SETI public: NASA Names New Historian

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Oct 10 2003 - 09:47:54 PDT

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Ron Baalke
    Sent: Friday, October 10, 2003 11:19 AM
    To: HASTRO-L_at_LISTSERV.WVU.EDU
    Subject: [HASTRO-L] NASA Names New Historian

    Glenn Mahone/Debbie Rahn
    Headquarters, Washington October 10, 2003
    (Phone: 202/358-1898/1638)

    RELEASE: 03-327

    NASA NAMES NEW HISTORIAN

         NASA announced today Dr. Steven J. Dick is the new
    Director, History Office, and Chief Historian. He will assume
    his duties at NASA on November 3.

    "We are delighted to have Steve join the NASA team," said
    Michael O'Brien, NASA's Assistant Administrator, Office of
    External Relations. "With his diverse background, scientific
    accomplishments and thorough understanding of NASA, he will be
    an invaluable asset as the agency's historian," O'Brien said.

    Dick has worked as an astronomer and historian of science at
    the U. S. Naval Observatory since 1979. He obtained his
    Bachelor of Science in astrophysics (1971), Master of Arts and
    Ph.D. (1977) in history and philosophy of science from Indiana
    University. He fills the position that has been vacant since
    Dr. Roger D. Launius departed in July 2002 to become historian
    of the National Air and Space Museum.

    He is a well-known expert in the field of astrobiology and its
    cultural implications. He spent three years at the Naval
    Observatory's Southern Hemisphere station in New Zealand. Dick
    served as the first Historian of the Naval Observatory, and
    has most recently been the Acting Chief of its Nautical
    Almanac Office.

    Dick served on the panel to examine the societal implications
    of possible life in the Mars rock. He received the NASA Group
    Achievement Award, "For initiating the new NASA
    multidisciplinary program in astrobiology, including the
    definition of the field of astrobiology, the formulation and
    initial establishment of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, and
    the development of a Roadmap to guide future NASA investments
    in astrobiology."

    He is on the Editorial Board of several journals, including
    the Journal for the History of Astronomy, and is an associate
    editor of the International Journal of Astrobiology. He was
    Chairman of the Historical Astronomy Division of the American
    Astronomical Society (1993-1994) and President of the History
    of Astronomy Commission of the International Astronomical
    Union (1997-2000). He is President-elect of the Philosophical
    Society of Washington.

    Dick has authored more than 100 publications, including:
    Plurality of Worlds: The Origins of the Extraterrestrial Life
    Debate from Democritus to Kant (Cambridge University Press,
    1982); The Biological Universe: The Twentieth Century
    Extraterrestrial Life Debate and the Limits of Science
    (Cambridge University Press, 1996); and Life on Other Worlds
    (1998), the latter translated into four languages. He was also
    editor of Many Worlds: The New Universe, Extraterrestrial Life
    and the Theological Implications (2000).

    His history of the Naval Observatory, Sky and Ocean Joined:
    The U. S. Naval Observatory, 1830-2000 (Cambridge University
    Press, 2002), received the John Lyman Award of the North
    American Society for Oceanic History for best book in 2002 in
    Science & Technology. It also won the Naval Observatory's
    Captain James Melville Gilliss Award for extraordinary
    dedication and exemplary service. Dick is also the author
    (with James Strick) of the forthcoming volume: The Living
    Universe: NASA and the Development of Astrobiology (Rutgers
    University Press).

    Dick and his wife Terry live in Herndon, Va. They are the
    parents of two sons, one a Scripps Institute of Oceanography
    graduate student, and another who is a student at the
    University of Virginia.

    For information about NASA programs on the Internet, visit:

    http://www.nasa.gov

    For information about NASA history programs on the Internet,
    visit:

    http://history.nasa.gov

    -end-


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