| Maryland Inducts Satellite Pioneers into Innovation Hall of Fame |
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 14, 2005 CONTACT: Missy Corley (301) 405-6501 mcorley@umd.edu COLLEGE PARK , Md. — WHAT Miller and Plummer worked on the top-secret Corona Project (1959 to 1972). The Corona Project created the field of satellite surveillance, providing vital photographic information that permitted the United States to gauge the nuclear threat posed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War and pursue more effective foreign policies. As part of the project, Miller and Plummer lead the first successful recovery of a man-made object from earth orbit. Together with others involved in the Corona project, Miller and Plummer helped lay the groundwork for the many earthward looking satellites that now provide a vast array of scientific and security information about the Earth, its processes and its people. Miller and Plummer were among the five engineering leaders of the Corona Project who received this year's Charles Stark Draper Prize from the National Academy of Engineering. One of the world's preeminent awards for engineering achievement, the Draper Prize cited the group "for the design, development, and operation of Corona , the first space-based Earth observation system." WHO WHEN
Kim Building , University of Maryland, College Park, Md. The Kim Building is located at the intersection of Paint Branch and Stadium Drives. Media interested in attending can call the above contact for directions or parking information. ####
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