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| Enlarge ImageA group of U.S. Navy officers are pursuing graduate degrees in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program through a special arrangement between the institutions. They are: (back row, from left) Lt. j.g. Brendan Gotowka, Ensign Matthew Watts, and Ensign Colleen Maloney; (middle row) Ensign Maria Parra-Orlandoni, Ensign Allison Berg, and Lt. Cmdr. Jasper "Carl" Hartsfield; (front row) Ensign Kathryn D'Epagnier and Lt. Benjamin Jones. (See "An Officer and a Graduate Student.") (Photo by Tom Kleindinst, WHOI) |
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Nine U.S. Navy officers are pursuing graduate degrees in the MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering through a special arrangement between the institutions (see "An Officer and a Graduate Student").
Lieutenant Commander Carl Hartsfield, Class of 2005
Education: Murray State University, 1992 Experience: 15 years of active duty as a nuclear-trained submarine officer, including two tours on fast attack submarines (USS Los Angeles and USS Parche) and one tour at the Pentagon Research: developing a navigation method for REMUS autonomous underwater vehicles that uses a single ship-mounted beacon instead of an expensive acoustic field placed on the bottom of the ocean Advisors: Arthur Baggeroer, MIT, and Chris von Alt, WHOI After grad school: will become second-in-command of the ballistic missile submarine USS Nevada
Lieutenant junior grade Brendan Gotowka, Class of 2005
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2003 Research: contributing to the Mine Burial Prediction program, which examines how the movement of seafloor sediments can cover and uncover explosives Advisor: Peter Traykovski, WHOI After grad school: nuclear power training school and submarine warfare
Lieutenant Benjamin Jones, Class of 2006
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 1997 Experience: helicopter pilot for six years Research: analyzing the acoustic spectra of “biosonar”—that is, what beaked whales “see” when bouncing echoes off prey Advisors: Andone Lavery and Tim Stanton, WHOI After grad school: will join the Meteorology and Oceanography Command
Ensign Allison Berg, Class of 2006
(See "Double Duty for Ensign/Student Allison Berg") Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2004 Research: using portable Sonic Detection and Ranging (SODAR) instruments to study the winds from the ocean’s surface to roughly 200 meters altitude Advisor: Gene Terray, WHOI After grad school: training as a surface warfare officer on the destroyer USS Momsen
Ensign Colleen Maloney, Class of 2006
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2004 Research: studying the properties of underwater sand ripples on the continental shelf and how they are remodeled by storms (part of the Mine Burial Prediction program) Advisor: Peter Traykovski, WHOI After grad school: training as a surface warfare officer in Little Creek, Va.
Ensign Matthew Watts, Class of 2006
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2004 Experience: served for three years as enlisted sailor before entering the U.S. Naval Academy Research: working to create a mechanical fish that will mimic the fast startle response observed in fish. Advisor: Mike Triantafyllou, MIT After grad school: training as a surface warfare officer in Pearl Harbor
Ensign Kathryn D’Epagnier, Class of 2007
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2005 Research: interested in underwater vehicles Advisor: To be determined After grad school: training as a surface warfare officer
Ensign David Farrell, Class of 2007
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2005 Research: to be determined Advisor: Art Baggeroer, MIT After grad school:flight school in Pensacola, Fla.
Ensign Maria Parra-Orlandoni, Class of 2007
Education: U.S. Naval Academy, 2005 Research: would like to work with autonomous underwater vehicles Advisors: Henrik Schmidt, MIT, and Dana Yoerger, WHOI After grad school: training as a surface warfare officer in San Diego
Notable Alumnae/i of the MIT/WHOI and Navy PartnershipRear Admiral Craig E. Dorman
(retired)
A one-time Navy SEAL, Dorman
received his doctorate in physical oceanography from the Joint Program in 1972.
His 26-year career also included service
as director for anti-submarine warfare in the Space and Naval Warfare Systems
Command. Upon retirement in 1989, he became the sixth director of Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution. From 1993 to 2002, he was a senior scientist at
Pennsylvania State University and served as special assistant and chief
scientist at the Office of Naval Research. Since 2002, he has served as vice president for research at the University
of Alaska.
Rear Admiral Jay M. Cohen
Awarded dual master’s degrees in
ocean engineering and naval architecture in 1972, Cohen’s military experience
has included tours as a submarine commander and as Deputy Director for
Operations for the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Since 2000, Cohen has served as Chief
of Naval Research, managing the science and technology programs of the Navy and
Marine Corps.
Rear Admiral Paul Sullivan
After earning his master’s
degree in ocean engineering in 1975, he commanded several fast attack and
ballistic missile submarines. In 1998, he became director of the Navy’s Deep
Submergence Branch, and then moved to director positions on the United States
Strategic Command Staff and the Chief of Naval Operations Staff. He is now
commander of the submarine force for the U.S. Pacific Fleet.
Captain Wendy Lawrence
In a naval career that began
with her entry into the U.S. Naval Academy in 1977, Lawrence served for 11
years as a helicopter pilot. She achieved a MIT/WHOI master of ocean
engineering degree in 1988, and by 1992, she was selected for astronaut training
by NASA. (Her father, William Lawrence, was a test pilot with future astronauts
John Glenn and Alan Shepherd and a finalist in the inaugural astronaut class.)
She made space shuttle flights in 1995, 1997, and 1998, before training for
several years for duty on the Russian space station Mir. In July 2005, she
lifted off on the shuttle Discovery
in the nation’s first return to space since 2003.
Commander D. Benjamin Reeder
Immediately after finishing his
Ph. D. in oceanographic engineering in 2002, Reeder shipped off to the Arabian
Gulf to serve as meteorology and oceanography officer on USS Tarawa
during the first months of the war. He finished drafting two science journal
papers based on his thesis work while sailing back from the Gulf in fall 2003.
In 2004, Reeder joined the faculty in the department of oceanography at the
Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. |
Posted: August 26, 2005 [top] |