
John Gibbons
John H. Gibbons was the 2000-01 president of Sigma Xi. A senior fellow
at the National Academy of Engineering, John Gibbons is a former
Assistant to the President for Science and Technology and Director of
the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, charged with
providing access to authoritative information and expert scientific,
engineering and technological advice for the President, federal
officials and Congress, and with coordinating science and technological
policy throughout the federal government. Gibbons co-chaired the
President's Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) and
managed the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC). He received
his bachelor's degree in mathematics and chemistry from Randolph-Macon
College and his Ph.D. in physics from Duke University. He then spent the
next 15 years@Oak Ridge National Laboratory and in the late '60s
pioneered studies on how to use technology to conserve energy and
minimize the environmental impacts of energy production and
conservation. In 1973 he was appointed the first director of the federal
Office of Energy Conservation and two years later returned to Tennessee
to direct the University of Tennessee Energy, Environment and Resources
Center. In 1979 he returned to Washington to direct the Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment until his Presidential appointment on
February 2, 1993. His honors include the Federation of American
Scientists Public Service Award, the AAAS Philip Hauge Abelson Prize,
the Leo Szilard Award for Physics in the Public Interest from the
American Physical Society, and medals from the German and French
governments for fostering scientific cooperation. Gibbons is a Fellow of
the American Physical Society and of AAAS, a member of the National
Academy of Engineering and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
He was elected to Sigma Xi in 1953 by the Duke University Chapter.