2995 lines
105 KiB
Plaintext
2995 lines
105 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: sci.space.news
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From: yee@atlas.arc.nasa.gov (Peter Yee)
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Subject: Media Guide 4/93 (Forwarded)
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Message-ID: <1993May1.173049.18835@news.arc.nasa.gov>
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Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
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Date: Sat, 1 May 1993 17:30:49 GMT
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Lines: 2986
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The following is the ASCII-converted Media Guide. All tabs have
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been removed and replaced with 5 spaces (with perhaps 6 exceptions
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where the line length was too long). A global search and replace of
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"5 spaces" with a "tab" should allow for a reconstruction of the
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document. All other formatting including boldface, italics, different
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type sizes and forced pages have been removed. There are no graphics
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in this version. Full text follows:
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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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NASA MEDIA GUIDE AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS CONTACTS
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APRIL 1993
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FOREWORD
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To members of the news media:
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I am pleased to provide you with the 1993 edition of our Media
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Guide and Public Affairs Contacts. The NASA Public Affairs team
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listed in this directory is committed to providing you with timely
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and accurate information about the agency's many programs.
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I invite you to visit the NASA facilities around the United
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States. An overview of the various facilities, their major
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responsibilities and the public affairs contacts are provided in this
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directory.
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We look forward to working with you.
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Geoffrey H. Vincent
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Acting Associate Administrator
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for Public Affairs
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Headquarters (HQ) 1
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Ames Research Center (ARC) 12
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Hugh L. Dryden Flight Research Facility (DFRF) 15
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Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) 18
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Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) 22
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Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC) 26
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John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC) 30
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Langley Research Center (LARC) 34
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Lewis Research Center (LERC) 38
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George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) 42
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Michoud Assembly Facility (MAF) 47
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John C. Stennis Space Center (SSC) 48
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Wallops Flight Facility (WFF) 50
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Public Affairs FAX Phone Listing 52
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Information Sources 54
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NASA Internal News Publications 56
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Alphabetical listing of Public Affairs Contacts 58
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NASA HEADQUARTERS
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300 E Street, S.W.
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Washington, D.C. 20546
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Headquarters has more than 2,000 employees and administers the
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total NASA budget, which for FY 1993 is $14.3 billion. Daniel S.
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Goldin is the NASA Administrator.
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NASA Headquarters exercises management over the space flight
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centers, research centers and other installations that constitute the
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
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Responsibilities of Headquarters cover the determination of
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programs and projects; establishment of management policies,
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procedures and performance criteria; evaluation of progress and the
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review and analysis of all phases of the aerospace program.
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Planning, direction and management of NASA's research and
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development programs are the responsibility of program offices which
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report to and receive overall guidance and direction from an
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associate administrator.
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The Office of Aeronautics directs the agency's aeronautics
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research and development programs, including the High-Speed Research
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Program which is creating and refining the technology and addressing
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the environmental challenges supporting the development of a future
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U.S. high-speed civil transport aircraft.
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The office also researches advanced technology for subsonic
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aircraft, manages NASA's weather-related flight safety research,
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works to improve inspection methods for aging aircraft, propulsion
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research and development of advanced piloting and air traffic control
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aids. In addition, it directs numerous flight research programs
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using high-performance aircraft such as the SR-71, F/A-18 and F-16XL.
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It also manages fundamental aeronautics research in aerodynamics,
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fluid dynamics, structural mechanics and human factors issues such as
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the interaction of pilots with highly-automated cockpits.
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The aeronautics office also manages NASA's portion of the multi-
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agency High Performance Computing and Commu-nications program, and
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NASA's part of the National Aero-Space Plane (NASP) program. NASP is
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a national endeavor to develop and demonstrate technology for
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advanced vehicles that would take off horizontally, fly into orbit,
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then return for a runway landing.
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The Office of Aeronautics has institutional management
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responsibility for Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif.; Ames-
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Dryden Flight Research Facility, Edwards, Calif.; Langley Research
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Center, Hampton, Va.; and Lewis Research Center, Cleveland. Dr.
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Wesley L. Harris is Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Space Science is responsible for the NASA space
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research and flight programs directed toward scientific
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investigations of the solar system and astronomical objects using
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ground-based, airborne and space technologies including sounding
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rockets and deep space satellites. This office works closely with
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the scientific community through the Space Studies board of the
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National Academy of Sciences and other advisory groups.
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The Office of Space Science has institutional management
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responsibility for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
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Dr. Wesley T. Huntress, Jr., is the Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Mission to Planet Earth is responsible for NASA's
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Earth science and environmental research. Mission To Planet Earth is
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a comprehensive, coordinated research program that studies the Earth
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as a global environmental system. Comprising ground-based, airborne
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and space-based programs, this office includes participation from
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other federal agencies as part of the U.S. Global Change Research
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Program and the international science community.
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The office has institutional management for the Goddard Space
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Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. Dr. Shelby G. Tilford is Acting
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Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications is
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responsible for assuring the health and safety of humans in space and
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to understand the biological effects of space flight on organisms.
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It also uses the unique attributes of the space environment to
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conduct research and gain new knowledge in fluid behavior, combustion
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science, material science and biotechnology. Dr. Harry Holloway is
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the Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Space Flight operates the Space Shuttle and develops
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both manned and unmanned platforms which enable scientific research
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and advanced technology development.
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The Space Shuttle is NASA's primary space transportation system
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and the only space vehicle capable of carrying people and large
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payloads into Earth orbit and returning them. OSF is responsible for
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scheduling Space Shuttle flights, developing financial plans and
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pricing structures and providing services to users. As part of its
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duties, the Office of Space Flight conducts operations and
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utilization of Spacelab, a laboratory dedicated to research in space
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that flies in the Shuttle's cargo bay.
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The office is working with the Russian Space Agency to plan and
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execute a series of joint missions that will involve flying a
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cosmonaut aboard the Shuttle and an astronaut aboard the Mir space
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station, leading up to a mission with a Shuttle docking to the
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Russian space station. The office also is conducting early planning
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activities for the operation of the U.S. space station.
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The Office of Space Flight also is responsible for institutional
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management of the Kennedy Space Center, Fla.; Marshall Space Flight
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Center, Huntsville, Ala.; Johnson Space Center, Houston; and the
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Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Miss. Jeremiah W. Pearson
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III is Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Space Systems Development is responsible for
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defining and developing potential future space systems and
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capabilities, as well as demonstrating enhancements to improve
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existing systems capabilities. The office has responsibility for
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space station development and operations; large propulsion systems
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development including a new space transportation main engine and the
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Advanced Solid Rocket Motor and advanced transportation systems
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program planning.
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A permanently manned space station is essential for advancing
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human exploration of space. The space station will be a permanent
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outpost in space where humans will live and work productively for
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extended periods of time. It will provide an advanced research
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laboratory to explore space and employ its resources, and will
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provide the opportunity to learn to build, operate and maintain
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systems in space. The station will be launched in segments aboard
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the Space Shuttle and assembled in orbit, with first flight set for
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1996. NASA centers responsible for developing major elements of the
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space station are the Marshall Space Flight Center, Johnson Space
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Center and Lewis Research Center.
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The advanced solid rocket motor is being developed to replace the
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redesigned solid rocket motor. The ASRM will improve the safety,
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reliability and the performance of the Space Shuttle system. Arnold
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D. Aldrich is Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Advanced Concepts and Technology has a mission to
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pioneer innovative, customer-focused concepts and technologies,
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leveraged through industrial, academic and government alliances, to
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ensure U.S. commercial competitiveness and preeminence in space.
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The office's four primary functions are to maintain a highly
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professional systems engineering team capable of detailed feasibility
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and cost analysis of advanced concepts, to be NASA's front door to
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businesses which want the agency's help and expertise in developing
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new ideas and technologies, to be the agency's lead in the transfer
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of technology into the commercial sector and to further the
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commercialization of space.
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The office also manages the agency's Small Business Innovative
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Research, technology transfer, Defense Conversion Act and other
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innovative technology development programs including a new experiment
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in incubating technology start-up companies. Gregory M. Reck is
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Associate Administrator.
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The Office of Space Communications is responsible for planning,
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development and operation of worldwide communications, command,
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navigation and control, data acquisition, telemetry and data
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processing essential to the success of NASA programs and activities.
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Communications systems requirements for Space Shuttle flights;
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Earth orbital, planetary and interplanetary space probes; expendable
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launch vehicles; research aircraft; sounding rockets; balloons and
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administrative support are provided by this office. The office
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consists of five divisions. Charles T. Force is Associate
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Administrator.
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The Office of Safety And Mission Quality plans, develops and
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evaluates safety, quality and risk management policies and activities
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in support of NASA programs. Responsibilities include providing
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leadership in quality management for science and engineering programs
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and working closely with NASA flight, ground operations and research
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programs to develop safety, reliability, maintainability and quality
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assurance policies and requirements. The office consists of seven
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divisions and three safety panels. Frederick D. Gregory is Associate
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Administrator.
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Headquarters Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
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Jeff Vincent (GVINCENT) 202/358-1898 703/836-0015
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Acting Associate Administrator
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Diane Mangel (DMANGEL) 202/358-1898 301/884-5789
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Secretary
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vacant 202/358-1400
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Deputy Associate Administrator
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Linda A. Lynch (LLYNCH) 202/358-1754 301/384-2213
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Secretary
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FAX: 202/358-4345
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Internal Communications - P-2
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Elizabeth V. Schmid (ESCHMID) 202/358-1760 703/548-8320
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Acting Head/Editor, NASA Magazine
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Sonja Maclin 202/358-1768
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FAX: 202/358-4360
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Program Management Division - PS
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Jeff Vincent (GVINCENT) 202/358-1747 703/836-0015
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Director
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Diane M. Cheatham (DCHEATHAM) 202/358-1748 301/599-9340
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Administrative Officer
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Robin Timms (RTIMMS) 202/358-1749 301/884-0666
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Budget Analyst
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Theresa D. Houser (THOUSER) 202/358-1765 301/868-9069
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ADP Coordinator
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Patricia M. Riep (PN) (PRIEP) 202/358-1764 301/262-4260
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Freedom of Information Act Officer
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Jo Ann Schneider 202/358-1764 301/725-0025
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FOIA Assistant
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Thelma Johnson 202/358-1752
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Correspondence Processing Analyst
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Public Affairs Officers
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Sarah Keegan (SKEEGAN) 202/358-1902 703/237-7513
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Public Affairs Officer
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FAX: 202/358-4336
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Office of Aeronautics
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Drucella Andersen (DAANDERSEN) 202/358-4733 703/893-3844
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Public Affairs Officer (R)
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Barbara Selby (BSELBY) 202/358-1983 301/552-1917
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Public Affairs Officer (R)
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Les Dorr, Jr. (LDORR) 202/488-4615
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Writer/Editor
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FAX: 202/358-4060
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Office of Space Communications
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Office of Safety and Mission Quality
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Dwayne C. Brown (DBROWN) 202/358-0547 301/459-4822
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Public Affairs Officer (O) (Q)
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FAX: 202/358-2779
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Office of Space Flight
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Office of Space Systems Development
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Mark Hess (MHESS) 202/358-1776 703/548-2994
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Public Affairs Officer (M-9)
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Jim Cast (JCAST) 202/358-1779 301/248-3734
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Public Affairs Officer (M-9)
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Edward S. Campion (ECAMPION) 202/358-1780 703/998-6342
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Public Affairs Officer (M-9)
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Carolyn W. Townsend 202/358-1781 410/263-8259
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Public Affairs Specialist (M-9)
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FAX: 202/358-2887
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Office of Space Science
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Paula Cleggett-Haleim (PCLEGGETT) 202/358-0883 301/203-9323
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Senior Public Affairs Officer (S)
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Grace Reardon 202/358-1547
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Secretary
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FAX: 202/358-3093
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Office of Life and Microgravity Sciences and Applications
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Michael Braukus (MBRAUKUS) 202/358-0872 410/740-7126
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Public Affairs Officer (U)
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FAX: 202/358-3093
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Office of Mission to Planet Earth
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Brian Dunbar (BDUNBAR) 202/358-0873 703/841-9110
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Public Information Officer (Y)
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FAX: 202/358-3093
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International Affairs Division
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Debra Rahn (DRAHN) 202/358-1639 703/273-7053
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Public Affairs Officer (IR)
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Jennifer McCarter 202/358-1639
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Public Information Assistant
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FAX: 202/358-3030
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202/358-3031
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Office of Advanced Concepts and Technology
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Charles Redmond (CREDMOND) 202/358-1757 202/363-3184
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Public Affairs Officer (C)
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FAX: 202/358-3084
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Office of Human Resources and Education
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Terri Sindelar (TSINDELAR) 202/358-1977 301/670-9247
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Public Affairs Officer (FE)
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FAX: 202/358-4210
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Media Services Division - PM
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James W. McCulla (JMCCULLA) 202/358-0002 703/821-2236
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Director
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Beverly C. Randolph 202/358-1724
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Secretary
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News and Information Branch - PM (HQNEWSROOM)
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Newsroom Phone 202/358-1600
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David W. Garrett (DGARRETT) 202/358-1725 703/998-6910
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Chief
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Kenneth C. Atchison (KATCHISON) 202/358-1726 301/937-2198
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Assistant News Chief
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Donald L. Savage (DSAVAGE) 202/358-1727 703/644-9749
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Public Affairs Officer
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Budget And Congressional Affairs
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Dave Steitz (DSTEITZ) 202/358-1730 202/483-6072
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Patrice Williams (PCWILLIAMS) 202/358-1729
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Secretary
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FAX: 202/358-4210
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202/358-4335
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Broadcast and Imaging Branch - PMD
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Branch phone 202/358-1900
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Joseph Headlee (JHEADLEE) 202/358-1734 703/451-3023
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Chief
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Deanna Corridon 202/358-1733
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Secretary
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H. Thomas Jaqua (HTJAQUA) 202/358-1737 410/586-3254
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Photo and Motion Pictures
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Bill Ingalls 202/358-1742 703/243-9243
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Still Photographer
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Althea Washington 202/358-1738 202/291-3113
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Visual Information Specialist
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Constance Moore 202/358-1740 301/899-3163
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Audio Visual Coordinator
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Tony L. Ellington 202/358-0020 703/670-0487
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Audio Visual Production Specialist
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Deborah Rivera 202/358-1743 703/750-0654
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Radio and Television Programs
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Christopher C. Allingham 202/484-0067 202/396-5069
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Television Producer
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John F. Walsh III (JWALSH) 202/358-0066 703/719-6882
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Television Producer
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FAX: 202/358-4333
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Public Services Division - PO
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James M. Funkhouser (JFUNKHOUSER) 202/358-1750 703/323-5404
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Director
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Joycelyn R. Harley 202/358-1750
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Secretary
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FAX: 202/358-4331
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Special Events Branch - POE
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Branch Phone: 202/358-2379
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Eugene A. Marianetti (EMARIANETTI) 202/358-1721 703/998-0989
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Chief
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Joanna Adamus 202/358-1716 703/960-2729
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Secretary
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Mary Weatherspoon 202/358-1720 301/856-3556
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Protocol Officer
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Evelyn Thames 202/358-1719 301/843-3529
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Astronaut Appearances
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Geneva B. Barnes 202/358-1639 301/622-2082
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International Astronaut Appearances (I)
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Tawana M. Clary 202/358-1718 202/832-0291
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Astronaut Appearances Assistant
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Dorothy C. Davis (GUEST) 202/358-1717 410/798-5811
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Program Support Assistant
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FAX: 202/358-4332
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Special Services Branch - POS
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Robert Schulman 202/358-2381 410/757-8095
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Chief
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Mary F. Reeves 202/358-1708 301/505-4285
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Secretary
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Jack Schmid 202/358-2381 703/548-8320
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NASA Exhibits Manager
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Sharon R. Lord (SRLORD) 202/358-1711 301/855-8492
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Exhibits Coordinator
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Bertram R. Ulrich (BULRICH) 202/358-1713 202/986-0609
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Fine Arts/Graphics Coordinator
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Renee N. Juhans (RJUHANS) 202/358-2381
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Public Inquiries Coordinator
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Delores Dale 202/358-1714
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Secretary
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FAX: 202/358-4331
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Television Development Division - PT
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Robert J. Shafer (RSHAFER) 202/358-1767 703/569-6714
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Director
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Thomas J. Bentsen (TBENTSEN) 202/358-1704 410/740-0519
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Mgr., Advanced Video Systems Development
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Walter A. Maull (WMAULL) 202/358-1703 703/278-8324
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Mgr., Planning & Implementation
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Patricia A. Respess 202/358-1701 703/352-8220
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Program Support Assistant
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FAX: 202/358-4334
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AMES RESEARCH CENTER
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Mountain View, Calif. 94035
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Ames Research Center was founded in 1939 as an aircraft research
|
|
laboratory by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA)
|
|
and named for Dr. Joseph S. Ames, Chairman of NACA from 1927 to 1939.
|
|
In 1958, Ames became part of NASA, along with other NACA
|
|
installations and certain Department of Defense facilities. In
|
|
1981, NASA merged Ames with the Dryden Flight Research Center and the
|
|
two installations are now referred to as Ames-Moffett and Ames-Dryden
|
|
(see separate section on Ames-Dryden).
|
|
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|
Ames-Moffett is located in Mountain View, Calif., in the heart of
|
|
"Silicon Valley" at the southern end of San Francisco Bay on about
|
|
430 acres of land adjacent to the U.S. Naval Air Station, Moffett
|
|
Field.
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|
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|
Ames specializes in scientific research, exploration and
|
|
applications aimed toward creating new technology for the nation.
|
|
|
|
The center's major program responsibilities are concentrated in
|
|
computer science and applications, computational and experimental
|
|
aerodynamics, flight simulation, flight research, hypersonic
|
|
aircraft, rotorcraft and powered-lift technology, aeronautical and
|
|
space human factors, life sciences, space sciences, solar system
|
|
exploration, airborne science and applications, and infrared
|
|
astronomy.
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|
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The center also supports military programs, the Space Shuttle and
|
|
various civil aviation projects. These projects and responsibilities
|
|
will continue to evolve as NASA's needs change and Ames' capabilities
|
|
develop.
|
|
|
|
About 2,200 civil service employees and some 2,100 contractor
|
|
employees are employed at Ames' two locations. In addition,
|
|
approximately 400 graduate students, cooperative education students,
|
|
post-doctoral fellows and university faculty members work at the
|
|
center.
|
|
|
|
The Ames staff uses advanced equipment in their search for new
|
|
technology. This equipment includes aircraft and spacecraft, wind
|
|
tunnels, large computer facilities, flight simulators and entry
|
|
heating simulators.
|
|
|
|
The center's laboratories are equipped to study solar and
|
|
geophysical phenomena, life evolution and life environmental factors
|
|
and to detect life on other planets. Capital investment at the two
|
|
locations is more than $996 million, and today's estimated
|
|
replacement value is more than $2.9 billion. Dr. Dale L. Compton is
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Center Director.
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Ames Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
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External Affairs Office
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Michael Marlaire 415/604-4191 408/253-2456
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Acting Chief
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Vacant
|
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Deputy Chief
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Astrid Terlip 415/604-3347
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Secretary
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David Morse
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Staff Asistant 415/604-9000
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Media Services Office
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(AMES.PIO)
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Wendell (Del) Harding 415/604-9000 408/244-2680
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Chief
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Janet Smith 415/604-9000
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Clerk
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Noemi Gardner 415/604-9000
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Clerk
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Michael Mewhinney 415/604-3937 415/386-2059
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Jane Hutchison 415/604-4968
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Public Affairs Specialist
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|
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Donald G. James 415/604-3935 510/462-8778
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Diane Farrar 415/604-3934
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Peter W. Waller 415/604-3938 415/493-9406
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Public Affairs Specialist
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|
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Elinor Brody 415/604-5090
|
|
Astrogram Editor
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FAX: 415/604-3953
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Educational Programs Office
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|
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Garth A. Hull (GAHULL) 415/604-5543 415/941-3250
|
|
Chief
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|
|
Thomas B. Clausen (TCLAUSEN) 415/604-5544 408/996-3726
|
|
Educational Programs Specialist
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|
|
|
Laura A. Shawnee (LASHAWNEE) 415/604-3936 415/493-6968
|
|
Educational Programs Specialist
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|
|
Mary Valleau 415/604-3939 415/734-9155
|
|
Secretary
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|
|
|
Ginny Zeitman 415/604-3574 408/296-0200
|
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Teacher Resource Ctr. Coordinator
|
|
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|
|
Commercial and Community Relations Office
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|
|
|
Donald James 415/604-4044
|
|
Acting Chief
|
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|
|
Danielle Goldwater 415/604-5554
|
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Commercial Programs Manager
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|
|
Geoffrey Lee 415/604-6406
|
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Technology Utilization Officer
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|
|
Anita Sarlin 415/604-4044
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
C. J. Fenrick 415/604-1227
|
|
Freedom of Information
|
|
|
|
Ames Research Center was founded in 1939 as an aircraft research
|
|
laboratory by the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA)
|
|
and named for Dr. Joseph S. Ames, Chairman of NACA from 1927 to 1939.
|
|
In 1958, Ames became part of NASA, along with other NACA
|
|
installations and certain Department of Defense facilities. In
|
|
1981, NASA merged Ames with the Dryden Flight Research Center and the
|
|
two installations are now referred to as Ames-Moffett and Ames-Dryden
|
|
(see separate section on Ames-Dryden).
|
|
|
|
Ames-Moffett is located in Mountain View, Calif., in the heart of
|
|
"Silicon Valley" at the southern end of San Francisco Bay on about
|
|
430 acres of land adjacent to the U.S. Naval Air Station, Moffett
|
|
Field.
|
|
|
|
Ames specializes in scientific research, exploration and
|
|
applications aimed toward creating new technology for the nation.
|
|
|
|
The center's major program responsibilities are concentrated in
|
|
computer science and applications, computational and experimental
|
|
aerodynamics, flight simulation, flight research, hypersonic
|
|
aircraft, rotorcraft and powered-lift technology, aeronautical and
|
|
space human factors, life sciences, space sciences, solar system
|
|
exploration, airborne science and applications, and infrared
|
|
astronomy.
|
|
|
|
The center also supports military programs, the Space Shuttle and
|
|
various civil aviation projects. These projects and responsibilities
|
|
will continue to evolve as NASA's needs change and Ames' capabilities
|
|
develop.
|
|
|
|
About 2,200 civil service employees and some 2,100 contractor
|
|
employees are employed at Ames' two locations. In addition,
|
|
approximately 400 graduate students, cooperative education students,
|
|
post-doctoral fellows and university faculty members work at the
|
|
center.
|
|
|
|
The Ames staff uses advanced equipment in their search for new
|
|
technology. This equipment includes aircraft and spacecraft, wind
|
|
tunnels, large computer facilities, flight simulators and entry
|
|
heating simulators.
|
|
|
|
The center's laboratories are equipped to study solar and
|
|
geophysical phenomena, life evolution and life environmental factors
|
|
and to detect life on other planets. Capital investment at the two
|
|
locations is more than $996 million, and today's estimated
|
|
replacement value is more than $2.9 billion. Dr. Dale L. Compton is
|
|
Center Director.
|
|
|
|
Ames Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
External Affairs Office
|
|
|
|
Michael Marlaire 415/604-4191 408/253-2456
|
|
Acting Chief
|
|
|
|
Vacant
|
|
Deputy Chief
|
|
|
|
Astrid Terlip 415/604-3347
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
David Morse
|
|
Staff Asistant 415/604-9000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Media Services Office
|
|
(AMES.PIO)
|
|
|
|
Wendell (Del) Harding 415/604-9000 408/244-2680
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Janet Smith 415/604-9000
|
|
Clerk
|
|
|
|
Noemi Gardner 415/604-9000
|
|
Clerk
|
|
|
|
Michael Mewhinney 415/604-3937 415/386-2059
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Jane Hutchison 415/604-4968
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Donald G. James 415/604-3935 510/462-8778
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Diane Farrar 415/604-3934
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Peter W. Waller 415/604-3938 415/493-9406
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Elinor Brody 415/604-5090
|
|
Astrogram Editor
|
|
|
|
FAX: 415/604-3953
|
|
|
|
Educational Programs Office
|
|
|
|
Garth A. Hull (GAHULL) 415/604-5543 415/941-3250
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Thomas B. Clausen (TCLAUSEN) 415/604-5544 408/996-3726
|
|
Educational Programs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Laura A. Shawnee (LASHAWNEE) 415/604-3936 415/493-6968
|
|
Educational Programs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Mary Valleau 415/604-3939 415/734-9155
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Ginny Zeitman 415/604-3574 408/296-0200
|
|
Teacher Resource Ctr. Coordinator
|
|
|
|
|
|
Commercial and Community Relations Office
|
|
|
|
Donald James 415/604-4044
|
|
Acting Chief
|
|
|
|
Danielle Goldwater 415/604-5554
|
|
Commercial Programs Manager
|
|
|
|
Geoffrey Lee 415/604-6406
|
|
Technology Utilization Officer
|
|
|
|
Anita Sarlin 415/604-4044
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
C. J. Fenrick 415/604-1227
|
|
Freedom of Information
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ames Research Center
|
|
HUGH L. DRYDEN FLIGHT RESEARCH FACILITY
|
|
Post Office Box 273
|
|
Edwards, Calif. 93523
|
|
|
|
The Dryden Flight Research Facility is located at Edwards,
|
|
Calif., in the Mojave Desert, approximately 80 miles north of Los
|
|
Angeles. The facility enjoys almost ideal weather for flight
|
|
testing and is located at the southern end of a 500-mile, high-speed
|
|
flight corridor. Situated adjacent to Rogers Dry Lake, a 44-square-
|
|
mile natural surface for landing, the facility is in an isolated area
|
|
free from problems of population disturbance or hazard.
|
|
|
|
About 450 civil service and 510 contractor employees are employed
|
|
at Dryden. Capital investment at the facility totals about $135
|
|
million and replacement value is $371 million.
|
|
|
|
The facility's primary research tools are research aircraft.
|
|
Ground-based facilities include a high temperature loads calibration
|
|
laboratory that allows testing of complete aircraft and structural
|
|
components under the combined effects of loads and heat; a highly
|
|
developed aircraft flight instrumentation capability; a flight
|
|
systems laboratory with a diversified capability for avionics system
|
|
fabrication, development and operations; a flow visualization
|
|
facility that allows basic flow mechanics to be seen on models or
|
|
small components; a data analysis facility for processing of flight
|
|
research data; a remotely piloted research vehicles facility and a
|
|
test range communications and data transmission capability that links
|
|
NASA's Western Aeronautical Test Range facilities at Ames-Moffett,
|
|
Crows Landing and Dryden.
|
|
|
|
Since 1946, Dryden has developed a unique and highly specialized
|
|
capability for conducting flight research programs. Its test
|
|
organization, consisting of pilots, engineers, technicians and
|
|
mechanics, is unmatched anywhere in the world. This versatile
|
|
organization has demonstrated its capability, not only with high-
|
|
speed research aircraft, but also with such unusual flight vehicles
|
|
as the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle and wingless lifting bodies.
|
|
|
|
The facility participated in the Approach and Landing Tests of
|
|
the Space Shuttle orbiter Enterprise and continues to support Shuttle
|
|
orbiter landings from space as well as processing them for ferry
|
|
flights back to the launch site.
|
|
|
|
Dryden is flying a specially instrumented F/A-18 to investigate
|
|
high angle of attack, or high alpha, flight. Today's high
|
|
performance jet aircraft can fly in the high alpha flight regime, but
|
|
not necessarily efficiently. The facility's research will create a
|
|
data base for aircraft designers to accurately predict high alpha
|
|
airflow. High alpha technology may result in airplanes capable of
|
|
"supermaneuvers" and will help eliminate operational limitations
|
|
imposed on aircraft designed without this techno-logy.
|
|
|
|
Another high alpha program currently in progress at Dryden
|
|
features the X-31. An international test organization managed by the
|
|
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is conducting
|
|
flight tests to obtain data for next-generation high performance
|
|
aircraft. In addition to NASA and DARPA, program participants
|
|
include the U.S. Navy and Air Force, Rockwell International, the
|
|
Federal Republic of Germany and Deutsche Aerospace.
|
|
|
|
The facility's B-52 currently is serving as the carrier aircraft
|
|
for Pegasus, a winged, three-stage space launch booster. Pegasus
|
|
will be used to deliver small payloads into orbit. The B-52 has been
|
|
used previously to carry aloft and air-launch such vehicles as the
|
|
famed rocket-powered X-15 and the lifting bodies, forerunners of the
|
|
Space Shuttle.
|
|
|
|
Dryden's F-15 is continuing flight research on Performance
|
|
Seeking Control (PSC). Using digital flight control, inlet control
|
|
and engine control systems together, PSC demonstrates improvements in
|
|
peak engine performance and maneuvering capabilities. The F-15 also
|
|
is equipped with a new computer-aided control system that will allow
|
|
a pilot to maintain control of a crippled aircraft using engine
|
|
propulsion to maneuver. The ultimate goal of the program is to land
|
|
the aircraft with only engine power.
|
|
|
|
Extensive tests of Space Shuttle landing gear assemblies, from
|
|
normal conditions up to and including failure modes, will be
|
|
conducted using a CV-990 transport aircraft. Information from the
|
|
tests will help in developing crew procedures for various landing
|
|
conditions and situations.
|
|
|
|
Facility researchers are making preparations for the flight test
|
|
program of an experimental vehicle of the National Aero-Space Plane
|
|
Program (NASP). One of three SR-71 aircraft based at Dryden
|
|
currently is flying in preparation for possible experiments for the
|
|
NASP. Kenneth J. Szalai is Director.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ames-Dryden Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
Nancy Lovato (NDLOVATO) 805/258-3448 805/948-2957
|
|
Public Affairs Officer
|
|
|
|
Donald E. Haley (DEHALEY) 805/258-3456 805/943-5817
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Donald A. Nolan (DANOLAN) 805/258-3447 805/942-9804
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Michelle Berman (DRYDEN.NEWS) 805/258-3449
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Teacher Resource Center 805/258-3456
|
|
|
|
Tour Office 805/258-3460
|
|
|
|
Linda Faulhaber 805/258-3459
|
|
The X-Press Editor
|
|
|
|
FAX: 805/258-3566
|
|
|
|
|
|
GODDARD SPACE FLIGHT CENTER
|
|
Greenbelt, Md. 20771
|
|
|
|
This NASA field center, 10 miles northeast of Washington, D.C.,
|
|
has one of the world's leading groups of scientists, engineers and
|
|
administrative managers. It has the largest scientific staff of all
|
|
the NASA centers.
|
|
|
|
With its approximately 13,000 civil service and contract
|
|
employees, including its facility at Wallops Island, Va., the center
|
|
is involved in, among other things, research in the Earth and space
|
|
sciences and the design, fabrication and testing of scientific
|
|
satellites that survey the Earth and the universe as well as tracking
|
|
satellites and suborbital space vehicles.
|
|
|
|
Because of its versatility, Goddard scientists can develop and
|
|
support a mission, and Goddard engineers and technicians can design,
|
|
build and integrate the spacecraft. Goddard also is involved in
|
|
implementing suborbital programs using small and medium expendable
|
|
launch vehicles, aircraft, balloons and sounding rockets.
|
|
|
|
Controllers in the Payload Operations Control Centers maintain a
|
|
24-hour vigil every day of the year for more than 20 orbiting
|
|
spacecraft. Spacecraft being watched include Tracking and Data Relay
|
|
Satellites which serve as vital communications links between orbiting
|
|
spacecraft and Earth through a Goddard-managed ground terminal in
|
|
White Sands, N.M. Two major telescopes, the International
|
|
Ultraviolet Explorer, launched in 1978 and the widely-recognized
|
|
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) launched in April 1990, also are under
|
|
the watchful eyes of Goddard controllers.
|
|
|
|
So is the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), launched in November
|
|
1989. COBE has provided scientists a whole new view of the cosmos.
|
|
The spacecraft was designed to study the origin and dynamics of the
|
|
universe, including the theoretical cataclysmic explosion known as
|
|
the "Big Bang."
|
|
|
|
From the Space Telescope Operations Control Center at Goddard,
|
|
managers and engineers control the orbiting HST observatory and
|
|
maintain an around-the-clock vigil from an array of consoles. HST
|
|
has accomplished a number of scientific achievements and, in spite of
|
|
a spherical aberration in its primary mirror, has provided scientists
|
|
with images of celestial objects in detail never seen before.
|
|
|
|
One of the highlights of 1993 will be the first HST servicing
|
|
mission. The solar arrays will be replaced and several instruments
|
|
and gyros will be changed out.
|
|
|
|
The Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (GRO), launched in April 1991,
|
|
also is managed by Goddard. Compton's mission is to study gamma ray
|
|
emitting objects in the Milky Way galaxy and beyond. Within its
|
|
first 3 months of operation, the Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment
|
|
Telescope, one of four instruments aboard Compton, detected one of
|
|
the most luminous gamma-ray sources ever seen. The source of this
|
|
radiation was identified with the variable Quasar 3C279 located in
|
|
the constellation Virgo, approximately 7 billion light years from
|
|
Earth.
|
|
|
|
In spite of their size, Goddard's Small Explorer (SMEX) missions
|
|
will investigate some of the most important questions raised in
|
|
astrophysics and space physics. The program will conduct focused
|
|
investigations which probe conditions in unique parts of space,
|
|
complement major missions, prove new scientific concepts or make
|
|
significant contributions to space science in other ways. The first
|
|
SMEX mission, the Solar Anomalous Magnetospheric Particle Explorer
|
|
was launched in July 1992.
|
|
|
|
Goddard also has developed an Explorer Project which provides
|
|
moderate-sized missions in quick response to new scientific
|
|
opportunities. The Explorer Project includes the Extreme Ultraviolet
|
|
Explorer, launched in 1992 to study a newly opened window of the
|
|
electromagnetic spectrum called the extreme ultraviolet.
|
|
|
|
The Goddard-managed Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS),
|
|
designed to collect, for the first time, data sets of the chemistry,
|
|
dynamics and radiative inputs of the upper atmosphere, was launched
|
|
on Discovery in September 1991. UARS is the first spacecraft to be
|
|
launched as part of the Mission to Planet Earth Q the NASA element of
|
|
the U.S. Global Change Research Program.
|
|
|
|
Future Mission to Planet Earth projects include Earth probes,
|
|
such as the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission and the most
|
|
ambitious science mission ever undertaken, the Earth Observing System
|
|
(EOS). The EOS mission, for which GSFC has the lead role in NASA,
|
|
addresses pressing global issues, such as the depletion of
|
|
atmospheric ozone and long-term global warming.
|
|
|
|
Acting as the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
|
|
(NOAA)'s agent, Goddard procures the Geostationary Operational
|
|
Environmental Satellite and TIROS series spacecraft and instruments
|
|
required to meet NOAA's objectives. Goddard also provides for their
|
|
launch.
|
|
|
|
Goddard manages the U.S. portion of many international projects
|
|
including two x-ray observatories: the German Roentgen Satellite
|
|
launched in June 1990 and the Japanese Astro-D launched in January
|
|
1993. Geotail, developed for Japan in support of Goddard's
|
|
International Solar-Terrestrial Physics Project, was launched in 1992
|
|
to better understand the interaction of the sun, the Earth's magnetic
|
|
field and the Van Allen radiation belts.
|
|
|
|
Much of the center's theoretical research is conducted at the
|
|
Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City. Operated in
|
|
close association with area universities, the institute provides
|
|
support research in geophysics, astrophysics, astronomy and
|
|
meteorology.
|
|
|
|
The scientific data from these and other space flight experiments
|
|
are catalogued and archived at the National Space Science Data Center
|
|
at Goddard in the form of magnetic tapes, microfilm and photographic
|
|
prints to satisfy the thousands of requests each year from the
|
|
scientific community. Dr. John M. Klineberg is Center Director.
|
|
|
|
Goddard Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
Janet Ruff (JRUFF) 301/286-6255 703/521-2445
|
|
Chief, Public Affairs
|
|
|
|
Patricia Ratkewicz 301/286-8102 410/544-1432
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Elaine Pearl 301/286-8957 301/627-6308
|
|
Admin. Assistant
|
|
|
|
James Elliott 301/286-6256 703/385-1463
|
|
Special Assistant/Chief Editor
|
|
|
|
Randee Exler (PUBINFO) 301/286-0697 301/552-3247
|
|
Chief, Public Information/News Chief
|
|
|
|
Tammy Jones 301/286-5566 301/292-4860
|
|
Public Information
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Publications
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Allen Kenitzer 301/286-2806 410/987-8456
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Public Information
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Earth Science
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Mike Finneran 301/286-5565 301/262-9645
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Public Information
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Fred Brown 301/286-7504
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Public Information
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Editor, Goddard News
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Still Photos
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Michelle Mangum 301/286-8956 301/794-4184
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Public Information Assistant
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Dateline Goddard
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Still Photos
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Carl Poleskey 301/286-8982 202/547-9064
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Chief, Public Services
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Tony May 301/286-8955 301/322-9160
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Public Services
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Secretary
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Nina Desmond 301/286-8141 301/474-7128
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Public Services
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Community Relations
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Darlene Ahalt 301/286-8101 301/552-2674
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Public Services
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Protocol/Speakers Bureau
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Donna Drelick 301/286-7995 301/890-5392
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Public Services
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Legislative Affairs
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Elva Bailey 301/286-7207 301/464-0599
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Chief, Educational Programs
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Richard Crone 301/286-7206 301/465-9031
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Educational Programs
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Rebecca Allen 301/286-7205 301/535-2061
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Educational Programs
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Secretary
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FAX: Newsroom 301/286-8142
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FAX: Mission News Center 301/286-2184
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JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
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4800 Oak Grove Drive
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Pasadena, Calif. 91109-8099
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NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) is located at the foot of
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the San Gabriel Mountains near Pasadena, Calif., approximately 20
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miles northeast of Los Angeles. JPL, occupying 177 acres of land, is
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a government-owned facility employing about 6,000 people. JPL is
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operated by the California Institute of Technology under a NASA
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contract administered by the NASA Pasadena office.
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The laboratory is engaged in exploring the Earth and the solar
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system with automated spacecraft. In addition to the Pasadena site,
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JPL manages the Deep Space Communications Complex, a station of the
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worldwide Deep Space Network (DSN) located at Goldstone, Calif., on
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40,000 acres of land occupied under permit from the U.S. Army. The
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DSN allows for spacecraft communications, data acquisition and
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mission control, and for the study of space with radio science; and
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in performing basic and applied scientific and engineering research
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in support of the nation's interests
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JPL was formed in 1944. In 1958, it built and operated the first
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U.S. satellite, Explorer 1. Its robotic spacecraft have explored all
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planets in the solar system except Pluto.
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Current NASA flight projects under JPL management include Voyager,
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Galileo, Magellan, Mars Observer, Ulysses and Topex/Poseidon. Major
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space science instruments include the new wide field/planetary camera
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for Hubble Space Telescope, the NASA scatterometer and the Shuttle
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|
imaging radar.
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The laboratory designs and tests flight systems, including
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complete spacecraft, and provides technical direction to contractor
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organizations.
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In addition to the NASA contract, JPL also performs work for the
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Departments of Defense and Energy, the Federal Aviation
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Administration and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Edward C.
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Stone, Jr., is Director of JPL.
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JPL Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
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Public Affairs Office - MS 180-201
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George F. Alexander (GALEXANDER) 818/354-7006 818/708-9963
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Manager
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Philipp D. Neuhauser 818/354-6278 818/353-2976
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Staff Specialist
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Yvonne M. Samuel 818/354-0349 818/790-0088
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Administrative Assistant
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Gweneth Jackson 818/354-7006 818/398-1701
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Secretary
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FAX: 818/393-0034
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Public Information Office - MS 180-200
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(JPLPIO/JPL)
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Robert J. MacMillin (RMACMILLIN) 818/354-5011 818/247-9345
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Manager
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Franklin O'Donnell 818/354-5011 213/255-7868
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Deputy Manager
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Alan S. Wood 818/354-5011 818/355-1814
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Public Information Specialist
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James J. Doyle 818/354-5011 818/246-6024
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Public Information Specialist
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Jurrie J. van der Woude 818/354-5011 818/963-5025
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Public Information Specialist
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James H. Wilson 818/354-5011 818/797-9874
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Public Information Specialist
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Mary Hardin 818/354-5011 213/827-5990
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Public Information Specialist
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Diane Ainsworth 818/354-5011 213/398-7672
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Public Information Specialist
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Edward D. McNevin III 818/364-5011 818/398-7460
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Public Information Specialist
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Mark Whalen 818/354-5011 213/666-2115
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Editor, Universe
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Alison Galien 818/354-5011 818/793-0556
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Secretary
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FAX: 818/354-4537
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Audiovisual Services Office - 186-AUD
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Stephen L. Bridges (SLBRIDGES) 818/354-6170 818/793-4688
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Manager
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Gregory A. Hanchett 818/354-6170 818/798-1607
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Group Leader
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Cory S. Borst 818/354-6170 818/249-6629
|
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Audiovisual Technician
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|
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Sheri L. Rowe-Lopez 818/354-6170 818/307-9846
|
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Secretary
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|
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Lisa M. Rovarino 818/354-6170 818/447-4433
|
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Secretary
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FAX: 818/393-6441
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Public Education Office - CS-530
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Richard F. Alvidrez 818/354-8592 213/221-8620
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Manager
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Michael A. Garcia 818/354-8593 213/258-1582
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Educational Services Specialist
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David M. Seidel 818/354-9313 213/653-3144
|
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Educational Services Representative
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Peter J. McCloskey 818/354-6916 818/364-0955
|
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Teacher Resource Center Coordinator
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Philip J. Schmidt 818/354-6916 818/793-5076
|
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Secretary
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FAX: 818/354-8080
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Public Services Office - 180-205
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|
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Kimberly L . Lievense 818/354-0112 818/249-8186
|
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Acting Manager
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Kimberly C. Johansen 818/354-2413 818/790-6468
|
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Public Services Representative
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|
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Sharon L. Miller 818/354-9318 818/352-4968
|
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Secretary
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|
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James P. Nations 818/354-9314 818/303-1007
|
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Public Services Representative
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|
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Kay F. Van Lepp 818/354-9312 818/398-8167
|
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Public Services Representative
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FAX : 818/393-4641
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LYNDON B. JOHNSON SPACE CENTER
|
|
Houston, Texas 77058
|
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|
|
Johnson Space Center is located on NASA Road 1, adjacent to Clear
|
|
Lake, and about 20 miles southeast of downtown Houston via Interstate
|
|
45. Additional facilities are located at nearby Ellington Field,
|
|
approximately 7 miles north of the center.
|
|
|
|
Johnson Space Center was established in September 1961 as NASA's
|
|
primary center for design, development and testing of spacecraft and
|
|
associated systems for manned flight; selection and training of
|
|
astronauts; planning and conducting manned missions; and extensive
|
|
participation in the medical, engineering and scientific experiments
|
|
carried aboard space flights.
|
|
|
|
Johnson has program management responsibility for the Space
|
|
Shuttle program, the nation's current manned space flight program.
|
|
Johnson also has a major responsibility for the development of the
|
|
space station, a permanently manned, Earth-orbiting facility to be
|
|
constructed in space and operable within the decade. The center will
|
|
be responsible for the interfaces between the space station and the
|
|
Space Shuttle and flight operations of both.
|
|
|
|
Johnson also is responsible for direction of operations at the
|
|
White Sands Test Facility (WSTF), located on the western edge of the
|
|
U.S. Army White Sands Missile Range at Las Cruces, N.M. WSTF
|
|
supports the Space Shuttle
|
|
propulsion system, power system and materials testing.
|
|
|
|
Most of the 100 buildings situated on the 1,620 acre Johnson site
|
|
are office space and laboratories, with some dedicated to astronaut
|
|
training and mission operations.
|
|
|
|
Among the specialized training facilities are the Shuttle
|
|
simulators (bldg. 5); Space Shuttle Orbiter Trainer, the Manipulator
|
|
Development Facility, Precision Air Bearing Facility and Space
|
|
Station mockups (Bldg. 9 North); and the Weightless Environment
|
|
Training Facility (Bldg. 29). The Mission Control Center (Bldg. 30),
|
|
where all human space flights are monitored, is located at the center
|
|
of the complex. The Space Station Control Center was completed in
|
|
November 1991 and will be ready to support integrated training in
|
|
mid-1995.
|
|
|
|
Life sciences, planetary and Earth sciences, robotics, artificial
|
|
intelligence and lunar samples are a few of the research areas in the
|
|
16 facilities dedicated to space and life sciences.
|
|
Engineering facilities include vacuum chambers, an anechoic
|
|
chamber, antenna range, avionics testing and various structural and
|
|
environmental test areas housed in 22 buildings. Aaron Cohen is
|
|
Center Director.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Johnson Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
Office Of Director, Public Affairs - AP
|
|
|
|
Harold S. Stall (HSTALL) 713/483-3671 713/333-2260
|
|
Director
|
|
|
|
Douglas K. Ward (DKWARD) 713/483-3671 713/326-1808
|
|
Deputy Director
|
|
|
|
(vacant) 713/483-0229
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Mara R. Pena 713/483-0228 713/488-1380
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Iris L. Gardner 713/483-7009 713/876-4194
|
|
Administrative Assistant
|
|
|
|
Elena L. Salsitz 713/483-5599 713/666-4022
|
|
Chief of Protocol
|
|
|
|
FAX: 713/483-3379
|
|
|
|
|
|
Media Services Branch - AP3
|
|
(PAOJSC)
|
|
|
|
Jeffrey E. Carr 713/483-5111 713/474-3166
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Pat Malpass 713/483-8658 713/488-4576
|
|
Public Affairs Assistant
|
|
|
|
Mengo Carr 713/483-5111 713/333-9163
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Kari L. Fluegel 713/483-8649 713/332-8694
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Kyle J. Herring 713/483-8653 713/474-3366
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Billie A. Deason 713/483-8646 713/326-4387
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Brian D. Welch 713/483-8650 713/480-5194
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Barbara L. Schwartz 713/483-8647 713/474-4769
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
James A. Hartsfield 713/483-4934 713/724-4138
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Rob Navias 713/483-8651
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Kelly O. Humphries 713/244-5050 713/996-8410
|
|
Space News Roundup Editor
|
|
|
|
William W. Robbins (BILLROBBINS) 713/483-8638 713/474-3423
|
|
Audio Visual Manager
|
|
|
|
Andrew R. Patnesky 713/483-8636 713/251-7314
|
|
Photo Documentation Specialist
|
|
|
|
FAX: 713/483-2000
|
|
|
|
|
|
Public Services Branch - AP4
|
|
|
|
Stephen A. Nesbitt (SNESBITT) 713/483-4241 713/286-5971
|
|
Chief, Public Services
|
|
|
|
Louis A. Parker (LAPARKER) 713/483-8622 713/481-4372
|
|
Deputy Chief, Public Services Branch
|
|
Exhibits Manager
|
|
|
|
Libby Salas 713/483-8608 713/481-5237
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Jeannie Carlin 713/483-8621 713/694-5769
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Linda M. Copley 713/483-8609 713/334-1728
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Community Affairs
|
|
|
|
Boyd E. Mounce 713/483-8623 713/334-7734
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Lunar Samples/Exhibits
|
|
|
|
James D. Poindexter 713/483-8624 713/475-9671
|
|
Educational Specialist
|
|
|
|
Juanie J. Campbell 713/483-8613 713/488-8421
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Speakers Bureau
|
|
|
|
Florestela Luna 713/483-8612 713/485-3533
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Freedom of Information Act
|
|
|
|
Tommie L. Walton 713/483-8610 713/524-7659
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Education
|
|
|
|
Bunda Dean (BDEAN) 713/483-8625 713/482-4879
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Norma Rhoads 713/483-0235 713/538-2011
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Education
|
|
|
|
Robert Fitzmaurice, Ed.D 713/483-1257 713/334-2424
|
|
Center Education Programs Officer
|
|
|
|
FAX: 713/483-4876
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JOHN F. KENNEDY SPACE CENTER
|
|
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 32899
|
|
|
|
Located on Florida's central Atlantic coast, the Kennedy Space
|
|
Center (KSC) is NASA's principal launch base. It occupies 140,000
|
|
(56,568 hectares) acres of land and water on Merritt Island, the
|
|
adjacent coastal strand, and the Indian and Banana Rivers and
|
|
Mosquito Lagoon by which the center is surrounded. The NASA holdings
|
|
include 84,031 acres (34,007 hectares), the remainder is owned by the
|
|
State of Florida but controlled by NASA under deeds of dedication.
|
|
Robert L. Crippen is Director.
|
|
|
|
KSC's eastern boundary fronts on the Atlantic Ocean and the
|
|
center's large area (about one-fifth the size of Rhode Island) is
|
|
surrounded by water, providing ample safety to the surrounding
|
|
communities during launches, landings and other hazardous operations.
|
|
|
|
Only a small portion of KSC is used for space operations; the
|
|
balance is managed by the U.S. Department of the Interior as a
|
|
wildlife refuge and national seashore.
|
|
|
|
The center was established in the early 1960s as the launch site
|
|
for the Apollo lunar landing missions. KSC pioneered the mobile
|
|
launch technique in which space vehicles are built up inside
|
|
protective structures and moved to their launch pads a short time
|
|
before launch, reducing their exposure to the corrosive sea shore
|
|
environment to the minimum.
|
|
|
|
After the Apollo program was concluded in 1972, KSC's Complex 39
|
|
was used for the launch of four Skylab missions and for the Apollo
|
|
spacecraft for the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project.
|
|
|
|
The center's facilities were modified for the Space Shuttle
|
|
program in the mid to late 1970s. The Shuttle era began with the
|
|
launch of the STS-1 mission on April 12, 1981. As of the beginning
|
|
of 1993, more than 50 Shuttle missions had been launched and the
|
|
current forecast calls for the launch of approximately eight missions
|
|
per year from KSC's twin pads.
|
|
|
|
KSC is NASA's prime center for the test, checkout and launch of
|
|
payloads and space vehicles. This includes launch of manned vehicles
|
|
at KSC and oversight of NASA missions launched on unmanned vehicles
|
|
from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., and Vandenberg Air Force
|
|
Base (VAFB) in California.
|
|
|
|
The center is responsible for the assembly, checkout and launch
|
|
of Space Shuttle vehicles and their payloads, landing operations and
|
|
turn-around of Shuttle orbiters between missions, as well as
|
|
preparation and launch of unmanned Scout vehicles from VAFB. KSC
|
|
also is responsible for the operation of the KSC Vandenberg Launch
|
|
Site Resident Office located at VAFB.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kennedy Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
Hugh W. Harris (HHARRIS) 407/867-2201 407/783-4421
|
|
Director, Public Affairs Office
|
|
|
|
Lisa A. Fowler 407/867-2201 407/636-2396
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
FAX: 407/867-8007
|
|
|
|
David S. Dickinson 407/867-7484 407/452-0743
|
|
Deputy Director, Public Affairs
|
|
|
|
Mary Jo Shallcross 407/867-2622 407/383-4612
|
|
FOIA, Speakers Bureau
|
|
|
|
Darleen Hunt 407/867-2622 407/452-9383
|
|
Protcol Officer
|
|
|
|
Jill Rock 407/867-2622 407/459-1149
|
|
Public Relations Specialist
|
|
|
|
Carol Cavanaugh 407/867-2622 407/459-1826
|
|
Public Relations Specialist
|
|
|
|
Maret Tennison 407/867-2622 407/636-6155
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
FAX 407/867-3395
|
|
|
|
PUBLIC INFORMATION BRANCH - PA-PIB
|
|
(PAO.KSC)
|
|
|
|
Dick Young 407/867-2468 904/423-1800
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Leslie Williams 407/867-2468
|
|
Secretary/Accreditation
|
|
|
|
Christina Ross 407/867-2468
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Lisa Malone 407/867-2468 407/868-0252
|
|
News Chief
|
|
|
|
Diana Boles 407/867-2468 407/453-5925
|
|
Public Information/Logistics
|
|
|
|
Bruce Buckingham 407/867-2468 407/728-7545
|
|
Public Information
|
|
|
|
George H. Diller 407/867-2468 407/269-4040
|
|
Public Information
|
|
|
|
William Johnson 407/867-7819 407/631-0084
|
|
Public Information/Television
|
|
|
|
Tina Pechon 407/867-7819
|
|
Public Affairs Assistant
|
|
|
|
Garry (Mitch) Varnes 407/867-2468 407/773-9165
|
|
Public Information
|
|
|
|
Manny Virata 407/867-7819 407/452-7952
|
|
Public Information
|
|
|
|
Ken Thornsley 407/867-7819 407/269-1585
|
|
Public Information/Photography
|
|
|
|
FAX: 407/867-2692
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EDUCATION AND AWARENESS BRANCH - PA-EAB
|
|
(PA.EAB)
|
|
|
|
Steve Dutczak 407/867-4444 407/453-0612
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Tracy Young 407/867-4444 407/868-0909
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Patti Phelps 407/867-4444 407/383-3396
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
Manned Flight Awareness
|
|
|
|
June Buchanan 407/867-4444 407/254-7239
|
|
Student Educational Program Coordinator
|
|
|
|
Joseph Green 407/867-4444 407/452-8067
|
|
Writer/Editor
|
|
|
|
Jane Hodges, Ph.D. 407/867-4444 407/264-9316
|
|
Educational Program Coordinator
|
|
|
|
FAX: 407/867-7242
|
|
|
|
|
|
VISITOR CENTER OFFICE - PA-VCO
|
|
|
|
Edward K. Harrison 407/867-2363 407/453-5168
|
|
Chief
|
|
|
|
Jean Rhodes 407/867-2363 407/269-3585
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Larry Mauk 407/867-2363 407/636-5209
|
|
Visual Information Specialist
|
|
|
|
James E. Ball 407/867-2363 407/264-1514
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Jan Foster 407/867-2363 407/783-8643
|
|
Program Management Specialist
|
|
|
|
FAX: 407/867-2097
|
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LANGLEY RESEARCH CENTER
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Hampton, Va. 23681-0001
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Langley Research Center occupies 787 acres of government-owned
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land and shares aircraft runways, utilities and some facilities with
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Langley Air Force Base. An additional 3,200-acre marshland is under
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permit to NASA and is used as a drop zone for model aircraft tests.
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Langley's primary mission is basic research in aeronautics and
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space technology. Major research fields include aerodynamics,
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materials, structures, flight controls, information systems,
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acoustics, aeroelasticity, atmospheric sciences and nondestructive
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evaluation.
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Approximately 60 percent of Langley's work is in aeronautics,
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working to improve today's aircraft and to develop concepts and
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technology for future aircraft. Over 40 wind tunnels, other unique
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research facilities and testing techniques as well as computer
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modeling capabilities aid in the investigation of the full flight
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range Q from general aviation and transport aircraft through
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hypersonic vehicles.
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Langley's goal is to develop technologies to enable aircraft to
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fly faster, farther, safer and to be more maneuverable, quieter, less
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expensive to manufacture and more energy efficient.
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Researchers are studying improved flight control systems to aid
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aircraft in
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operating more efficiently in all kinds of weather and in crowded
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terminal airways. In cooperation with the FAA, Langley is examining
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wind shear, the cause of nearly 40 percent of U.S. airline fatalities
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in a recent several-year period.
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The National Aero-Space Plane is challenging Langley researchers
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to expand the limits in hypersonic (Mach 5-25) engines, heat-
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resistant materials and supercomputers for engine and airframe
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design. Improvements in supersonic (Mach 1-5) engine performance,
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fabrication of composite materials and laminar flow airfoil
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technology are spawning a new era in long-distance air travel.
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Passengers in the next century will
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benefit from current research programs at Langley.
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The additional 40 percent of Langley's work supports the national
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space programs. Researchers study atmospheric and Earth sciences,
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develop technology for advanced space transportation systems, conduct
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research in laser energy conversion techniques for space applications
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and provide the focal point for design studies for large space
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systems technology and space station activities.
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Langley researchers performed extensive work on the structure,
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aerodynamics and thermal protection system for the Space Shuttle.
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Langley also manages an extensive program in atmospheric sciences,
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seeking a more detailed understanding of the origins, chemistry and
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transport mech-anisms that govern the Earth's atmospheric data using
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aircraft, balloon and land- and space-based remote sensing
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instruments designed, developed and fabricated at Langley.
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The center is contributing to the conceptual design phase of the
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Earth Observing System, the first stage of the international Mission
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To Planet Earth. The system envisions a network of up to five
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equatorial and four polar orbiting research satellites.
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Langley has been named lead center for management of the
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agency's technology development program for the future High Speed
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Civil transport program. Langley will manage high-speed technology
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in areas of aerodynamic performance, airframe materials and
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structures, the flight deck and airframe systems integration.
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The Langley Research Center, established in 1917 as the first
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national civil aeronautical laboratory, has been instrumental in
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shaping aerospace history for over 7 decades. Paul F. Holloway is
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Center Director.
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Langley Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
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A. Gary Price (AGPRICE) 804/864-6124 804/898-4198
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Head, Office of External Affairs MS-115
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Dr. Karen R. Credeur (KRCREDEUR) 804/864-3307 804/868-7347
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Deputy Head, Office Of External Affairs
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Janice Johnson 804/864-6123 804/898-1879
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Secretary
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Margaret W. Hunt (MWHUNT) 804/864-6125 804/877-5271
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Information Specialist MS-115
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FAX: 804/864-6333
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Office of Public Affairs - MS 115
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J. Campbell Martin (JCMARTIN) 804/864-6121 804/868-6818
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Head, Office of Public Affairs
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Catharine G. Schauer 804/864-6122 804/898-8463
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Public Affairs Specialist
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H. Keith Henry (KHENRY) 804/864-6120 804/826-8916
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Public Affairs Specialist
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vacant (Bionetics Corp.) 804/864-6126
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Editor, Researcher News
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Carol Petrachenko (Bionetics Corp.) 804/864-6528 804/481-4993
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Photojournalist MS-146
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Summer Intern 804/864-6529
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Office of Public Services - MS 154
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Dr. Karen R. Credeur (KRCREDEUR) 804/864-3307 804/868-7347
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Head, Office of Public Services
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Alice E. Eley (AEELEY) 804/864-3308 804/245-2134
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Secretary
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Jean Drummond Clough (JDCLOUGH) 804/864-6828 804/898-5113
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Ann H. Suit (ASUIT) 804/864-3305 804/229-9338
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Pamela J. Verniel 804/864-6362 804/898-4683
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Activities Coordinator MS-496
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Roger A. Hathaway 804/864-3312 804/826-8388
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Education & Information Specialist MS-154
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Marchelle D. Canright 804/864-3313 804/595-3751
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Education & Information Specialist MS-154
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Marny Skora (MSKORA) 804/864-3315 804/868-6245
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Public Affairs Specialist MS-154
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Craig E. Murden (Bionetics Corp.) 804/864-3296 804/898-4766
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Information Specialist MS-146
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Susan Smigielski (Bionetics Corp.) 804/864-3293 804/591-2447
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Public Mail MS-146
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Audrey S. Coppedge (Bionetics Corp.) 804/864-3297 804/380-8154
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Teacher Resource Center MS-146
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Peter D. Thomas 804/864-3117 804/671-1772
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Education - IPA
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LEWIS RESEARCH CENTER
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21000 Brookpark Road
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Cleveland, Ohio 44135
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NASA's Lewis Research Center occupies 350 acres of land adjacent
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to the Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, some 20 miles
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southwest of Cleveland, Ohio.
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More than 140 buildings comprise the center which is staffed by
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about 2,800 government employees and some 2,200 on-site contractors.
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Additional facilities are located at Plum Brook Station, about 3
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miles south of Sandusky, Ohio.
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The center was established in 1941 by the National Advisory
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Committee for Aeronautics (NACA). Named for George W. Lewis, NACA's
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Director of Research from 1924 to 1947, the center developed an
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international reputation for its research on jet propulsion systems.
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Lewis is NASA's lead center for research, technology, and
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development in aircraft propulsion, space propulsion, space power,
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and satellite communications.
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The center has been advancing propulsion technology to enable
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aircraft to fly faster, farther and higher, and also focused its
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research on fuel economy, noise abatement, reliability and reduced
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pollution.
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The center pioneered efforts in the use of high energy fuels for
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both air breathing and space propulsion. Projects demonstrated the
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practicality of liquid hydrogen as a fuel leading to its use in the
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Apollo and the Space Shuttle programs as prime examples.
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Lewis has responsibility for developing the power system to
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provide the electrical power necessary to accommodate the life
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support systems and research experiments to be conducted aboard the
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space station. In addition, the center is supporting the station in
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other major areas such as auxiliary propulsion systems and
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communications.
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Lewis is the home of the Microgravity Materials Science
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Laboratory, a unique facility to qualify potential space experiments.
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Other facilities include a Space Experiments Lab, Zero-Gravity Drop
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Tower, Powered Lift Facility, Icing Research Tunnel, wind tunnels,
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space tanks, chemical rocket thrust stands, and chambers for testing
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jet engine efficiency and noise.
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A major computer complex supports both the center's scientific and
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|
administrative activities. Individual computer work stations are
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dispersed throughout the center with network connections between
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them. Lawrence J. Ross is Center Director.
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Lewis Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE PHONE HOME PHONE
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External Programs Directorte - MS 3-16
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John M. Hairston, Jr. (JHAIRSTON) 216/433-8686 216/681-0325
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Director of External Programs
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Nancy A. Horansky 216/433-2943 216/333-0716
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Secretary
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Ronald C. Alexander 216/433-2942
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Technical Assistant to the
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Director of External Programs
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Syreeta J. Stewart 216/433-2889
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Secretary
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FAX: 216/433-5266
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Office of Community and Media Relations - MS 3-13
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Linda Dukes-Campbell (LDUKES) 216/433-8920 216/591-1196
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Chief, Community and Media Relations
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Cynthia M. Watson 216/433-6776 216/661-0078
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Secretary
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FAX: 216/433-2888
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Media Relations Office - MS 3-11
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Marilyn S. Edwards (MSEDWARDS) 216/433-2899 216/356-0851
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Chief, Media Relations Office
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Linda S. Ellis 216/433-2900 216/779-1266
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Aeronautics, Aerospace Technology,
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Office of Interagency & Industry Programs
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Mary Ann Peto (MAPETO) 216/433-2902 216/722-5447
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Space Flight Systems, Space Station
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Engineering, Educational Programs
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Lori Rachul 216/433-8806 216/356-2843
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Public Affairs Specialist
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Administration & Computer Services,
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Technical Services, Community Relations,
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Equal Opportunity, University Programs,
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Mission Safety & Assurance, Health
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Services, Comptroller
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Doreen B. Zudell 216/433-2888
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Lewis News Editor
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Sherrie L. Campbell 216/433-2901
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Secretary
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FAX: 216/433-2888
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Community Relations Office - MS 3-13
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Thomas A. Cozzens 216/433-2513 216/851-8425
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Manager, Community Relations
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David M. DeFelice 216/433-6186
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Special Programs
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Eleanore M. Boughton 216/433-6631
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Secretary
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FAX: 216/433-2888
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Visitor Center - MS 8-1
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Gail T. Smith 216/433-6689
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Manager, Visitor Center
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Visitor Center Information 216/433-2001
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Monica Boyd 216/433-2016
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Administrative Assistant
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Kimberly Dove 216/433-2003
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Speakers Bureau Coordinator
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Diane L. Borys 216/433-3156
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Tour Coordinator
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Marian J. Mroz 216/433-5573
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Public Inquiries/Publications
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Office of University Programs - MS 3-7
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Francis J. Montegani 216/433-2956
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Chief, Office of University Programs
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Office of Educational Programs - MS 7-4
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R. Lynn Bondurant (LBONDURANT) 216/433-5583 216/933-4529
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Chief, Office of Educational Programs
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JoAnn Charleston 216/433-2957
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Deputy Chief, Office of Educational Programs
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Office of Interagency and Industry Programs - MS 3-7
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Harvey J. Schwartz 216/433-2921
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Chief, Office of Interagency and
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Industry Programs
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Anthony F. Ratajczak 216/433-2225
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Chief, Technology Utilization Office
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GEORGE C. MARSHALL SPACE FLIGHT CENTER
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Huntsville, Ala. 35812
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The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) is located on
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1,800 acres inside the U. S. Army's Redstone Arsenal at Huntsville,
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Ala. The center has about 3,650 civil service employees. Of this
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number, more than 65 percent are scientists and engineers and more
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than 15 percent are business professionals. The remainder consists
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of technicians and administrative and clerical support personnel.
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Marshall was officially dedicated by President Dwight D.
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|
Eisenhower on July 1, 1960, by the transfer to NASA of part of the
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Army Ballistic Missile Agency. The center is named for former
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|
Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense and Army World War II Chief
|
|
of Staff, General of the Army George C. Marshall. The center's first
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|
director was Dr. Wernher von Braun, the noted German rocket
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|
scientist.
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Marshall manages three government-owned, contractor-operated
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|
facilities for NASA: the Michoud Assembly Facility near New Orleans
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where the Space Shuttle external tanks are made; the Slidell Computer
|
|
Complex in Slidell, La., which provides computer services support to
|
|
Michoud; and the new Advanced Solid Rocket Motor development and
|
|
assembly facility at Yellow Creek, near Iuka, Miss.
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In the past, Marshall has been identified primarily as NASA's
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launch vehicle development center. Today, this describes but one
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facet of the center's multi-faceted operation. Marshall is a multi-
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project management, scientific and engineering research and
|
|
development establishment, with emphasis on projects involving
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|
investigation and application of space technologies to the solution
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|
of problems on Earth as well as in space. Marshall also plays a key
|
|
role in many NASA mission operations.
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Marshall had a significant role in the development of the Space
|
|
Shuttle and continues to manage the Space Shuttle main engines, the
|
|
external tanks that carry liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen for those
|
|
engines, and the solid rocket boosters that, together with the
|
|
engines, lift the Shuttle into orbit.
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Additionally, Marshall is managing development of the Advanced
|
|
Solid Rocket Motor, planned to replace the current Shuttle Redesigned
|
|
Solid Rocket Motors in the late-1990s.
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The center has a key role in the development of scientific
|
|
payloads and experiments to be flown aboard the Shuttle. Many of
|
|
these multidisciplinary payloads are flown on Spacelab, a reusable,
|
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modular research facility carried in the Shuttle's cargo bay.
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The center operates NASA's Spacelab Mission Operations Control
|
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Center, a new, state-of-the-art facility from which all NASA-managed
|
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Spacelab missions are controlled.
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To prepare crew members for Marshall-managed Spacelab missions,
|
|
the center also operates a Payload Crew Training Complex. Here,
|
|
science crews train in Shuttle and Spacelab simulators to conduct the
|
|
research they will perform in space.
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The center managed the development and initial orbital checkout of
|
|
the Hubble Space Telescope, now orbiting above the Earth and relaying
|
|
a wealth of new knowledge about the universe from distant galaxies to
|
|
neighboring planets. Marshall also is managing the Advanced X-ray
|
|
Astrophysics Facility, a project with two observatories that will
|
|
provide detailed, long-term study of x-ray emissions from the
|
|
universe and the phenomena that produce them. These include some of
|
|
the most violent processes in nature Q the birth and death of stars
|
|
and galaxies, spinning neutron stars, quasars and black holes.
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Marshall manages two space transfer vehicle systems, the Inertial
|
|
Upper Stage (IUS) and the Transfer Orbit Stage (TOS). The IUS, a
|
|
two-stage rocket, places spacecraft in high-Earth orbits or on escape
|
|
trajectories for planetary missions. The single-stage TOS is
|
|
intended to boost satellites such as the Advanced Communications
|
|
Technology Satellite into geosynchronous transfer orbit and in 1992,
|
|
was used in launching the Mars Observer spacecraft into an
|
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interplanetary trajectory.
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The Marshall center manages one of the three work packages for the
|
|
space station, including developing and producing the U.S. laboratory
|
|
and habitation modules and the environmental control and life support
|
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systems.
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The Marshall center is strongly committed to investigating the
|
|
processing of materials in space and working in a microgravity
|
|
environment. These endeavors promise to increase the understanding
|
|
of materials and improve Earth-based processes. Center Director is
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Thomas J. "Jack" Lee.
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Marshall Public Affairs Contacts
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NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
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|
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John B. Taylor (JBTAYLOR) 205/544-0031 205/881-7843
|
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Director
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Robert K. Ruhl 205/544-0031 205/650-0798
|
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Deputy Director
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|
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Judi A. Hollingsworth 205/544-1837 205/830-9728
|
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Secretary
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Media Services Office - CA10
|
|
(PUBINFO.MSFC)
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|
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Dom Amatore (DAMATORE) 205/544-0034 205/461-7833
|
|
Director
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|
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Vacant 205/544-0034
|
|
Secretary
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|
|
David Crim 205/544-3655 205/539-5696
|
|
Student Aide
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|
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FAX: 205/544-5852
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|
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Mission Operations Team
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|
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David B. Drachlis (DDRACHLIS) 205/544-6538 205/881-9302
|
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Manager
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Spacelab
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|
|
Jerry Berg 205/544-6540 205/534-4968
|
|
Upper Stages, AXAF, SEDS
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|
|
Jim Sahli 205/544-6528 205/922-9495
|
|
Science and Engineering Labs
|
|
Flight Experiments
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Vacant 205/544-0034
|
|
Audio/Visual Services
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Project Support
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|
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Mike Simmons 205/544-6537 205/822-1882
|
|
Manager
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Space Station, Education
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|
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June Malone 205/544-7061 205/881-3527
|
|
Space Shuttle, ASRM
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|
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Vacant 205/544-0034
|
|
Speeches, HLLV
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|
|
Ernest Shannon 205/544-0030 205/882-3231
|
|
Editor (MARSHALL.STAR)
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|
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Public Services and Education Branch - CA20
|
|
(PUBSERVICE.MSFC)
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|
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Edward D. Medal (EMEDAL) 205/544-0038 205/883-2394
|
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Director
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Sandra H. Turner 205/544-8704 205/233-0607
|
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Protocol Officer
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Jean Palmer 205/544-6518 205/773-5051
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Secretary
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|
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Cherise Thornton 205/544-6530 205/650-5034
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Student Aide
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|
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Education Branch - CA 21
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|
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William Anderson (BILLANDERSON) 205/544-7391 205/723-2898
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Chief
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Jeff Ehmen (JEHMEN) 205/544-6531 205/828-0880
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Education
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|
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Martha Howard 205/544-2716 205/971-5337
|
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Education Programs
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Ransom Ritter 205/544-9275 205/852-4448
|
|
Education Programs
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|
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Pat Armstrong 205/544-1726 205/539-3975
|
|
Project LASER Discovery Lab
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|
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Virginia Witherspoon 205/544-1798 205/536-6719
|
|
Project LASER Discovery Lab
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Public Services Branch - CA 22
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|
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Edward D. Medal (EMEDAL) 205/544-0038 205/883-2394
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Chief (Acting)
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John Dumoulin 205/544-6541 205/895-9348
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Exhibit Programs
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|
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Linda Howard 205/544-4577 205/383-6904
|
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Exhibit Programs
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|
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Nancy Robinson 205/544-6524 615/433-6705
|
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Protocol Assistant
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|
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Steven Roy 205/544-6535 205/883-5886
|
|
Public Visitor Programs
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|
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Al Jordan (ALJORDAN) 205/544-6532 205/351-2900
|
|
Publications, Inquiries, Speakers
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MICHOUD ASSEMBLY FACILITY
|
|
P.O. Box 29300
|
|
New Orleans, La. 70189
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|
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The Michoud Assembly Facility is located in Orleans Parish, La.,
|
|
about 15 miles east of downtown New Orleans. The site is on the Gulf
|
|
Intra-Coastal Waterway and has deep water access via the Mississippi
|
|
Gulf outlet.
|
|
|
|
The facility occupies approximately 833 acres of land. There are
|
|
33 buildings with an area of about 3.5-million square feet. The
|
|
largest building within the complex is the main manufacturing
|
|
building, originally built in 1942.
|
|
|
|
The primary mission of Michoud is the systems engineering,
|
|
engineering design, manufacture, fabrication, assembly and related
|
|
work for the Space Shuttle external tank.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center exercises overall management control
|
|
of the facility. A prime contractor, Martin Marietta, provides Space
|
|
Shuttle production capability.
|
|
|
|
|
|
NOTE: No NASA Public Affairs Office exists at Michoud Assembly
|
|
Facility. Public Affairs functions for Michoud are handled by the
|
|
Director of Public Affairs at Marshall Space Flight Center. Liaison
|
|
between Michoud and MSFC in public affairs matters is handled by:
|
|
|
|
NAME & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
John Demarest 504/257-2601 504/887-4580
|
|
Manager
|
|
|
|
FAX: 504/255-2152
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
JOHN C. STENNIS SPACE CENTER
|
|
Stennis Space Center, Miss. 39529
|
|
|
|
NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center (SSC), located in Hancock
|
|
County near Bay St. Louis, Miss., has grown over the past 30 years
|
|
into NASA's premier center for testing large rocket propulsion
|
|
systems for the Space Shuttle and future generations of launch
|
|
vehicles. Additionally, the center has developed into a scientific
|
|
community actively engaged in research and development programs
|
|
involving space, oceans and Earth.
|
|
|
|
Approximately 14,000 acres make up the operations complex, which
|
|
includes an industrial laboratory and specialized engineering
|
|
facilities to support engine testing. A significant advantage of the
|
|
facility is the availability of all forms of transportation,
|
|
including a direct water transportation route to the Gulf of Mexico
|
|
and through the Intracoastal Waterway to the Kennedy Space Center in
|
|
Florida. Surrounding the operations complex is an almost 125,000-
|
|
acre acoustical buffer zone held under restrictive easement by NASA
|
|
to muffle the loud, low-frequency noise produced during static tests.
|
|
|
|
Since 1975, SSC's primary mission has been the research and
|
|
development and the flight acceptance testing of the Space Shuttle
|
|
main engines. The data accumulated from these ground tests, which
|
|
simulate flight profiles, are analyzed to ensure that engine
|
|
performance is acceptable and that the required thrust will be
|
|
delivered in the critical ascent phase of Shuttle flights. Static
|
|
testing is conducted on the same concrete and steel stands used from
|
|
1966 to 1970 to captive-fire all first and second stages of the
|
|
Saturn V rocket used in the Apollo manned lunar landing and Skylab
|
|
programs.
|
|
|
|
SSC also is involved in several other emerging test programs and
|
|
activities, one of which is the Advanced Solid Rocket Motor (ASRM)
|
|
program. With the onset of ASRM testing planned for 1996, SSC will
|
|
be totally responsible for proving that the Space Shuttle's main
|
|
propulsion systems are flightworthy.
|
|
|
|
The center also is gearing up for the Space Transportation Main
|
|
Engine (STME) program. SSC will test much of the STME propulsion
|
|
hardware beginning with the turbopumps at the center's Component Test
|
|
Facility.
|
|
The High Heat Flux Facility at SSC will test materials in support
|
|
of the National Aero-Space Plane. In the future, SSC's role in NASP
|
|
testing may be increased to include expansion of the facility for
|
|
testing the plane's thermal structure.
|
|
|
|
SSC personnel also are involved in scientific research, remote
|
|
sensing technology and applications, and technology transfer. The
|
|
center has been designated as NASA's lead center for the
|
|
commercialization of remote sensing technology and as such, work with
|
|
the public and private sectors to expand the use of remote sensing
|
|
imagery and technology.
|
|
|
|
SSC is somewhat unique in NASA in that the center also serves as
|
|
host to 18 other federal and state agencies and university elements
|
|
in residence involved in environmental and oceanographic programs.
|
|
Approximately 4,100 people are employed at SSC. Roy S. Estess is the
|
|
Director.
|
|
|
|
SSC Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
Myron L. Webb (MLWEBB) 601/688-3341 601/864-3842
|
|
Public Affairs Officer
|
|
|
|
Nancy Sullivan 601/688-3341 601/452-3719
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Lanee J. Cobb 601/688-1957 601/868-7437
|
|
News Chief
|
|
|
|
Sherri J. Jacobi 601/688-3333
|
|
Secretary
|
|
|
|
Lagniappe 601/688-2313
|
|
House organ
|
|
|
|
FAX 601/688-1094
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Goddard Space Flight Center
|
|
WALLOPS FLIGHT FACILITY
|
|
Wallops Island, Va. 23337
|
|
|
|
Wallops Flight Facility, a part of the Goddard Space Flight
|
|
Center, is one of the oldest launch sites in the world. Established
|
|
in 1945, the facility covers 6,166 acres, including about 1,100 acres
|
|
of marshland, in three separate areas of Virginia's Eastern Shore Q
|
|
the island, the main base and the mainland just west of the island.
|
|
Wallops Island is about 7 miles southeast of the main base and is 5
|
|
miles long and l/2 mile wide at the widest point. Wallops is located
|
|
on Virginia's Atlantic Coast, Delmarva Peninsula, about 40 miles
|
|
southeast of Salisbury, Md., and 72 miles north of the Chesapeake Bay
|
|
Bridge Tunnel.
|
|
|
|
Wallops manages and implements NASA's sounding rocket program
|
|
which uses solid-fueled rocket launch vehicles to accomplish
|
|
approximately 35 scientific, suborbital missions each year. Launches
|
|
are conducted at Wallops and many other ranges throughout the world.
|
|
|
|
Wallops manages and coordinates NASA's Scientific Balloon Program
|
|
using thin-film, helium-filled balloons to provide approximately 35
|
|
scientific missions each year. Launches are conducted at Palestine,
|
|
Texas, Ft. Sumner, N.M., and several other sites throughout the
|
|
world.
|
|
|
|
The facility operates and maintains the Wallops launch range and
|
|
data acquisition facilities. In addition, mobile launch, tracking
|
|
and data acquisition systems are transported to and operated at
|
|
various world sites to accommodate sounding rocket, balloon and NASA
|
|
network mission requirements.
|
|
|
|
Wallops supports NASA, DOD and other agencies in aeronautical
|
|
research. Approximately 150-200 test operations, concentrating on
|
|
aircraft/airport interface and aircraft operating problems research,
|
|
are conducted each year at the research airport.
|
|
|
|
Wallops aircraft also are used to support applications and
|
|
scientific research missions that are developing new instruments,
|
|
providing ground truth data for satellite measurements and conducting
|
|
field experiments.
|
|
|
|
Wallops provides support including launching, tracking, aircraft
|
|
flights and data reduction to various segments of DOD, other
|
|
agencies, commercial, international and educational ventures.
|
|
|
|
Wallops plans and conducts Earth and ocean physics, ocean
|
|
biological and atmospheric science field experiments, satellite
|
|
correlative measurements and developmental projects for new remote
|
|
sensor systems. The main thrust of this effort is in support of the
|
|
Laboratory for Hydrospheric Processes.
|
|
|
|
Wallops supports tenants (NOAA, Navy, Coast Guard) that use the
|
|
land and facilities available at the site. The support also includes
|
|
providing fire protection, utilities, coordination of operations,
|
|
repairs to buildings, guards and other related services.
|
|
|
|
Wallops provides the facilities that are specifically designed for
|
|
the management and education programs of the NASA Office of
|
|
Professional Development and for other NASA courses and conferences.
|
|
Wallops Director is Joseph McGoogan, Director, Suborbital Projects
|
|
and Operations.
|
|
|
|
Wallops Public Affairs Contacts
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) & TITLE OFFICE PHONE HOME PHONE
|
|
|
|
Keith Koehler 804/824-1579 410/896-2730
|
|
Public Affairs Specialist
|
|
|
|
Mary T. Gladding 804/824-1584 804/824-5117
|
|
Public Affairs Clerk
|
|
|
|
Visitor Center 804/824-1344
|
|
|
|
Teacher Resource Lab 804/824-2297
|
|
|
|
FAX: 804/824-1971
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PUBLIC AFFAIRS FACSIMILE TRANSMISSION NUMBERS
|
|
|
|
Installation Phone
|
|
|
|
NASA Headquarters
|
|
Associate Administrator's Office 202/358-4345
|
|
Newsroom 202/358-4210
|
|
Newsroom 202/358-4335
|
|
Broadcast & Imaging 202/358-4333
|
|
Public Services - Exhibits & Art program 202/358-4331
|
|
Public Services - Astronaut & Guest Appearances 202/358-4332
|
|
Television Development 202/358-4334
|
|
Internal Communications 202/358-4360
|
|
Aeronautics 202/358-4060
|
|
Space Science/MTPE/LMSA 202/358-3093
|
|
International Affairs 202/358-3029
|
|
Advanced Concepts and Technology 202/358-3084
|
|
Space Flight & Space Systems Development 202/358-2887
|
|
Communications/Quality 202/358-2779
|
|
|
|
Ames Research Center
|
|
Public Information Office 415/604-3953
|
|
|
|
Dryden Flight Research Facility
|
|
PAO Trailer 805/258-3566
|
|
|
|
Goddard Space Flight Center
|
|
Newsroom 301/286-8142
|
|
Mission News Center 301/286-2184
|
|
Goddard Institute (New York) 212/678-5552
|
|
|
|
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
|
|
Newsroom 818/354-4537
|
|
|
|
Johnson Space Center
|
|
Newsroom 713/483-2000
|
|
PAO Director 713/483-3379
|
|
Public Services Branch 713/483-4876
|
|
|
|
Kennedy Space Center
|
|
Newsroom (Press Site Dome) 407/867-2692
|
|
PAO Director 407/867-7787
|
|
Vandenberg NASA/KSC (Mail Room) 805/865-3921
|
|
|
|
Langley Research Center
|
|
External Affairs Office 804/864-6333
|
|
|
|
Lewis Research Center
|
|
External Programs Director 216/433-5266
|
|
Newsroom 216/433-8143
|
|
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center
|
|
Public Affairs 205/544-5852
|
|
|
|
Michoud Assembly Facility
|
|
Communications Center 504/255-2152
|
|
|
|
John C. Stennis Space Center
|
|
Public Affairs Office 601/688-1094
|
|
|
|
Wallops Flight Facility
|
|
Newsroom 804/824-1971
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
INFORMATION SOURCES
|
|
|
|
Electronic Information Distribution
|
|
|
|
NASA news releases, Space Shuttle status reports, Shuttle launch
|
|
manifest, current mission information and public affairs contacts are
|
|
available to the media electronically on CompuServe. For access to
|
|
NASA NEWS, contact CompuServe at 1-800/848-8199 and ask for
|
|
representative 176.
|
|
|
|
NASA Select Television
|
|
|
|
The television service of NASA is an agency-wide TV-audio system
|
|
offering a wide range of programming and coverage of NASA events via
|
|
satellite. During Space Shuttle missions, the system provides
|
|
realtime air-to-ground communications between the orbiter and mission
|
|
control, public affairs commentary from launch to landing and news
|
|
briefings. Unless noted, all programming carried on NASA Select may
|
|
be taped for re-broadcast and other uses.
|
|
|
|
The system also is used for other NASA briefings and events. For
|
|
most press briefings, the system is interactive (one-way video, two-
|
|
way audio) between centers so that media covering an event from one
|
|
center may ask questions at a briefing originating from another.
|
|
|
|
In addition to live mission coverage and press briefings, NASA
|
|
Select offers informational and educational programming on space and
|
|
related topics and updates on all of NASA's projects. Historical
|
|
documentaries focusing on great moments in America's space program
|
|
also are featured, as well as recurring science as received from
|
|
Galileo, Mars Observer, Ulysses, Hubble and other spacecraft.
|
|
|
|
The programming starts at noon Eastern time, Monday through
|
|
Friday, and is shown in 4-hour blocks (repeated at 4 p.m., 8 p.m. and
|
|
midnight). Within these 4 hour blocks, at 2 p.m., 6 p.m., 10 p.m.
|
|
and 2 a.m. are programs containing material specifically suitable for
|
|
classroom use. Live programs such as press conferences and mission
|
|
coverage take precedence over regularly scheduled programming.
|
|
|
|
NASA Select coverage is carried on a full satellite transponder as
|
|
follows:
|
|
Satcom F-2R, transponder 13, C-band
|
|
Orbital Position: 72 degrees W. long.
|
|
Frequency: 3960.0 MHz
|
|
Vertical polarization
|
|
Audio monaural: 6.8 MHz
|
|
|
|
NASA Select video also is available at the AT&T Switching Center,
|
|
Television Operation Control (TVOC), Washington, D.C., and the
|
|
following NASA locations:
|
|
|
|
NASA Headquarters
|
|
Ames Research Center
|
|
Dryden Flight Research Facility
|
|
Goddard Space Flight Center
|
|
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
|
|
Johnson Space Center
|
|
Kennedy Space Center
|
|
Langley Research Center
|
|
Marshall Space Flight Center
|
|
Stennis Space Center
|
|
|
|
For Space Shuttle missions, updated NASA Select TV schedules may
|
|
be obtained by calling COMSTOR, 713/483-5817. COMSTOR is a computer
|
|
data base service requiring the use of a telephone modem.
|
|
For additional information concering NASA Select, contact Deborah
|
|
Rivera, NASA Headquarters, 202/358-1743.
|
|
|
|
Television
|
|
|
|
NASA Headquarters produces a 14 1/2-minute "magazine format"
|
|
videotape quarterly called "Aeronautics and Space Report." The
|
|
program is available to TV stations via satellite NASA Select and KU
|
|
Band. It also is uplinked to NASA field centers via the NASA Select
|
|
TV system. As an aid to broadcasters wishing to excerpt portions of
|
|
this videotape for news programming, both audio channels are used.
|
|
Channel 1 audio carries a completely mixed track with narration,
|
|
music, actualities and effects. Channel 2 audio has effects and
|
|
actualities only.
|
|
|
|
To downlink this program, television stations should contact Joe
|
|
Headlee, NASA Headquarters, 202/358-1734. Stations are notified in
|
|
advance when to expect a satellite feed with information on the
|
|
current topics.
|
|
|
|
Audio
|
|
|
|
NASA produces a weekly 4 1/2-minute program called the "The Space
|
|
Story" and a 60-second spot called "Frontiers". These topical radio
|
|
programs feature astronauts, scientists and other people in NASA's
|
|
ongoing research efforts. These programs are distributed via
|
|
satellite and on broadcast-quality cassettes to thousands of stations
|
|
in the United States and abroad.
|
|
|
|
Mission highlight audio tapes and other space-age sound effects
|
|
also are available from NASA's radio office by calling 202/358-1735.
|
|
|
|
NASA Audio News Service
|
|
|
|
Several NASA centers also provide up-to-date reports on
|
|
aeronautics and space activities through automated telephone systems.
|
|
The center codaphone services are:
|
|
|
|
Dryden 805/258-4464
|
|
Goddard 301/286-NEWS (6397)
|
|
Johnson 713/483-8600
|
|
Kennedy 407/867-2525
|
|
Marshall 205/544-NEWS (6397)
|
|
Headquarters 202/358-3014
|
|
|
|
Status reports during Space Shuttle missions are available by
|
|
calling the above numbers for Kennedy (prelaunch), Johnson (mission
|
|
operations) and Dryden (landing operations).
|
|
|
|
Still Photography
|
|
|
|
NASA field centers maintain photo files on current projects and
|
|
those of the recent past. Older files are periodically purged to
|
|
make way for newer material. The Broadcast and Imaging Branch, NASA
|
|
Headquarters, has files covering projects and missions extending back
|
|
to the agency's creation in 1958. Researchers seeking early or
|
|
general material may save time by starting their search at
|
|
Headquarters.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Internal News Publications
|
|
|
|
|
|
HQ
|
|
|
|
NASA Magazine
|
|
Editor: Beth Schmid
|
|
Phone: 202/358-1760
|
|
Published quarterly.
|
|
Feature story articles or ideas are accepted from NASA employees and
|
|
contractors, subject to editing. Deadlines are last day of July,
|
|
October, January and April, respectively, for the following quarterly
|
|
publication. Call the editor with suggestions or to submit an
|
|
article.
|
|
|
|
HQ Bulletin
|
|
Editor: Rebecca Trexler
|
|
Phone: 202/479-4630
|
|
Fax: 202/479-7266
|
|
Publishes twice monthly on first and third Monday of each month.
|
|
HQ Bulletin accepts contributions including articles and photos,
|
|
deemed to be of interest to headquarters employees and subject to
|
|
editing. Deadline is 2 weeks prior to publication date.
|
|
|
|
|
|
AMES
|
|
Astrogram
|
|
Editor: Elinor Brody
|
|
Associate Editor: Pamela Davoren
|
|
Phone: 415/604-5090
|
|
Published every other Friday. Does not accept outside contributions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DFRF
|
|
The X-Press
|
|
Editor: Linda Faulhaber
|
|
Phone: 805/258-3449
|
|
Published biweekly.
|
|
X-Press does not accept unsolicited contributions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
GSFC
|
|
Goddard News
|
|
Editor: Fred Brown
|
|
Phone: 301/286-7504
|
|
The Goddard News, an eight-page monthly publication is distributed
|
|
the last week of the month. News and feature articles are primarily
|
|
Goddard-related. Contains a monthly status of several orbiting
|
|
Goddard-managed spacecraft. Goddard News does not accept commercial
|
|
ads.
|
|
|
|
|
|
JPL
|
|
Universe
|
|
Editor: Mark Whalen
|
|
Phone: 818/354-6089
|
|
Published every 2 weeks on Friday.
|
|
Does not usually accept contributions for publication.
|
|
|
|
|
|
JSC
|
|
Space News Roundup
|
|
Editor: Kelly O. Humphries
|
|
Phone: 713/244-5050
|
|
Published every friday.
|
|
Space News Roundup accepts contributions subject to editor's
|
|
discretion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
KSC
|
|
Spaceport News
|
|
Editor: Melinda Milsap
|
|
Managing Editor: Lisa Malone
|
|
Phone: 407/867-2468
|
|
Published biweekly.
|
|
Outside contributions accepted, subject to editing.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LARC
|
|
Researcher News
|
|
Managing editor: Marny Skorna
|
|
Editor: Ann Laiacona
|
|
Phone: 804/864-6126
|
|
Fax: 804/864-7732
|
|
Published every other week on Friday. Published for center
|
|
employees, contractors and aerospace enthusiasts. Researcher News
|
|
accepts outside contributions subject to editing. Deadline is
|
|
Tuesday following publication of the previous issue. No advertising
|
|
accepted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
LERC
|
|
Lewis News
|
|
Editor: Doreen Zudell
|
|
Phone: 216/433-2888
|
|
Publisher: Media Relations Office
|
|
Published bi-weekly.
|
|
Lewis News accepts contributions from HQ and other NASA installations
|
|
for News Notes section, if they are relevant to Lewis' employees.
|
|
Deadline is noon every other Friday (2 weeks prior to publication).
|
|
|
|
|
|
MSFC
|
|
The Marshall Star
|
|
Editor: Ernie J. Shannon
|
|
Phone: 205/544-0030
|
|
Published every Wednesday, 50 weeks out of the year.
|
|
Outside contributions are accepted as long as they have at least a
|
|
NASA tie, prefer Marshall tie as well. No advertising allowed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
SSC
|
|
Lagniappe
|
|
Editor: Evelyn Watkins
|
|
Phone: 601/688-2313
|
|
Lagniappe Office
|
|
Bldg. 1100, Rm. 1031.
|
|
Published monthly. Comments and suggestions welcomed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
WFF
|
|
Inside Wallops
|
|
Editor: Keith Koehler
|
|
Phone: 804/824-1579
|
|
Published monthly
|
|
Accepts contributions only from other NASA centers and HQ. Deadline
|
|
is the 25th of the preceeding month.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS CONTACTS
|
|
|
|
NAME (TELEMAIL ADDRESS) CENTER OFFICE PHONE
|
|
|
|
Adamus, Joanna HQ 202/358-1716
|
|
Ahalt, Darlene GSFC 301/286-8101
|
|
Ainsworth, Diane JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Alexander, George F. (GALEXANDER) JPL 818/354-7006
|
|
Alexander, Ronald C. LERC 216/433-2889
|
|
Allen, Rebecca GSFC 301/286-7205
|
|
Allingham, Christopher C. HQ 202/358-1900
|
|
Alvidrez, Richard F. JPL 818/354-8592
|
|
Amatore, Dom (DAMATORE) MSFC 205/544-0034
|
|
Andersen, Drucella (DAANDERSEN) HQ 202/358-4733
|
|
Anderson, William (BILLANDERSON) MSFC 205/544-7391
|
|
Armstrong, Pat MSFC 205/544-1726
|
|
Atchison, Kenneth C. (KATCHISON) HQ 202/358-1726
|
|
Bailey, Elva GSFC 301/286-7207
|
|
Ball, James E. KSC 407/867-2363
|
|
Barnes, Geneva B. HQ 202/358-1639
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Bentsen, Thomas J. (TBENTSEN) HQ 202/358-1704
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Berg, Jerry MSFC 205/544-6540
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Berman, Michelle (DRYDEN.NEWS) DFRF 805/258-3449
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Boles, Diana KSC 407/867-2468
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Bondurant, Lynn (LBONDURANT) LERC 216/433-5583
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Borst, Cory JPL 818/354-6170
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Borys, Diane L. LERC 216/433-3156
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Boughton, Eleanore M. LERC 216/433-6631
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Boyd, Monica LERC 216/433-2016
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Braukus, Mike (MBRAUKUS) HQ 202/358-0872
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Bridges, Stephen L. (SLBRIDGES) JPL 818/354-6170
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Brody, Elinor ARC 415/604-5090
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Brown, Dwayne C. (DBROWN) HQ 202/358-0547
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Brown, Fred GSFC 301/286-7504
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Buchanan, June KSC 407/867-4444
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Buckingham, Bruce KSC 407/867-2468
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Campbell, Juanie J. JSC 713/483-8613
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Campbell, Sherri LERC 216/433-2901
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Campion, Edward S. (ECAMPION) HQ 202/358-1780
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Canright, Marchelle D. LARC 804/864-3313
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Carlin, Jeannie JSC 713/483-8621
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Carr, Jeffrey E. JSC 713/483-5111
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Carr, Mengo JSC 713/483-5111
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Cast, Jim (JCAST) HQ 202/358-1779
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Cavanaugh, Carol KSC 407/867-2622
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Charleston, JoAnn LERC 216/433-2957
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Cheatham, Diane M. (DCHEATHAM) HQ 202/358-1748
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Clary, Tawana M. HQ 202/358-1718
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Clausen, Thomas B. (TCLAUSEN) ARC 415/604-5544
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Cleggett-Haleim, Paula (PCLEGGETT) HQ 202/358-0883
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Clough, Jean Drummond (JDCLOUGH) LARC 804/864-6828
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Cobb, Lanee J. SSC 601/688-1957
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Copley, Linda M. JSC 713/483-8609
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Coppedge, Audrey S. LARC 804/864-3297
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Corridon, Deanna HQ 202/358-1733
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Cozzens, Thomas A. LERC 216/433-2513
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Credeur, Dr. Karen R. (KRCREDEUR) LARC 804/864-3307
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Crim, David MSFC 205/544-3655
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Crone, Richard GSFC 301/286-7206
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Dale, Delores HQ 202/358-1714
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Davis, Dorothy C. HQ 202/358-1717
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Dean, Bunda (BDEAN) JSC 713/483-8625
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Deason, Billie A. JSC 713/483-8646
|
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DeFelice, David M. LERC 216/433-6186
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Demarest, John MAF 504/257-2601
|
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Desmond, Tina GSFC 301/286-8141
|
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Dickinson, David S. KSC 407/867-7484
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Diller, George H. KSC 407/867-2468
|
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Dorr, Les, Jr. HQ 202/488-4615
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Dove, Kimberly LERC 216/433-2003
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Doyle, James JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Drachlis, David B. (DDRACHLIS) MSFC 205/544-6538
|
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Drelick, Donna GSFC 301/286-7995
|
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Dukes-Campbell, Linda LERC 216/433-8920
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Dumoulin, John MSFC 205/544-6541
|
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Dunbar, Brian (BDUNBAR) HQ 202/358-0873
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Dutczak, Steve (PA.EAB ) KSC 407/867-4444
|
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Edwards, Marilyn S. (MSEDWARDS) LERC 216/433-2899
|
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Ehmen, Jeff (JEHMEN) MSFC 205/544-6531
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Eley, Alice E. (AEELEY) LARC 804/864-3308
|
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Ellington, Tony L. HQ 202/358-0020
|
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Elliott, James GSFC 301/286-6256
|
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Ellis, Linda S. LERC 216/433-2900
|
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Exler, Randee GSFC 301/286-0697
|
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Farrar, Diane ARC 415/604-3934
|
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Faulhaber, Linda DFRF 805/258-3459
|
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Fenrick, C. J. ARC 415/604-1227
|
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Finneran, Mike GSFC 301/286-5565
|
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Fitzmaurice, Robert, Ed.D JSC 713/483-1257
|
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Fluegel, Kari L. JSC 713/483-8649
|
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Foster, Jan KSC 407/867-2363
|
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Fowler, Lisa KSC 407/867-2201
|
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Funkhouser, James M. (JFUNKHOUSER) HQ 202/358-1750
|
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Galien, Alison JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Garcia, Michael A. JPL 818/354-8593
|
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Gardner, Noemi ARC 415/604-9000
|
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Garner, Iris L. JSC 713/483-7009
|
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Garrett, David W. (DGARRETT) HQ 202/358-1725
|
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Gladding, Mary T. WFF 804/824-1584
|
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Goldwater, Danielle ARC 415/604-5554
|
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Green, Joseph KSC 407/867-4444
|
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Hairston, John M. , Jr. (JHAIRSTON) LERC 216/433-8686
|
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Haley, Donald E. (DEHALEY) DFRF 805/258-3456
|
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Hanchett, Gregory A. JPL 818/354-6170
|
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Hardin, Mary JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Harding, Wendell (Del) ARC 415/604-9000
|
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Harley, Joycelyn R. HQ 202/358-1750
|
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Harris , Hugh W. (HHARRIS) KSC 407/867-2201
|
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Harrison, Edward K. KSC 407/867-2363
|
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Hartsfield, James A. JSC 713/483-4934
|
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Hathaway, Roger A. LARC 804/864-3312
|
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Headlee, Joseph (JHEADLEE) HQ 202/358-1734
|
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Henry, H. Keith (KHENRY) LARC 804/864-6120
|
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Herring, Kyle J. JSC 713/483-8653
|
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Hess, Mark (MHESS) HQ 202/358-1776
|
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Hodges, Jane KSC 407/867-4444
|
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Hollingsworth, Judi A. MSFC 205/544-1837
|
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Horansky, Nancy LERC 216/433-2943
|
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Houser, Theresa D. (THOUSER) HQ 202/358-1765
|
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Howard, Linda MSFC 205/544-4577
|
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Howard, Martha MSFC 205/544-2716
|
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Hull, Garth A. (GAHULL) ARC 415/604-5543
|
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Humphries, Kelly O. JSC 713/483-5050
|
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Hunt, Darleen KSC 407/867-2622
|
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Hunt, Margaret W. (MWHUNT) LARC 804/864-6125
|
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Hutchison, Jane ARC 415/604-4968
|
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Ingalls, Bill HQ 202/358-1742
|
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Jackson, Gweneth JPL 818/354-7006
|
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Jacobi, Sherri J. SSC 601/688-3333
|
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James, Donald G. ARC 415/604-3935
|
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Jaqua, H. Thomas (HTJAQUA) HQ 202/358-1737
|
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Johansen, Kimberly C. JPL 818/354-2413
|
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Johnson, Janice LARC 804/864-6123
|
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Johnson, Thelma HQ 202/358-1752
|
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Johnson, William KSC 407/867-7819
|
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Jordan, Al (ALJORDAN) MSFC 205/544-6532
|
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Juhans, Renee N. HQ 202/358-2381
|
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Keegan, Sarah (SKEEGAN) HQ 202/358-1902
|
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Kenitzer, Allen GSFC 301/286-2808
|
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Koehler, Keith WFF 804/824-1579
|
|
Lee, Geoffrey ARC 415/604-6406
|
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Lievense, Kimberly L . JPL 818/354-8699
|
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Lord, Sharon R. (SRLORD) HQ 202/358-1711
|
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Lovato, Nancy (NDLOVATO) DFRF 805/258-3448
|
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Luna, Florestela JSC 713/483-8612
|
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Lynch, Linda A. HQ 202/358-1754
|
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Maclin, Sonja HQ 202/358-1768
|
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MacMillin, Robert J. (RMACMILLIN) JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Magnum, Michelle GSFC 301/286-8956
|
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Malone, June MSFC 205/544-7061
|
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Malone, Lisa KSC 407/867-2468
|
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Malpass, Pat JSC 713/483-8658
|
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Mangel, Diane (DMANGEL) HQ 202/358-1898
|
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Marianetti, Eugene A. (EMARIANETTI) HQ 202/358-1721
|
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Mark Whalen JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Marlaire, Michael ARC 415/604-4191
|
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Martin, J. Campbell (JCMARTIN) LARC 804/864-6121
|
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Mauk, Larry KSC 407/867-2363
|
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Maull, Walter A. (WMAULL) HQ 202/358-1703
|
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May, Tony GSFC 301/286-8955
|
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McCarter, Jennifer HQ 202/358-1639
|
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McCloskey, Peter J. JPL 818/354-6916
|
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McCulla, James W. (JMCCULLA) HQ 202/358-0002
|
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McNevin III, Edward D. JPL 818/354-5011
|
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Medal, Edward D. (EMEDAL) MSFC 205/544-0038
|
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Mewhinney, Michael ARC 415/604-3937
|
|
Miller, Sharon L. JPL 818/354-9318
|
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Montegani, Francis J. LERC 216/433-2956
|
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Moore, Constance HQ 202/358-1740
|
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Morse, David ARC 415/604-9000
|
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Mounce, Boyd E. JSC 713/483-8623
|
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Mroz, Marian J. LERC 216/433-5573
|
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Murden, Craig E. LARC 804/864-3296
|
|
Nations, James P. JPL 818/354-9314
|
|
Navias, Rob JSC 713/483-8651
|
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Nesbitt, Stephen A. (SNESBITT) JSC 713/483-4241
|
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Neuhauser, Philipp D. JPL 818/354-6278
|
|
Nolan, Donald A. (DANOLAN) DFRF 805/258-3447
|
|
O'Donnell, Franklin JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Palmer, Jean MSFC 205/544-6518
|
|
Parker, Louis A. (LAPARKER) JSC 713/483-8622
|
|
Patnesky, Andrew R. JSC 713/483-8636
|
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Pearl, Elaine GSFC 301/286-8957
|
|
Pechon, Tina KSC 407/867-7819
|
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Pena, Mara R. JSC 713/483-0228
|
|
Peto, Mary Ann (MAPETO) LERC 216/433-2902
|
|
Petrachenko, Carol (Bionetics) LARC 804/864-6528
|
|
Phelps, Patti KSC 407/867-4444
|
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Poindexter, James D. JSC 713/483-8624
|
|
Poleskey, Carl GSFC 301/286-8982
|
|
Price, A. Gary (AGPRICE) LARC 804/864-6124
|
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Rachul, Lori LERC 216/433-8806
|
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Rahn, Debra (DRAHN) HQ 202/358-1639
|
|
Randolph, Beverly C. HQ 202/358-1724
|
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Ratajczak, Anthony F. LERC 216/433-2225
|
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Ratkewicz, Patricia GSFC 301/286-8102
|
|
Reardon, Grace HQ 202/358-1547
|
|
Redmond, Charles (CREDMOND) HQ 202/358-1757
|
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Reeves, Mary F. HQ 202/358-1708
|
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Respess, Patricia A. HQ 202/358-1701
|
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Rhoads, Norma JSC 713/483-0235
|
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Rhodes, Jean KSC 407/867-2363
|
|
Rhodes, Jean KSC 407/867-2363
|
|
Riep, Patricia M. (PRIEP) HQ 202/358-1764
|
|
Ritter, Ransom MSFC 205/544-9275
|
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Rivera, Deborah (DRIVERA) HQ 202/358-1743
|
|
Robbins , William W. (BILLROBBINS) JSC 713/483-8638
|
|
Robinson, Nancy MSFC 205/544-6524
|
|
Rock, Jill KSC 407/867-2622
|
|
Ross, Christina KSC 407/867-2468
|
|
Rovarino, Lisa M. JPL 818/354-6170
|
|
Rowe-Lopez, Sheri L. JPL 818/354-6170
|
|
Roy, Steven MSFC 205/544-6535
|
|
Ruff, Janet GSFC 301/286-6255
|
|
Ruhl, Robert K. MSFC 205/544-0031
|
|
Sahli, Jim MSFC 205/544-6528
|
|
Salas, Libby JSC 713/483-8608
|
|
Salsitz, Elena L. JSC 713/483-5599
|
|
Samuel, Yvonne JPL 818/354-0349
|
|
Sarlin, E. Anita AMES 415/604-4044
|
|
Savage, Don (DSAVAGE) HQ 202/358-1727
|
|
Schauer, Catharine G. LARC 804/864-6122
|
|
Schmid, Elizabeth V. HQ 202/358-1760
|
|
Schmid, Jack HQ 202/358-2381
|
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Schmidt, Philip J. JPL 818/354-6916
|
|
Schneider, Jo Ann HQ 202/358-1764
|
|
Schulman, Robert HQ 202/358-2381
|
|
Schwartz, Barbara L. JSC 713/483-8647
|
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Schwartz, Harvey J. LERC 216/433-2921
|
|
Seidel, David M. JPL 818/354-9313
|
|
Selby, Barbara (BSELBY) HQ 202/358-1983
|
|
Shafer, Robert J. (RSHAFER) HQ 202/358-1767
|
|
Shallcross, Mary Jo KSC 407/867-2622
|
|
Shannon, Ernest MSFC 205/544-0030
|
|
Shawnee, Laura A. (LASHAWNEE) ARC 415/604-3936
|
|
Simmons, Mike MSFC 205/544-6537
|
|
Sindelar, Terri (TSINDELAR) HQ 202/358-1977
|
|
Skora, Marny LARC 804/864-3315
|
|
Smigielski, Susan LARC 804/864-3293
|
|
Smith, Gail T. LERC 216/433-6689
|
|
Smith, Janet ARC 415/604-9000
|
|
Stall , Harold S. (HSTALL) JSC 713/483-3671
|
|
Steitz, David (DSTEITZ) HQ 202/358-1730
|
|
Stewart, Syreeta LERC 216/433-5266
|
|
Stone , Phillip L. LERC 216/433-2924
|
|
Suit, Ann H. (ASUIT) LARC 804/864-3305
|
|
Sullivan, Nancy SSC 601/688-3341
|
|
Taylor, John B. (JBTAYLOR) MSFC 205/544-0031
|
|
Tennison, Maret KSC 407/867-3395
|
|
Terlep, Astrid ARC 415/604-3347
|
|
Thames, Evelyn L. HQ 202/358-1719
|
|
Thomas, Peter D. LARC 804/864-3117
|
|
Thornsley, Ken KSC 407/867-7819
|
|
Thornton, Cherise MSFC 205/544-6530
|
|
Timms, Robin (PS) (RTIMMS) HQ 202/358-1749
|
|
Townsend, Carolyn W. HQ 202/358-1781
|
|
Turner, Sandra H. MSFC 205/544-8704
|
|
Ulrich, Bertram R. HQ 202/358-1713
|
|
Valleau, Mary ARC 415/604-3939
|
|
Van der Woude, Jurrie JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Van Lepp, Kay F. JPL 818/354-9312
|
|
Varnes, Gary (Mitch) KSC 407/867-2468
|
|
Verniel, Pamela J. LARC 804/864-6362
|
|
Vincent, Jeff (GVINCENT) HQ 202/358-1747
|
|
Virata, Manny KSC 407/867-7819
|
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Waller, Peter W. ARC 415/604-3938
|
|
Walsh, John F. III (JWALSH) HQ 202/358-1900
|
|
Walton, Tommie L. JSC 713/483-8610
|
|
Ward, Douglas K. (DKWARD) JSC 713/483-3671
|
|
Washington, Althea HQ 202/358-1738
|
|
Watson, Cynthia M. LERC 216/433-2888
|
|
Weatherspoon, Mary HQ 202/358-1720
|
|
Webb, Myron L. (MLWEBB) SSC 601/688-3341
|
|
Welch, Brian D. JSC 713/483-8650
|
|
Whalen, Mark JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Williams, Leslie KSC 407/867-2468
|
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Williams, Patrice C. (PCWILLIAMS) HQ 202/358-1729
|
|
Wilson, James H. JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Witherspoon, Virginia MSFC 205/544-1798
|
|
Wood, Alan S. JPL 818/354-5011
|
|
Young, Dick (PAO.KSC) KSC 407/867-2468
|
|
Young, Tracey KSC 407/867-4444
|
|
Zeitman, Ginny ARC 415/604-3574
|
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Zudell, Doreen B. LERC 216/433-2901
|