APRIL 1996 the AMERICAN P Hysicalnews SOCIETY VOLUME 5, NO 4 Captains of Industry Join 39 Nobel Laureatesto Lead Campaign

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APRIL 1996 the AMERICAN P Hysicalnews SOCIETY VOLUME 5, NO 4 Captains of Industry Join 39 Nobel Laureatesto Lead Campaign Featuring CAREERPLUS A supplement to APS News. A P S N E W S See page CP1. APSAPRIL 1996 THE AMERICAN P HYSICALNews SOCIETY VOLUME 5, NO 4 Captains of Industry Join 39 Nobel LaureatesTo Lead Campaign he Campaign for Physics, the $5 and family foundations have pledged million science education initiative an impressive $3 million to The Cam- Two of the first CEOs to join the ofT The APS and the American Association paign for Physics. Campaigns Executive Committee of Physics Teachers, which was announced in fall 1995, has attracted These CEOs couple their leadership major company CEOs and 39 Nobel efforts with those of 39 Nobel laure- laureates to its leadership ranks. Led by ates who have indicated their personal honorary chair William Hewlettt, Co- interest in helping assure the founder of Hewlett-Packard Company, Campaigns success. These Nobel lau- the Campaigns Executive Committee reates serve on a Campaign Council includes eight industry leaders whose which is led by Professor Nicolaas focus is to solicit other key corporate Norman Augustine, Robert E. Allen, Bloembergen of Harvard University. Nicolaas Bloembergen prospects for the Campaign. President, Charman & CEO, Professor Bloembergen also chairs the Chair, Campaign Lockheed Martin AT&T Campaigns Administrative Group, the Administrative Group Working alongside Mr. Hewlett are seven advisory committee for the initiative. vice chairs including Paul Allaire, Xerox Corporation; Robert Allen, AT&T; To date, the Campaign has already gen- Norman Augustine, Lockheed Martin erated $3.6 million in pledges on its Corporation; Robert Galvin, Motorola, $5 million goal. This total includes two BAPS goes On-Line Inc.; Gordon Moore, Intel Corporation; gifts of $500,000 or more, four gifts of Lewis Platt, Hewlett-Packard Company; $250,000 and four gifts of $100,000. So, ajor changes are in store for those (eBAPS). The title and the author list and George Soros, Soros Fund Manage- The Campaign for Physics gets off to a members who subscribe to the will be the only published material from ment and Soros Foundation Network. strong start thanks to the collective ef- BulletinM of the APS (BAPS) in order to abstracts submitted on paper. The Campaign Executive Committee forts of its Campaign Executive get a copy of their meeting program in There are many advantages to this new members have pledged volunteer in- Committee, 39 Nobel laureates and nu- advance. Beginning this summer, with system. First of all, the eBAPS meet- volvement as well as pacesetting merous other individual leaders who the new dues cycle, a paper copy of ing program will be available sooner financial support to the Campaign. are working hard to assure its ultimate BAPS will no longer be mailed to than the paper version ever was or This group of CEOs, their corporations success. subscribers prior to the meeting. These changes are reflective of the advent of could be. This will make planning the APS Home Page (http://aps.org) travel to meetings easier, since eBAPS Top Recruiters Honored in and the APS system of electronic will be available as much as two and a submission of abstracts. Prior to the half months prior to a meeting. (In meeting, it will be available on the the Gutenberg universe, this time pe- Membership Campaign Home Page, or via ftp (a titles only riod was generally only four to five version). The paper version of BAPS, weeks.) Secondly, program committee Two APS members were honored for their efforts at recruiting new members for representing the final program, will be will have more flexibility, should they the APS Member-Get-a-Member campaign instituted last year. Cosmin Deciu of available on site, as part of registration. desire it, in altering their program prior Bucharest, Romania and Gonzalo Gutierrez of Santiago, Chile, will each receive a to the meeting, since the printing top recruiter incentive of $300 toward APS renewals and subscriptions. Deciu was When you get your new dues invoice, schedule will be postponed until closer chosen randomly to receive the grand prize of $500 toward travel to an upcoming please be aware that subscribers to to the meeting. Lastly, the electronic APS meeting. Both men recruited five members each. BAPS may not receive their paper copy system individually notifies submitters in advance of the meeting dates. who submitted electronically of the According to APS Membership Supervisor, Trish Lettieri, a total of 244 APS mem- receipt of their abstract, and then again bers participated in the campaign, 38 of whom brought in two or more new According to APS Meetings Manager when the presentation has been sched- members; 300 new members were recruited in the six-month campaign. Michael Scanlan, the success of the uled during the meeting. system of electronic abstract submis- Deciu is a graduate student in physics at the University of Bucharest in Romania. sion has made this possible. More than The new system should also help to He has been an APS member since 1994. Interestingly, Mr. Deciu recruited his 86 percent of the abstracts received for contain the costs associated with the sixth member after the campaign was officially over. He said that his professor the March and Joint May meetings of printing of meeting programs, enabling was a little bit upset at not being recruited earlier. Deciu says he plans to use the Society were submitted electroni- APS to hold the cost of BAPS page the grand prize to attend the Minneapolis DPF Meeting in August. cally. Electronically submitted abstracts charges at their current level. This helps can be viewed in their entirity on the offset the increased price of paper (up Gutierrez is a graduate student in solid state physics at the Pontificia Universidad APS Home Page. 50 percent over last year), and the main- Catolica de Chile, having received an undergraduate degree in physics from the tenance of the electronic system. One implication of note for those mem- Universidad de Chile in 1985. He was involved with the pro-democracy move- bers not using the electronic system is Please check out the meeting programs ment against the Pinochet regime, working in environmental studies and other that the text of paper abstracts will no already on the Home Page. Said social projects before resuming his studies in 1991. He is presently on a four- longer appear in either the paper ver- Scanlan, Input from our membership month visit to the Concurrent Computing Laboratory of Materials Simulation at sion of BAPS or the electronic version about this new system is vital. Louisiana State University. IN THIS ISSUE April 24 is National Physics Day Captains of Industry Join 39 Nobel Laureates To Lead Campaign ................. 1 he National Science Foundation local shopping malls; coordinating free Top Recruiters Honored in Membership Campaign ........................................ 1 (NSF) has designated Wednesday, public lectures; working with other sci- BAPS goes On-Line ....................................................................................... 1 AprilT 24, as the second annual National ence departments for campus-wide April 24 is National Physics Day ..................................................................... 1 Physics Day, to be celebrated as part of science events; and other events de- Pilot Programs Seek To Enhance Job Opportunities ....................................... 2 National Science and Technology Week. signed to engage the publics interest. “Meta” Researcher Champions New Funding Sources for Independent Science .................................................................................... 2 Physics departments around the coun- try, as well as all chapters of the Society I hope many of you will take advan- Physicists To Be Honored at 1996 Spring Meeting......................................... 3 tage of this special occasion to visit a Opinion ........................................................................................................... 4 of Physics Students, are being encour- aged to become involved in local local school or organization and share Announcements .............................................................................................. 9 your enthusiasim for physics with oth- CareerPlus Supplement..................................................................... CP1-CP8 activites. Possibilities include hosting open houses for local high school phys- ers, said Judy Franz, APS executive officer. The Back Page ............................................................................................... 8 Those interested in further ideas and assis- APS Meeting News ................................................................................. Insert ics students and/or teachers; contacting a local school and volunteering to visit; tance may contact Ed Neuenschwander, AIP, arranging physics demonstrations at at (301) 209-3010; email: [email protected]. APS News April 1996 Pilot Programs Seek To Enhance Job Opportunities Two complementary programs aimed The second project supported by NSF guidance offices and materials; courses at the same time a national effort will at enhancing future employment op- is a national outreach program involv- in other departments, such as econom- be undertaken to develop a program portunities for Ph.D. physicists are ing direct interaction between Schwartz ics, computer science, and business; to disseminate and implement the most being launched this year. Funded by aided by other physicists and pro- and identifying contacts with scientists promising career-enhancing
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