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EXPERIENCE SUMMARY:
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Dr. Bluford's
record of accomplishments includes over 29
years of experience as a senior level
business executive, NASA Astronaut,
aerospace technical supervisor, aerospace
engineer, computational fluid dynamicist,
instructor pilot, and tactical fighter
pilot. He is the first African American to
fly in space (STS-8, the eighth flight of
the Space Shuttle) and the first African
American to return to space (STS-61A, the
22nd flight of the Space Shuttle; STS-39;
the 40th flight of the Space Shuttle; and
STS-53, the 52nd flight of the Space
Shuttle).
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EDUCATION:
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B.S.,
aerospace engineering from the Pennsylvania
State University, 1964; M.S., with
distinction in aerospace engineering from
the Air Force Institute of Technology, 1974;
Ph.D., aerospace engineering, minor in laser
physics from the Air Force Institute of
Technology, 1978; M.B.A., University of
Houston, Clear Lake, 1987.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:
NYMA, Inc.
(since July 1993). Vice President/General
Manager - Responsible for overall management
of all Engineering Services Division
programs. Responsible for contract
management, new business, indirect costs
control, personnel, and implementation of
company policies and procedures. Dr. Bluford
executes his duties through daily technical
status meetings with all direct reports,
weekly one-on-one schedule reviews, biweekly
cost reviews and ad hoc problem solving
meetings. Dr. Bluford reports contract
costs, technical status, scheduling, and new
business program status with the company
Chief Operating Officer on a monthly basis.
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United States
Air Force (1965 - July 1993) ASTRONAUT
OFFICE, JOHNSON SPACE CENTER (1978 - JULY
1993) NASA Astronaut (1979 - 1993).
Astronaut Office expert and point of contact
on Space Station Freedom (SSF) operations.
Lead astronaut and supervisor of the Space
Station Operations Group in the Space
Station Support Office of the Flight Crew
Operations Directorate. Responsible for
developing and coordinating flight crew
positions on various Space Station
operational and programmatic issues.
Evaluate various Space Station systems and
element designs, mock ups, simulations, and
production equipment in support of SSF
development. Payload commander on
STS-53, which flew in December, 1992 and
on
STS-39, which flew in May, 1991.
Responsible for payload integration, crew
training, operational coordination, and
on-orbit operations for these Department of
Defense missions. In 1986-1989, Astronaut
Office expert and point of contact for all
Spacelab missions and all Space Shuttle
pallet experiments. Represented the
Astronaut Office in mission integration,
planning, crew related payload issues,
payload definition, and safety-related
activities with respect to these payloads.
Mission specialist astronaut on STS-61A,
which flew in November, 1985. Led both U.S.
and European astronauts in conducting 76
on-orbit experiments in materials
processing, life sciences, and fluid
physics. Also, he served as a mission
specialist astronaut and flight engineer on
STS-8, which flew in 1983. This was the
first Space Shuttle mission with a night
launch and night landing. NASA Astronaut
Candidate (1978 - 1979). Trained in all
aspects of Space Shuttle flight operations,
Space Shuttle systems, payload operations
and integrations, and NASA administrative
and engineering procedures. Received
specialized training in astronomy,
aerodynamics, geology, meteorology, computer
science, guidance and navigation, and flight
medicine. Flight qualified as a NASA T-38
pilot. AERODYNAMICS AND AIRFRAME BRANCH, AIR
FORCE FLIGHT DYNAMICS LABORATORY, WRIGHT
PATTERSON AIR FORCE BASE (1975-1978) Branch
Chief, Aerodynamics and Airframe Branch
(1977 - 1978). Responsible for identifying,
planning, coordinating, and directing the
Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory
research and development programs in
subsonic, transonic, and supersonic
aerodynamics of aircraft. Supervised 38
scientists and engineers, including 10 Air
Force officers and managed an annual budget
of $5 million in engineering and research
contracts. Managed the Air Force Flight
Dynamics Laboratory's Trisonic and Vertical
Wind Tunnels. Interfaced several critical
Air Force aerodynamic technology development
programs with other Air Force organizations,
the U.S. Navy, NASA, and with foreign
countries. Supervised various Air Force
engineering projects including those in such
areas as airframe-propulsion integration,
non-axisymmetric nozzles, forward swept
wings, VSTOL, thrust vectoring and thrust
reversing, missile aerodynamics,
computational fluid dynamics, and
supercritical airfoil design. Deputy for
Advanced Concepts, Aeromechanics Division
(1975 - 1976). Responsible for identifying,
planning and conducting in-house analytical
and experimental investigations in the field
of aerodynamics. Conducted research in
computational fluid dynamics by solving the
Navier-Stokes equations for the fluid flow
around thin planar delta wings at supersonic
and hypersonic speeds. Wrote three technical
papers, made several technical
presentations, and completed a doctoral
dissertation and Ph.D. degree on the
research topic. Served as Inspector General
of the Aeromechanics Division. AIR FORCE
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, WRIGHT PATTERSON
AFB, DAYTON, OHIO (1972 - 1974) Graduate
Student, Aerospace Engineering. Completed
the Master of Science degree program in
Aerospace Engineering with distinction.
Awarded the Mervin E. Gross Award as class
valedictorian. Completed the course work and
doctoral examinations for the Ph.D. degree
program in Aerospace Engineering. 3630TH
FLYING TRAINING WING, SHEPPARD AFB, WICHITA
FALLS, TEXAS (1967 - 1972) Wing Executive
Support Officer/T-38 Instructor Pilot
Instructed American and German students in
all flying phases of the T-38 Undergraduate
Pilot Training Program. Served as
administrative officer and school secretary
for the Wing. 12TH TACTICAL FIGHTER WING,
CAM RANH BAY, VIETNAM (1966 - 1967) F4C
Combat Pilot Flew air superiority, close air
support, and combat air patrol in the F4C
tactical fighter aircraft. Completed 144
combat missions including 65 missions over
North Vietnam.
SPECIAL HONORS:
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Presented the
Leadership Award of Phi Delta Kappa (1962)
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the National
Defense Service Medal (1965)
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Vietnam
Campaign Medal (1967)
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Vietnam Cross
of Gallantry with Palm (1967)
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Vietnam
Service Medal I (1967)
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10 Air Force
Air Medals (1967)
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3 Air Force
Outstanding Unit Awards (1967, 1970, 1972)
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the German Air
Force Aviation Badge from the Federal
Republic of West Germany (1969)
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T-38
Instructor Pilot of the Month (1970)
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Air Training
Command Outstanding Flight Safety Award
(1970)
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an Air Force
Commendation Medal (1972)
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the Air Force
Institute of Technology's Mervin E. Gross
Award (1974)
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Who's Who
Among Black Americans 1975-1977
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an Air Force
Meritorious Service Award (1978)
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National
Society of Black Engineers Distinguished
National Scientist Award (1979)
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three NASA
Group Achievement Awards (1980, 1981 and
1989)
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the
Pennsylvania State University Alumni
Association's Distinguished Alumni Award
(1983) and Alumni Fellows Award (1986)
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USAF Command
Pilot Astronaut Wings (1983)
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NAACP Image
Award (1983)
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Who's Who in
America (1983)
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Pennsylvania's
Distinguished Service Medal (1984)
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Defense
Superior Service Medal
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Defense
Meritorious Service Medal; the New York City
Urban League's Whitney Young Memorial Award
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the 1991 Black
Engineer of the Year Award
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NASA
Distinguished Service Medal
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NASA
Exceptional Service Medal; National
Intelligence Medal of Achievement
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Legion of
Merit
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honorary
doctorate degrees from Florida A&M
University, Texas Southern University,
Virginia State University, Morgan State
University, Stevens Institute of Technology,
Tuskegee Institute, Bowie State College,
Thomas Jefferson University, Chicago State
University, Georgian Court College, and
Drexel University.
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