SETI public: Fw: Cornell News: Arecibo Observatory names director

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Sep 26 2003 - 07:28:32 PDT

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: cunews_at_cornell.edu
    Sent: Friday, September 26, 2003 9:08 AM
    To: CUNEWS-PHYSICAL_SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu; CUNEWS-SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu
    Subject: Cornell News: Arecibo Observatory names director

    Sixto González named first Puerto Rico-born head of Arecibo
    Observatory; Daniel Altschuler to lead new outreach program

    FOR RELEASE: Sept. 25, 2003

    Contact: David Brand
    Office: 607-255-3651
    E-mail: deb27_at_cornell.edu

    ARECIBO, P.R. -- Sixto González has been named director of
    Arecibo Observatory, the home of the world's largest and
    most-sensitive single-dish radio telescope. His appointment is
    effective Sept. 29. He is the first native-born Puerto Rican to head
    the observatory.

    Since 2001 González has been assistant director for space and
    atmospheric sciences at the telescope facility. He succeeds Daniel
    Altschuler, who will become the first director of the observatory's
    Office for the Public Understanding of Science (OPUS), which will
    provide a multicultural focus for education and public outreach
    activities in Puerto Rico.

    The announcement was made by Robert Brown, director of the National
    Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (NAIC), which manages the
    observatory. NAIC is a national research center operated by Cornell
    University, Ithaca, N.Y., under a cooperative agreement with the
    National Science Foundation (NSF).

    Commenting on the appointments, Brown said, "All of us share in the
    desire to enhance the scientĩc purpose of the Arecibo Observatory
    and bring the excitement of its research program to the people who
    provide its support. With the appointments of Sixto and Daniel to
    their new positions, we have the leadership in place to achieve these
    goals."

    The observatory's director is responsible for overall management of
    the facility, including the execution of basic policy that maintains
    the observatory at the forefront of research in astronomy, planetary
    studies and atmospheric sciences.

    >From 1993 to 1999, González, who was born in Bayamon, P.R.,
    was a research associate at the observatory, and currently he is a
    senior research associate. Earlier this year, he and José
    Alonso, educational officer at the observatory, helped create a new
    program of ̃rst-hand research experience in the geosciences for high
    school students and their teachers, and for undergraduates in
    northwest Puerto Rico. González himself took part in a
    summer-student program at the observatory in 1988. González
    currently is serving a two-year term as chairman of the NSF's
    Coupling, Energetics and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions (CEDAR)
    steering committee. CEDAR, which is part of the agency's involvement
    in the U.S. Global Change Research Program, aims to explain how
    energy is transferred between atmospheric regions by combining a
    comprehensive observational program with theoretical and empirical
    modeling efforts. He also is serving as vice chairman of Scientific
    Commission C of the Committee on Space Research, an international
    group promoting scientific research in space.

    González attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    from 1983 to 1984 and earned his B.Sc. from the University of Puerto
    Rico-Humacao in 1988. He earned his Ph.D. from Utah State University
    in 1994.

    Altschuler, who became director and senior research associate at
    Arecibo Observatory in 1991, was project leader for the construction
    of the Angel Ramos Foundation Visitor and Education Center at the
    observatory, which attracts about 125,000 visitors a year and is the
    site of summer science-teacher workshops.

    In collaboration with the NSF Office of Informal Education, OPUS will
    develop and implement new initiatives that will make use of the
    observatory to promote public understanding of science to 4 million
    Hispanic U.S. citizens on the island.

    Since 1979 Altschuler has been a professor of physics at the
    University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras. From 1976 to 1978, he was
    assistant professor in the Department of Natural Sciences at
    InterAmerican University of Puerto Rico at Aguadilla. He was a
    visiting scientist at the Max-Planck Institute for Radioastronomy,
    Germany, from 1985 to 1987.

    Born to German immigrants in Montevideo, Uruguay, Altschuler earned
    his bachelor's degree at Duke University and his Ph.D. at Brandeis
    University.

    Related World Wide Web sites: The following sites provide
    additional information on this news release. Some might not be part
    of the Cornell University community, and Cornell has no control over
    their content or availability.

    o Arecibo Observatory: <http://www.naic.edu/>

    -30-

    The web version of this release may be found at
    http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/Sept03/Arecibo.director.deb.html
    --

    Cornell University News Service
    Surge 3
    Cornell University
    Ithaca, NY 14853
    607-255-4206
    cunews_at_cornell.edu
    http://www.news.cornell.edu


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