Wings of fire - Sir APJ ABDUL KALAM Wings of fire | Page 23
Plate 8 My teachers at Schwartz High School—
Iyadurai Solomon (standing, left) and Ramakrishna
Iyer (sitting, right). They are the best examples of
small-town Indian teachers committed to nurturing
talent.
“He who knows others is learned, but the wise one is the
one who knows himself. Learning without wisdom is of no
use.”
In the course of my education at MIT, three teachers
shaped my thinking. Their combined contributions formed
the foundation on which I later built my professional career.
These three teachers were Prof. Sponder, Prof. KAV
Pandalai and Prof. Narasingha Rao. Each one of them had
very distinct personalities, but they shared a common
impulse— the capacity to feed their students’ intellectual
hunger by sheer brilliance and untiring zeal.
Prof. Sponder taught me technical aerodynamics. He
was an Austrian with rich practical experience in
aeronautical engineering. During the Second World War,
he had been captured by the Nazis and imprisoned in a
concentration camp. Understandably, he had developed a
very strong dislike for Germans. Inciden- tally, the
aeronautical department was headed by a German, Prof.
Walter Repenthin. Another well-known professor, Dr Kurt
Tank, was a distinguished aeronautical engineer who had
designed the German Focke–Wulf FW 190 single-seater
fighter plane, an outstanding combat aircraft of the Second
World War. Dr Tank later joined the Hindustan Aeronautics
Limited (HAL) in Bangalore and was responsible for the
design of India’s first jet fighter, the HF-24 Marut.
Notwithstanding these irritants, Prof. Sponder
preserved his individuality and maintained high
professional standards. He was always calm, energetic
and in total control of himself. He kept abreast of the latest