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Lynden U. Kibler graduated
in 1950 from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy and was
commissioned ensign with the U.S. Coast Guard. He was
assigned to a weather ship in the North Atlantic and
Gulf of Mexico. During his commission with the USCG he
also served as a captain of a cutter assisting ship and
as a commanding officer at the Coast Guard station on
the island of Iwo Jima during the Korean War.
In 1954 he
was awarded a graduate teaching assistantship at MIT
where in 1956 he received a Master of Science in
Electronics Engineering. Right after receiving his
master's, he joined the Bell Telephone Labs where he
worked until 1978. While at Bell Labs Dr. Kibler was
awarded 19 patents for his work in laser construction,
dual gate transistor modulator with zero harmonics up to
a 4th order, low noise antenna, and optical system "S"
shaped lenses. In 1968 supported by a Bell Labs
scholarship he received his PhD in Electro-Physics from
Polytechnic University.
In 1969 Dr.
Kibler founded the first Conservation (Environmental)
Commission of New Jersey and served as its chairman for
23 years. Dr. Kibler served on the Board of
Trustees of The College of New Jersey from 1979 until
1997. Since 1992 he has also served on the Board of
Directors of the National Alliance for Excellence, a
private scholarship foundation. |