Embry-Riddle to Dedicate Jack R. Hunt Aviator Park
Daytona
Beach, Fla., Jan. 23, 2003 -- Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University will dedicate a campus park in honor of its first
president, famed Navy aviator Jack Hunt, on Thursday, Feb.
20.
"As our country celebrates the Centennial of Flight,
we at Embry-Riddle are celebrating our rich heritage in
aviation education," said Bob Rockett, Embry-Riddle dean
of campus development. "We're proud to pay tribute to
Jack Hunt, the father of the modern Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University."
The 4 p.m. ceremony will be held at the Jack R. Hunt
Aviator Park, located between the John Paul Riddle Student
Center and the Capt. Willie Miller Instructional Center.
The park includes a monument and plaque funded by a generous
donation from Embry-Riddle alumnus Arnold Leonora. Benches
and tables to be used as a gathering place for students
will be added later. A biography of Hunt is also planned,
as well as improvements and additions to the Hunt display
in the Jack R. Hunt Memorial Library.
At the ceremony:
- Dr. John McCollister, co-author of The Sky is Home,
the history of Embry-Riddle, will deliver a special
prayer.
- Dr. George Ebbs, Embry-Riddle president, will welcome
the attendees.
- Bob Rockett and Brig. Gen. William Spruance, chairman
emeritus of Embry-Riddle's Board of Trustees, will speak
on Hunt's contributions to Embry-Riddle. Those who would
like to share their memories of him are invited to send
their stories to Rockett at robert.rockett@erau.edu.
- Geoff Hunt, Embry-Riddle alumnus and son of Jack Hunt,
will address the crowd.
- Dr. Irwin Price, chancellor of Embry-Riddle's Daytona
Beach campus, will talk about the park and unveil the
monument.
Following the ceremony, a formal reception will be held
in the atrium of the Aviation Building.
Hunt was president of Embry-Riddle from 1963 until his
death in 1984. Under his leadership, Embry-Riddle moved
from Miami to Daytona Beach in 1965, a move that was accomplished
with money and trucks borrowed from a group of Volusia
County civic leaders known as the Committee of 100. In
the following five years, Embry-Riddle won accreditation
and gained university stature. Embry-Riddle expanded under
Hunt's direction when the site of a former college in
Prescott, Ariz., became the university's Western campus.
Before joining Embry-Riddle, Hunt was a U.S. Navy commander
who gained international fame as the pilot of the Navy
airship ZPG-2 Snowbird, which made the first nonstop,
round-trip flight across the Atlantic Ocean. From March
4 to 16, 1957, Hunt led the 14-man crew of the Snowbird
in a journey of 9,448 miles that started in Massachusetts,
reached Portugal, Africa, Puerto Rico, and Cuba, and ended
in Florida. It was the longest nonrefueled sustained flight
ever made.
For this achievement, Fleet Adm. William "Bull" Halsey
awarded Cmdr. Hunt the Distinguished Flying Cross, and
President Dwight Eisenhower presented him with the Harmon
Trophy.
Friends of Jack Hunt and Embry-Riddle, especially members
of the Committee of 100, may request an invitation to
the park dedication ceremony by contacting Maxine Sowinski
at 386-226-6138 or maxine.sowinski@erau.edu
by Monday, Feb. 17.
Embry-Riddle, the world's largest, fully accredited
university specializing in aviation and aerospace, meets
the needs of students and industry through its educational,
training, research, and consulting activities. Embry-Riddle
educates more than 25,000 students annually through the
master's level at residential campuses in Daytona Beach,
Fla., and Prescott, Ariz., at more than 150 teaching centers
in the United States and Europe, and through distance
learning.
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