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Ex-NCAR chief an early climate-change scholar
By Virginia Culver The Denver Post Article Last Updated: 11/12/2007 11:14:41 PM MST The studious John Firor had his lighthearted side. He made up bedtime stories about a cowboy named Henry Hardbottom and built sailboats. (Courtesy of the Firor family)John Firor, former head of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder and an early scholar studying the effects of humans on climate, died Nov. 5 in Pullman, Wash. Firor, who suffered from Alzheimer's, was 80. Firor called attention to the effects of humans on the environment when that was considered almost a "radical idea," said Richard Anthes, president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, a consortium of universities that supports the NCAR. "He was a one of the most thoughtful and broad scientists, and one of the most articulate, I have ever known," said Anthes, of Boulder. Firor's first book was "The Changing Atmosphe A Global Challenge." "He had a wonderful way with words," said his daughter Susan Firor of Moscow, Idaho, and was able in either writing or speaking to explain things in a way nonscientists could understand. The gentle, soft-spoken Firor also had his lighthearted side. He made up a series of bedtime stories for his children, all about the central character, a cowboy named Henry Hardbottom, Susan Firor said. He built sailboats for his children and took up the banjo, a gift from the family. "It was kind of a joke, and he wasn't very good, but he loved bluegrass music and practiced hard," Susan Firor said. He also was a supporter of the Colorado Music Festival. John William Firor Jr. was born in Athens, Ga., on Oct 18, 1927. He started college at the Georgia Institute of Technology, but that was interrupted for service in the Army. Part of the time, he guarded plutonium at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. The experience led him to change his major from engineering to physics. He earned his physics degree at Georgia Tech and his doctorate at the University of Chicago. He married Merle Jenkins in 1950, and they had four children. She died in 1979. Later, he married Judith Jacobsen, an expert on global population. They wrote the book "The Crowded Greenhouse." She died in 2004. John Firor studied terrestrial magnetism at the Carnegie Institute in Washington, D.C., and measured seismic waves at copper mines in Argentina and Bolivia. He also once flew in a glider at the edge of a hailstorm. The glider pilot had quit, and Firor volunteered to do the job. That flight was later chronicled in a PBS program called "Creativity," hosted by Bill Moyers. He came to Colorado in 1968 to take a job at the High Altitude Observatory in Boulder, part of the NCAR, and then became executive director of the NCAR. In addition to his daughter, he is survived by another daughter, Kay Firor, of Cove, Ore.; two sons, Daniel Firor of Seattle and Jim Firor of Hotchkiss; three grandchildren; his sister, Anne Scott, of Chapel Hill, N.C.; and one brother, Hugh Firor, of Cincinnati. |
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