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People

Wil Lepkowski
Affliated Scholar, Consortium for Science,
Policy & Outcomes
Wil Lepkowski has a bachelors degree in chemistry
from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, a masters degree in
biochemistry from Ohio State University and was a Fellow in the Advanced
Science Writing Program at the Columbia University Graduate School of
Journalism. He began his journalism career with the Providence (RI)
Journal-Bulletin in the early 1960s, moving on to Johns Hopkins
University as medical science writer, then to the Washington Bureau of
the Newhouse Newspapers for another two, and further on to
Chemical &
Engineering News until 1969 when he joined the
Business Week
staff as its Washington science correspondent.
He left
Business Week to freelance and consult
in 1975 and in 1977 returned to C&EN where he remained until 1999. Since
then he has written for Nature;
for Washington Fax,
the
on-line science news service; Science and Government Report; Science,
Research/Technology Management, and Issues in Science and Technology.
He was a contributor to the first Encyclopedia of Science,
Technology, and Ethics. Past work involved articles for the
Washington Post,
Science Forum, Hastings Review, Technology
Review,
The
Progressive,
New Republic, National
Review, and the Boston Globe.
During his career at C&EN, he
covered the Bhopal disaster, chemical safety issues, chemical warfare,
international science and technology policy issues involving the
European Community, Japan, Poland, the former Soviet Union, Latin
America, and the full spectrum of domestic s&t issues including space,
energy, biomedical research, technological innovation and
competitiveness, environment, the National Science Foundation, the White
House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Congress. Throughout,
his aim has been to add social, ethical, and economic perspective to
science and technology in its pervasive and intricate interactions with
society.
In 2000 he initiated and co-chaired a Gordon
Research Conference on science and technology policy. In 2001 he was
named Journalist-in-Residence at Columbia University’s Center for
Science, Policy, and Outcomes and wrote a column entitled Science and
Policy Perspectives for the Center’s website. In 2005 he was elected as
Fellow in the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In
addition, he has taught writing at the graduate level at Virginia
Institute of Technology. He continues to write, focusing on essays
involving science, technology, and society, and on independent
scholarship such as a biography of the noted Bell Labs research chief
and policy titan, William O. Baker.
He is
married to the former Helene Hollander and from that marriage has one
child, Katherine. They reside in Reston, VA. He also has three
children—David, Rebecca, and Thomas--from a previous marriage. |