blocks-left.jpg
  Beyond UFO Secrecy  
 
 

Beyond UFO Secrecy - by John Greenewald, Jr.
Foreword by Stanton T. Friedman

Order TODAY! For a limited time -- get a FREE $20 GIFT!

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Main Menu  
 
 

bv.gif HomeShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif What's New
tree-T.gif Online Store
tree-T.gif VIP Club
tree-T.gif Private Messages
tree-T.gif Your Account
tree-T.gif Search
tree-L.gif Mailing Lists
bv.gif Research ArchiveShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif What's New
tree-T.gif Government Documents
tree-T.gif Video Archive
tree-T.gif Black Vault Encyclopedia
tree-T.gif Black Vault Radio
tree-T.gif FOIA Help Center
tree-L.gif Image Galleries
bv.gif Government Docs.Show/Hide content
tree-T.gif Aviation
tree-T.gif Bio/Chem Weapons
tree-T.gif Cloning
tree-T.gif Cold War Era
tree-T.gif Defense Issues
tree-T.gif DoD Archive
tree-T.gif FBI Files
tree-T.gif Field Manuals
tree-T.gif Homeland Sec.
tree-T.gif Iraq Docs.
tree-T.gif J.F.K. Era
tree-T.gif Mind Control
tree-T.gif N.W.O
tree-T.gif Nuclear Weaps.
tree-T.gif OTA Archive
tree-T.gif Other/Misc.
tree-T.gif Parapsychology
tree-T.gif PsyOps
tree-T.gif Remote Viewing
tree-T.gif Space
tree-T.gif Spy Satellites
tree-T.gif Terrorism
tree-T.gif World War II
tree-T.gif UFOs
tree-L.gif Weapons
bv.gif Video ArchiveShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif 9/11
tree-T.gif Aircraft/Helicopters
tree-T.gif EVP
tree-T.gif Misc.
tree-T.gif Missile Defense
tree-T.gif Nuclear Weapons
tree-T.gif Space
tree-T.gif Spy Satellites
tree-T.gif Vietnam
tree-T.gif Weapons
tree-T.gif Iraqi Frontlines
tree-L.gif UFOs
bv.gif EncyclopediaShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Extraterrestrials
tree-T.gif Conspiracy
tree-T.gif Cryptozoology
tree-T.gif JFK Assassination
tree-T.gif Military Aircraft
tree-T.gif Paranormal Phenomena
tree-T.gif Science-Fiction
tree-T.gif UFOs
tree-T.gif UFO Cases
tree-T.gif UFOlogists
tree-T.gif U.S. Government
bv.gif CommunityShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Forums
tree-T.gif Chat_SOMNEWCONTENT
tree-T.gif Personal Blog
tree-T.gif Games
tree-T.gif John's MySpace
_SOMRESTRICTEDMEMBERS Members List
tree-T.gif Downloads
tree-L.gif Web Links
bv.gif Daily NewsShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Topics
tree-T.gif Submit News
tree-T.gif News Archive
tree-L.gif News Feed
bv.gif ContactShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Contact
tree-T.gif Interview/Lecture Requests
tree-L.gif Recommend Us
bv.gif NewsletterShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Subscribe to Newsletter
tree-L.gif Unsubscribe
 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Search  
 
 


 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Support Us  
 
 
Find The Black Vault site useful? Make a small donation to show your support.


December's Goal: $289.00

- $ 289.00
- $ 260.10
- $ 231.20
- $ 202.30
- $ 173.40
- $ 144.50
- $ 115.60
- $ 86.70
- $ 57.80
- $ 28.90

We've collected $0.00 of our goal!
Amount of Donation:
$
(Select your donation amount and then press the PayPal button.)

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Visit Us Again  
 
 
· Set Your Home Page
 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Sponsors  
 
 
 
 

  
Space: Goddard Scientist Honored By The World Meteorological Organization">3. Space News
 
 
3. Space News

3. Space News
News submitted by: MIB

NASA research scientist Dr. Joanne Simpson has been awarded the prestigious International Meteorological Organization Prize by the Executive Council of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the first woman ever to win this prize.



Simpson, internationally acclaimed for her 54 years of pioneering work on cloud modeling, observational experiments on convective cloud systems and hurricane research, is being honored for her role as a leading participant in the aircraft aspects of several WMO Global Atmospheric Research Programme (GARP) experiments and for helping to establish a basic understanding of tropical circulation and heat balance.

The IMO Prize originates from WMO's predecessor body, the International Meteorological Organization (IMO), founded in 1873. The award is presented annually and consists of a gold medal, a sum of money and an official citation.

Throughout her professional life Simpson has served as a mentor and role model for young scientists, particularly women. In 2001, the American Meteorological Society honored Simpson with the Charles F. Anderson Award in recognition of her outstanding and extraordinary contributions to the promotion of educational outreach, educational service, and diversity in the AMS and broader communities.

Through her original ideas and efforts, Simpson shepherded NASA's development of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite from its inception through its launch as the first rain radar instrument in space. This mission ranks among her greatest achievements and will speed progress in modeling and predicting weather and climate resulting in improved forecasting of short-term climate variability.

Simpson is currently chief scientist for Meteorology at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. Previously, she served as the project scientist for the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Observatory.

Simpson came to Goddard in 1979 as head of the Severe Storms Branch in Goddard's Laboratory for Atmospheric Sciences. The research consisted of combined modeling and observations of severe storm systems, both in the tropics and mid-latitudes, using aircraft as well as satellite data. In 1986, she became TRMM project scientist and also served as the chief scientist for the Laboratory for Atmospheres. She became chief scientist for Meteorology in the Earth Sciences Directorate in 1988 and was selected as the first Goddard Senior Fellow in 1988.

Simpson is the first woman to ever receive a Ph.D. in meteorology, which she obtained at the University of Chicago in 1949.

Among the other positions she has held are: Assistant Professor of Physics, Illinois Institute of Technology, 1949-1951; Meteorologist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1951-1960; Professor of Meteorology, University of California at Los Angeles, 1960-1964; Director, Experimental Meteorology Laboratory, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1964-1974; and Corcoran Professor of Environmental Science, University of Virginia, 1974-1981.

Simpson is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi, and was made a Fellow of the American Meteorological Society in 1968 and a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union in 1994. She has held numerous positions within the American Meteorological Society, including two terms as Councilor in the 1970's, Commissioner of Scientific and Technological Activities, 1981-1987, President in 1989, and Publications Commissioner, 1992 to 1988.

Among the awards that Simpson has received are the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1954, the American Meteorological Society Meisinger Award in 1962 and the C.F. Brooks Award in 1992. She is the 1983 recipient of the Rossby Research Medal, the highest award of the American Meteorological Society, and received Goddard's first Nordberg Award for Earth Sciences in 1994.

She received the Department of Commerce Gold Medal in 1972, the Professional Achievement Award of the University of Chicago Alumni in 1975 and 1992. She received the Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) Lifetime Achievement Award in 1990.

Simpson's NASA awards include a NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Award in 1982 and NASA's Outstanding Leadership Medal presented in 1998 for her exceptional leadership in the atmospheric sciences culminating in the successful launching and performance of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite.

Simpson was elected to the National Academy of Engineering in 1988. She has been listed in Who's Who of American Women since 1972 and in Who's Who in America since 1980. She was elected an Honorary Member of the American Meteorological Society in 1995 and an Honorary Member of the Royal Meteorological Society of Great Britain in 1999.

Throughout her career, Dr. Simpson has been instrumental in promoting diversity within the Society and the greater scientific community and for mentoring young professionals and guiding them toward successful careers. She was a Charter member of the AMS Board on Women and Minorities in the early 1970's.

Simpson, a resident of Washington, D.C., was born in Boston in 1923 and spent her childhood in Cambridge, Mass. and Cape Cod. She met her husband, Dr. Robert H. Simpson, when she was a consultant for his National Hurricane Research Project. They have been married 38 years and have had many adventures with their combined families of five children, six grandchildren and two cats.

Source: NASA Press Release

http://www.cosmiverse.com/news/space/1102/space11260202.html

Posted on Wednesday, November 27 @ 11:04:58 CST by Administrator
 
   
  blocks-left.jpg
  Related Links  
 
  · God
· More about 3. Space News
· News by Administrator


Most read story about 3. Space News:
More on Planet X

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Article Rating  
 
 
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Options  
 
 
 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Black Vault Radio  
 
 
Download FREE On Demand Radio!

Now Playing: Episode #44 - People Speak Out Edition! (11/03/2008)

Program Archives

Get BVRN on YOUR WEBSITE!


Subscribe to the RSS/XML BVRN feed for iTunes or any other podcast software

 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Member Console  
 
   
Register Here
Lost Password

 
Membership:
New Today: 3
New Yesterday: 7
Waiting User(s): 1
Total Members: 36,386
Latest User: Tred

Most Ever Online:
Guest(s): 966
Member(s): 15
Total: 981

Online Stats:
Guest(s): 140
Member(s): 10
Hidden: 3
Total: 150
 
 

blocks-left.jpg
  Search for ANYONE