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Date: 6/16/2007 AERO ALUM AWES ASTRONAUT ARNOLD
Recipients say that of all the Space Flight Awareness (SFA) awards, the Silver Snoopy best symbolizes the intent and spirit of SFA. Astronauts personally present this award to employees for outstanding performance. The number of Silver Snoopys presented in any year cannot exceed 1% of the program population. The award includes a flown Silver Snoopy pin, the commendation letter stating when the Snoopy was flown and a signed Silver Snoopy certificate and frame.
The Silver Snoopy is the astronauts’ personal award. Candidates are considered if they have made contributions toward enhancing the probability of mission success, or made improvements in design, administrative/technical/production techniques, business systems, flight and/or systems safety or identification and correction or preventive action for errors. “Because this award is given by an astronaut, it is a reminder of how important the job that I do really is,” Polsgrove says. “Every time the shuttle lifts off, the crew is trusting me and everyone that works with me with their lives. That is very humbling.” Polsgrove began his career with NASA in August of 1999 after graduating from UC's Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics Department in June 1999. He is at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., where he works as a propulsion systems engineer on the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME).
Robert Polsgrove’s fondest memories of UC are the long nights he spent working with his classmates in the student lounge of the aerospace department. “The schoolwork was overwhelming sometimes, and late study nights became typical,” he says. “We would laugh and joke, and probably take twice as long to do the work as we should have, but we enjoyed the time with each other.”
“It was a good experience, but can't touch the special place in my heart that UC will always have,” he says. “I most remember Dr. Kirti Ghia. He was such a patient man—always willing to help. He was tough, but praised you when you did well. It felt good to get a compliment from him. When I was there, his office was in Baldwin Hall. We always used to joke about the stacks of papers and books in his office that would go practically to the ceiling, and we expected him to be late for class one day simply because he got trapped under an avalanche of paper.” "I am very much a strong supporter of UC's co-op program. While getting my undergraduate degree, I worked for six quarters at Delta Air Lines in Atlanta in the propulsion department. Not until I started working for NASA did I realize how valuable the co-op opportunity is. I wouldn't trade it for anything.
“I don't want to become an astronaut,” says Polsgrove. “It's a glamorous, high-profile profession worthy of praise, but not for me. I find my job on the ground to be the most rewarding thing I can do with my life, and I plan on doing it for a long time.”
NASA would be happy to hear that, no doubt.
For more UC news, go to www.uc.edu/news/
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