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Army Science Board

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The Army Science Board (ASB) is a Federal Advisory Committee organized under the Federal Advisory Committee Act. It is the Department of the Army senior scientific advisory body that was chartered in 1977 to replace the Army Scientific Advisory Panel. The ASB advises and makes recommendations to the Secretary of the Army, the Chief of Staff of the Army, the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Acquisition, Logistics and Technology) (ASA(ALT)), the army staff, and major Army commanders on scientific and technological matters of concern to the Army. The Secretary of the Army delegates oversight authority to the ASA(ALT), who functions as the ASB Director.

History

The Army Science Board (ASB) has served as the Army’s senior scientific advisory board. When it was chartered as a Federal Advisory Committee under the Federal Advisory Committee Act in 1977, the ASB replaced the Army Scientific Advisory Panel (ASAP). Both the ASAP and the ASB grew out of the need for Army-specific guidance on scientific research and development (R&D) and the Army’s desire to maintain its strong technical advantage over other nations.

From the founding of the Army through the early 1900s, the Army did not have an effective R&D program — production and procurement were emphasized and the R&D during this era was limited to product improvement. Prior to World War II, the Army’s R&D was controlled through the G-4 as a function of the supply arms and services. In October 1943, Secretary of War Henry Stimson indicated that he wanted scientific help in the war effort, resulting in the R&D branch’s reorganization and its elevation to division level in May 1944. This elevation eliminated obstacles related to recruiting and retaining enough qualified scientific people, and provided them the clout to effectively perform their duties.

Following World War II, despite GEN Dwight D. Eisenhower’s warnings that using scientific and technological resources solely for procurement purposes limited the usefulness of those resources and indications that separating R&D from procurement and production would benefit the military, concerns remained that the senior Army leadership lacked the vision to effectively guide the direction of R&D programs. However, funding and personnel limitations continued to direct R&D toward the necessary areas of procurement and production. A few years later, Dr. Donald Loughridge, the Army’s Senior Scientific Advisor, was concerned that the Army lacked an effective basic research program, resulting in its inability to attract desirable entry-level scientists to its laboratories. By April 1950, Secretary of the Army Gordon Gray was also concerned with the Army’s R&D program and its ability to support warfighters in future wars. He did not believe that the United States could fight a war based solely upon soldiers, especially with the fall of China to communism.

Shortly thereafter, Gray’s replacement, Secretary of the Army Frank Pace, evaluated the existing Army R&D program, which was then engaged in supporting the conflict in Korea. In January 1951, the evaluators recommended that a research advisory board be established to assist the Secretary of the Army in R&D matters. Based on this report, GEN Joseph Collins, Army Chief of Staff, recommended establishing an Army Scientific Advisory Committee as this research advisory board. By March, Pace approved establishing this board in principle and in November he took the first steps to obtain this scientific advice. Without formally establishing a committee, the Secretary appointed 10 outstanding scientists and industrialists as his scientific advisers. These pioneer advisers were:

  • Dr. Detlev Bronk, National Academy of Sciences President, 1950 to 1962, and Johns Hopkins University President, 1949 to 1953. He was credited with formulating the modern theory of biophysics.
  • Mr. Crawford Greenewalt, DuPont President, 1948 to 1962. He was instrumental in transforming the theoretical work into a production system capable of manufacturing sufficient plutonium for the Manhattan Project.
  • Mr. Robert Haslam, consultant and as Chief of Division 3, Rocket Ordnance Research, National Defense Research Committee.
  • Mr. Kaufman Keller, Chrysle board of directors member of W.R. Grace & Co.; retired Standard Oil Co. Vice President. Previously, he was a professor of chemical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
  • Dr. Frederick Hovde, Purdue University President, 1946 to 1971. During World War II, he w r Chairman of the Board, 1950 to 1956; Chrysler President, 1935 to 1950.
  • Dr. James R. Killian Jr., MIT President, 1948 to 1959; MIT Corp. Chairman, 1959 to 1971. Following his service on this board, he became the presidential science advisor to President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1957 to 1959.
  • Dr. Charles Lauritsen, Danish-born physicist and professor of electrical and radio engineering at the California Institute of Technology, 1911 to 1962. During World War II, his nuclear physics research was instrumental in the Manhattan Project.
  • Dr. Murrough O'Brien, University of California’s College of Engineering Dean, 1943 to 1959. Previously, he was the university’s Mechanical Engineering Department Chair, 1937 to 1943.
  • Dr. William Shockley, Bell Telephone Laboratories Research Physicist, 1945 to 1954. During World War II, he was the Anti-Submarine Warfare Operations Research Group Research Director. He received the Nobel Prize in physics in 1956 for his role in developing the transistor.
  • Mr. William Webster, New England Electric System Executive Vice President and Director. Following World War II, he was Deputy to the Secretary of Defense on Atomic Energy and the Chairman of the Military Liaison Committee to the Atomic Energy Commission. In 1950, he was the DOD R&D Board Chairman.

Following the Korean War, the Advisory Committee on Army Organization analyzed the Army’s organization with respect to its ability to support the nation in times of war and peace. This committee praised the scientific advisory group’s creation, indicating it was a significant step in bringing the best scientific ability and experience to the Army. In 1954, the House Committee on Government Operations issued a report stating that the Army’s scientific advisory group was not being used effectively. Army Secretary Robert TenBroek Stevens, Pace’s successor, concurred with these recommendations and established plans to formalize the ASAP with a permanent charter, enlarge its membership and give it more latitude in its efforts.

The ASAP — then with 25 members — held its first meeting November 16-17, 1954. During the meeting, the panel heard briefings on various areas involving the Army’s R&D efforts. By 1958, the panel grew to 70 members and divided itself into eight different subpanels:

  • Air Mobility
  • Chemical, Biological and Radiological Warfare
  • Communications and Electronics
  • Firepower
  • Environmental Research
  • Human Factors
  • Surface Mobility
  • Research Organization and Planning

Throughout its first 50 years, 590 people — including 50 women — have served as ASB members, resulting in more than 3,700 years of uncompensated, voluntary service to the Army. The ASB’s distinguished members also include two astronauts, three Olympians (one with a silver medal in the long jump), one U.S. Ambassador to France and a member of the first expedition team to ascend Mount Minya Konka in Eastern Tibet, China.

ASB and ASAP personnel have accepted many of the significant challenges the Army has had during the past half century. Even though these are some of the country’s busiest people, these 590 board members have willingly rearranged their complex schedules on short notice to use their own time to solve these significant challenges. They have placed the needs of their country first; and the Army has been fortunate to have, and grateful for, their generous service. With good fortune, the ASB will continue supporting our Nation long into the future.

Past Chairs

Past Army Scientific Advisory Panel Chairs
Years Chair
1951 - 1956 Dr. James R. Killian Jr.
1956 - 1957 Dr. Frederick L. Hovde
1958 - 1959 Mr. Richard S. Morse
1960 Dr. James W. McRae
1960 - 1961 Dr. Clifford C. Furnas
1961 - 1964 Dr. Morrough P. O’Brien
1965 Dr. Finn J. Larsen
1966 - 1970 Dr. Harold M. Agnew
1971 - 1976 Mr. Lawrence H. O'Neill
1976 - 1977 Dr. Bruce A. Reese
Past Army Science Board Chairs
1978 - 1981 Dr. J. Ernest Wilkins Jr.
1981 - 1983 Dr. Richard A. Montgomery
1983 - 1986 Dr. Wilson K. Talley
1986 - 1987 Dr. Irene C. Peden
1987 - 1989 Mr. Gilbert F. Decker
1989 - 1990 Dr. Dennis R. Horn
1990 - 1991 Dr. Duane A. Adams
1991 - 1992 Mr. James Jacobs (army science board chair)
1992 - 1995 Dr. Walter B. LaBerge
1995 - 1996 Dr. Wilson K. Talley
1996 - 1998 Dr. Michael Frankel
1998 - 2002 Mr. Michael J. Bayer
2002 - 2004 Dr. Joseph V. Braddock
2004 - 2005 Dr. James A. Tegnelia
2005 - Dr. Frank H. Akers, Jr.

Past Executive Secretaries

Past Army Scientific Advisory Executive Secretaries
Years Executive Secretary
1954-1955 MAJ Charles H. Curtis
1956-1957 MAJ J.D. Neumann
1958-1959 LTC William N. Harris
1960-1962 LTC Paul D. MacGarvey
1963-1964 LTC Kenneth R. Bull
1965-1966 MAJ Donald E. Rosenblum
1966-1967 LTC Joseph E. Fix III
1968-1969 LTC Wayne D. Miller
1969-1970 LTC Edward E. Roderick
1970-1971 LTC James R. Fuller
1971-1972 LTC William P. Boyd
1972-1973 LTC John G. Burbules
1974-1976 LTC Aubra N. Bone
1976- 1977 LTC E. F. Imler
Past Army Science Board Executive Secretaries
1979-1981 COL Roger Mickelson
1982-1986 Mr. Ronald A. Mlinarchik, P.E.

(Executive Director)

1987-1988 COL Richard E. Entlich
1989-1990 COL Thomas E. Stalzer
1990-1991 COL Bruce Braun
1991-1993 COL Barry Levine
1993-1996 COL Herbert J. Gallagher
1996-2000 COL Leonard Gliatta
2000-2001 COL Damian Bianca
2001-2002 COL Kevin Dietrick
2002-2004 COL Jeffrey D. Willey
2004-2005 LTC Scott S. Haraburda, Ph.D., P.E.
2005- COL Heather Ierardi

References

  • Haraburda, Scott S. (2006), "Army Science Board — Providing More Than 50 Years of Scientific Advice and Guidance." (PDF), Army AL&T Magazine., vol. PB 70-06-01, no. January - February - March, pp. 70–73


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