MARCH 2013 ISSUE NO. 9
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
MARCH IS WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH
DIRECTOR’S CORNER Weathering change, Page 2 NEW DEFENSE SECRETARY Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel talks sequester, Page 3 SPOTLIGHT NSRDEC’s Dr. Obusek focuses on Soldiers, Page 6-7 FUTURE SOLDIERS WILL HAVE FLEXIBLE ELECTRONICS Pages 8-9 SCHEMATICS FOR FUTURE WEAPONS IN 3D Pages 10-11 NATICK TUBE FOODS KEEP U-2 PILOTS FLYING HIGH Pages 12-13 ECBC DEVELOPS BETTER SENSORS Page 14 ARMY SAMPLES OCEAN FLOOR FOR PROJECT Page 15 CERDEC REACHES OUT TO YOUNG STUDENTS Pages 16-17 RDECOM DIRECTOR ENVISIONS FULLY UNITED LAB NETWORK Page 18 SENIOR AVIATION ENGINEER DEVELOPING NEXT GENERATION Page 20
Cindy Learn (left), a system engineer with the U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, adjusts the components of the M45 protective mask to ensure a proper fit. (U.S. Army photo by Tom Faulkner)
Engineer ensures masks fit By Dan Lafontaine RDECOM Public Affairs
ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Md. — An ill-fitting chemical-biological protective mask could expose Soldiers to potentially lethal hazards during combat. For Soldiers who cannot find a proper fit with a standard-issue mask, Cindy Learn and her colleagues are working to avoid any gaps in protection. Learn, a system engineer with the U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command, says her goal is to ensure users are safe from chemical, biological and radioactive particulate threats. ‘NO WARFIGHTER LEFT BEHIND’ “I like to call it ‘No Warfighter left behind.’ We make sure every Warfighter has a mask to use when they go to theater,” said Learn, who
works on the mask program for RDECOM’s Edgewood Chemical Biological Center, supporting the Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical and Biological Defense. “They are protected so they can protect us.” The Hard-to-Fit Program accommodates members of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps, as well as Department of Defense civilians who are required to wear masks for their jobs. “A Warfighter cannot be deployed without a mask that fits properly and securely to the face,” said Learn, who has been an Army civilian for six years. “There are infinite different shapes and sizes of faces, and having a protective mask that fits well is essential to any deployable mission. “Not being able to get your hands on the right fitting mask could be a career ender for some.”
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