Judith Neuffer

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Judith Ann Neuffer
LT Judith Neuffer pre-flight check 1974.jpg
Nickname(s)Judy
Born13 June 1948
Wooster, Ohio
AllegianceAmerican
Service/branchUnited States Navy
Years of service1973-1998
RankCaptain
AwardsNaval Awards include 4 Naval Meritorious Service Medals and the Navy Commendation Medal. NASA Medals include the Exceptional Service Medal, Exceptional Achievement Medal, the Outstanding Leadership Medal, and the NASA Outstanding Management Award.
Other workSenior Technical Manager, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

Judith Neuffer "Judy" Bruner (born Judith Ann Neuffer) is an American naval aviator and NASA manager. She was the first woman to serve as a P-3 pilot in the United States Navy.[1] Part of the first group of eight women receiving orders for Navy Flight Training in 1973, she was the first of the six who went on to earn their pilot's wings. She was the first female Navy pilot to fly through a hurricane. She also attained the rank of Navy Captain. She currently serves as a senior manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, where she has led numerous large programs.

Early life and education[]

Judith Neuffer was born on June 13, 1948 in Wooster, Ohio. Influenced in part by her father, a WWII P-38 pilot and post-war airport manager, she began accompanying her father to work during the summer at age 11. She began flight lessons at the age of 15 in a Piper Cub airplane. She successfully soloed in the Cub at age 16. In 1966, Bruner enrolled at Ohio State University, where she obtained a bachelor's degree in computer science. She enlisted at the end of her junior year and was commissioned following her graduation in 1970.

Military career[]

The United States Navy first offered official flight training to females in 1973. Orders were cut for 8 female pilots; six went on to earn their wings, Bruner included. She became the first woman to solo in a US Navy aircraft, a T-34, on May 10, 1973.[2] Though female flight training was at the time limited to the use of non-combat aircraft, Bruner was assigned to the P-3 aircraft — commonly used for submarine patrol and weather surveillance — at her request. During her Navy flying career, Bruner logged several thousands of hours piloting the P-3, and became the first female P-3 Aircraft Commander and the first woman to pilot an aircraft through the eye of a hurricane.

Bruner served a total of 28 years in the United States Navy. During her 10 years on active duty, she conducted flying assignments and a tour at The US Pentagon. For the remainder of her career, she held three Commanding Officer positions and also served as the Director of the Navy's Science and Technology Reserve Program. She received numerous Navy awards including four Meritorious Service Medals and the Navy Commendation Medal. Bruner retired from the United States Navy in 1998 having attained the rank of captain.

Judith Bruner in 2011

Aerospace career[]

Bruner began her career with NASA in 1981, working first as a contractor for UNISYS Corporation as a Senior Systems Analyst on the Hubble Space Telescope mission. Bruner formally joined NASA in 1989 working two years as the ground system Implementation Manager on the Earth Observing System satellite missions. Bruner was then selected to head the Spacecraft Control Center Branch. In this capacity, Bruner was assigned the responsibility for the development and implementation of all satellite control centers for missions at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) in Greenbelt, Maryland. Concurrently, Bruner also earned her M.S. Degree from The George Washington University School of Engineering and Applied Sciences in 1995.

In 1997, Bruner was assigned to Goddard Space Flight Center's Directors Staff serving in various capacities including Acting Director of NASA's IV&V facility in West Virginia and Program Manager for the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission. When the Space Shuttle Columbia accident occurred in February 2003, Bruner served as the GSFC point of contact for the investigation and the focal point for GSFC's support of NASA's subsequent Return to Flight. Currently, Bruner is the Director of the Safety and Mission Assurance Directorate at Goddard Space Flight Center. Bruner has received numerous technical and management awards during her tenure at NASA. To date, Bruner has received the Exceptional Service Medal, the Exceptional Achievement Medal, the Outstanding Leadership Medal, and the Outstanding Management Award to name just a few.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "——". Flying Magazine: 37. April 1973.
  2. ^ Women in the US Navy: "Ladies Wear The Blue" 1974 US Navy

Sources[]

External links[]

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