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Geraldine Knatz Voted
Chair-elect of Sea Grant Panel
Geraldine Knatz, managing director for
the Port of Long Beach in California, was recently voted chair-elect
of the National Sea Grant Review Panel, the Commerce Department's
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced today.
Knatz was elected unanimously to serve
as chair-elect by the panel, an independent 15-member citizens'
advisory committee made up of individuals with diverse backgrounds
in marine affairs. Panel members are appointed by the secretary
of Commerce to advise the secretary, Commerce's under secretary
for oceans and atmosphere, and the director of the National
Sea Grant College Program on scientific and administrative
policy.
Knatz will serve as the chair-elect for two years. She replaces
Frank Kudrna, president of civil engineering firm Kudrna &
Associates Ltd. in Chicago.
In addition to her work with the Port of Long Beach, Dr. Knatz
is an instructor at the University of Southern California in
the civil engineering department.
Other panel members are (alphabetically): James Arrington, associate
vice president for research and graduate studies, South Carolina
State University, Orangeburg; Peter Bell, adjunct professor with
the Carnegie Institute and retired vice president and chief scientist
of the Norton Company, Worcester, Mass.; Marne Dubs, consultant,
New Canaan, Conn.; Carlos Fetterolf, Jr., retired executive secretary,
Great Lakes Fishery Commission, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Michael Fischer,
Program Officer for the Environment at the William and Flora
Hewlett Foundation, Menlo Park, Calif.; Roger Hanson, professor
emeritus, University of Alabama, Birmingham; Walter Hartman,
retired General Motors Corporation division supervisor, Olcott,
N.Y.; Frederick E. Hutchinson, Professor Emeritus, University
of Maine, Lamoine; Elaine Knight, co-owner and manager of Knight's
Seafood, Brunswick, Ga.; Arthur Maxwell, director, Institute
of Geophysics, University of Texas, Austin; Jeffrey Stephan,
manager of the United Fishermen's Marketing Association, Kodiak,
Alaska; John Toll, chancellor emeritus, University of Maryland,
College Park; Judith Weiss, professor in the department of biological
sciences at Rutgers University, Newark, N.J.
Established by Congress in 1966, the National Sea Grant College
Program is a partnership of academia, government and the private
sector dedicated to the development and wise use of the nation's
coastal, ocean and Great Lakes resources. The program sponsors
research, education and outreach through a nationwide network
of colleges. |