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as executive director of the Manufacturing Forum at the National Academy of Engi- 

 neering and the National Academy of Sciences. A chemical engineer, he served as 

 senior specialist in science and technology policy at the Congressional Research 

 Service. He has taught at Washington University and Massachusetts Institute of 

 Technology and worked at the Office of Technology Assessment and Uniroyal. 



MICHAEL G.H. McGEARY is a political scientist who directed the staff work 

 for 10 major reports by various units of the National Academy of Sciences (Institute 

 of Medicine, Commission on Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education, Office of 

 Scientific and Engineering Personnel, and Committee on Science, Engineering, and 

 Public Policy) between 1981 and 1995. He did his graduate work at Massachusetts 

 Institute of Technology and, prior to coming to the National Academy of Sciences, 

 he worked at the National Academy of Public Administration and taught at Wellesley 

 College. Currently he is a consultant and is coauthoring a book on U.S. science and 

 technology policy. 



JULIE M. ESANU is a research assistant with the Commission on Physical 

 Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications. She works primarily on scientific and 

 technical data information issues. She received her bachelor's degree in political 

 science from the George Washington University in 1989. ' ' 



DANIELLE DEHMLER is a project assistant to this study. She received her 

 bachelor's degree in legal studies from the State University of New York at Buffalo in 

 1993. 



