Physics Today
Jump to Content
Increase text size Decrease text size
  • Sign In
  • View Items in Cart View Cart
  • Advanced
  • Keyword
 
  • Home
  • Print Edition
  • Daily Edition
    • News Picks
    • The Dayside
    • Physics Update
    • Singularities
    • Points of View
    • Politics and Policy
    • Science and the Media
    • Obituaries
    • We Hear That
    • Events Calendar
  • Advertising
  • Buyer's Guide
  • About us
    • Our mission
    • Our people
    • American Institute of Physics
    • Member societies
    • Register
    • Subscribe
    • Submit content
    • Marketing reprints
    • Rights and permissions
    • Help/FAQ
    • Change mailing address
    • Contact us
  • Jobs
    • Job Seeker Login
    • Search Jobs
    • Post Resumes
    • Career Resources
    • For Employers
    • Success Stories
    • Resume Templates
    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Display Advertising
    • Employer Resources
    • Banner Advertising
    • Security Tips
Follow us: Facebook    Twitter    rss    E-mail alert
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
issues and events

New Directors for NIST, NOAA

 

 

December 2001 page 24

Two veterans of both science and government service were set to become the new directors of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and NIST following their nominations by President Bush. Both men, retired Vice Admiral Conrad Lautenbacher and Purdue University nuclear engineer Arden Bement Jr, were awaiting what were expected to be quick confirmations by the Senate as Physics Today went to press.

Bush selected Lautenbacher, who holds a PhD in applied mathematics from Harvard University, to become the new under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere, the official title for NOAA's director. Lautenbacher, a 1964 graduate of the US Naval Academy, was the commander of the US Third Fleet, and advised the Joint Chiefs of Staff on the size and composition of US military forces. He served in both the Vietnam and Gulf Wars and is considered an expert in antisubmarine and anti-air warfare. Scott Gudes has been the acting director of NOAA since Bush took office.

In recent testimony before the House Science subcommittee on research, Lautenbacher advocated greater study of the seas, telling representatives that only 5% of the world's oceans have been mapped and that "today we know more about other planets than we do about our ocean depths." He called for a wide range of oceanic research, including increased study of the link between the oceans and the atmosphere so that climate shifts such as El Niño and La Niña can be better understood.

Bement, the head of Purdue University's school of nuclear engineering, was chosen by Bush to be the director of NIST. Bement was the vice president of science and technology at TRW throughout the 1980s and before that served as the deputy under secretary of defense for research and engineering. He moved to Purdue in 1993, where he served for a time as the director of the Midwest Superconductivity Consortium.

"I can think of few people more deserving of the appointment," said Ray Kammer, NIST's director from 1997 through 2000. "Dr. Bement has been associated with NIST for the last 20 years in a variety of posts, including chairman of the Visiting Committee on Advanced Technology." The visiting committee makes recommendations for NIST on the agency's organization, budget, and programs. Karen Brown, who has served as acting director since Bush took office, will return to her former position as NIST's deputy director.

Jim Dawson

  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Free this month
  • Acoustic Surgery
  • The Promise and Challenge of Solid-State Lighting
  • Isotopic Analysis of Pristine Microshells Resolves a Troubling Paradox of Paleoclimatology
  • Security at US Nuclear Power Plants Boosted after Terrorist Attacks
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Gedanken experiment: Levitate a physics sitcom?
    Points of View
  • Nanoplasmonics: The physics behind the applications
    February 2011
  • Half-quantum vortices
    Physics Update
  • Quantum criticality
    February 2011

 



SERVICES
Physics Today Jobs
Physics Today Buyers Guide
Event Calendar
Obituaries
DAILY EDITION
The Dayside
News Picks
Science in the Media
Politics & Policy
Singularities
Physics Update
Points of View
THE MAGAZINE
This month in print
Institutional subscriptions
Information for advertisers
READER SERVICE
Register
Sign in
Subscribe
Email alert
MORE INFO
FAQ
Contact us
About Physics Today
Privacy Policy
Marketing reprints
Rights and Permissions

Copyright © by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved

Find articles by AUTHORNAME

This PublicationThis Publication
ScitationScitation
SPINSPIN
ScitopiaScitopia
Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
PubMedPubMed