NOAA Heritage Program
21 - 30 of 75
Page 3 of 8
Interviewee Sort descending | Collection | Description | Interviewer | Date of Interview | Location of Interview | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Freddie Jeffries | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Biographical Sketch |
Molly Graham | Schertz, TX | NOAA Heritage Program | |
Gary Matlock | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
On July 26, 2024, Molly Graham interviewed Dr. Gary Matlock remotely for the NOAA Heritage Oral History Project. The interview explores Matlock's personal background, including his birth in Riverside, California, and his upbringing in Texas. Matlock discusses his academic journey, beginning with his inspiration from Jacques Cousteau and culminating in a Ph.D. from Texas A&M University. Key topics include his early work in fisheries and ecology, his educational experiences at Del Mar College, the University of Texas, and Texas A&M, and his career with NOAA. |
Molly Graham | , , | Ellicott City, MD | NOAA Heritage Program |
Gary Shigenaka | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Gary Shigenaka is a third-generation Japanese American born and raised in Lake Forest, Illinois. During World War II, Gary's father, other relatives, and over 100,000 other Japanese Americans were forcibly relocated and incarcerated in internment camps. Following the war, Gary's father and mother moved to Chicago's suburbs, where Gary grew up. Gary studied oceanography at the University of Washington, graduating in 1976. |
Molly Graham | Seattle, WA | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
Helen Wood | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Helen joined the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in 1988 as Director of the Office of Satellite Data Processing and Distribution, in the NOAA Satellite and Information Service. For more than 15 years she directed the operation of a space and Earth-based system that processed and distributed real-time data gathered by NOAA and other environmental satellites to support activities such as weather forecasting, ocean and climate monitoring, and satellite-assisted search and rescue. |
Molly Graham | , , | Bethesda, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service |
Ian Enochs | Decades of Change in the Florida Reef Tract: An Oral History Project |
Dr. Ian Enochs is the co-principal investigator of ACCRETE (Acidification, Climate, and Coral Reef Ecosystems TEam), NCRMP (National Coral Reef Monitoring Program), and AOAT (Atlantic Ocean Acidification Test-bed (NOAA) ). Dr. Enochs is the principal investigator of three projects: 1) Maug: a rare ocean acidification hotspot in US waters, 2) Incorporating Risk from Ocean Acidification into Acropora nurseries, and 3) Establishing numeric nutrient criteria for Southeast Florida Reefs. Enochs graduated cum laude from the University of Miami in 2006 and later earned his Ph.D. |
Zachary Mason | Baltimore, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, University of Maryland's Cooperative Institute for Satellite Earth System Studies, Coral Reef Conservation Program, Coral Reef Information System | |
James McFadden | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Dr. James McFadden was born in Winchester, Virginia, in 1934. He graduated from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University and graduated with a degree in geology. In 1960, James was offered a research assistantship at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's meteorology program. He spent five years in Madison and earned his PhD in meteorology. In 1965, McFadden came to work for the Environmental Science Services Administration's Sea-Air Laboratory, part of the Office of Meteorological Research in Washington, D.C. as a research scientist. |
Molly Graham | Lakeland, FL | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
Jeanette Davis | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Dr. Jeanette Davis is a Marine Microbiologist who currently serves at NOAA Fisheries in the Office of Policy where she conducts research and provides support on programs and policies regarding resources in the ocean. Dr. Davis was first exposed to the marine environment as a student at Hampton University during an internship where she lived on a 53-foot sailboat for a month, exploring the Chesapeake Bay. She earned a B.S. in Marine and Environmental Science from Hampton University and a PhD. in Marine Microbiology from the University of Maryland, College Park. |
Molly Graham | Silver Spring, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
Jerome "Nick" Heffter | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Dr. Jerome "Nick" Heffter served as a research meteorologist at OAR's Air Resources Lab. He was a pioneer in modeling the dispersion of nuclear radiation and other atmospheric pollutants during the Cold War. Nick tracked the release of nuclear radiation from Chernobyl in 1986 and reported it to US leaders before Russia informed the world of what is considered the worst nuclear accident in world history. Currently, Nick is retired from NOAA, but works as a contractor at the Air Resources Lab. Scope and Content Note |
Molly Graham | Bethesda, MD | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
John Bossler | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
Dr. John Bossler was born in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in 1936. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh with a degree in civil engineering in 1959 and went to work for the Coast and Geodetic Survey. John earned a master's and PhD in Geodetic Science from Ohio State University. Until 1986, John served as Director of the Coast and Geodetic Survey (C&GS) and the National Geodetic Survey (NGS). As Director of C&GS, he was an Admiral in the NOAA Commissioned Corps. |
Molly Graham | Fort Myers, FL | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service | |
John Ogren | NOAA Heritage Oral History Project |
John Ogren was born in 1966 in Blue Island, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. He was fascinated by the weather from an early age. He grew up listening to his grandfather's stories about the deadly 1967 oak lawn tornado outbreak. In high school, John became really interested in earth science and was "hooked" after a six-week weather unit in science class. Mr. Ogren attended Western Illinois University, where he graduated in 1988 with a degree in geography and a minor in broadcasting and communications. |
Molly Graham | Boston, MA | NOAA Heritage Program, National Weather Service |