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Stuff excised from the article:

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Personal Recollections

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(This section was generously contributed by Westerhout's distinguished colleagues and students and is essential to this biography, enlivening and personalizing it to transcend the dryness of so many other articles.)


- Hugo van Woerden: In Westerhout's Leiden years, astronomy students had to go through a long curriculum; each of the three degrees: candidaat, doctorandus and doctor, would require 3-4 years on average. Westerhout entered Leiden University in 1945. Right after his first degree, in early 1950, he started research in radio astronomy, a brand-new, post-war branch of astronomy. He worked with Oort on a model of the Galactic continuum radiation (Westerhout and Oort 1951, BAN 11, 323), and then became heavily involved in the first 21-cm Galactic hydrogen-line studies carried out with the Kootwijk Wurzburg dish. (In a witty after-dinner speech (2002, ASP Conf 276, pp. 27-33) he gave a vivid description of the Kootwijk operations.) After his second degree in 1954, Westerhout was drafted for military service. However, Oort and Van de Hulst successfully argued before the highest State Council that his 21-cm line work was indispensable to the Observatory, and Westerhout was excused from the army after only five months of service (while 18 months was normal). After 1956, using the Dwingeloo 25-meter radio telescope, Westerhout mainly worked on radio continuum studies, including his famous 21-cm source survey, a major 75-cm survey (Seeger, Westerhout, Conway, Hoekema 1965: BAN 18, 11), and early work on polarization of the Galactic background radiation. In 1962 he moved to the University of Maryland, where he became Professor and Director of Astronomy, and returned to Galactic 21-cm line studies with the Green Bank WVA 300-foot meridian telescope. Westerhout's interest in astronomy dates back to his high-school years. Like his contemporaries Schmidt and Van Woerden, he was inspired by Dr. Jean J. Raimond, Director of the Zeiss-Planetarium at The Hague and author of several popular books about astronomy. His father, Gart Westerhout, was an architect and his mother, Magda Foppe, was an author. At his first IAU General Assembly, at Dublin in 1955, Gart met Judith Monaghan, who worked at the Dublin Institute for Advanced studies; they fell in love and were married a year later.

- John D. Curtis, from his University of Maryland years: van Wijk and Westerhout had described how the Ph.D oral defense procedure sometimes occurred in Holland. The candidate might be flanked on either side by two "paranymphs", and upon receiving a question that he might have difficulty with would say: "One moment while I consult with my paranymphs". (Sort of two life-lines.) We found this most amusing, and James J. Rickard (who was about to be subjected to his orals) decided it would be even more memorable if HE was flanked by a couple of paranymphs all duded up in formal black tie dress, perhaps amplifying and distorting the proceeding into something of a caricature. The questioning began and Jim was doing fine until asked by one of the physics professors how can we measure the earth's proper motion through the universe. Jim hadn't a clue, but I knew and it suddenly occurred to me that just for fun the powers that be might allow just one consultation for theatrical effect. I grabbed a pencil and began writing for permission ... the room went dead quiet as everybody watched me, and upon receiving the note, Gart nodded. Jim then saw the note and gave the required "One moment while I..." comment, consulted with both paranymphs, and then explained to the board about looking at the differential red shift of the cosmic background radiation. The board moved on to the next question. I thought it was great, but Gart told me later that he had been almost in a state of shock and couldn't think fast enough to say no. Later, we were paranymphs again for someone else but Gart suggested we not do it again.

- Kurt Riegel: I was Gart's first Ph.D. student at the University of Maryland and it sometimes felt as though we were both making it up as we went along. For example, Gart suggested an efficient dissertation writing procedure that, to my knowledge, had not been employed before. Rather than writing and binding a bulky, excessively annotated and data-packed dissertation for defense, he suggested that we go directly to a version strong and compact enough for publishing directly in the Astrophysical Journal. I was all too happy to comply.
Shortly after his arrival in America, students gaped at his ever-present cigar - he imported Ritmeesters by the barrel from Holland, seemingly every week. Of course, he eventually spurned them but for a time they suggested a flamboyance seldom found among his academic colleagues.
I recall his enthusiasm for flying and his efforts to obtain an aviation license, when justified hiring private airplanes with pilot to carry four people to meetings as he polished his flying skills. One such flight carried us College Park MD to Ann Arbor MI. I was fascinated by the instrument panel, but noticed with horror that the altimeter dial started sweeping counterclockwise, faster & faster - we were dropping like a rock. Even under full-throttle the altimeter still plummeted, because we were in a strong downdraft of a developing storm. Gart and the unconcerned pilot pointed out that even the strongest downdraft must turn horizontal at some point, which of course is what happened as we resumed normal flight. Only later did I learn that the leveling-out maneuver in a downdraft is still dangerous - because of the danger of stalling in a flow that is parallel to the direction of flight!

- Mike Davis: I first met Gart when I arrived at the Sterrewacht te Leiden in September, 1960 as an NSF graduate fellow. I worked with Gart until his departure for Maryland, on compiling a discrete source catalog from the Dwingeloo 400 MHz survey. He and Judith were most helpful getting Jean and me settled into our apartment in Leiden. We even made use of the kolenkachel (coal-burning stove) that they still had in storage from the Suez crisis a few years earlier. We later met up with Gart and Judith in Green Bank, where we moved in 1966. They would come up with their children every summer, to continue the hydrogen observations with the 300 foot telescope. I was the assigned staff adviser for the 300-foot in those days, and much of what I learned and passed on to others came from Gart's experience and advice. We also enjoyed contact with the many Maryland graduate students who worked with Gart on this and other projects in Green Bank.

- Aage Sandqvist: I am forever indebted to Gart for still being in astronomy. Early in my graduate studies, after about a year or so, I was having trouble with some of my Physics courses. During my Christmas holidays, back home in Canada, I came to the conclusion that I didn’t have the brains to achieve a PhD and I arrived back at Maryland at the beginning of 1966 determined to pack my things and go home permanently. I told Gart, my advisor, about my decision to quit. He wouldn’t hear of it! He wouldn’t let me! After a long talk, during which he revealed his own uncertainties as a graduate student in Holland, and his own astonishment at now being the Director of the Astronomy Program at the University of Maryland, he convinced me to NEVER GIVE UP.

Westerhout in College Park, late 1960's

Gart gave me more good advice: One day in our old offices in the Physics building, I was sitting staring at the wall, daydreaming about a girl. Gart walked by and, seeing me in this blank state, asked me what I was doing. “Oh, thinking”, I said, wrinkling my brow a little. Shifting his cigar slightly, he walked on. Next day, I found a new sign on my notice board in front of me which said “DON’T THINK, - WORK!”

Gart and I had one standing conflict, which was never completely resolved: I loved lederhosen; Gart hated lederhosen. Although I could understand his political motivation for this feeling, because I too had (childhood) experiences from an occupied country (my parents were in the Danish resistance movement during WWII), I still thought that he was irrational, and as a Scandinavian and Canadian I suffered immensely from the high temperatures in the Washington area - lederhosen was a cool solution. But Gart didn’t like to see “hairy toes” (a reference to Jim Rickard’s sockless sandals) and “hairy knees” (yours truly) during working hours. So, eventually we reached an uncertain compromise, - no lederhosen during nine-to-five. This was not the end of the lederhosen story, however. That occurred the following summer up at the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) in Green Bank, West Virginia. Gart and I were sitting each at a desk in an office working away at the preparation of the next observing session in his Maryland-Green Bank Survey of Neutral Hydrogen in the Milky Way Galaxy. I had my back to the door and to Gart, when suddenly I heard him grunt. I looked around at him. I think he had swallowed his cigar. He was looking at the doorway, pale and eyes bulging. I looked at the door - and there stood Gart’s new student, Ron Harten, wearing ... lederhosen, practically identical to mine. “Not another one!” was his desperate whisper.
My last little story concerns Karin (my wife) and myself. Karin came from Sweden in the beginning of 1968 and we lived together as husband and wife without actually getting married until 1971, when we did marry. This was standard procedure in Scandinavia, but certainly not in the US in those days. One problem arose in connection with an observation run at Green Bank, because I wanted to show Green Bank to Karin and have her come along. “Only accompanying wives (and mothers, I think) are allowed in the dormitory at Green Bank” I was told authoritatively by NRAO. What to do? Well, we took a small tent along and pitched it in the little woods at the end of the Green Bank runway. I went from there to my observing session at the 140-foot telescope. While I was sitting at the control desk the first day, the phone rang and John Findlay (who was the Green Bank director at that time) was on the other end: “Sandy, you bloody idiot, why didn’t you tell a lie, and say that Karin was your wife. You’ll have to pull down the tent immediately. This observatory must be perfect. And just to let you know that I understand you, we will give YOU one room and Karin a separate room at the dorm, THIS time only”. Well, how does Gart come into this? Gart arrived by plane that same day and was greeted at the runway by a very excited Wally Oref, who was in charge of Green Bank morality and other administrative matters. “What are you going to do about that Sandqvist?” Wally cried out before Gart even got his foot on the tarmac. “What’s Sandy done now?” was Gart’s reply, and he was told in probably no uncertain terms. So, Gart and Sandy had another talk, about morality, culture, national characteristics - a very friendly talk it turned out to be. Gart’s last comment to me, as I left his office, was “... and oh, by the way, Sandy, whatever you do, just make darn sure that at least one bed in EACH room is messed up every morning!”

Discussion

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Somebody removed the genuine heart of this article. It has been reviewed carefully by all contributers, AND ALSO AFTER IT WAS WRITTEN, BY THE SUBJECT OF THE ARTICLE, Gart Westerhout. He approves of its contact, finds it accurate, and if necessary will provide written certification to that effect. -Kurt Riegel — Preceding unsigned comment added by Kurt Riegel (talkcontribs)
Wikipedia isn't intended to be a memorial site, or to host this type of material. Everything on Wikipedia needs to be verifiable from published sources. I suggest finding a newsletter or journal which will publish these reminiscences.   Will Beback  talk  04:26, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
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