Gift Establishes Summers Chair of Physics

Brother pays tribute to late Ole Miss professor, researcher

Two young women use an electronic device to complete a physics assignment in a classroom.

OXFORD, Miss. – The late Donald Summers wrote his first research paper during spring break in junior high school, conducting the research at the University of California Astronomy Observatory Library where he worked during the day and camped in the observatory's post office lobby at night.

The University of Mississippi physics professor is being remembered for his intellectual impact by his older brother, Robert Summers, of Palo Alto, California, with a faculty position named in his honor. Robert Summers committed $3.35 million to establish the Dr. Donald Summers Chair of Physics, the inaugural endowed chair for the UM Department of Physics and Astronomy.

"We have high hopes that an endowed position will allow us to attract a prominent, established physicist to join the department, someone who will raise our international profile and open new frontier research opportunities for students," said Kevin Beach, department chair.

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Physics professor Donald Summers (left) created a graduate student endowment in honor of James Reidy, chair and professor emeritus of physics at Ole Miss, in 2014. Summers is being honored with the Dr. Donald Summers Chair of Physics at the university by his brother, Robert Summers of Palo Alto, California. Photo by Robert Jordan/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

"The gift from Robert Summers is transformational for us. We are all grateful for his decision to honor Don's long tenure and amazing contributions to our department in this way."

Don Summers, who died in March 2021, was a respected Ole Miss professor and researcher for 31 years.

"Dr. Summers was a dedicated teacher and a productive researcher who made a difference in students' lives and strengthened the academic reputation of our university," said Lee Cohen, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. "Faculty support is such a crucial need in higher education and we are extremely grateful to Robert Summers for honoring his brother this way, at the university he made his professional home for so many years."

Ole Miss was the ideal place for Don Summers, his brother said.

"Don enjoyed his career immensely at the University of Mississippi; this was the perfect position for him – both the research opportunities and the teaching," Robert Summers said. "He continued to work on the International Particle Accelerator programs and enjoyed the 19th-century Astronomy Observatory."

The Summers brothers – both Eagle Scouts – grew up in San Jose, California, each pursuing teaching and research careers inspired by their grandfather, who had a career in education with the U.S. Foreign Service in the Philippines.

Don Summers intended to pursue graduate work in astronomy, but his adviser suggested astronomy could be limiting. A degree in physics, he learned, is an open door to both fields.

He conducted his thesis research at Fermilab in Illinois, the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in California and at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research headquartered in Switzerland. He earned his doctorate at the University of California at Santa Barbara.

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Robert Summers has given $3.35 million to establish a named and endowed faculty position for his brother, Donald, who was a longtime physics professor at Ole Miss. Submitted photo

Summers was recruited to Ole Miss in 1989 and became a full professor in 2002. His research interests were focused on studying the fundamental nature of matter, and he collaborated on high-energy physics experiments at Fermilab and at CERN.

The professor worked on the discovery of the W+, W and Z0 heavy particles, which mediate all weak interactions, and this discovery at CERN was eventually awarded a Nobel Prize. With Mississippi's experiment at Fermilab, Summers accumulated the world's largest sample of heavy charmed quarks, a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter.

Don Summers began his gifts to the university years ago. With $262,000, he created an endowment to help graduate students pursue degrees in experimental particle physics, naming the fund in honor of James J. Reidy, former chair and professor emeritus of physics and astronomy. Summers credited Reidy with building the university's reputation among the international scientific community through high-energy physics research.

Summers also established the Dr. Lee N. Bolen Jr. Scholarship Endowment in 2015 with gifts of almost $50,000 to provide scholarship assistance to undergraduate and graduate physics students and to honor Bolen, a colleague in the department.

Robert Summers was a researcher with the U.S. Geological Survey, studying high-pressure rock deformation and its direct application to understanding earthquake source mechanisms. Renowned researchers came to Menlo Park, California, to work with him.

Robert Summers gave some $275,000 in 2022 to create scholarship endowments in his brother's name at Ole Miss.

"Don and I both understood the significant benefits that student and faculty endowments undeniably provide," he said.

To make a gift to the Dr. Donald Summers Chair of Physics, send a check, with the fund's name written on the memo line, to the University of Mississippi Foundation, 406 University Ave., Oxford, MS 38655; or give online here.

Top: Ole Miss students work on a physics assignment in class. Students and researchers at the university will benefit from the research and teaching opportunities once the new Dr. Donald Summers Chair of Physics is filled by a prominent, established physicist. Photo by Mary Knight/UM Development

By

Tina H. Hahn

Campus

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Published

June 07, 2025