COMMIT TO LEAVING A LEGACY
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Roger Hunter
PAYING IT FORWARD
When Roger Hunter (BS '78) was in high school, he was awarded a scholarship that enabled him to attend the University of Georgia. Today, the alumnus and NASA program manager can think of no better way to pay it forward then to help provide similar opportunities for UGA students.
"My family did not have the economic ability to send me to college," Roger recalled. "I was nearing my high school graduation, and was becoming anxious about what I was going to do after graduation. I had applied to several colleges and was accepted, but I did not have the economic means to attend. That all changed on a Sunday afternoon in April, just a few weeks before graduation. I remember receiving a call from the financial aid office at UGA telling me I was going receive a four-year scholarship to attend; I was overwhelmed with this news and generosity. That's why I give back, to afford others the same opportunities I received because of the scholarship that UGA made happen for me."
Attending UGA changed Roger's life. On the day he graduated from UGA, he was also commissioned through the Air Force ROTC program at UGA. For the next 21 years he served in the U.S. Air Force, primarily focusing on space operations. When he retired from the Air Force, he joined the Boeing Company, and worked in its Integrated Defense Systems. For the next seven and a half years with Boeing, Roger directed more than 250 engineers and technicians in sustaining the Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite constellation and its command and control systems. In 2008, NASA recruited him to join its Kepler mission team at NASA Ames Research Center. The Kepler Mission is NASA's first mission capable of searching the Milky Way galaxy for other worlds that could be potentially habitable. The results from Kepler have been amazing and Roger presented a TEDxUGA talk on that mission at the TEDxUGA event in March 2014.
STAYING CONNECTED
Although Roger's career has landed him in northern California, 2,500 miles from campus, he has found several ways to remain connected to and supportive of the University of Georgia. In 2013, he helped UGA become the world's first university to have a planetary system named after it , and in 2015, he hosted UGA President Morehead and other members of the UGA community on a tour of the NASA Ames Research Center. He currently serves on the Franklin College Board of Advisors and on the University's Board of Visitors.
Recently, he established a generous bequest, a planned gift left through his will to benefit the University of Georgia Foundation, to endow the Roger C. Hunter Scholarships for Future Scientists Fund and the Roger C. Hunter Distinguished Professorship in the Sciences Fund. Roger was compelled to establish these funds because of his interest in the STEM fields and their effect on the national economy. "I want to provide the students who also have those interests with the means to apply themselves to their studies. I don't want them to worry about having sufficient funds to pay for their basic necessities like housing, clothing or food. They can apply themselves to their studies because that is the best investment they can make for all of us," Roger explained.
IN HIS OWN WORDS
"You can't wait for the future to happen; they are going to invent it."
Roger Hunter
COMMITING TO A BETTER FUTURE THROUGH MENTORING
Not only has Roger established a generous planned gift through his estate, he also heavily invests his time and knowledge, primarily by mentoring students. "They bring the future," said Roger. "You can't wait for the future to happen; they are going to invent it. We have to figure out a way to help them think their way through it so they can create a future that is better than the present we are living in today."
Roger regularly returns to Athens to share his expertise-and his wonderful sense of humor-with students. In 2014, he served as the undergraduate Fall Commencement speaker, igniting the crowd by opening his address with "How 'bout them Dawgs" in Latin.
He also visits campus to work with students in the UGA Small Satellite Research Laboratory. The "SmallSat Lab" was established in 2016 with the goal of launching a student-built spacecraft - a Cube Satellite - into low earth orbit. The lab's mission is to place UGA among the world's top spacefaring universities, to give UGA a permanent presence in outer space while teaching students how to design, build and operate spacecraft, and to provide faculty with unique space-based data.
"I mentioned to Malcom Adams [Josiah Meigs Distinguished Teaching Professor and the Mathematics Department Head at UGA] to look into the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative because there are grants awarded to inspire kids about space and engineering," Roger recalled. "Now it is just exploding. I am hoping that program and these scholarships will be kernels for the future."
IN HIS OWN WORDS
"I am hoping one of these kids will become a Nobel Prize winner. There is no reason they can't!"
Roger Hunter
LASTING FOOTPRINTS
Roger has high hopes for the legacy he is helping create at the university through his mentoring and financial support. "I am hoping one of these kids will become a Nobel Prize winner," he said. "There is no reason they can't!"
"I've used this example before," Roger notes as he recalls the 2014 UGA commencement speech. "I am hoping they will leave lasting footprints on the lives of other people. Astronauts that walked on the moon, we still see their footprints almost 50 years later. These kids can have the same kind of impact. Leave footprints in other people's lives, once you've done that, you've lived a good life. You've helped someone less fortunate than yourself."
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This site is informational and educational in nature. It is not offering professional tax, legal, or accounting advice.
For specific advice about the effect of any planning concept on your tax or financial situation or with your estate, please consult a qualified professional advisor.