Especially, "How Things Fly" and Cosmic Voyage. June 3, 

 1996 through August 9, 1996. 



Victor Enriquez, Bachelors Candidate, College of Aeronautics. 

 Restoration. Working on restoring and preserving historic 

 aircraft. Restoration tasks may include inspection, 

 documentation, disassembly, repair, cleaning, corrosion 

 treatment reassembly and installation of aviation and/or 

 space flight artifacts. Artifact support may include moving, 

 installing, and inspecting objects in the Museum's collec- 

 tions. June 3, 1996 through August 9, 1996. 



Pamela Feltus, Masters Candidate, George Washington 

 University. Art and Culture. Assisting Curator with 

 research on military history fot the Star Wars book; 

 assisting with collections management tasks such as 

 cataloging and condition reporting; supporting ac- 

 tivities for a photo shoot of artifacts. Aptil 15, 1996 

 through October 31, 1996. 



Kelli Holsendolph, Bachelors Candidate, Florida A&M 

 University. Theater. Organizing volunteers for the Enola 

 Gay exhibit. Contacting volunteers via telephone and 

 scheduling them to work various shifts and tracking the 

 number of hours they volunteer. June 3, 1996 through 

 August 9, 1996. 



Cassandra Hughes, University of California at Riverside. 

 Helping with production of the Star Wars exhibit, working 

 with AutoCAD. July 15, 1996 through August 15, 1996. 



Thomas Koch, Bachelors Candidate, Parks College of St. 

 Louis. Restoration. Working on restoring and preserving 

 historic aircraft. Restoration tasks may include inspection 

 documentation, disassembly, repair, cleaning, corrosion 

 treatment, reassembly and installation of aviation and/or 

 space flight artifacts. Artifact support may include moving, 

 installing and inspecting objects in the Museum's collec- 

 tions. June 3, 1996 through August 9, 1996. 



Stephanie Leitner, Bachelors Candidate, George Washington 

 University. Astrophysics. Developing the laboratory for 

 Astrophysics Web Site and On-Line Astronomy Adventure 

 (including html programming, graphic creation and 

 development of innovative educational approaches). Assist- 

 ing in the Lab's public outreach, space science education ef- 

 forts, and exhibit/gallery development. June 3, 1996 

 through August 9, 1996. 



Mary-Katherine McGovern, Bachelors Candidate, Yale 

 University. Astrophysics. Assisting the Laboratory for 

 Astrophysics in image processing and related data analysis. 

 Reducing extragalactic data and the subsequent analysis of 

 this data. June 3, 1 996 through August 9, 1996. 



Melissa J. Mercer, Masters Candidate, George Washington 

 University. Education Services Department. Developing 

 public programming to accompany National Air and Space 

 Museum's first ever hands-on gallery "How Things Fly." 

 January 14, 1996 through May 31, 1996. 



Angela Miller, Bachelors Candidate, New Mexico Tech. 

 Education/Library. Managing the "How Things Fly" 

 Resource Center located in the exhibit gallery. Refine proce- 



dures for visitor use of the Center monitor visitor preferen- 

 ces and needs for materials. June 3, 1996 August 9, 1996. 



Carmenmaria A. Mortillaro, Masters Candidate, The George 

 Washington University. Exhibits. Observing and hands-on 

 experience in design, graphic design, & production of the 

 "Space Race" exhibit scheduled to open at the National Air 

 & Space Museum in April 1997. September 24, 1996 

 through December 31, 1996. 



Sophie M. Robov, Masters Candidate, Loretto College. 



Archives. Establishing physical and intellectual control of 

 archival collections. Writing descriptions, arranging and 

 rehousing collections and performing preservation tasks to 

 make archival collections accessible for research use. June 3, 

 1996 through August 9, 1996. 



Gabriel Roux, Bachelors Candidate, Ecole des Techniques 

 Aero et de Const. Auto. Restoration. Working on restora- 

 tion and preserving historic aircraft. Restoration tasks may 

 include inspection, documentation, disassembly, tepait, 

 cleaning, corrosion treatment, reassembly and installation 

 of aviation and/or space flight artifacts. June 3, 1996 

 through August 9, 1996. 



Tracey E. Spooner, Bachelors Candidate, George Mason 

 University. Education. Helping to set up and run the Air 

 and Space intern program for the summer of 1997. May 20, 

 1996 through August 15, 1996. 



Charles Tahan, Bachelors Candidate, College of William & 

 Mary. Astrophysics. Working on the Heterodyne Spectros- 

 copy Program; concentrating on instrument development 

 and scientific data analysis. Participating in both areas, 

 having a unique opportunity to join a scientific program 

 that uses state of the art instruments. June 3, 1996 through 

 August 9, 1996. 



Eric R. Thomson, Bachelors Candidate, University of Idaho. 

 Restoration. Working on restoration and preserving his- 

 totic aircraft. Restoration tasks may include inspection, 

 documentation, disassembly, repair, cleaning, corrosion 

 treatment, reassembly and installation of aviation and/ot 

 space flight artifacts. June 3, 1996 through August 9, 1996. 



Melody Weller, Champlain College. Education. Working on 

 the Internet to develop materials that can be used for 

 science education. Reviewing existing Internet resources 

 for ideas and models and keeping staff informed about 

 them; creating and testing various formats for the Web site 

 with staff. May 22, 1996 through August 16, 1996. 



National Museum of African Art 



D. Denenge Akpem, Bachelors Candidate, Smith College. As- 

 sisting in the curatorial process on the exhibition "A King 

 and His Cloth: Asantehene Agyeman Prempeh I" and a 

 corresponding theater production. September 3, 1996 

 through December 20, 1996. 



Christina M. Bennett, Bachelors Candidate, Spelman College. 

 Conservation. Repairing cracks of a concrete sculpture so 

 that a mold can be made for a reproduction. The cracks are 



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