Michael Griffin of APL to be Nominated As Next NASA
Head

Michael Griffin
|
President Bush announced last week his intention to
nominate the Applied
Physics Laboratory's Michael Griffin to be the next
administrator of NASA. Griffin, 55, currently heads APL's
Space Department, a 600-person, $200 million unit that
creates unique mission-critical spaceflight hardware,
software and other products for military and civilian
customers.
In an e-mail to Lab staff, APL Director Richard Roca
said that "just to be considered for such a post is a
tribute to Mike and his outstanding record. To be actually
nominated is truly an honor."
Prior to joining Johns Hopkins, Griffin was president
and chief operating officer of In-Q-Tel, a CIA-funded
enterprise whose mission is to identify and invest in
cutting-edge solutions that serve national security
interests. He also served in several positions with Orbital
Sciences Corp., including CEO of Magellan Systems. Earlier
in his career, Griffin served as chief engineer and
associate administrator for exploration at NASA and was
deputy for technology at the Strategic Defense Initiative
Organization.
Griffin earned a bachelor's degree in physics and
later a master's degree in applied physics from Johns
Hopkins. He holds a doctorate in aerospace engineering from
the University of Maryland, College Park.
His nomination has been met with enthusiastic
bipartisan support, and he is expected to receive
congressional confirmation.
GO TO MARCH 21,
2005
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
GO TO THE GAZETTE
FRONT PAGE.
|