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National Medal of Technology And Innovation: Obama Awards Inventors For Achievements

National Medal Of Technology And Innovation

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE   10/21/11 06:02 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama said the 12 people he recognized Friday for achievement in science, technology and innovation should make others feel embarrassed about their old science projects.

Remember the baking soda volcano?

"The volcano with the stuff coming out ... with the baking soda inside," Obama said at a White House awards ceremony where the National Medal of Science went to seven researchers while the National Medal of Technology and Innovation went to five inventors. "Apparently, that was not a cutting-edge achievement, even though our parents told us it was really terrific."

The researchers were recognized for work that ranged from discovering a new property of the DNA helix to contributions to the development and use of transgenic mice – rodents given an extra dose of genetic material and used in medical research.

Obama pointed out that nine of the honorees were born in foreign countries but ended up in the U.S. "because America is the best place in the world to do the work that they do. And now more than ever, it's critical that we make the investments necessary to keep it that way."

He said too few of today's college undergraduates are studying science, technology, engineering and mathematics – subjects that he says are critical to the future global competitiveness of the U.S. "And that's troubling, because no matter how many great minds we attract from around the world, it won't be enough if we can't grow some here at home," Obama said.

A list of the medal recipients and descriptions of their work, according to the White House.

National Medal of Science:

_Jacqueline K. Barton, California Institute of Technology, for discovering a new property of the DNA helix.

_Ralph L. Brinster, University of Pennsylvania, for his work on the use of transgenic mice.

_Shu Chien, University of California, San Diego, for work in cardiovascular physiology and bioengineering.

_Rudolf Jaenisch, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, for improving understanding of epigenetic regulation of gene expression, the biological mechanisms that affect how genetic information is variably expressed.

_Peter J. Stang, University of Utah, for contributions to the development of organic supramolecular chemistry.

_Richard A. Tapia, Rice University, for contributions in optimization theory and numerical analysis and for efforts to foster diversity and excellence in mathematics and science education.

_Srinivasa S.R. Varadhan, New York University, for his work in probability theory.

National Medal of Technology and Innovation:

_Rakesh Agrawal, Purdue University, for his record of innovations in improving the energy efficiency and reducing the cost of gas liquefaction and separation. The innovations have benefited electronic device manufacturing, liquefied gas production and the supply of industrial gases.

_B. Jayant Baliga, North Carolina State University, for development and commercialization of the Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor and other power semiconductor devices extensively used in transportation, lighting, medicine, defense and renewable energy generation systems.

_C. Donald Bateman, Honeywell, for developing critical flight-safety sensors now used by aircraft worldwide, including ground proximity warning systems and systems to detect wind shear.

_Yvonne C. Brill, RCA Astro Electronics (Retired), for innovation in rocket propulsion systems for geosynchronous and low-earth orbit communication satellites.

_Michael F. Tompsett, TheraManager, for work including the design and development of the first charge-coupled device imagers.

___

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WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama said the 12 people he recognized Friday for achievement in science, technology and innovation should make others feel embarrassed about their old science projects.
WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama said the 12 people he recognized Friday for achievement in science, technology and innovation should make others feel embarrassed about their old science projects.
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02:30 PM on 10/24/2011
"USA!! USA!! USA!!"........wait
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ellamenta
My bio is too full for your micro
01:25 PM on 10/24/2011
While politicians pay lip service to America's need for STEM educated workers, salaries in fields requiring technical education have not kept pace with rises in living costs, and increases in H1B visas further drive those wages down.
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John michael Adams
06:50 AM on 10/23/2011
i discovered obama is a lame president. where's my medal?
09:10 PM on 10/23/2011
look in a really dark secretive place. It would match the balance of your discovery venture.
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lambdin1
What's this?
08:37 PM on 10/22/2011
We really need to get back to science and the basics. I've heard of many schools not teaching cursive writing! We can thank Steve Jobs for that! We've become a nation of thumbs!!!!
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02:31 PM on 10/24/2011
And something else that ends in ...umbs.
Charles W Noble
rain drops make rivers flowing in the ocean
07:32 PM on 10/22/2011
Key fact 9 out of the 12 people who got the award were immigrants! About time we recognize the brilliance of the immigrants and their contribution to our country. I wonder, how many industries will be created as a result of these immigrants research? How many jobs? How will it impact American Competitiveness. Thank You Immigrants for working hard to help our country be the best. Hopefully, we have taken the time to make you feel welcome.
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neolow
was a democrat now a liberal
04:56 PM on 10/22/2011
Education is the key to advancement not only for the individual but the nation. Why is America so backwards in investing in education?
1. Real men don't teach: Teaching is a female-dominated profession and thus teachers (women) are traditionally underpaid.
2. Teaching is low status: Teaching is looked-down on because it is a female-dominated profession and underpaid.
3. Education is against the common person: Whenever experts come down on the side against free-market or conservative ideals, as in climate change and green energy, they are elitist.
4. Education must support the free-market: Privatization and dismantling teachers' unions will make teaching more effective.
5. I got mine now you get yours: Education is not seen as necessary to advance the country as a whole.
With these ideas in place, American is in a race to the bottom. Other countries have big obstacles to overcome, but the US is doing everything it can to hamstring itself with free market economy and objectivism philosophy.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
06:23 PM on 10/22/2011
Fanned and faved.

The sad part is that, the leader of Objectivism, Ayn Rand, also had these comments to make:

A nation’s productive—and moral, and intellectual—top is the middle class. It is a broad reservoir of energy, it is a country’s motor and lifeblood, which feeds the rest. The common denominator of its members, on their various levels of ability, is: independence. The upper classes are merely a nation’s past; the middle class is its future.

(AND)

The middle class is the heart, the lifeblood, the energy source of a free, industrial economy, i.e., of capitalism; it did not and cannot exist under any other system; it is the product of upward mobility, incompatible with frozen social castes. Do not ask, therefore, for whom the bell of inflation is tolling; it tolls for you. It is not at the destruction of a handful of the rich that inflation is aimed (the rich are mostly in the vanguard of the destroyers), but at the middle class.

There's a bit of a shocker.  Anti-upper class?  Wowzers...

Source:
http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/middle_class.html
09:13 PM on 10/23/2011
we seem to prefer walking around shouting "we're number 1" as opposed to actually investing in ourselves and infrastructure.
04:27 PM on 10/22/2011
Uh, what about the University of Pennsylvania that has found a new treatment for cancer that has something like a 96% success rate in Stage3/4 Patients? Oh well, I suppose "Probability Theory" is more important.
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JDShipley
I drink coffee, therefore I am.
03:08 PM on 10/22/2011
India has a huge and profitable IT industry built in roughly 15 years because of one issue: India invested in education.
03:46 PM on 10/22/2011
The credit goes to the family's priorities than government. It was more like the Indian parents influenced the kids to study hard and be competitive. But then, we are talking about a small percentage of Indian population which would be still high compared to the population of most of the countries.
04:53 PM on 10/22/2011
The U.S. spends WAY more on education, per capita, than India. We spend more than any other country. The spending levels are not the problem. It's how we spend the money, plus some troubling social, cultural, and economic issues which contribute to a very apathetic student population.
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Lahonda
Bynocent Instander
03:00 PM on 10/22/2011
President Obama "gets it." We need more investment in education at all levels.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
06:11 PM on 10/22/2011
In which case, let's see amnesty for all college students who divert into STEM careers, while bringing back jobs that require STEM skills.

http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/career/its-a-it-job-seekers-market-employers-need-new-tactics-to-recruit-it-pros/3490?tag=rbxccnbtr1

I think "low cost" has far more to do with everything, and when people don't see a return on investment, of course they won't spend money on education in fields that won't put a return on their investment. 

Being a manager or CEO seems to be the way to go, in the USA:
http://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2011/09/land-of-the-free-home-of-the-workaholics.html

It starts at the top.  Let's see some real change and real motivation.  I'd love to go into biology or chemistry, but there is not much in the way of "demand" for workers here.  And noting unemployment levels in other STEM fields, including:

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9133529/U.S._H_1B_workers_outnumber_unemployed_techies

Again, $10/hr is "manna from heaven", or whatever the phrase is, for people in countries used to 50 cents per hour.  $10/hr is absolutely nothing in the US, these days.

And if it really is a serious issue, with congress doing nothing but obstructing, well - we can always do this:
http://www.infowars.com/pdd-51-new-executive-order-give-obama-dictator-power/

Not that what I am saying is necessarily the best solution, but at least I'm putting out something to start out with, or at least to observe.
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hypnotoad72
Real democracy = living wages.
06:21 PM on 10/22/2011
"amnesty" as in debt-forgiveness.

If we desperately need these positions and to get more Americans to get involved, then what needs to be done is far more than what is currently going on.

And the cynic in me still says "it's all about wage devaluation", but time will certainly prove that belief incorrect, if it is an incorrect belief.
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hrc04
put on your pants and go home.
12:26 PM on 10/22/2011
What a nerd. And I mean that admirably.