Roy Estess

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Roy_Estess an entity of type: Thing

Roy S. Estess was the fourth director of the Stennis Space Center (SSC), having held a variety of managerial positions at the center that prepared him to lead the facility during the dynamic years of the 1990s. Estess, a native Mississippian and a graduate of Mississippi State University, came to the center as a Apollo Program Engine quality control engineer in 1966 and worked his way up through the ranks to the Director of the Stennis Space Center. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Roy Estess
rdf:langString Roy S. Estess
rdf:langString Roy S. Estess
xsd:date 2010-06-25
xsd:date 1939-01-05
xsd:integer 27888855
xsd:integer 1022301840
xsd:date 1939-01-05
rdf:langString Estess greets the Expedition 3 and STS-108 crews during return ceremonies.
xsd:date 2010-06-25
rdf:langString Test engineer, Director of Stennis Space Center, Acting Center Director of Johnson Space Center
rdf:langString Roy S. Estess was the fourth director of the Stennis Space Center (SSC), having held a variety of managerial positions at the center that prepared him to lead the facility during the dynamic years of the 1990s. Estess, a native Mississippian and a graduate of Mississippi State University, came to the center as a Apollo Program Engine quality control engineer in 1966 and worked his way up through the ranks to the Director of the Stennis Space Center. During his early years in key positions at the facility and while serving on temporary duty at NASA Headquarters, Estess came to be known as a "straightshooter." Many describe him as a no-nonsense manager who has the ability of cutting through the chaff to get to the heart of a problem or situation. His first assignment at SSC, known then as the Mississippi Test Facility, was as a test engineer working on the Saturn V S-II second stage test program, part of the Apollo Project. When the facility's manager, Jackson Balch, began diversifying the installation in the early 1970s, he assigned Estess to serve as one of his marketers. Balch tasked Estess with searching for new and compatible federal and state agencies to share in the vast facilities and diverse programs starting up at the center. Estess was then named head of the Applications Engineering Office that related to the new agencies and the public sector. He later served as deputy of the Earth Resources Laboratory (ERL). His organizational and management skills were further developed during his tenure as director of the Regional Applications Program (RAP). The RAP was an innovative approach to assist the 17 Sun Belt states in the application of remote sensing technology to resource planning and management. Estess was selected as the center's deputy director in 1980 when the facility was known as the National Space Technologies Laboratories (NSTL). As deputy director, from 1980–1989, Estess was asked to handle several significant tasks that led to the further development of the center. He served for three years as the Agency's Equal Opportunity officer, interim director of the ERL, and completed the Advanced Management Program at Harvard School of Business. In 1989, he was named Center Director of Stennis and served in that role until 2002. He also served as (acting) Center Director of Johnson Space Center.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5378
xsd:gYear 1939
xsd:gYear 2010

data from the linked data cloud