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SLR-Mail No.801

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Date:2001-08-17 10:48:00
Sender:Ruth Neilan & Carey Noll <Carey Noll <noll@cddisa.gsfc.nasa.gov>>
Subject:[SLR-Mail] No. 801: Honors Reception - September 3, Budapest
Author:Ruth Neilan
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SLR Electronic Mail 2001-08-17 10:48:00 UTC Message No. 801
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Author: Ruth Neilan & Carey Noll
Subject: Honors Reception - September 3, Budapest



Invitation to a Reception Honoring

John Bosworth --- Tom Clark

during the venue of the
IAG Scientific Assembly 2001

Hosted by the IAG Services: IERS, ILRS, IVS, and IGS



Dear colleagues,

In June of this year two people retired from long-held leadership
positions in the development and evolution of space geodesy - John
Bosworth and Tom Clark of NASA´s Goddard Space Flight Center.

John was a central figure in the Crustal Dynamics Project and
follow-on activities for the last 20 years. With this retirement he
will also be vacating his position as the first Director of the
Central Bureau of the International Laser Ranging Service and Chair
of the CSTG Sites sub-commission.

Tom Clark is widely recognized as the ´Guru´ of VLBI, and has an
impressive 32 year involvement in its development. Both Tom and John
are have had influence on GPS: John´s pursuing the multi-technique
collocation site ties, and Tom´s operations of the GPS equipment at
GSFC, his totally accurate clock (TAC), and phase center measurements
of the GPS antennae.

An interesting review of their professional careers is planned with
your help. We invite you to attend and if you have a particular
memory that you will share, it will contribute to a memorable
evening! Please join us:


Honors Reception

John Bosworth --- Tom Clark

Monday, September 3, 20001
6:00 - 9:00 PM

Taverna Hotel - Budapest Rooom
1052 Budapest, Váci utca 20.

Phone: +361 485 3100
Fax: +361 485 3111


* Excellent Hors D´Oeuvres will be served, cash bar.

* Bring your memories and enjoy an evening with friends.

** Please RSVP ** reply to this message or send a message to
ruth.neilan@jpl.nasa.gov with the word ´Reception´ in the Subject.


Additional Detail

John Michael Bosworth, Associate Chief of the Laboratory for
Terrestrial Physics and Head of the Space Geodesy and Sensor
Calibration Office (Code 920.1), retired from GSFC on June 1
following almost 40 years of federal service, all but two years with
NASA. Mr. Bosworth was honored by many individuals or organizations
at his retirement dinner on June 12. John had a long and successful
career as a Project Manager at Goddard but is perhaps best remembered
for his past two decades of effort on behalf of space geodesy - first
as Deputy Manager under Dr. Bob Coates, and then later as Manager, of
NASA´s Crustal Dynamics Project (CDP). The CDP scored many scientific
firsts in making precise contemporary measurements of tectonic plate
motion, regional crustal deformation, Earth orientation parameters
(spin axis orientation and spin rate or length of day), Earth gravity
field, etc. Following the termination of CDP in 1993 and the
movement of space geodetic network responsibilities to GSFC´s
Laboratory for Terrestrial Physics, John retained primary
responsibility for the management of NASA´s SLR and VLBI networks and
served as head of the CSTG Sites Subcommission and as the first
Director of the International Laser Ranging Service (ILRS) Central
Bureau, which is located at GSFC.



Dr. Thomas Arvid Clark retired from GSFC on June 1, 2001. Tom
received his B.S. in Engineering Physics and his Ph.D. in
Astro-Geophysics from the University of Colorado in 1961 and 1967
respectively. From 1966 to 1968, he served as Chief of the Astronomy
Branch at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center and as Project Scientist
on the Spacelab Coronagraph. Since arriving at GSFC in 1968, Dr.
Clark has received numerous NASA awards for his pioneering work on
Radio Astronomy Explorer 1 and 2 and several generations of Very Long
Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) systems. Since the beginning of the
NASA Crustal Dynamics Project in 1979, a global network of
approximately 30 VLBI stations have been used to define the Celestial
reference Frame and to measure global plate tectonics, Earth
orientation parameters, and Universal Time. In recent years, he
developed the Totally Accurate Clock (TAC), an inexpensive GPS timing
receiver that has found widespread use in a number of global
networks. Tom was named a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
(AGU) in 1991 and a Fellow of the International Association of
Geodesy (IAG) in 1999. Tom was also a pioneer in amateur and digital
radio; he designed and flew several low cost satellites for relaying
amateur radio messages around the globe and is a past president of
AMSAT. In May 2001, he was one of only 50 initial inductees into the
CQ Amateur Radio Hall of Fame, a list which included such engineering
luminaries and inventors as Guglielmo Marconi (radio), Samuel Morse
(telegraph), Nikola Tesla (HF generators and radio), and John Bardeen
and William Schockley (transistor). Dr. Clark has applied for GSFC
Emeritus status.


From: Carey Noll

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