UNC professor of chemistry named Jefferson Science Fellow at State
Department ceremony
Press Release: (From U. north Carolina)
May 25, 2005
CHAPEL HILL -- Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice introduced Dr.
Edward T Samulski as a new Jefferson Science Fellow, chosen to offer science
advice to the Department of State, at a Tuesday (May 24) afternoon ceremony
held in the State Department's Benjamin Franklin Room. Dr. Samulski, Cary
C. Boshamer professor of chemistry in the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill's College of Arts and Sciences, is one of five tenured
professors nationwide to receive the prestigious U.S. Department of State
honor.
Former Secretary of State Colin L. Powell established the program in October
2003 to continue elevating the role of science and technology in U.S.
foreign policy. The program brings renowned science professors from American
universities to the State Department for one-year assignments, followed by
a five-year consultancy after they return to their academic careers.
The Jefferson Fellows are chosen through a competition administered by the
National Academy of Sciences and the Office of the
Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary of State. They are selected
for their scientific achievements, articulation and communication skills,
abilities to accurately describe scientific topics for non-scientific
audiences and their interest in science and engineering policy.
The salary and benefits of each Jefferson Fellow are being paid by the
academic institution at which the tenured appointment is held. Each fellow
also will receive a stipend of $50,000 from funding provided by the
MacArthur Foundation and the Carnegie Corp. The Jefferson Fellows will
travel occasionally as a part of their tenure, and stipends will be
available for that purpose.
"This new program is superbly designed to enable science and policy to
interface. Its creators have done a brilliant job of ensuring that
non-partisan, objective information can be provided and integrated smoothly
into policy decisions. I'm also grateful for how supportive the College (of
Arts and Sciences) and Chancellor (James Moeser) have been," said Samulski.
He added that he was looking forward to the challenge of working in areas
with which he was not as familiar. "I think they are interested in having
people who can look at a wide range of scientific subjects analytically and
anticipate the implications for policy. This kind of problem-solving is very
appealing to me. Science is a universal language, with the capacity to
unite individuals and nations around the globe. Its importance can only
increase over the coming decades as the world shrinks and the playing field
levels. To be able to contribute to this future is an honor for me."
Samulski has been a member of the UNC faculty since January 1988 and was
chairman of the chemistry department from 1995-2000. He came to the
university from the University of Connecticut, where he had taught since
1972.
His major research interests are the structure and dynamics of soft
materials such as liquid crystals and elastic polymers. In 2004, Samulski
and his students announced that they had found unequivocal evidence of a
biaxial nematic liquid crystal, a scientific achievement that had eluded
researchers for more than 30 years.
He is co-director of the multi-university NASA Institute on Biologically
Inspired Materials, a NASA-funded consortium of research institutions that
is working to create new materials that might revolutionize civil aviation
and space travel. Samulski's NASA research has translated into his
teaching, too: He offers a first-year seminar for UNC undergraduates titled
"You Don't Have to Be a Rocket Scientist."
Among his honors is a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1995, which recognizes
unusually distinguished achievement in the past and
exceptional promise for future accomplishment.
He received his bachelor of science degree from Clemson University and his
doctorate from Princeton University.
The year-long appointment begins August 15th
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