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NOAA's NWS Focus
April 07, 2003 |
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NWS Aberdeen, SD, employees
present saving bonds to the logo contest winners
at the March 4, 2003, Women In Science (WIS) Conference.
Left to right, Mindy Albrecht, Met Intern, Julia
Berg, Met Intern, Michelle Monson, WIS logo contest
winner, Webster High School, Webster SD, and Amy
Parkin ,General Forecaster. Read more about the
conference in the story
below.
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Expanding Opportunities
Conference at Florida A&M Gives Sign of Progress
By
John Jones
NWS Deputy Director
I attended the 4th Expanding
Opportunities Conference for Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences,
on March 30 to April 1, 2003, to help encourage minority students
to pursue the sciences, go for graduate degrees and possibly work
for NOAA. This conference proved to me that we are making tremendous
steps in this effort.
We are not only attracting more minority students
to the sciences, but quality students! For example,
in the next few years Howard University, a Minority
Serving Institution (MSI), will produce minority
students with Ph.D.s in atmospheric science which
will double or triple the current rate.
The conference, co-sponsored by NOAA and Florida
A&M University, was held on A&M's lovely campus in
Tallahassee. Deputy Secretary of Commerce Sam Bodman
was one of the conference keynote speakers. NOAA
senior management was represented by Deputy Assistant
Secretary Tim Keeney along with representatives,
mostly from the Director or Deputy level, from each
of the line offices.
Panel discussions covered areas represented by
each of the NOAA Minority Serving Institution (MSI)
initiative centers, Living Marine Resources, Environmental
Sciences, Remote Sensing and Atmospheric Science.
NWS is responsible for a successful NOAA
Center for Atmospheric Science, led by Howard
University with Jackson State University, the University
of Texas at El Paso, and the University of Puerto
Rico at Mayaguez. An entire series of sessions was
also devoted to educational advances, governmental
and private sector career opportunities, and the
integration of science, policy, management, and outreach.
The hit of the conference was poster presentations
by the students, both undergraduate and graduate.
Beside the four schools already mentioned, students
attending schools from Puerto Rico to New York to
Idaho to Hawaii to Arizona and back to Florida were
there. Over 80 posters were displayed covering topics
of interest to NOAA, mainly sciences in the four
centers named above. The level of research and spectrum
of topics was impressive. Three undergraduates and
three graduate students with outstanding posters
were honored at an awards lunch where the top prize
was $500.
I was quite impressed with these students. Through
the NOAA MSI initiative and other NOAA student programs,
you may start seeing more of what I saw the last
few days. I think you too will be impressed.
For more information on NOAA's Educational Partnership
Program with MSIs, click
here.
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SMG Briefs Columbia Accident
Investigation Board
The NWS
Spaceflight Meteorology Group (SMG) continues to provide expert
assistance to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) following the break-up of the space shuttle Columbia on
February 1, 2003.
On March 28, 2003, SMG briefed the Columbia Accident
Investigation Board (CAIB) on NEXRAD WSR-88D
radar data over Texas and Louisiana at the time
of the accident. This briefing included an introduction
to WSR-88D design and interpretation, and demonstrations
of radar loops showing the suspended debris field
and its motion following the accident. SMG's briefing
emphasized the limitations of using the WSR-88D
to locate large debris.
Weather radar data analyzed by the NWS Radar Operations
Center, the National Severe Storms Laboratory, and
the Spaceflight Meteorology Group provided an initial
view of potential debris locations to NASA investigation
teams. The data gathering effort by NWS Southern
Region Headquarters and Weather Forecast Offices
throughout the country allowed a detailed analysis
of the weather radar data to be in the hands of the
Debris Collection Team within a week of the accident.
SMG is coordinating a multi-agency effort to reconstruct
the atmospheric conditions that Columbia flew
through on its ill-fated descent. NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center Data Assimilation Office is providing
a gridded analysis of the entry atmosphere up to
250,000 feet. Above this altitude, the Marshall Space
Flight Center Global Reference Atmosphere Model 1999
is supplementing the analysis. SMG is analyzing and
customizing the modeled atmosphere for the NASA Johnson
Space Center. In addition, SMG is using the National
Centers for Environmental Prediction Global Data
Analysis System to provide additional input.
According to SMG Meteorologist-In-Charge Frank
Brody, SMG's top priority will continue to be supporting
NASA and the CAIB in reviewing and understanding
meteorological data associated with the Columbia disaster.
In addition, SMG will be an active participant in
the Space Shuttle Program's "Return to Flight" evaluations
of weather flight rules and other factors.
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NWS Staff Participates
in Wisconsin Governor's Conference on Emergency Management
Several NWS staff participated
with more than 500 emergency managers and law enforcement personnel
in the 36th Annual Wisconsin Governor's Conference on Emergency
Management held March 18-19, 2003, in Appleton, WI.
Warning Coordination Meteorologists Jeff Last,
WFO Green Bay,WI; Rusty Kapela, WFO Milwaukee/Sullivan,WI;
and Todd Shea, WFO LaCrosse, WI; were joined by Meteorologists-In-Charge
Craig Edwards, WFO Minneapolis, MN; and Gary Austin,
WFO Green Bay.
The conference included breakout sessions focusing
on recent disasters and current issues in emergency
management.
Last, Kapela, Shea, and Edwards presented a breakout
session highlighting Wisconsin's 2002 weather, NOAA
Weather Radio expansion, and StormReady in Wisconsin.
Kapela also participated in a seminar on the role
of the NWS in support of the Emergency Alert System
(EAS).
The NWS staff also answered questions from visitors
to the StormReady booth in the exhibit hall.
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Aberdeen, SD,
Hosts 2003 Women In Science Conference
More than 350 students
and 20 teachers turned out for the second Women In Science (WIS)
Conference hosted by the NWS and its partners at the Johnson Fine
Arts Center on the campus of Northern State University in Aberdeen,
SD, on March 4, 2003.
Ten guest speakers were featured, including: Karen Nyberg,
a NASA astronaut from Vining, MN, as the keynote speaker; Noreen
Schwein, Hydrology Program Leader for the Services Division of
NWS Central Region in Kansas City, MO; and Kelly Whitaker, Information
Technology Officer, NWS Weather Forecast Office, Rapid City,
SD.
The conference is a major feature of an overall WIS program
begun by WFO Aberdeen in 2002. While the program is geared toward
7th - 10th grade girls, the information provided is available
to all students.
In addition to the guest speakers, this year's conference also
featured:
- a logo design
contest, with the designer of the winning logo receiving
a $500 savings bond and runner up receiving a $250 savings
bond, and
- an essay contest,
with the winners and runners-up receiving savings bonds.
Students were provided a packet of information on math- and
science-related careers. In addition, each teacher was provided
a "resource" packet to help them continue to cultivate their
students' interest in science.
Students also had a chance to visit booths which included a
display of historical medical tools from the Dakota Prairie Museum
and a display of books about women in science from the Alexander
Mitchell Library.
"Lisa Johnsen [Administrative Support Assistant] and Amy Parkin
[Meteorologist] must be given the bulk of the credit for planning
our Women In Science conferences," said Aberdeen Meteorologist-In-Charge
Bill Tallman. "Teachers and students have been unanimous in praising
their efforts."
For more information and pictures of the Women In Science conferences,
visit the Aberdeen
WFO web page.
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Training Module
on Gap Winds Available
The Cooperative Program
for Operational Meteorology, Education and Training (COMET) has
released a new web-based module titled "Gap Winds." This is the
latest Core Module in the Mesoscale Meteorology Primer series.
This module provides a basic understanding of why gap winds occur,
their typical structures, and how gap wind strength and extent
are controlled by larger scale, or synoptic, conditions. In this
module, a number of important gap flows in coastal regions around
the world are addressed, with special attention given to comprehensively
documented gap wind cases in the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the
Columbia River Gorge. This module is available from the "New" listing
on the Meteorology, Education and Training (MetEd) homepage (http://meted.ucar.edu)
or it can be accessed at http://meted.ucar.edu/mesoprim/gapwinds/index.htm.
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Also On the
Web...Travel Charge Card Training
NOAA is requiring all
Citibank travel charge cardholders to complete on-line cardholder
training on the proper use of the travel card by April 30, 2003.
The General Services Administration offers the online
training class on proper use of a government travel card. According
to NOAA's Finance Office/Comptroller, after successfully completing
the training, employees should notify their supervisors, and print
and maintain the certificate of training in their personal files.
Current cardholders and approving officials should review a list
of do's and don'ts on the proper use of the travel card at: http://www.rdc.noaa.gov/~finance/do's%20&%20dont's.pdf.
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Employee Milestones
- Click here to see NEW
APPOINTMENTS/TRANSFERS to NWS through March 31, 2003.
- Click here to see RETIREMENTS/DEPARTURES
from NWS through March 31, 2003.
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Take
a look at other NWS news, as submitted for the NOAA
Weekly Report
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Click
here to take a look at NOAA-wide employee news, as posted
in the latest issue of AccessNOAA
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Send
questions and comments to NWS.Communications.Office@noaa.gov
or mail to:
National Weather
Service
Communications Office
ATTN: W/COM
1325 East West Highway
Silver Spring, MD 20910-3283
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