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So I arrive at Sadlers Wells theatre, about to see Matthew Bourne's Sleeping Beauty, and I spot a grey- bearded man who reminds me of my heroes. As I pay for my cab, I catch a hint of an American accent and I think: it is! It is him!
I tell the girl, she doesn't get it. I'm freaking out, quietly, inside. I don't get starstruck. But John Landis? Come on!
Once we're seated I nip out to get a programme and he's still outside, chatting away. I check my phone, google his face, that's DEFINITELY HIM.
Everso politely I interrupt and explain I'm a huge fan and that, while i don't want to disturb his day, id love to get a photo because - and i quote - Blues Brothers is pretty much on repeat in my house.'
We were just talking about that!' he says, and then goes on tell to me about how they organised the chases, the crashes, the number of cars they used, how they shot certain scenes, what techniques they had to employ, what permission they did (and didn't get).
One of my all time top directors, explaining to me the details and background to one of my all time favourite films.
Writing this up, quickly, before the curtain raises, I'm dumbstruck and nearly in tears of happiness.
What an amazing moment and what an amazing guy.
WIPO Director General Francis Gurry met on April 13, 2016 with Turkey’s Minister of Science, Industry and Technology Fikri Işık during an official visit to Ankara. They discussed bilateral cooperation and how WIPO can support Turkey's use of the global IP system.
© Turkish Patent Institute 2016.
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I work Full time in the media and have amassed over 30 years Full time experience on both sides of the camera, I am a Walk On Artist or Body Double (for a Number of "A" list Actors & Presenters) / Skill Double / Stand In (Principle or Utility) Supporting Artist or Assistant Director, / Production Assistant. - I am professional, reliable, enthusiastic and determined. I am also authoritative, creative and have a good sense of humour. I am able to portray a good range of emotions. I am eager and willing to learn and am open to new ideas. Please take the time to look over my profile information and photos, - I am also very flexible and versatile, I specialise in playing Authoritarian or Uniformed roles. I have Access to a considerable number of Genuine & Very Expensive Costumes / Uniforms, Including Period. Please let me know of Your Individual Specific requirements, i promise i will do my best to help.
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famous for Die tödliche Maria • Lola rennt • Heaven • Das Parfum • The International • Cloud Atlas • Babylon Berlin
WIPO Director General Daren Tang (right) met on March 28, 2022 with Minister of Science, Technology and Environment Elba Rosa Pérez Montoya, Minister of Science, Technology and Environment of Cuba.
The Minister briefed Mr. Tang on the development of Cuba's innovation ecosystem.
More: WIPO Director General Tang Visits Cuba
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Samar Shamoon. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO License.
Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva and Magdalena Andersson, Chairman for the International Monetary Fund and Financial Committee, participate in the IMFC Press Conference during the 2021 Spring Meetings at the International Monetary Fund.
IMF Photo/Cory Hancock
8 April 2021
Washington, DC, United States
Photo ref: CH210408851.arw
Director of Marshall Space Flight Center, Jody Singer, right, speaks on a panel with NASA's three other female center directors: Dr. Marla Peréz-Davis of Glenn Research Center, second from left, Vanessa Wyche of Johnson Space Center, center, Janet Petro of Kennedy Space Center, second from right, moderated by NASA General Counsel Sumara Thompson-King, left, during the "DirectHERS" - Launching Through the Glass Ceiling event, Tuesday, June 7, 2022, at the Mary W. Jackson NASA Headquarters Building in Washington. Photo Credit: (NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde meets with Federal Chancellor of Austria Sebastian Kurz at IMF Heaquarters on Thursday, February 21 in Washington, D.C. Ryan Rayburn/IMF Photo
Creative Director and co-founder of the design-driven creative agency Buck, Digital Design grad Ryan Honey recently made a return to VFS. Ryan spent a week sharing his experience and advice with current students.
Read more about Ryan's visit on the VFS Blog.
Find out more about VFS’s one-year Digital Design program at vfs.com/digitaldesign.
Vitor Gaspar, Director of the Fiscal Affairs Department, and Paolo Mauro, Deputy Director of the Fiscal Affairs Department, participate in the Fiscal Monitor press briefing during the 2021 Spring Meetings at the International Monetary Fund.
IMF Photo/Cliff Owen
7 April 2021
Washington, DC, United States
Photo ref: CO101181.ARW
Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva take part in FaceBook Live interview, has lunch in HQ2 Cafe and attends ice cream social
The WIPO Director General (right) met on November 24, 2020, with the Minister for Development Cooperation and Foreign Trade of Finland Ville Skinnari.
Discussions focused on the ways in which a balanced and effective intellectual property system is an important part of innovation ecosystems, as well as the experiences of Finland in this respect.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 IGO License.
IATA announced the launch of an advanced aviation training program in partnership with the École nationale de l’aviation civile (ÉNAC) in Toulouse, France. This is the first time that IATA has partnered with a university to offer an airline operations degree.
Director-General in the Presidency Cassius Lubisi addresses graduates on the occasion of the graduation ceremony of the Faculty of Human and Social Sciences at the North West University, Mafikeng Campus. (Photo: GCIS)
UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous conducted a four-day mission in Tanzania, where she met with government officials, civil society groups, and partners, to strengthen partnerships, ignite public discourse towards Generation Equality and galvanize action for gender equality and women’s empowerment in the country.
Pictured: Reviewing the implementation of UN Women’s work on empowering rural women in the country, Ms. Bahous visited women farmers who benefited from UN Women’s Climate-Smart Agriculture programme supported by The Korea International Cooperation Agency. Altogether, 232 women sunflower farmers and 300 horticultural women farmers have benefited from the programme and have received 5050 land certificates of customary rights promoting women’s land ownership.
Read More: www.unwomen.org/en/news-stories/news/2022/10/un-women-exe...
Photo: UN Women/Michael Goima
Director de la Policía Nacional ascendió al máximo grado.
En su hoja de vida reposan 91 condecoraciones y más de 100 felicitaciones a lo largo de su carrera profesional.
En ceremonia presidida por el señor presidente de la República, doctor Iván Duque Márquez, el director general de la Policía Nacional, Oscar Atehortua Duque, ascendió de Mayor General a General, el máximo grado institucional.
El Primer Mandatario le impuso al general Atehortua Duque la cuarta estrella en el marco de la ceremonia efectuada en el campo de paradas de la Escuela de Cadetes de Policía ‘General Francisco de Paula Santander’, a la que asistieron el señor ministro de Defensa, doctor Guillermo Botero Nieto; los comandantes de las Fuerzas Militares, el Cuerpo de Generales, oficiales, suboficiales, mandos ejecutivos, patrulleros, agentes, autoridades civiles y eclesiásticas e invitados especiales.
Desde que asumió la Dirección General, el general Atehortua Duque ha liderado el Plan Estratégico Institucional 2019-2022 ‘Colombia Bicentenaria - Seguridad con Legalidad’, que se constituye en la hoja de ruta de la Institución para los próximos cuatro años y que busca estar ‘Más cerca del ciudadano’ y consolidar la seguridad ciudadana como una prioridad nacional, todo alineado al proceso de Modernización y Transformación Institucional (MTI), el Plan Nacional de Desarrollo ‘Pacto por Colombia’ y la Política de Defensa y Seguridad para la Legalidad, el Emprendimiento y la Equidad del Gobierno Nacional.
El general Oscar Atehortua Duque ha privilegiado los tres pilares fundamentales al frente de la Dirección General: una Policía para la gente, una Policía que se transforma para servir mejor y una Policía que piensa en sus policías.
En el marco del acto también ascendieron los brigadieres generales Carlos Ernesto Rodríguez Cortés (director de Tránsito y Transporte), William Ernesto Ruiz Garzón (Director del INPEC), Fabio Hernán López Cruz (Director de Investigación Criminal e INTERPOL -DIJIN-), Herman Alejandro Bustamante Jiménez (comandante de la Región 8 de Policía), Ramiro Castrillón Lara (comandante de la Región 5 de Policía) y Fabián Laurence Cárdenas Leonel (comandante de la Región 4 de Policía) al grado de Mayor General, gracias a sus calidades humanas y profesionales y a su ejemplar carrera en la Policía Nacional de todos los colombianos.
Durante la ceremonia, y como un reconocimiento a los más de 60 años prestados a la Patria, el Presidente de la República también otorgó el grado honorario al mayor Humberto Aparicio Navia, director del Palacio Museo Histórico de la Policía Nacional.
Perfil del general Oscar Atehortua Duque
El general Oscar Atehortua Duque, director general de la Policía Nacional, nació en Armenia (Quindío) el 24 de enero de 1966, en el hogar conformado por sus padres, el señor Mario de Jesús Atehortúa Quintero y la señora María Adíela Duque.
Está casado con la señora Adriana Correa Lasso y es padre de Paola Andrea, Óscar Andrés y Diana Carolina.
El primero de diciembre de 1985 se graduó como subteniente de la Escuela de Cadetes de Policía ‘General Francisco de Paula Santander’, siendo el primer puesto entre 236 integrantes.
Es administrador de empresas de la Escuela de Administración de Negocios, administrador policial de la Dirección Nacional de Escuelas, especialista en Seguridad Integral, magíster en Estudios Políticos de la Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, magíster en Seguridad Pública y magíster en Gestión de la Calidad y Excelencia en las Organizaciones. También realizó el curso de Investigación Criminal en la Academia del FBI en Quantico, Virginia (Estados Unidos).
Se ha desempeñado, entre otros cargos, como analista de inteligencia e investigador de la Dirección de Investigación Criminal e INTERPOL, oficial de planta en la Escuela ‘General Santander’, Comandante de la Compañía Antinarcóticos en la Dirección de Antinarcóticos, Jefe del Área de Investigaciones y Operaciones de la Dirección Antinarcóticos, Jefe del Grupo de Inteligencia y Área de Interdicción de la Dirección Antinarcóticos, Comandante del Departamento de Policía Córdoba, Director de la Escuela Nacional de Operaciones Policiales ‘BG. Jaime Ramírez’, Agregado de Policía ante la Embajada de Colombia en Austria, jefe del Área de Control Interno de la Policía Nacional, Comandante de la Región de Policía Nº 2, Director del Fondo Rotatorio de la Policía, Comandante de la Unidad Nacional Contra la Minería Ilegal y Antiterrorismo y Director de Sanidad.
Antes de asumir la Dirección General, en diciembre de 2018, se desempeñó como Inspector General de la Institución.
En su hoja de vida reposan 91 condecoraciones y más de 100 felicitaciones por el trabajo ejemplar y brillante realizado a lo largo de su carrera profesional.
The Lactating Automaton is a silent short film, shot on 35mm in the fabulous location of Birr Castle in October '10 and Jan '11. It was directed by Andrew Legg, with Olwen Kelleghan as production designer. I came on board as Art Director in this challenging steampunk period piece. We had a team of talented model makers who made and maintained the various robots on set, while I managed set dressing and standby props with the assistance of Mark Kilbride.
Debara L. Tucci, M.D., M.S., M.B.A., Director, National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD), NIH
www.nidcd.nih.gov/about/nidcd-director-message/welcome
Credit: National Institutes of Health
Federico Suarez.
Director de cine, integrante de la brigada de BUILDING MOTION IDEAS.
Fotografia tomada en Rodriguez. Diciembre 2005.
I was asked to become the Art Director for a local theater company. I need to add a second coat of white paint before I start on the scenery for the Peter Pan play.
The Sonny Angels are getting impatient waiting on George and want to get started painting the colorful stuff on the boards.
(happy birthday Jaime)
253/365
Patricia Siekelova
To show that I was the picture director I thought of a theme i could take a picture of. I made Pata's angel wings and told her what to wear. I waited for the sunset before we got on top of the roof, and then told her what to do so I could take a picture.
BAKOKO Director, Alastair Townsend designed and oversaw construction of the Cutty Sark Pavilion whilst working at Youmeheshe Architects and Designers, London. The cutting edge visitor center was built within a restricted budget and met a tight construction program of only 6 months from design to completion. The fast-track structure was the first building in the world to be designed using Bentley’s Generative Components parametric computational design software.
Cutty Sark is one of the world’s most famous sailing vessels. After being decommissioned, the historic clipper ship has rested in a dry dock in the centre of historic maritime Greenwich where it served as public museum. Grimshaw Architects in association with Youmeheshe Architects and Designers were commissioned to design a cutting-edge visitor centre within and beneath the ship as part of a 27 million pound conservation programme that required closing the attraction for a complete restoration overhaul.
The Cutty Sark Pavilion was built to provide an exciting and memorable temporary exhibition venue. It is dedicated to telling the story of the ship and the ambitious project underway to save her whilst she undergoes restoration and construction works. Originally, it was designed to remain on site during the Cutty Sark’s restoration and the construction of a Permanent Visitors’ Centre (taking 2-3 years). After serving its role in Greenwich, the structure will be disassembled and re-erected elsewhere; possibly serving as a remote classroom, museum, or exhibition space dedicated to telling the tale of Cutty Sark to audiences abroad.
The Pavilion’s role as a public face of the ambitious restoration project became all the more important when a devastating fire ravaged the ship in the early hours of May 21st 2007.
The design aim was to achieve an experience evocative of walking amongst the sails, masts, and rigging of a majestic sailing ship like Cutty Sark. Spherical steel nodes connect a hexagonal timber gridshell structure. A complex tension network of steel cables and masts give rigidity to the overall structure and prop the PVC fabric cladding with telescopic masts.
Tight integration of 3DCAD information between the design team and the contractors enabled the structure to be quickly designed, modified, and built. Digital manufacturing of elements such as the CNC’d structural timber components and the digitally tailored fabric cladding were vital to delivering such an ambitious structure in a mater of months.
Bentley’s Generative Components computational design software was utilized in designing the amorphous shape of this complex structure, giving an unprecedented level of global control over every element. Fairly radical adjustments to the structure’s design were possible even in the latter stages of design. This proved vital in meeting the tight program as well as reaching a cost-optimized solution.
The first building of it’s kind in the world, the Cutty Sark Pavilion’s experimental nature met the client’s demand that the temporary visitor center be relevantly engaging and intriguing in order to capture the public’s interest.
Digital ID: 1260077. Mr. Ed. Downes, FSA director in Greene, Georgia, speaking on 'Food for Defense.'. Delano, Jack -- Photographer. [May 1941]
Notes: Original negative #: 44184-D
Source: Farm Security Administration Collection. / Georgia. / Jack Delano. (more info)
Repository: The New York Public Library. Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Photographs and Prints Division.
See more information about this image and others at NYPL Digital Gallery.
Persistent URL: digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/id?1260077
Rights Info: No known copyright restrictions; may be subject to third party rights (for more information, click here)
Director-General engages high-ranking Australian officials, promotes implementation of Chemical Weapons Convention and cooperation in Pacific region. Picture-Patrick Hamilton
First year Officer and Naval Cadets compete in the Director of Cadets Challenge - which includes a series of mental and physical tasks - as part of the First Year Opportunity Program (FYOP) at the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC). RMC Grounds, Kingston, ON September 02, 2022. Image by: Cpl Alex Brisson, Imagery Technican OJE, RMC, Kingston 2022-RMC3-0106
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Emmanuel Berrod. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.
Bonnie Jeanne Dunbar (born March 3, 1949) is a former NASA astronaut. She retired from NASA in September 2005 then served as president and CEO of The Museum of Flight until April 2010. From January 2013 - December 2015, Dr. Dunbar lead the University of Houston's STEM Center (science, technology, engineering and math) and was a faculty member in the Cullen College of Engineering.[1] Currently, she is a professor of aerospace engineering at Texas A&M University and serves as Director of the Institute for Engineering Education and Innovation (IEEI), a joint entity in the Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station (TEES) and the Dwight Look College of Engineering at Texas A&M University.
Contents
1 Early life
2 NASA career
3 Spaceflight experience
4 Education
5 Organizations
6 Awards and honors
7 References
Early life
Dunbar was born in Sunnyside, Washington. In 1967, she graduated from Sunnyside High School, Sunnyside, Washington. Following graduation in 1971 from the University of Washington, Dunbar worked for Boeing Computer Services for two years as a systems analyst. From 1973 to 1975, she conducted research for her master's thesis in the field of mechanisms and kinetics of ionic diffusion in sodium beta-alumina. She is a member of Kappa Delta sorority.
In 1975, she was invited to participate in research at the Atomic Energy Research Establishment, Harwell near Oxford, England, as a visiting scientist. Her work there involved the wetting behavior of liquids on solid substrates. Following her work in England, she accepted a senior research engineer position with Rockwell International Space Division in Downey, California. Her responsibilities there included developing equipment and processes for the manufacture of the Space Shuttle thermal protection system in Palmdale, California. She also represented Rockwell International as a member of the Dr. Kraft Ehricke evaluation committee on prospective space industrialization concepts. Dunbar completed her doctorate at the University of Houston in Houston, Texas. Her multi-disciplinary dissertation (materials science and physiology) involved evaluating the effects of simulated space flight on bone strength and fracture toughness. These results were correlated to alterations in hormonal and metabolic activity. Dr. Dunbar has served as an adjunct assistant professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Houston.
Dunbar is a private pilot with over 200 hours in single engine land aircraft, has logged more than 700 hours flying time in T-38 jets as a back-seater, and has over 100 hours as co-pilot in a Cessna Citation jet. She was married to fellow astronaut Ronald M. Sega.[2]
NASA career
Dunbar accepted a position as a payload officer/flight controller at the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in 1978. She served as a guidance and navigation officer/flight controller for the Skylab reentry mission in 1979 and was subsequently designated project officer/payload officer for the integration of several Space Shuttle payloads.[3][4]
Dunbar became a NASA astronaut in August 1981. Her technical assignments have included assisting in the verification of Shuttle flight software at the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL), serving as a member of the Flight Crew Equipment Control Board, participation as a member of the Astronaut Office Science Support Group, supporting operational development of the remote manipulator system (RMS). She has served as chief of the Mission Development Branch, as the Astronaut Office interface for "secondary" payloads, and as lead for the Science Support Group. In 1993, Dr. Dunbar served as Deputy Associate Administrator, Office of Life and Microgravity Sciences, NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. In February 1994, she traveled to Star City, Russia, where she spent 13-months training as a back-up crew member for a 3-month flight on the Russian Space Station, Mir. In March 1995, she was certified by the Russian Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center as qualified to fly on long duration Mir Space Station flights. From October 1995 to November 1996, she was detailed to the NASA JSC Mission Operations Directorate as Assistant Director where she was responsible for chairing the International Space Station Training Readiness Reviews, and facilitating Russian/American operations and training strategies.
A veteran of five space flights, Dunbar has logged more than 1,208 hours (50 days) in space. She served as a mission specialist on STS-61-A in 1985, STS-32 in 1990, and STS-71 in 1995, and was the Payload Commander on STS-50 in 1992, and STS-89 in 1998.
Spaceflight experience
STS-61-A Challenger (October 30-November 6, 1985), was the West German D-1 Spacelab mission. It was the first to carry eight crew members, the largest to fly in space, and was also the first in which payload activities were controlled from outside the United States. More than 75 scientific experiments were completed in the areas of physiological sciences, materials science, biology, and navigation. During the flight, Dunbar was responsible for operating Spacelab and its subsystems and performing a variety of experiments. Her mission training included six months of experiment training in Germany, France, Switzerland, and The Netherlands. STS-61-A launched from the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and returned to land at Edwards Air Force Base, California. Mission duration was 7 days, 44 minutes 51 seconds, traveling 2.5 million miles in 111 orbits of the Earth.
STS-32 Columbia (January 9–20, 1990), launched from the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and returned to a night landing at Edwards Air Base in California. During the flight, the crew successfully deployed the Syncom IV-F5 satellite, and retrieved the 21,400-pound Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) using the RMS. They also operated a variety of middeck experiments including the Microgravity Disturbance Experiment (MDE) using the Fluids Experiment Apparatus (FEA), Protein Crystal Growth (PCG), American Flight Echocardiograph (AFE), Latitude/Longitude Locator (L3), Mesoscale Lightning Experiment (MLE), Characterization of Neurospora Circadian Rhythms (CNCR), and the IMAX Camera. Dunbar was principal investigator for the MDE/FEA Experiment. Additionally, numerous medical test objectives, including in-flight lower body negative pressure (LBNP), in-flight aerobic exercise and muscle performance were conducted to evaluate human adaptation to extended duration missions. Mission duration was 10 days, 21 hours, 01 minute, 38 seconds, traveling 4.5 million miles in 173 orbits of the Earth.
STS-50 Columbia (June 25 to July 9, 1992). Dunbar was the Payload Commander on STS-50, the United States Microgravity Lab-1 mission which was dedicated to microgravity fluid physics and materials science. Over 30 experiments sponsored by over 100 investigators were housed in the Spacelab in the Shuttle's Payload Bay. A payload crew of four operated around-the-clock for 13 days performing experiments in scientific disciplines such as protein crystal growth, electronic and infrared detector crystal growth, surface tension physics, zeolite crystal growth, and human physiology. Mission duration was 13 days, 19 hours, 30 minutes and 4 seconds, traveling 5.7 million miles in 221 orbits of the Earth.
STS-71 Atlantis (June 27 to July 7, 1995), was the first Space Shuttle mission to dock with the Russian Space Station Mir, and involved an exchange of crews. The Atlantis was modified to carry a docking system compatible with the Russian Mir Space Station. Dunbar served as MS-3 on this flight which also carried a Spacelab module in the payload bay in which the crew performed medical evaluations on the returning Mir crew. These evaluations included ascertaining the effects of weightlessness on the cardio/vascular system, the bone/muscle system, the immune system, and the cardio/pulmonary system. Mission duration was 9 days, 19 hours, 23 minutes and 8 seconds, traveling 4.1 million miles in 153 orbits of the earth.
STS-89 Endeavour (January 22–31, 1998), was the eighth Shuttle-Mir docking mission during which the crew transferred more than 9,000 pounds of scientific equipment, logistical hardware and water from Space Shuttle Endeavour to Mir. In the fifth and last exchange of a U.S. astronaut, STS-89 delivered Andy Thomas to Mir and returned with David Wolf. Mission duration was 8 days, 19 hours and 47 seconds, traveling 3.6 million miles in 138 orbits of the Earth. Dunbar was the Payload Commander, responsible for all payload activities including the conduct of 23 technology and science experiments.
Education
1971: B.S. Ceramic Engineering, University of Washington
1975: M.S. Ceramic Engineering, University of Washington
1983: Ph.D. Mechanical/Biomedical Engineering, University of Houston
Organizations
American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
The American Ceramic Society (ACerS)
National Institute of Ceramic Engineers (NICE)
Keramos Honorary
Society of Biomedical Engineering
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Tau Beta Pi
Materials Research Society (MRS)
Board of Directors, Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight
Board of Trustees Silver Wings (service organization) (SW)
International Academy of Astronautics (IAF)
Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA)
Society of Women Engineers (SWE)
Association of Space Explorers (ASE)
Awards and honors
Honorary Doctorate from Heritage University in 2016
Kappa Delta sorority
Honorary Doctorate from Heriot-Watt University in 2000 [5]
The American Ceramic Society (ACerS) James I. Mueller Award, Cocoa Beach, Florida (2000)
Inducted into the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame (2000), one of five women in the world so honored annually
Selected as one of the top 20 women in technology in Houston, Texas (2000)
NASA Space Flight Medals (1985, 1990, 1992, 1995 and 1998)
NASA Superior Accomplishment Award (1997)
Member, National Science Foundation (NSF) Engineering Advisory Board, 1993–present
NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal (1996)
NASA Outstanding Leadership Award (1993)
Fellow of American Ceramic Society (1993)
Design News Engineering Achievement Award (1993)
IEEE Judith A. Resnik Award (1993)[6]
Society of Women Engineers Resnik Challenger Medal (1993)
Museum of Flight Pathfinder Award (1992)
AAES National Engineering Award (1992)
NASA Exceptional Service Award (1991)
University of Houston Distinguished Engineering Alumna (1991)
M.R.S. President's Award (1990)
The American Ceramic Society (ACerS) Schwaltzwalder P.A.C.E. Award (1990)
University of Washington Engineering Alumni Achievement (1989)
NASA Exceptional Service Medal (1988)
The American Ceramic Society (ACerS) Life Membership (1986)
General Jimmy Doolittle Fellow of the Aerospace Education Foundation (1986)
Evergreen Safety Council Public Service in Space Award (1986)
The American Ceramic Society (ACerS) Greaves-Walker Award (1985)
Rockwell International Engineer of the Year (1978)
Graduated Cum Laude from the University of Washington in 1975