Dr. Gernot Winkler passed on April 30.   To this list he is well-known as the 
person who, along with Dr. Essen of NPL. initiated the current system of leap 
seconds in UTC.  To us in the U.S. Naval Observatory's Time Service Department, 
Gernot was an inspiring leader in every way.  A strong and supportive manager, 
aided by his Von-Braun accent, he always encouraged us to do our best.  One of 
his favorite techniques was to praise someone behind his back about something 
very specific, because he knew the word would get to him.   He would follow our 
progress, and would welcome us into his small, densely-packed but 
well-organized office to talk to us about it.

As a role-model  he was an intellectual giant who was happy to share.  I 
learned timekeeping from his technical review articles, and very much enjoyed 
learning philosophy from his almost-as-technical essays on not just the nature 
of time but of such things as deism, determinism, realism, subjectivism, 
monism, positivism, etc.     Very recently I even downloaded a table from his 
website (http://gmrwinkler.net/­), for a viewgraph on whether the future exists.

I still don’t know if there is a future, but I’m pretty sure there was a past 
because when Gernot was running Time Service, which then included what is now 
the Earth Orientation department, he would ensure that everything worked.   In 
fact, a few years ago I told him that it seemed like under his watch everything 
went smoothly.  He gave me a funny look, and replied that every minute of every 
day was a struggle.    And it’s good he was struggling – because the department 
and the USNO grew and prospered with him.   One of his achievements, for 
example, was to convince the Air Force to use Navy clocks to determine GPS 
time.     Another was funding and assistance for all kinds of innovations, such 
as masers, VLBI for Earth Orientation measurements, and TWSTT.

Gernot came a long way from where he grew up in Austria.  To the end he was 
intellectually vibrant, following the latest developments in science and 
society.   But I wouldn’t expect anything less from a draftee who had the 
courage to apply the German army’s own rules to trap a Nazi general in a 
cable-car over the Alps, and more importantly had the ability to do this and 
survive.

His final good-bye is attached, along with an email from his son Victor.

****************************

Friends

It is with deep sadness that I am writing to you. This past Saturday (April 30, 
2016) at 2:45AM, our father Gernot Winkler passed away in his home. My sister 
Trixi and I were with him. I have never felt this kind of grief before, but it 
is really a testament to the kind of person who my father was: I could not have 
done better.

My father was born 17 October 1922 in Frohnleiten Austria. He and my mother 
were married in 1952. My sister and I were very fortunate to have them as 
parents. My mother Renate passed away on 31 March 2014, my father never stopped 
missing mom. In the two years since then, he was in failing health but he 
insisted on continuing to live in his house. He, my sister and I all were 
clear-headed about the situation, and collectively we made it work for dad. He 
last drove his car in January 2016, and since then his decline accelerated.

Please join me in having either an egg salad or tuna sandwich for lunch 
...Gernot loved his tuna fish and egg salad.

The most important point in this email is the enclosure, which dad wrote and 
revised over many many years.

Please feel free to contact myself or my sister Trixi. I am sorry if this news 
finds a roundabout path to you, but that’s just the circumstances of this 
period.

Peace.

Vic Winkler
Trixi (Winkler) Summers

v...@vicwinkler.com   (703) 622 7111
trixisumm...@gmail.com

Attachment: GoodbyFromGMRW.pdf
Description: GoodbyFromGMRW.pdf

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