so that I could ask him for input and get his perspective of what he was like as an engineering student at Purdue," Fagan said. "He reviewed details and made suggestions, and the design was approved by committee."

Fagan also had to meet with his subject to solve a key missing ingredient: He needed to know what Armstrong's profile looked like.

"I took photos that clearly showed his profile because none existed," Fagan said. "The age difference did not really matter because bone structure and basic features don't change. Without knowing someone's profile, you are just guessing, based on shadows you see in non-profile photographs, as to how the person looks in real life."

Armstrong also provided materials for the sculptor to work with, including photographs from family albums, his slide rule and original Purdue notebooks, said Fagan, an internationally known artist whose work adorns the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C. Fagan currently is working on a statue of Ronald Reagan for the U.S. Capitol building. He also created the official White House portrait of Barbara Bush, an oil painting.

Armstrong earned a bachelor's degree from Purdue's School of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1955 and was selected for astronaut training in 1962. As spacecraft commander for NASA's Apollo 11, he and astronauts Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin completed the first landing mission to the moon in 1969, with Armstrong as the first human to walk on the lunar surface. He also had been commander of the Gemini 8 flight in 1966 when he performed the first successful docking of two vehicles in space, flew 78 combat missions from an aircraft carrier during the Korean War and was a test pilot for pioneering high-speed aircraft.

Armstrong is a retired chairman of the EDO Corp., an electronics and aerospace manufacturer.

Mary Jo Kirk has lived in Washington, D.C., for nearly 40 years. During that time she completed a master's degree in English literature from The George Washington University, held several professional sales and marketing positions, married Bob Kirk and raised three daughters. She currently serves as co-chair of The Circle, the membership program at the National Gallery of Art, which brings together people from across the nation who share an appreciation for the arts and to enhance the National Gallery. She is a member of Chapter, the governing board of the Washington National Cathedral and is a trustee of the Washington National Opera.

Bob Kirk, a retired chairman of British Aerospace Holdings Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of British Aerospace plc., earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue in 1952 and received an honorary doctorate in engineering from Purdue in 1993. After graduating from Purdue, he served three years as an officer in the U.S. Navy. From 1958 to 1967 he served in key engineering and marketing positions for Litton Industries. He was based four years in Switzerland before becoming vice president and head of Litton's Washington office. In 1967 he joined ITT as vice president and product-line manager. In 1977 he became president and CEO of LTV Aerospace, holding that position until 1986. Then he was chairman and CEO of Allied Signal Aerospace from 1986 to 1989 and chairman and CEO of CSX Transportation from 1989 to 1992.

In recent years, Bob Kirk has served as a member of the board of directors of such companies as Harsco Corp. and First Aviation Services Inc. He also has served on the Defense Industry Advisory Council Committee on Military Experts, and he was a charter member of the U.S. Delegation of the NATO Industrial Advisory Group.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42988
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 10-26-2007 01:44 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Purdue University photo release:
Students admire a bronze statue of Neil Armstrong during an unveiling ceremony on Friday (Oct. 26) at Purdue. Armstrong, a Purdue alumnus, also is the namesake for a new building being dedicated on Saturday (Oct. 27). Artist Chas Fagan of Charlotte, N.C., created the sculpture, which depicts Armstrong as an undergraduate student in the 1950s.

Jay Chladek
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From: Bellevue, NE, USA
Registered: Aug 2007

posted 10-26-2007 10:40 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Jay Chladek   Click Here to Email Jay Chladek     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I have to say, this tribute is much better then say a statue of Armstrong as a test pilot or an astronaut. Reason being is it shows he had all this untapped potential with no firm direction yet while going to college and he was in the process of shaping it. So bravo to the selection committee for going this way and congrats to the sculptor for doing such a great job on it as well.

spaceman1953
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From: South Bend, IN
Registered: Apr 2002

posted 10-28-2007 05:06 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for spaceman1953   Click Here to Email spaceman1953     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
On the cement base on Neil's right, is a notepad on some sort and a slide rule and a slide rule case!

After the hall dedication on Saturday, MANY people were using the folding chairs still out, and climbing up to sit next to Neil and take pictures. But I know only me and one Engineering student we talked to knew about the slide rule!

Interesting, because in that slide rule exhibit in Potter Hall, there is a copy of Neil (and Gene Cernan's letter) telling that (a paraphrase), "I will send you my slide rule for your exhibit as soon as I find it!"

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