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ARL in January 2013, Perconti served for 12 years as director of the Science and Technolo- gy Division of the U.S. Army Communications- Electronics Research, Development and Engi- neering Center’s Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate.


He holds a doctorate in electrical and computer engineering from George Washington Universi- ty, an M.S. in electrical and computer engineer- ing from Johns Hopkins University and a B.S. in electrical and computer engineering from George Mason University. Perconti is a fellow of the Military Sensing Symposium and a member of the Army Acquisition Corps. He has published extensively on many aspects of military sensing as well as countermine and counter-improvised explosive device technology, has authored and co-authored more than 50 publications includ- ing three book chapters, and holds two patents. Perconti was selected for the Senior Executive Service in January 2013. (U.S. Army photo by Jhi Scott, ARL Public Affairs)


OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE ARMY FOR ACQUISITION, LOGISTICS AND TECHNOLOGY


3: ASA(ALT) WELCOMES NEW SERGEANT MAJOR Sgt. Maj. Michael S. Clemens has been named the chief enlisted adviser to the assistant secretary of the Army for acquisition, logistics and technology (ASA(ALT)), replacing Sgt. Maj. Rory L. Malloy, who retired in May.


Clemens most recently served as senior enlisted leader for the Combined Security Transition Command – Afghanistan, support- ing Operation Freedom’s Sentinel. Before that assignment, he served as command sergeant major (CSM) of the U.S. Army Armor School and the 316th Cavalry Brigade, both at Fort Benning, Georgia.


Clemens entered the Army in September 1989 and has participated in operations Des- ert Shield, Desert Storm, Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. He is a graduate of every level of training within the Noncommissioned Officer Education System, culminating in his graduation from the U.S. Sergeants Major Academy, the CSM Course at Fort Leav- enworth, Kansas, and the CSM Executive Education Course. Clemens’ military education includes the Airborne, Air Assault, Jumpmaster and Pathfinder schools. He is a graduate of the Scout and Cavalry Leaders courses, the Joint Firepower Course, the Expeditionary Warfare School Distance Education Program and the CSM/SGM Force Management Course.


Clemens is a recipient of the Draper Armor Leadership award, a member of the Ser- geant Audie Murphy Club, and a distinguished member of the 15th Cavalry Regiment and the 505th and 508th Parachute Infantry Regi- ments. He has been inducted into the Order of Saint George and the Order of Saint Maurice.


4: NEW S&T DIRECTOR FOR DASA(R&T) The deputy assistant secretary of the Army for research and technology welcomed Dr. Arthur J. Goff III as the new director of international science and technology pro- grams. Goff arrives from the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases, where he was a principal investigator in the Virology Division, served on the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee and was an adviser to the World Health Organization Advi- sory Committee on Variola Virus Research.


PEO FOR AMMUNITION


5: CHANGE OF LEADERSHIP AT PM CAS Col. Willie Coleman, left, relinquished the responsibility of the Project Manager for Com- bat Ammunition Systems (PM CAS) within the Program Executive Office (PEO) for Ammu- nition to Col. Will McDonough during a change of management ceremony July 20 at Picatinny Arsenal, New Jersey. PEO James Shields, center, officiated the ceremony.


“Willie has been overseeing the Army’s artillery munitions and mortar systems since joining the PEO Ammo family in 2015,” Shields said. “During his tenure at PM CAS, he has been instrumental in developing strategies and exe- cuting programs to counter, and stay ahead of,


ASC.ARMY.MIL


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WORKFORCE


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