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The Administrator and Deputy Administrator of NASA are the highest-ranked officials of Shana Dale).[2]
The first Administrator of NASA was Dr. T. Keith Glennan; during his term he brought together the disparate projects in space development research in the US.[3] Daniel Goldin held the post for the longest term (nearly 10 years), and is best known for pioneering the "faster, better, cheaper" approach to space programs.[4] The only person to hold the post twice is James C. Fletcher, who returned to NASA following the Challenger disaster.[5]
The longest-running (acting) Deputy Administrator was John R. Dailey, who held the post following his retirement from the United States Marine Corps.[6] The longest-running full Deputy Administrator was Hugh Latimer Dryden, who was the first Deputy Administrator.[7] William R. Graham has held the post of Deputy Administrator twice, and was the acting Administrator in between,[8] as did Frederick D. Gregory.[9] Dr. Daniel Mulville served as the acting Deputy Administrator twice, and was acting Administrator in between.[10]
The current Administrator of NASA is Charles Bolden, and Lori Garver is the Deputy Administrator. Their nomination was announced on May 24, 2009 by President Barack Obama,[11] they were formally appointed upon successful confirmation by the United States Senate on July 15, 2009[12][13][14] and they started their positions on July 17, 2009.[15]
University of Utah, Google Books, Nasa, California Institute of Technology, Mars
Nasa, California Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Physics, Rand Corporation
United States Air Force, Washington, D.C., Nasa, Test pilot, United States Air Force Academy
United States, Administrator of NASA, Daniel Goldin, Sean O'Keefe, United States Senate
Goddard Space Flight Center, Barack Obama, Nasa, Michael D. Griffin, United States
Apollo program, International Space Station, Soviet Union, Mars, Space Shuttle
Texas A&M University, Stevens Institute of Technology, James C. Fletcher, Deputy Administrator of NASA
Authority control, Ronald Reagan, Nasa, University of Florida, St. Petersburg, Florida
Apollo program, Soviet Union, Russia, International Space Station, Spaceflight