May 2012 to 2000 Targeting Analyst/Senior Intelligence AnalystStrategic Solutions Unlimited Fort Bragg, NC Jun 2011 to May 2012 Fast Track Program Lead SIGINT Instructor, JSOC Certified IC REACH InstructorSIGINT Terminal Guidance Phoenix, AZ Dec 2010 to Jun 2011 Aerial Precision Geolocation Operator/InstructorSIGINT Fort Bragg, NC May 2010 to Dec 2010 AnalystSTG NCOIC, SIGINT Fort Hood, TX May 2005 to Apr 2010 AnalystSIGINT Fort Hood, TX Oct 2002 to May 2005 Analyst
Education:
Mercyhurst University 2014 MS in Applied IntelligenceMethodist University 2014 B.S. in Applied Forensic Science and Cyber Crime
Dr. Baldwin graduated from the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine in 2004. She works in Berkeley, CA and specializes in Psychiatry. Dr. Baldwin is affiliated with Alta Bates Summit Medical Center Herrick Campus.
pickup lane honked as they passed. Protesters seemed united by a sense of urgency. Im disgusted, a woman named Emily Baldwin said, of the detentions. She had blue hair and a pink scarf, and was balancing a piece of poster board against a low gate, writing a sign to wave among the crowd.
Asteroid expert Emily Baldwin told Skymania news that the space ball might put on a show for astronomers. "We are certain that it will miss us, but if it did enter the atmosphere, an asteroid this size would mostly burn up in a brilliant fireball, possibly scattering a few meteorites," she said.
Skymania quoted Emily Baldwin, of the magazine Astronomy Now, as saying, We are certain that it will miss us, but if it did enter the atmosphere, an asteroid this size would mostly burn up in a brilliant fireball, possibly scattering a few meteorites.
"We are certain that it will miss us, but if it did enter the atmosphere, an asteroid this size would mostly burn up in a brilliant fireball, possibly scattering a few meteorites," said Astronomy Now magazine's Dr. Emily Baldwin in an interview with Skymania news.
Date: Jun 25, 2011
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Asteroid on Monday to Miss Earth but May Collide With Satellite: NASA
According to Skymania news, Dr. Emily Baldwin, a U.K. asteroid expert, shared if it did enter the atmosphere, an asteroid this size would mostly burn up in a brilliant fireball, possibly scattering a few meteorites.