NOMINATIONS TO BEGIN FOR 1980 ARTHUR S. FLEMMING AWARDS
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: NN-1-1 Heath
(202) 638-2800
Nominations to Beqin for 1980 Arthur S. Flemming Awards
The nomination process for the 33rd annual Arthur S. Flemming Awards,
one of the highest honors bestowed on employees of the federal government,
is inaugurated this week with the distribution of official nomination forms
to agency heads in Washington, D.C.
This prestigious award has been presented annually since 1948 to honor
outstanding young individuals in the federal government. Ten separate awards
are made, five in the scientific or technical fields, and five in the
administrative or executive fields. Past award recipients include such
well-known figures as Daniel P. Moynihan, John Chancellor and Neil Armstrong.
Any civilian or military employee of the Executive Branch of the United
States government who does not reach his or her fortieth birthday before
January 1, 1981 is eligible to be nominated. Employees of the Library of
Congress, the General Accounting Office, the Administrative Office of the U.S.
Courts, and the Botanic Gardens who meet the same age criteria are also
eligible. Nominees may include employees in departmental headquarters,
regional or field offices or military installations throughout the world.
Nominees are evaluated on the basis of their accomplishments and community
involvement.
(more)
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The award recipients are chosen by a panel of distinguished
judges. Last year's judges included Senator Paul Tsongas; Richard W.
Velde, Chief Minority Counsel, Senate Judiciary Committee; Dan Parker,
honorary chairman, Parker Pen Company; and D.C. Public Service Commission
Chairwoman, Elizabeth H. Patterson. Last year's sponsors were BDM
Corporation, Exxon Corporation, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
and Perpetual Federal Savings and Loan Association.
Winners of the 1980 awards will be announced in March, 1981.
The Arthur S. Flemming Awards are presented annually by the Downtown
Jaycees of Washington, D.C.
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Arthur S. Flemming
Awards
1980
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Thirty-Third Annual
Arthur S. Flemming
Awards
April 10, 1981
"So very much of what we are to be as a Nation
- and what we are to achieve as a people -
depends upon the caliber and character of the
Federa! career service. In no other endeavor can
you more direct! serve ourcountry'scavse - or
the values on which we stand - than in the
public service."
HONORING OUTST I?ING YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN IN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
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The Arthur S. Flemming Awards
Program
Sponsored by
Presented by _-.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
of New York, New York
BDM International, Inc.
of McLean, Virginia
Exxon Corporation
of New York, New York
Flow General Inc. and its Subsidiaries
General Research Corporation
International Research &
Technology Corporation
SWL, Inc.
of McLean, Virginia
Temporaries, Inc.
of Washington, D.C.
COMSAT Corporation
of Washington, D.C.
Hill and Knowlton
of Washington, D.C.
Presented in cooperation with
The Office of Personnel Management
The Downtown Jaycees
of Washington, D.C.
The Downtown Jaycees wish to extend their
congratulations to the Honorees of these
awards. We are proud to be the hosts of this
program honoring such talented and dedicated
persons in our Federal service. We feel we can
say this not only for our own organization but
also for the other 320,000 Jaycees in 7200
Chapters throughout the United States.
Service to Humanity is the Best Work of
Life." reads the last line of our Creed - a Creed
which is endorsed not only by the U.S. Jaycees,
but by Jaycees in over 80 countries around the
world. The Downtown Jaycees is an
organization of young men and women from
18-35 years of age. We run the Cherry Blossom
Parade, Orphans' Shopping Tour, Soap Box
Derby, handicapped childrens' events, and
30-40 additional projects of varying sizes every
year.
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Dr. Arthur Flemming's career in and out of
federal service is truly exemplary of the purposes
set forth for granting these awards named in his
honor- He served as a member of the first and
second Hoover Commissions on Organization of
the Executive Branch of Government, 1947-49
and 1953-55; President Eisenhower's Advisory
Committee on Government Organization,
1953-61; International Civil Service Advisory
Board, 1950-64; National Advisory Committee
of the Peace Corps, 1961-68; President's
Committee on Labor-Management Policy,
1965-68. While performing these services, Dr.
Flemming was serving as the President for Ohio
Wesleyan University, 1948-53 and 1957-58;
University of Oregon, 1961-68; and Macalester
College, 1968-71. He also rendered service as
a member of the U.S. Civil Service Commission,
Arthur Sherwood Flemming
1939-48 and the War Manpower Commission
where he was chairman of the Labor-
Management Manpower Policy Committee,
1942-45. As Director of the Office of Defense
Mobilization, 1953 --57, Dr. Flemming served as
a member of the National Security Council and
by invitation of the President participated in
meetings of the Cabinet. He was president of a
variety of organizations including the Oregon
Council of Churches, 1964-69; National
Council on Social Welfare, 1968-69; and the
American Council on Education, 1969-70.
From 1958-61 he served as Secretary of the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
And from 1973-78 he served as the U.S.
Commissioner on Aging. At the present time Dr.
Flemming is serving as the Chairman, U.S.
Commission on Civil Rights.
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Statement of Purpose
The purpose of honoring outstanding
individuals in the Federal Government each year
is fourfold: (1) to recognize those who have
performed outstanding and meritorious work for
the Federal Government; (2) to attract
outstanding persons to the Federal Government;
(3) to encourage high standards of performance
in the Federal service; and (4) to enhance
appreciation of our form of government and the
opportunities and responsibilities that it presents.
Basis of Awards
The following general criteria are considered
in evaluating nominations:
(a) Specific Accomplishments. A specific
accomplishment, for which the nominee is
primarily responsible, resulting in a material
improvement in service, a substantial financial
savings or significant social or technological
progress. One or more nominees may be
submitted if such nominees were equally
responsible for the accomplishment.
(b) General Accomplishment. Outstanding
executive, scientific or technical ability or
outstanding performance evidenced by the
nominee, even though such ability or
performance is not necessarily connected with or
related to a specific accomplishment or project.
(c) Community Involvement. Community
activities in which the nominee has participated
for the enhancement of the community at large.
Specific examples and details must support
each nomination. Supporting data should be
limited to facts, insofar as possible, rather than
opinions or conclusions.
Eligibility of Nominees
Any male or female, civilian or military
employee of the Executive Branch of the United
States Government who did not reach his or her
fortieth birthday before January 1, 1981, is
eligible for nomination in the Arthur S. Flemming
Awards Program. Similar employees of the
Library of Congress, the General Accounting
Office, Office of the Architect of the Capitol, the
Government Printing Office, the Administrative
Office of the U.S. Courts, and the Botanic
Garden are also eligible. Nominees may include
employees in departmental headquarters,
regional or field offices or military installations
throughout the world.
General Information
Ten separate awards are made. Five awards
are in scientific or technical fields, and five in
administrative or executive fields.
The award recipients are chosen by a panel of
distinguished, nationally prominent judges. Each
award winner receives suitably engraved
awards. Awards are presented at the Arthur S.
Flemming Awards Program in Washington, D.C.
The Office of Personnel Management has
enthusiastically supported and assisted the
Commission and the Jaycees in the furtherance
of this Program.
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The Arthur S. Flemming Awards
Program
Judges
Mr. Dan Parker
Honorary Chairman
The Parker Pen Company
Mr. Sidney Metzger
Vice President &
Chief Scientist
Communications Satellite
Corporation
Dr. Richard Lesher
President
U.S. Chamber of
Commerce
Mr. Richard W. Velde
Majority Counsel & Staff
Director of the
Sub-Committee on Courts
U.S. Senate
Mrs. Esther Peterson
Consumer Affairs Advisor
Mr. Alexander Trowbridge
President
National Association of
Manufacturers
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The Arthur S. Flemming Awards
Program
Administrative Consultants
Dr. Richard Chapman
Vice President
National Academy of
Public Administration
Dr. Dorothy Goodman
Director
Washington International
School
Mr. Julian Blincoe
V.P. of Consumer Services
Washington Gas Light Co.
Mr. Jerome Page
President
Washington Urban League
Ms. Judith McCaffrey
President
The Women's Bar
Association of U.C.
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Scientific Consultants
Dr. Pier Bargellini
Senior Scientist
Communications Satellite
Corporation
Dr. Richard Davis
Chairman, Department of
Dairy Sciences
University of Maryland
Dr. Leo B. VanHerpe
Orthopedic Surgeon
Dr. Ying-Nan Chiu
Chairman, Department of
Chemistry
Catholic University
Dr. Estelle Ramey
Department of Physiology
and Biophysics
Georgetown University
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The Arthur S. Flemming Awards
Commission
Elton Critts
Harry Custis
Rebecca Eklund
Charles Krautler
Phil Layfield
Peter Summerville
Peter Williams
The Arthus S. Flemming Awards
Committee
Rebecca Eklund
Chairperson
Dee Alban
Bernadette Bruccoleri
Janice Johnson
Michael T. Spencer
The Commission and Committee gratefully
acknowledge the support of the following:
Aetna Life & Casualty
AI CPA
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Department of Defense (for military band)
Ex-Speed-Ite Printing Service Inc.
Hechingers
Neiman-Marcus
Frank Parsons Paper Co., Inc.
Prince Georges Engraving
Raff Embossing & Foilcraft, Inc.
George C. Shaffer Florists
United States Chamber of Commerce
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The Arthur S. Flemming Awards
Program
Thursday, April 9, 1981
6:30 pm Sponsors' reception and dinner for honorees
Hay Adams Hotel
Friday, April 10, 1981
12 noon Awards Luncheon
The Shoreham/Americana Hotel
INTRODUCTION OF WINNERS .. Peter J. Williams
INVOCATION ................ Richard Halverson,
Chaplain, U.S. Senate
OPENING REMARKS ............... Harry Custis
President, Downtown Jaycees
INTRODUCTION ................ Rebecca Eklund
Arthur S. Flemming Awards Program
Chairperson
PRESENTATION OFAWARDS Dr. ArthurS. Flemming
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Honorees
ADMINISTRATIVE
DIVISION
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Judith Kammins Albietz
Bureau of Land Management,
Anchorage, Alaska
For her outstanding achievement in administration
during the past two years in implementing a historic
congressional land settlement with Native Ameri-
cans, the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act
(ANCSA).
Over that period, as Chief of the ANCSA Division
within the Alaska office of the Bureau of Land Man-
agement, she managed the efforts of 65 persons and
coordinated with countless others to transfer 13
million acres of land to 60 Eskimo, Indian, and Aleut
corporations. This required adjudication of rights
and interests in an area equivalent to about twice the
size of the state of Maryland. The land conveyed was
more than three times the acreage conveyed, before
her arrival, over the preceding four years.
She assumed the leadership of a newly organized
division in an agency new to her and she established
effective working relationships with other managers
whose activites and policies would affect the expedi-
tious transfer of land. She promptly formulated pro-
posals for resolution of policy issues consistent with
general land laws. She planned and monitored a
schedule of several hundred actions whose timely
accomplishment was required. She stayed well
within her budget, but substantially exceeded the
Secretary of Interior's goal.
Kenneth P. Boehne
U.S. Railroad Retirement Board,
Chicago, Illinois
For his superior performance, both individually and
in managing others, and his dedication, determina-
tion, and sense of urgency in improving the opera-
tions of the U.S. Railroad Retirement Board, the
Board's service to its clients, and the financial condi-
tion of the railroad retirement program. Mr.
Boehne's efforts have resulted in significant accom-
plishments in areas of great concern to the Presi-
dent, the Congress, and the general public. Specifi-
cally, during the past 17 months, Mr. Boehne built
an effective internal audit organization at the Board
from ground up. He directed reviews of significant
scope and impact. One such review was of the
Board's organizational structure. In a 240-page re-
port, he recommended numerous alternative solu-
tions to problems identified. He designed a follow-
up system to ensure that prompt, proper, and
complete corrective actions have been taken on
audit recommendatons. In directing the Board's in-
formation collection management program, he re-
duced the paperwork burden the Board places on
the public by about 1 percent in 1980- He directed
cash management reviews at the Board that have
resulted in $150,000 of savings and could result in
an additional $9.4 million in one-time savings and a
recurring increased investment income of more
than $7 million. He prepared a report which pre-
sented alternative approaches for Board manage-
ment to consider in implementing the debt collec-
tion standards set by the U.S. General Accounting
Office and the U.S. Department of Justice. In 1979,
he was involved in the investigation of the Board's
investment program which resulted in a new agree-
ment increasing by $50 million the Board's invest-
ment income.
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Ronnie Davis
Department of Housing and
Urban Development
San Francisco, California
For his remarkable managerial ability demonstrated
in his recent modernization of the Accounting func-
tion of a regional office. Through Mr. Davis's inno-
vative modern technique, he formulated an office
staff into an inspired, dedicated, creative group of
employees that increased productivity and reversed
an outdated bookkeeping operation into a respect-
ed financial management system.
This exceptional leader is able to accomplish his
missions because of his high personal standard of
excellence, his unwavering commitment to the De-
partment's goals, and an expressed ability to en-
courage his staff to perform with ingenuity and cre-
ativity. Mr. Davis never loses sight of his commit-
ment to equal employment opportunities, upward
mobility of his employees and other special empha-
sis programs of the Department in achieving his
management goals. The methods and procedures
he implemented through his management tech-
niques, accomplished extraordinary results.
Colonel Leslie G. Denend
United States Air Force,
The Pentagon
Washington, D. C.
For his outstanding contribution to the effective
functioning of the National Security Council in co-
ordinating U.S. foreign, intelligence and defense
policy making, for the breadth of his technical and
substantive knowledge as instructor of pilot training
and professor of economics at the Air Force Acade-
my and as NSC staff member, for his quality of
leadership as an officer of the U.S. Air Force, and for
his personal interest and profound involvement in
community activities, Colonel Leslie G. Denend
was selected to receive this Award.
Special recognition from Mrs. Rosalynn Carter for
assistance in her work with Cambodian refugees is
only one reflection of his typical concern for others.
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Commander Alan M. Steinman
U.S. Public Health Service, Coast Guard
Washington, D. C.
For demonstrating exceptional professional com-
petence while serving with the United States Coast
Guard_ He developed the curriculum for the Coast
Guard Emergency Medical Technician School,
trained the necessary personnel, and developed ap-
propriate equipment and medical evacuation data
collection methodologies in support of the Coast
Guard lifesaving mission. He served as Chairman of
the Hypothermia Work Group at Coast Guard
Headquarters, establishing a service-wide response
to accidental hypothermia encountered in Coast
Guard operations, advising the Commandant on
protective clothing for Coast Guard personnel, and
serving as the Coast Guard spokesman in the field.
As the flight surgeon advisor to Coast Guard avi-
ation programs, Commander Steinman co-de-
signed the Underwater Escape Rebreathing device
for use by aircrew personnel trapped inside of
ditched, submerged, inverted aircraft. He also func-
tioned as medical advisor to the Coast Guard Head-
quarters Search and Rescue Division. In this posi-
tion, he effected modifications in Coast Guard
rescue craft to permit more rapid recovery of injured
people and to provide emergency medical care
while on board rescue crafts. He also developed a
method for the performance of cardiopulmonary
resuscitation on near-drowning victims while still in
the water.
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Honorees
SCIENTIFIC
DIVISION
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Bruce A. Banks
NASA, Lewis Research Center,
Cleveland, Ohio
For his outstanding achievement as a research sci-
entist in developing a program applying NASA
space technology for the direct benefit of mankind
in biomedical devices. His research demonstrated
that materials whose surfaces were modified by ex-
posure to the beam of an ion thruster, originally
developed for spacecraft propulsion, produced
markedly different and more favorable response
when implanted in body tissues. This research
permitted the creation of a broad spectrum of
biocompatible mechanical devices for human appli-
cation. Laboratory tests are on-going to evaluate
percutaneous connectors, left ventricle assist
pumps, artificial artery material, and many others,
all treated with the ion beam to promote tissue
ingrowth and enhance biocompatibility.
Mr. Banks has also contributed his talents to his
community especially in his work with young peo-
ple.
Dr. George Khoury
Health & Human Services,
National Cancer Institute, NIH
Bethesda, Maryland
For his scientific insight, originality, and technical
excellence in research on the molecular mecha-
nisms which underlie the induction of cancer by
DNA tumor viruses; for his pioneering discoveries of
the ways in which cells copy and splice genetic
information; for his studies on the use of viruses to
package biologically important normal genes and to
transfer them to eukaryotic cells; and for his
achievements in helping to attain the goals of the
National Cancer Program.
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Michael Jay Brownstein
Health and Human Services, NIMH
Bethesda, Maryland
For his outstanding contributions to neuroscience,
specifically his development of techniques for mi-
crodissection of brain and the biochemical localiza-
tion of specific substances in these tiny pieces of
tissue; his research on the mechanisms involved in
the wide variation between day and night of the
secretory activity of the pineal gland; and his investi-
gations of biologically-active peptides, their forma-
tion, distribution and neuroendocrine functions in
the brain.
Thomas Mark Buchanan
Health & Human Services
U.S. Public Health Service Hospital,
Seattle, Washington
For his outstanding accomplishments as a research
scientist in immunology, Dr. Thomas Buchanan has
applied his research talents to discover the virulent
and immunogenic factors of the Neisseria gonor-
rhoeae cell wall. He is well on the way to developing
an effective vaccine for this ubiquitous organism.
The merits of such a vaccine are great in view of the
epidemic proportions of gonorrhea, and the mor-
bidity and mortality that it causes.
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Dr. William F. Ballhaus, Jr.
NASA, Ames Research Center,
Moffett Field, California
For his outstanding achievement as a research sci-
entist in initiating and advancing computational flu-
id dynamic methods as a practical tool for improving
designs of transonic aircraft through development
of applicable and efficient numerical methods and
computer codes, and through recognizing their fu-
ture capability and significance to the aeronautical
community. Apart from the importance of this tech-
nical contribution to the scientific archives, Dr.
Ballhaus has played a major role in the increasing
acceptance of computational fluid dynamic meth-
ods as an effective and low-cost tool for improving
aircraft design. Due to his efforts in fostering the
implementation of his codes, new designs, rede-
signs, and modifications to existing aircraft have
been accomplished at savings of literally millions of
dollars to the government and the aerospace indus-
try.
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FORMER ARTHUR S. FLEMMING AWARD WINNERS
1948
Harold Lyons
James R. Turner
Lyle A. Dunstan
John M.Leddy
Roy B. Eastin. Jr.
Delbert M. Steiner
1949
Marx Leva
Carlisle H. Humelsine
Leroy Alldredge
John J. Kelleher
1950
Dale E. Oyster
Albert F. Siepert
Paul W. McDaniel
Clinton L. Watch
1951
Dana K. Bailey
Ted B. Westfall
John H. Buehler
Kenneth L. Vore
1952
James C. Kelley
Seymour S. Berlin
Frank W. Barton
Hugh J. Miser
1953
Harold L. Goodwin
Richard W, Johnston
John S. Ball
Franklin K. Pittman
John R. Pellam
James M. Gregory
James M. Hundley
Robert L. Henry
Najeeb E. Halaby
1954
Casper J. Aronson
Paul A. Barron
Donald C. Bergus
William R. Brown
Carl W. Clewlow
George E. Cooper
Howard W. Habermyer
Terrell L. Hill
Leon Jacobs
Daniel Swern
1955
Vernon D. Acree
Burnett F. Anderson
Herbert P. Broida
Millard Cass
Bernard Rosen
David B. Scott
Harold S. Frederikson
John H. Harley
Arthur E. Hess
William M. Kauffmann
1956
Samuel C. Adams, Jr.
Willard K. Davis
J. Arnold Pines
Roger Linton Conkling
Artemus E. Wetherbee
Alfred J. Eggers. Jr.
Maurice R. Hilleman
Manual F. Morales
Herbert Tabor
Leo A. Wall
1957
Robert E. Hollingsworth
Robert L. Sweet
Joseph J. Liebling
Edward R. Saunders. Jr.
Leonard P. Bienvenu
Don H. Baker. Jr.
Sidney Undenfriend
John D. Wallace
Louis H. Roddis. Jr.
Leonard T. Skeggs
1958
Leon Mandelkern
Herman Frederick Eilts
Joseph E. Rall
Thomas G. Meeker
Eugene S. Staples
Wilson A. Maxim
Douglas John Wilcox
Robert A. Beall
Welcome W. Wilson
Alan M. Lovelace
1959
John Peter Abbadessa
John Norman Cole
Paul Windels, Jr.
Frederick C. Alpers
William D. Brewer
Frank E. Block
Arthur W. Hummell. Jr.
Joseph Sternberg
John J. Grady
Maxime A. Faget
1960
Berl I. Bernhard
Robert D. Gidel
George Cabot Lodge
Bradley H. Patterson, Jr.
Kenneth L. Rabidoux
Ernest Ambler
Harry D. Holmgren
Joseph W. Siry
Knox T. Millsaps
Wolfgang E. Moekel
1961
Theodore H. Reed
Thomas G. Sorensen
Dwight A. Ink
Jack P. Ruina
Warren W. Wiggins
Andrew G. Morrow
Jack W. Smith
Lewis M. Branscomb
John P. Craven. Chief
Bernard Lubarsky
1962
Lawrence Lewis Kavanau
Kevin Maroney
John R. Wilkins
Charles M. Herzfeld
George Stevens, Jr.
Norman J. Doctor
N. Thompson Powers
Edgar M. Cortright, Jr.
Joseph F. Saunders
George M. Low
1963
Donald R. Chadwick
Richard N. Gardner
A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.
Jerome Herbert Perlmutter
George Leon Rogossa
Sjoerd Lieuwe Bonting
Christopher C. Craft. Jr.
Serge N. Timasheff
John W. Townsend, Jr.
James R. Wait
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1964
Eugene P. Foley
Thomas L. Hughes
Wesley L. Hjornevik
Daniel P. Moynihan
Paul A. Volcker, Jr.
Eugene Braunwald
Leonard Jaffe
Robert Jastrow
Joseph F. Shea
George W. Sutton
1969
Gregory John Ahart
Thomas Ostrom Enders
Stanley Bruce Herschensohn
Larry Craig Johnstone
Robert E. Jordan III
Neil Alden Armstrong
Jay Norman Cohn
Richard Day Deslattes. Jr.
Steve A. Eberhart
Eugene Francis Kranz
1974
Angelina Garcia
Carolyn (Leach) Huntoon
William J. Kilberg
Ivan Wayne Kirk
Kent Kresa
Robert I. Levy
Donald Henry Marx
Richard W. Roberts
Douglas H. Sargeant
Gregory R. Woods
1979
Wallace E. Day
William J. Flanagan, Jr.
Dr. J. Michael McGinnis
Mr. Christian S. White
Mr. John E. Wilson
Dr. Anthony Fauci
Dr. Elaine S. Oran
Mr. Anthony J. Broderick, Jr.
Mr. John E. Eckland
Dr. Michael P. McCormick
1965
Richard R. Bonner
Andrew F. Brimmer
Raymond L. Garthoff
Robert Lundegard
Timothy J. May
Bruce N. Ames
Lester R. Brown
Robert A. Frosch
Gerald S. Hawkins
Wilmot N. Hess
1966
David Bronheim
John W. Chancellor
Sheldon S. Cohen
Arnold R. Fritsch
Edwin A. Jaenke
Alexander B. Trowbridge
Peter Bender
Lucien B. Guze
James W. Miller
Eugene M. Shoemaker
1967
Joseph T. English
John T. Hughes
Ronald B. Lee
Maurice C. Mackey, Jr.
Harry C. McPherson, Jr.
Martin E. Abel
John D. Hodge
George F. Pezdirtz
Thomas P. Quinn
Frank J. Rauscher, Jr.
1968
Bertram S. Brown
Glenn W. Ferguson
Barry R. Flamm
John R. Petty
Edward F. Rose
Martin E. Glicksman
Richard E. Hallgren
James J. Kramer
Norman F. Ness
Edward H. Stone 11
1970
Page Ed Ronde Cranford
Benjamin F. L. Darden
Louis Patrick Neeb
Philip Andrew Odeen
William J. Whalen
George Robert Carruthers
Lynwood Cottle Dunseith
James D. Finkelstein
Allan D. Simon
Marvin Paul Thompson
1971
Richard M. Asofsky
Petras V. Avizonis
Robert Jay Hermann
Harvey Graham Purchase
Jacqueline Jai-Kang Whang-Peng
Seth M. Bodner
Norman Albert Carlson
Jonathan L. Goldstein
Mary Elizabeth Hanford
Lane E. Holdcroft
1972
B. Jean Apgar
Floyd E. Bloom
Jerry F. Franklin
Harrison H. Schmitt
John Speidel
Gary Baise
George B. Brosan
James C. Curvey
Peter G. Nash
Anthony Schwarzalder
1973
Robert Arthur Cornell
Delio E. Gianturco
Peter Barton Hutt
L. Manning Muntzing
Joel Alan Snow
Edward Carlyle Franklin
George Harry Heilmeier
David Greybill Hummer
Glynn Stephen Lunney
Cyril Marvin Pierce
1975
Arnold D. Aldrich
Alvin Leroy Alm
John Hill Barcroft
Paul Harold Booker
Julia Vadala Taft
J. Paul Boris
Joseph Ray Chambers
Robert James Cook
Robert Joseph Learson
Edward M. Scolnick
1976
Stephen W. Bosworth
C. T. Fredrickson
James David Isbister
Ronald C. Rasmus
Victor Manuel Rivera
Bradford E. Brown
William George DeMott Frederick
Donald Rex Johnson
Richard Allen Skop
Charles Conrad Thiel. Jr.
1977
William D. Burch
Patricia Murphy Gormley
James K. Hess
Thomas Peter Ruane
James Harlan Taylor
Thomas L. Boggs
Duff G. Gillespie
Ivy F. Hooks
Sherwood B. Idso
James B. Pollack
1978
Robert Michael Gates
Christian R. Holmes, IV
Robert D. Hormats
Gerald Patrick Norton
Pierce A. Quinlan
Fred E. Arnold
Gary Edward Daterman
J. William Gadzuk
Wayne A. Hendrickson
Candace B. Pert
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