FEBRUARY 1998 the AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY VOLUME 7, NO 2 APS Newstry the Enhanced APS News-Online: [

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FEBRUARY 1998 the AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY VOLUME 7, NO 2 APS Newstry the Enhanced APS News-Online: [ A P S N E W S FEBRUARY 1998 THE AMERICAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY VOLUME 7, NO 2 APS NewsTry the enhanced APS News-online: [http://www.aps.org/apsnews] Campaign for Physics Celebrates Reaching $5 Million Funding Goal he Campaign for Physics, the science 3M; Robert Galvin, Motorola, Inc.; Gor- The Campaign con- T education fundraising initiative of don Moore, Intel Corporation; Lewis sists of five interrelated the APS and the American Association Platt, Hewlett-Packard Company; George initiatives designed to of Physics Teachers (AAPT) launched in Soros, Soros Fund Management & Soros spark and keep alive the the fall of 1995, attained its $5 million fund- Foundation Network; and Alex Trotman, flame of scientific inter- ing goal. A victory celebration was held Ford Motor Company. Together with the est and learning in November 22, 1997 in San Francisco, CA. support of 39 Nobel laureates serving on youngsters from kin- The evening included remarks from key a Campaign Council of Nobel Laureates, dergarten through campaign leadership, endorsements from the committee raised $3.5 million in cor- graduate school. Cam- participants in Campaign programs and porate and foundation gifts including one paign programs are recognition of campaign volunteers. seven-figure gift and 11 six-figure gifts. designed to help teach- Funding from the Campaign has allowed “Through the Campaign, we have ers, engage students, Corporate representatives and campaign program participants joined in APS and AAPT to launch and expand five helped school districts implement sys- involve scientists and the celebration of the Campaign’s victory. From far right (clockwise): important science education programs temic science education reform which build support struc- Lewis Platt, Hewlett-Packard Company; D. Allan Bromley, 1997 APS which are having a dramatic impact on will provide students with a science cur- tures among business, president; Joan Platt, wife of Lewis Platt; Nicolaas Bloembergen, improving the teaching of science in riculum and learning environment that academia and govern- Campaign Administrative Group Chair; Jan Hustler, Bay Area Schools for Excellence in Education (benefiting from the Teacher-Scientist schools across the country. will nurture their interest in and appre- ment that will Alliance Institute); Ginn Huster, husband of Jan Hustler; Barbara According to Campaign Director ciation for science,” said Hewlett, who strengthen the coun- Kaufmann, 3M Foundation director; Nancy Thomas, Hewlett-Packard Darlene Logan, the effort benefitted considered the Campaign an imperative. try. The following Company contributions manager; Len Thomas, husband of Nancy greatly from the financial and volunteer “We have created support structures for summarizes program Thomas; Deli Bloembergen, wife of Nicolaas Bloembergen. support of major industrial leaders, in- science teachers, particularly in urban set- progress to date cluding William R. Hewlett, Co-founder tings, who are seeking ways in which to thanks to the generous support of of Hewlett-Packard Company, who led improve their teaching skills and tech- Campaign donors. the Campaign’s Executive Committee as niques and developed a resource center honorary chair. Working with him were for their use in obtaining information on The Teacher-Scientist- leading captains of industry who served the best in science teaching curricula and Alliance Institute as vice chairs of the Campaign Executive materials.” He added that the Campaign The Teacher-Scientist Alliance Committee. These included Robert funds are also being used to provide men- Institute (TSAI) is an education Allen, AT&T; Paul Allaire, Xerox Cor- tor and financial support to undergraduate outreach effort designed to support poration; Norman Augustine, Lockheed minority students interested in pursuing a hands-on science education ap- Martin Corporation; Livio DeSimone, careers in science, and to help establish proach in the US. This systemic mechanisms for the exchange of informa- science education reform program tion among academia, industry and was launched by the APS with government on science education and in- funding from the Campaign. TSAI dustrial needs. involves volunteer scientists who Nicolaas Bloembergen presents Lewis Platt, Chairman, Nobel laureate Nicolaas Bloembergen, have committed to working with President & Chief Executive Officer of Hewlett-Packard Inside Harvard University and a past president of their local school district or dis- Company, with a plaque recognizing the contributions News APS, chaired both the Campaign Council tricts to reform science education. of Mr. Platt and Hewlett-Packard Company toward the APS Outreach Programs for Minorities of Nobel Laureates and Campaign Ad- (Continued on page 3) Campaign’s success. and Women at a Glance ............................. 2 ministrative Group, the internal steering MEMBER IN THE SPOTLIGHT ................... 2 committee for the initiative. “The care- Featuring Cherry Murray, director of the Physical Research Laboratory at Bell Laboratories/Lucent fully developed science education Tutorial Sessions, Mini-Conferences, Plasma Technologies. programs of the Campaign for Physics IN BRIEF ....................................................... 3 will make a dramatic difference in el- Science Expo Featured at the DPP Meeting CAP to become the Committee on Careers and ementary through graduate level science hysicists discussed the latest able addition to the annual meeting, and Professional Development; doubling non-defense teaching, benefitting students, teachers, R&D; a new Task Force on APS Prizes and Awards; discoveries in the universe of plas- contribute to the continued cross-fertiliza- industry and our nation,” he said of his P National Medal and other honorees; and new fund- mas when the APS Division of Plasma tion of ideas in plasma physics. There were ing initiatives. involvement. “I am proud to have played Physics (DPP) held its annual meeting on also four “mini-conferences” consisting of APS Junior Member Survey: a leadership role in support of such excel- November 17-21, 1997 at the Lawrence contributed presentations throughout the Perceptions of the Job Market ................. 4 lent initiatives.” Sherrie Preische reports on results from the APS Convention Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- week in the areas of coherent radiation gen- Junior Member Survey. In addition to the Corporate and Foun- vania. More than 1500 papers were eration, plasma accelerators, nonlinear Early Electronic Publication of Physical dation Gifts Campaign, an effort to obtain presented at the second largest APS meet- dynamics, and deep space plasmas. Review D Articles ........................................ 5 the support of individuals was led by an ing of the year, including four review PRD-online will post accepted articles well in ad- Individual Gifts Committee. Chaired by papers, three APS prize recipient addresses, Latest Fusion News vance of the paper issue. John Armstrong (formerly of IBM Cor- and 84 invited talks. Wednesday evening’s Magnetic Fusion - Scientists working on Free JETP Letters Online .......................... 5 poration), the committee included 40 banquet featured a keynote address by the Joint European Torus (JET), the PRL-online subscribers can access JETP Letters- world’s largest fusion experiment, pre- online without charge. outstanding members of the physics com- William Happer of Princeton University, munity, each of whom made a leadership as well as presentation of the 1997 APS sented results of a recent run of experiments Fluid Researchers Gather for on their machine using high-power opera- 1997 DFD Meeting....................................... 6 gift to the Campaign and encouraged oth- Maxwell Prize, Award for Excellence in tion with a 50-50 mixture of deuterium and New research results in turbulence control, ers to participate. The committee Plasma Physics, and Award for Outstand- sonoluminescence, and biofluid dynamics were ing Doctoral Dissertation in Plasma tritium fuel. The researchers announced a among the highlights of the 1997 fall meeting of the generated over $1.5 million in individual Physics by APS President, Andy Sessler. record 14 Megajoules of fusion energy, 16 APS Division of Fluid Dynamics. gifts including 23 gifts of $10,000 or more. megawatts of peak fusion power and a Historical Factal .......................................... 6 “I am pleased that I was able to contrib- A prominent new feature was the or- ganization of five tutorial sessions, aimed record fusion Q (the ratio of fusion power This is the 100th anniversary of the birth of physi- ute to this key undertaking by APS and produced to the net input power) of 65%. cist Leo Szilard. AAPT as it is important that we, as physi- at educating non-specialists with a gradu- ate level understanding of important On Monday morning, Richard ................................. 7 cists, involve ourselves in helping assure Announcements topics in plasma physics. Thirteen tuto- Hawryluk of Princeton Plasma Physics Francis M. Pipkin Award is established; Student that future generations are afforded a Laboratory gave a twenty-year retrospec- research Apker Awards announced with $5,000 rial presentations were given, explaining strong science education,” said Ernest award; APS Fellowship deadline summary; the basic principles, accomplishments, tive on physics experiments of the Henley (University of Washington), an- Caught in the Web; APS Operating and Bylaws issues and objectives of such topics as la- Tokamak Fusion
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