April 17, 2003
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 17, 2003
IVC Technology Director Appeals to Congress for More Investment
in Local Research and Development
Dr. Larry DeShazer, Director of the State Center of Applied
Competitive Technology (CACT) at Irvine Valley College, traveled to
Washington, D.C. in April to make a case in Congress for increased
federal spending and balanced investment in science and engineering
research and development.
DeShazer and more than 200 scientists, engineers and technology
leaders who represent the optics industry in Southern California
made the visit to Capitol Hill as part of the Eighth Annual
Congressional Visits Day, April 2-3. The event is sponsored each
year by the Science-Engineering-Technology (SET) Work Group.
In his meetings with congressional leaders, DeShazer stressed the
importance of the nations broad portfolio of investments in
science,
engineering and technology as a means to promote national
security, prosperity and innovation. Moreover, he was able to
conveyfrom a constituents perspectivethe impact photonics
research has on health and homeland security, and its significance
in sustaining the growth of both local and national economies.
Photonics is a new discipline that replaces conventional
electronics by using light to perform functions that once were the
domain of electrons. Photonics offers faster, smaller, cheaper
technologies to address critical problems in our increasingly
impacted global society. Existing electronics technology is reaching
its limit, said DeShazer.
He added: We have been living off of fundamental research done
up to the 1980s and now its end is in sight. More fundamental
research must be undertaken to keep pace with the demands on
technology, to provide the jobs and health for our society.
More than 50 percent of all industrial innovation and growth in
the United States since World War II can be attributed to advances
pioneered through science, engineering and technology research. This
publicly-funded R&D is a vital foundation for much of todays
scientific and technological progress. Some examples of scientific
and technological advances that can be traced back to
federally-funded research include global environmental monitoring,
lasers and the Internet.
In his discussions with Congress, DeShazer further emphasized
that science, engineering and technology will play an increasingly
important role in the fight against terrorism. To ensure homeland
security, he said, it is important that we take advantage of the
expertise in which the U.S. leads the world.
According to DeShazer and other scientists, photonics is the best
solution to probe chemical and biological agents without risking
exposure to harmful materials, and research on explosives-sniffing
lasers should continue. Additionally, biomedical optics will make a
significant impact on health care. For example, instead of removing
tissue for a biopsy, doctors can instead probe diseased tissues
using photonics.
I was pleased to have the opportunity to participate in this
event, continued DeShazer. I feel strongly that making our voices
heard to our elected representatives in Washington is critical to
ensure ongoing support of federal R&D programs. It is crucial to the
continued leadership of the nation that we commit increased
resources to these efforts.
Highlights of the two-day event included remarks by Mike Holland
of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and by
staff members from Capitol Hill. A reception was held at the Rayburn
House Office Building honoring Reps. James Walsh (R-NY) and Alan
Mollohan (D-WV) with the George E. Brown Jr.
Science-Engineering-Technology Leadership Award. Participants in the
Congressional Visits Day met with their senators and representatives
on April 3.
The SET Work Group is an information network comprised of
professional, scientific, and engineering societies, higher
education associations, individual institutions of higher learning,
and trade associations.
The Center for Applied Competitive Technology at Irvine Valley
College is a non-profit outreach program of the California Community
College system, dedicated to enhancing the strength and
competitiveness of Californias manufacturing companies by providing
technical and business assistance. For more information, contact Dr.
DeShazer at (949) 451-5203 or go to www.irvinecact.com.
Additional information on the 2003 Congressional Visits Day can
be found on the Web at www.agiweb.org/cvd/.
Dr. Larry G. DeShazer is Director of CACT at Irvine Valley
College. He has thirty years of experience in business
administration, industrial management, scientific research and
product development. He was director of industrial programs, Laser
Systems Division, McDonnell Douglas Aerospace in St. Louis; head of
Laser Optical Materials, Hughes Research Laboratories, Malibu; and
director of Solid State Laser Group, Spectra Technology Inc., a
subsidiary of Spectra Physics. He was also president of several
laser medical products manufacturers. DeShazer has served as Liaison
Scientist for the U.S. Office of Naval Research in London, and was a
tenured professor at the University of Southern California in the
departments of physics and electrical engineering. At USC, he
founded the Center for Laser Studies, now in its 27th year of
operation, and he was a teacher and research professor of laser
physics and quantum electronics for 13 years. DeShazer received a
Ph.D. in physics at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. He is
Fellow of the Optical Society of America and the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics
Engineers. He is cited by the society for contributions to
fundamental research in laser spectroscopy of rare-earth and
transition-metal solids and the development of lasers using these
materials.