Schmitt Completes NASA Advisory Council Service; Ford Named Chairman

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Oct. 16, 2008

Michael Braukus 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1979 
michael.j.braukus@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-261

SCHMITT COMPLETES NASA ADVISORY COUNCIL SERVICE; FORD NAMED CHAIRMAN

WASHINGTON -- NASA Advisory Council Chairman Harrison "Jack" H. 
Schmitt announced Thursday he was leaving the council. Fellow council 
member Kenneth Ford will succeed him as chairman effective 
immediately. The NASA Advisory Council provides advice to the NASA 
administrator on important program and policy matters related to the 
U.S. space program. 

"My service as chairman of Administrator Mike Griffin's advisory 
council has been one of my most rewarding professional experiences," 
Schmitt said. "The members of the council represent the finest and 
most diverse group of advisors that could be assembled, and I am 
greatly indebted to them for the stimulating interaction and 
productive deliberations we have had during the last three years. The 
administrator, NASA and the nation have been well served by their 
dedication and hard work, and I am certain that even more productive 
activity will take place under the guidance of the new chairman, Ken 
Ford." 

The council consists of experts from various fields offering knowledge 
of the multitude of functions within the agency. Council 
recommendations and advice are critical to the agency's timely 
strategic and tactical decisions about NASA's mission. 

"Sen. Schmitt has provided invaluable advice and leadership for over 
three years as Chair of the NASA Advisory Council," Griffin said. "He 
was instrumental in reformulating the NAC to fulfill its proper role 
as NASA's primary external advisory group. The experience he has 
brought to the NAC as a scientist, astronaut and former U.S. senator 
has been of tremendous value to me in helping to manage the agency. I 
am deeply grateful for both his long friendship and his commitment of 
service to NASA and the nation." 

Schmitt has served as chair of the NASA Advisory Council since 
November 2005. Under his leadership, the council developed and 
submitted more than 100 recommendations to the NASA administrator in 
the areas of aeronautics, audit and finance, exploration, human 
capital, science, and space operations. These recommendations 
significantly contributed to NASA's implementation of the agency's 
new space exploration plans. 

Schmitt also was the primary advocate behind the council's February 
2007 workshop that produced 35 recommendations covering exploration 
science, lunar science, lunar-based science, and other research 
enabled by the emerging exploration architecture for returning humans 
to the moon by 2020. The workshop was a key part of the council's 
obligation to advise the administrator about science associated with 
the nation's return to the moon while making its findings directly 
available to NASA's exploration and science directorates. Schmitt 
also led the council's initiative to build a strong relationship with 
the National Institute of Health and other entities for the 
utilization of the International Space Station as a national 
laboratory. 

Schmitt is a geologist, former NASA astronaut and former U.S. senator. 
He and his Apollo 17 crewmate, Eugene Cernan, were the last two 
people to walk on the moon. 

Kenneth Ford has been a member of the NASA Advisory Council since June 
2007, serving on the Exploration Committee. He is founder and 
director of the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, a 
statewide not-for-profit research institute of the state university 
system of Florida. The institute features world-class scientists and 
engineers investigating a broad range of topics related to building 
technological systems that are aimed at amplifying and extending 
human cognitive and perceptual capacities. 

In January 1997, NASA asked Ford to develop and direct its new Center 
of Excellence in Information Technology at NASA's Ames Research 
Center at Moffett Field, Calif. He served as both associate center 
director and director of the Center of Excellence. Ford was awarded 
the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal in July 1999. 

Ford is the author of hundreds of scientific papers and six books. His 
research interests include artificial intelligence, cognitive 
science, human-centered computing, and entrepreneurship in government 
and academia. He earned a Ph.D. in computer science from Tulane 
University. Ford is a fellow of the Association for the Advancement 
of Artificial Intelligence and was the 2008 recipient of the Robert 
S. Englemore Memorial Award for his work in artificial intelligence. 

In 2005, Ford was appointed to the Air Force Science Advisory Board. 
President George W. Bush nominated Ford to serve a six-year term on 
the National Science Board in October 2002. 

For more information about the NASA Advisory Council, visit: 



http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/oer/nac 


For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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