"He was far and away the best teacher I had – he made engineering relevant and interesting," says Ryan Bethel, an electrical engineering alumnus who graduated in 2001 with a bachelor's degree and in 2007 with a master's degree.
"He was very personable – you could talk to him about anything. He was a friend, not just a professor," says Al Blais, who earned an electrical engineering degree in 2001.
Whitney knew that funds were being raised to support the Electronics Lab and he was "excited and happy" about the prospect of having the facility bear his name, says Prof. Mohamad Musavi, chair of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department.
"But, he was a very humble person and so his ultimate goal was simply to make sure that the lab where he had spent the majority of his life with his students was going to have the money to be kept updated. He knew that students would benefit from state-of-the-art equipment," says Musavi, who led the charge to create the endowment.
A UMaine graduate, Whitney earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering degree in 1962 and a master's degree in electrical engineering in 1964. He taught electrical engineering at the University from 1962 until 1971 when he became the head of electrical engineering at Tibbett's Industries in Camden. He served as president of the company from 1974 to 1986 and then returned to UMaine to continue teaching.
Whitney had the makings of a great teacher even as a student, according to Carleton Brown, who was one of his professors at UMaine and who encouraged him to go into education.
"He was always searching for a very deep understanding of the material," says Brown. "He was excited about the subject and I knew that would carry over to his teaching and that he would give that same sense of excitement to his students."
Later, the two taught a number of courses together and Brown was gratified to see that his instincts had been correct.
"He was such a natural at teaching and interacting with students. He always tried very hard to give others a depth of understanding, not just a bunch of facts and descriptions. He always had his office door open and encouraged students to drop by and chat. And he was a kid at heart. He wore crazy ties and athletic shoes. That endeared him to students."
Because he had worked in industry, Whitney understood the "real world picture," says Maurice Richard '78, a member of UMaine's Electrical and Computer Engineering Visiting Committee.
Richard, who co-founded his own engineering design company in South Portland, often visited the campus to recruit employees, and counted on Whitney to advise him.
"I really got a sense of how valuable Al was to the engineering program by talking to students who had him as a professor. He knew how to teach the students to survive and do well in their engineering careers. Besides teaching them courses that were very pertinent to the type of work they'd be doing, he also taught them non-technical skills like the importance having a strong work ethic and being able to get along with people."
UMaine electrical engineering alumnus Ken Bach, who earned his bachelor's degree in 1963 and master's degree in 1965, also served on UMaine's Electrical and Computer Engineering Visiting Committee and often heard students voice their admiration for Whitney. "I was impressed with the regard students held for Al – he obviously was a revered instructor." |