MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Guy Webster (818)
354-6278
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 26, 2001
SOLAR SYSTEM AMBASSADORS
CHOSEN TO TEACH EARTHLINGS ABOUT SPACE
Space enthusiasts from
all 50 states and Puerto Rico have been selected to lead public events
in 2002 conveying news and excitement about solar-system exploration.
The 278 volunteers chosen
for the coming year's Solar System Ambassador program of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., range from a Minnesota lawyer
to a Texas teacher trainer, and from a California respiratory therapist
to a Georgia marine mechanic.
"I'm doing this because
I see a real need for the public to know more about space," said
one newly named ambassador, Dr. Bob Polcyn, a retired physician in
Hot Springs, S.D. "One of the major lessons from learning more
about other planets is how special our own planet is."
The ambassadors run events
such as star parties, lectures, community displays, musical presentations
and library appearances. JPL provides them with special training opportunities,
including question-and-answer sessions with leaders of interplanetary
missions. It also supplies materials such as the latest pictures from
JPL-managed spacecraft orbiting Mars and Jupiter.
"I'm very interested
in the training, and I think the ambassador program will give me more
credibility that will help me reach more people in my community,"
Polcyn said. Through his local astronomy club, he has previously presented
space talks to elementary students and retirement-home residents.
As a Solar System Ambassador, he intends to organize programs both
for adults and children.
Another new ambassador,
Julie Corbett-Steineke, of Chicago, will concentrate on programs for
young people. She is a gymnastics coach who has trained Olympic competitors.
"I want to be a Solar System Ambassador so I can reach a greater
number of children and have more of an impact by allowing them to
learn along with me," she said. "I love that spark in a
child's eyes, the 'Wow!' when they want to run right to the computer
or the library and find out more."
The five-year-old ambassador
program will reach all 50 states for the first time in 2002, said
JPL's Kay Ferrari, coordinator of the program. In 2001, 206 Solar
System Ambassadors in 48 states organized more than 960 presentations,
reaching about 2.5 million people, including those who learned about
the programs via mass media, she said.
"The 2002 ambassadors
are a wonderfully diverse group," Ferrari said. "The program
brings people together who have all kinds of different backgrounds
but share an interest in space exploration."
Ambassadors were selected
by the program's board of directors at JPL. During an application
period in September, candidates submitted information about their
experience and their proposed events.
Nearly half the members
of the 2002 group already have experience as Solar System Ambassadors.
Peggy Motes, of Muncie, Ind., has participated since 1999. She runs
a planetarium for the Muncie public schools and was recently named
one of America's top educators by USA Today. Through the JPL affiliation,
she gets updates on current missions that she uses in "News from
NASA" presentations in the planetarium.
"Recently, we've had
information about the Mars Odyssey spacecraft and the Genesis mission
to collect particles of the solar wind and bring them back to Earth,"
Motes said.
For Florence Brammer, a
Minneapolis labor-law attorney just becoming a Solar System Ambassador,
talking to groups about space exploration will be something new. She's
been inspired by the night sky since childhood and has helped conduct
art programs in local schools. "Space exploration is one of the
frontiers of the future," she said. "My hope for being an
ambassador is not only that I'll enjoy it for myself, but that I can
get middle-school kids excited about space exploration."
Dane Wilkins, a respiratory
therapist in Ukiah, Calif., has experience teaching about health topics,
but not about outer space. "I've always been interested in space,
and I think the best way for me to learn as much as possible about
something is by teaching it. As a Solar System Ambassador, I'll be
able to get information straight from the horse's mouth. I'm really
excited about it and think it will be a benefit to the community here."
Online information is available
about the Solar System Ambassador program at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ambassador
. JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology
in Pasadena.
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NOTE TO
EDITORS: Solar System Ambassadors for 2002 are listed state-by-state
at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ambassador/usstates.html
. Guy Webster, at (818) 354-6278, can help you contact them.
12/26/01
- GW
#2001- 246