The following list does not include promotions of members of the Uniformed Services, nominations to the Service Academies, or nominations of Foreign Service officers.
Submitted January 20
James Addison Baker III,
of Texas, to be Secretary of State.
John Goodwin Tower,
of Texas, to be Secretary of Defense.
Manuel Lujan, Jr.,
of New Mexico, to be Secretary of the Interior.
Clayton Yeutter,
of Nebraska, to be Secretary of Agriculture.
Robert Adam Mosbacher,
of Texas, to be Secretary of Commerce.
Elizabeth Hanford Dole,
of Kansas, to be Secretary of Labor.
Louis W. Sullivan,
of Georgia, to be Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Jack Kemp,
of New York, to be Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Samuel Knox Skinner,
of Illinois, to be Secretary of Transportation.
Adm. James D. Watkins, USN, Ret.,
of California, to be Secretary of Energy.
Edward J. Derwinski,
of Illinois, to be Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
Edward J. Derwinski,
of Illinois, to be Administrator of Veterans Affairs.
Richard G. Darman,
of Virginia, to be Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Carla Anderson Hills,
of California, to be U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
William J. Bennett,
of North Carolina, to be Director of National Drug Control Policy.
Michael J. Boskin,
of California, to be a member of the Council of Economic Advisers.
Thomas R. Pickering,
of New Jersey, to be the Representative of the United States of America to the United Nations with the rank and status of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, and the Representative of the United States of America in the Security Council of the United Nations.
William Kane Reilly,
of Virginia, to be Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency.
Submitted February 1
Edith E. Holiday,
of Georgia, to be General Counsel for the Department of the Treasury, vice Mark Sullivan III, resigned.
William M. Diefenderfer III,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget, vice John F. Cogan, resigned.
Submitted February 8
Robert Michael Kimmitt,
of Virginia, to be Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, vice Michael Hayden Armacost, resigned.
Margaret DeBardeleben Tutwiler,
of Alabama, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Charles E. Redman, resigned.
Janet Gardner Mullins,
of Kentucky, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice J. Edward Fox, resigned.
Robert B. Zoellick,
of the District of Columbia, to be Counselor of the Department of State, vice Max M. Kampelman, resigned.
Submitted February 21
Richard J. Kerr,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, vice Robert M. Gates, resigned.
Submitted February 28
Ferdinand F. Fernandez,
of California, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, vice Warren J. Ferguson, retired.
Pamela Ann Rymer,
of California, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, vice Anthony M. Kennedy, elevated.
Robert C. Bonner,
of California, to be United States District Judge for the Central District of California, vice Pamela Ann Rymer, upon elevation.
Melinda Harmon,
of Texas, to be United States District Judge for the Southern District of Texas, vice John V. Singleton, Jr., retired.
Vaughn R. Walker,
of California, to be United States District Judge for the Northern District of California, vice Spencer M. Williams, retired.
Submitted March 1
John D. Negroponte,
of New York, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Mexico.
Submitted March 3
Lawrence S. Eagleburger,
of Florida, to be Deputy Secretary of State, vice John C. Whitehead, resigned.
Bruce S. Gelb,
of New York, to be Director of the United States Information Agency, vice Charles Z. Wick, resigned.
Submitted March 6
Donald Phinney Gregg,
of Maryland, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Korea.
Anthony Joseph Principi,
of California, to be Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs (new position).
William Pelham Barr,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Douglas W. Kmiec, resigned.
Submitted March 7
Joseph Verner Reed,
of Connecticut, for the rank of Ambassador during his tenure of service as Chief of Protocol for the White House.
Submitted March 8
David Campbell Mulford,
of Illinois, to be an Under Secretary of the Treasury (new position).
Charles H. Dallara,
of South Carolina, to be a Deputy Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice David Campbell Mulford.
David W. Mullins, Jr.,
of Massachusetts, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice Charles O. Sethness, resigned.
Submitted March 9
Henry E. Catto,
of Texas, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Vernon A. Walters,
of Florida, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Federal Republic of Germany.
Wendell Lewis Willkie II,
of the District of Columbia, to be General Counsel of the Department of Commerce, vice Robert H. Brumley II, resigned.
Submitted March 13
Michael Hayden Armacost,
of Maryland, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Japan.
Eric I. Garfinkel,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice Jan W. Mares, resigned.
Submitted March 14
Richard B. Cheney,
of Wyoming, to be Secretary of Defense.
Donna R. Fitzpatrick,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Energy (Management and Administration), vice Lawrence F. Davenport, resigned.
Submitted March 17
James Roderick Lilley,
of Maryland, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the People's Republic of China.
Richard Thomas McCormack,
of Pennsylvania, to be Under Secretary of State for Economic and Agricultural Affairs, vice W. Allen Wallis, resigned.
Donald J. Atwood,
of Massachusetts, to be Deputy Secretary of Defense, vice William H. Taft IV, resigned.
Submitted April 4
John R. Bolton,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Richard Salisbury Williamson, resigned.
Herman Jay Cohen,
of New York, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Chester A. Crocker, resigned.
Terence A. Todman,
of the Virgin Islands, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Argentina.
Charles Edgar Redman,
of Florida, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Sweden.
Richard Reeves Burt,
of Arizona, for the rank of Ambassador during his tenure of service as head of delegation on nuclear and space talks and chief negotiator on strategic nuclear arms (START).
Robert R. Glauber,
of Massachusetts, to be an Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice George D. Gould, resigned.
Hollis S. McLoughlin,
of New Jersey, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice Charles H. Dallara, resigned.
Kenneth Winston Starr,
of Virginia, to be Solicitor General of the United States, vice Charles Fried, resigned.
Susan Carol Schwab,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Director General of the United States and Foreign Commercial Service, vice Lew W. Cramer, resigned.
Constance Horner,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice Donald M. Newman, resigned.
Mary Sheila Gall,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice Sydney J. Olson, resigned.
Elaine L. Chao,
of California, to be Deputy Secretary of Transportation, vice Mary Ann Weyforth Dawson, resigned.
W. Henson Moore,
of Louisiana, to be Deputy Secretary of Energy, vice Joseph F. Salgado, resigned.
John Chatfield Tuck,
of Virginia, to be Under Secretary of Energy, vice Donna R. Fitzpatrick, resigned.
John Theodore Sanders,
of Illinois, to be Under Secretary of Education, vice Linus D. Wright, resigned.
Frank Quill Nebeker,
of Virginia, to be chief judge of the U.S. Court of Veterans Appeals for the term of 15 years (new position).
William G. Rosenberg,
of Michigan, to be an Assistant Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, vice J. Craig Potter, resigned.
Constance Berry Newman,
of Maryland, to be Director of the Office of Personnel Management, vice Constance Horner, resigned.
Paul D. Coverdell,
of Georgia, to be Director of the Peace Corps, vice Loret M. Ruppe, resigned.
Withdrawn April 4
Lew W. Cramer,
of California, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Director General of the United States and Foreign Commercial Service (new position -- P.L. 100 - 418), which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Submitted April 6
Reginald Bartholomew,
of Virginia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Under Secretary of State for Coordinating Security Assistance Programs, vice Edward J. Derwinski, resigned.
Morris Berthold Abrams,
of New York, to be the Representative of the United States of America to the European Office of the United Nations, with the rank of Ambassador, vice Joseph Carlton Petrone, resigned.
John E. Robson,
of Georgia, to be Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, vice M. Peter McPherson, resigned.
Roger Bolton,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice Edith E. Holiday, resigned.
Jack Callihan Parnell,
of California, to be Deputy Secretary of Agriculture, vice Peter C. Myers, resigned.
Richard Thomas Crowder,
of Minnesota, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for International Affairs and Commodity Programs, vice Daniel G. Amstutz, resigned.
Kay Coles James,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice Stephanie Lee-Miller, resigned.
Phillip D. Brady,
of Virginia, to be General Counsel of the Department of Transportation, vice B. Wayne Vance, resigned.
Susan S. Engeleiter,
of Wisconsin, to be Administrator of the Small Business Administration, vice James Abdnor, resigned.
Submitted April 7
Richard Thomas McCormack,
of Pennsylvania, to be United States Alternate Governor of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development for a term of 5 years, United States Alternate Governor of the Inter-American Development Bank for a term of 5 years, United States Alternate Governor of the African Development Bank for a term of 5 years, United States Alternate Governor of the African Development Fund, and United States Alternate Governor of the Asian Development Bank, vice W. Allen Wallis, resigned.
James O. Mason,
of Georgia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice Robert E. Windom, resigned.
Fred M. Zeder II,
of New York, to be President of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation, vice Craig A. Nalen, resigned.
Submitted April 12
Douglas P. Mulholland,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Morton I. Abramowitz, resigned.
Diane Kay Morales,
of Texas, to be an Assistant Secretary of Energy (Environment, Safety and Health), vice Ernest C. Baynard III, resigned.
John Cameron Monjo,
of Maryland, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Indonesia.
Ronald Frank Lehman II,
of Virginia, to be Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, vice William F. Burns, resigned.
Thomas Jones Collamore,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice Katherine M. Bulow, resigned.
Nancy Mohr Kennedy,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary for Legislation, Department of Education, vice Frances M. Norris, resigned.
Dale Triber Tate,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Jerry D. Blakemore.
Withdrawn April 12
Jerry D. Blakemore,
of Illinois, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice David F. Demarest, resigned, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Submitted April 13
Ivan Selin,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of State for Management, vice Ronald I. Spiers, resigned.
Michael Rucker Darby,
of Texas, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs, vice Robert Ortner, resigned.
Rufus Hawkins Yerxa,
of the District of Columbia, to be a Deputy United States Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador, vice Michael A. Samuels, resigned.
Submitted April 17
Alan Charles Raul,
of New York, to be General Counsel of the Department of Agriculture, vice Christopher Hicks, resigned.
Paul Dundes Wolfowitz,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, vice Fred Charles Ikle, resigned.
Peter F. Secchia,
of Michigan, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Italy.
Submitted April 18
Walter J.P. Curley,
of New York, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to France.
David George Ball,
of Connecticut, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice David M. Walker, resigned.
Richard Thomas Crowder,
of Minnesota, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Commodity Credit Corporation, vice Daniel G. Amstutz, resigned.
Jack Callihan Parnell,
of California, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Commodity Credit Corporation, vice Peter C. Myers, resigned.
Submitted April 19
Roderick Allen DeArment,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Labor, vice Dennis Eugene Whitfield, resigned.
H. Lawrence Garrett III,
of Virginia, to be Secretary of the Navy, vice William Lockhart Ball III, resigned.
Submitted May 1
Morton I. Abramowitz,
of the District of Columbia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Turkey.
Melvyn Levitsky,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics Matters, vice Ann Barbara Wrobleski, resigned.
Kenneth W. Gideon,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice O. Donaldson Chapoton, resigned.
Shirley D. Peterson,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice William S. Rose, Jr., resigned.
William Lucas,
of Michigan, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice William Bradford Reynolds, resigned.
Michael Philip Skarzynski,
of Illinois, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice James P. Moore, Jr., resigned.
Gerald L. Olson,
of Minnesota, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice Marty T. Goedde, resigned.
Alfred A. DelliBovi,
of New York, to be Under Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, vice Carl D. Covitz, resigned.
Galen Joseph Reser,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Edward R. Hamberger, resigned.
Robert Refugio Davila,
of the District of Columbia, to be Assistant Secretary for Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, Department of Education, vice Madeleine C. Will, resigned.
Sidney Linn Williams,
of Virginia, to be a Deputy United States Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador, vice Alan F. Holmer, resigned.
E. Patrick Coady,
of Virginia, to be United States Executive Director of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development for a term of 2 years, vice Robert Brendon Keating, term expired.
John B. Taylor,
of California, to be a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, vice Michael Mussa, resigned.
Submitted May 2
Bernard William Aronson,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Elliott Abrams, resigned.
Carol T. Crawford,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Thomas M. Boyd, resigned.
David Philip Prosperi,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Wendy Monson DeMocker, resigned.
Chic Hecht,
of Nevada, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Commonwealth of the Bahamas.
Thomas Michael Tolliver Niles,
of the District of Columbia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be the Representative of the United States of America to the European Communities, with the rank and status of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Joseph Zappala,
of Florida, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Spain.
Francis Anthony Keating II,
of Oklahoma, to be General Counsel of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, vice J. Michael Dorsey, resigned.
Franklin Eugene Bailey,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Wilmer D. Mizell, Sr., resigned.
James E. Cason,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice George S. Dunlop, resigned.
Charles E. Hess,
of California, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Orville G. Bentley, resigned.
David J. Gribbin III,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice M.D.B. Carlisle, resigned.
Louis A. Williams,
of Wyoming, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice J. Daniel Howard, resigned.
Submitted May 5
Melvin F. Sembler,
of Florida, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Australia and to serve concurrently and without additional compensation as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Nauru.
Richard H. Solomon,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Gaston Joseph Sigur, Jr., resigned.
Jewel S. Lafontant,
of Illinois, to be United States Coordinator for Refugee Affairs and Ambassador-at-Large while serving in this position, vice Jonathan Moore, resigned.
Jo Ann D. Smith,
of Florida, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Kenneth A. Gilles, resigned.
Kathleen M. Harrington,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Francis J. Duggan.
Kenneth B. Kramer,
of Colorado, to be an Associate Judge of the United States Court of Veterans Appeals for the term of 15 years (new position -- P.L. 100 - 687).
Withdrawn May 5
Francis J. Duggan,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice William John Maroni, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Submitted May 10
Frank Henry Habicht II,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, vice A. James Barnes, resigned.
Submitted May 11
John Hubert Kelly,
of Georgia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be an Assistant Secretary of State, vice Richard W. Murphy, resigned.
James Buchanan Busey IV,
of Illinois, to be Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration, vice T. Allan McArtor, resigned.
Submitted May 12
Edward N. Ney,
of New York, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Canada.
Donald B. Rice,
of California, to be Secretary of the Air Force, vice Edward C. Aldridge, Jr., resigned.
Sean Charles O'Keefe,
of Virginia, to be Comptroller of the Department of Defense, vice Clyde O. Glaister, resigned.
Frank A. Bracken,
of Indiana, to be Under Secretary of the Interior, vice Earl E. Gjelde, resigned.
Jennifer Lynn Dorn,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Michael E. Baroody, resigned.
Jerry M. Hunter,
of Missouri, to be General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board for a term of 4 years, vice Rosemary M. Collyer, term expired.
Submitted May 16
James Franklin Rill,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Charles F. Rule, resigned.
E. Bart Daniel,
of South Carolina, to be United States Attorney for the District of South Carolina for the term of 4 years, vice Vinton DeVane Lide, resigned.
John Michael Farren,
of Connecticut, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade, vice W. Allen Moore, resigned.
Robert P. Davis,
of Virginia, to be Solicitor for the Department of Labor, vice George R. Salem, resigned.
John C. Weicher,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, vice Kenneth J. Beirne, resigned.
Nell Carney,
of Virginia, to be Commissioner of the Rehabilitation Services Administration, vice Susan S. Suter, resigned.
Submitted May 17
Della M. Newman,
of Washington, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to New Zealand and to serve concurrently and without additional compensation as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Western Samoa.
Robert D. Orr,
of Indiana, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Republic of Singapore.
Bryce L. Harlow,
of Virginia, to be a Deputy Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice John K. Meagher, resigned.
Submitted May 18
Antonio Lopez,
of Tennessee, to be an Associate Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, vice George Woloshyn, resigned.
Submitted May 31
Keith Lapham Brown,
of Colorado, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Denmark, to which position he was appointed during the recess of the Senate from October 22, 1988, to January 3, 1989.
William Andreas Brown,
of New Hampshire, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Israel, to which position he was appointed during the recess of the Senate from October 22, 1988, to January 3, 1989.
Dee V. Benson,
of Utah, to be United States Attorney for the District of Utah for the term of 4 years, vice Brent D. Ward, resigned.
Thomas Joseph Murrin,
of Pennsylvania, to be Deputy Secretary of Commerce, vice Donna F. Tuttle, resigned.
Quincy Mellon Krosby,
of New York, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice G. Philip Hughes, resigned.
C. Austin Fitts,
of New York, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, vice Thomas T. Demery, resigned.
Jeffrey Neil Shane,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Gregory S. Dole.
Charles E.M. Kolb,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Under Secretary for Planning, Budget, and Evaluation, Department of Education, vice Bruce M. Carnes, resigned, to which position he was appointed during the recess of the Senate from October 22, 1988, to January 3, 1989.
Fred T. Goldberg, Jr.,
of Maryland, to be Commissioner of Internal Revenue, vice Lawrence B. Gibbs, resigned.
Reggie B. Walton,
of the District of Columbia, to be Associate Director for National Drug Control Policy (new position -- P.L. 100 - 690).
Delos Cy Jamison,
of Montana, to be Director of the Bureau of Land Management, vice Robert F. Burford, resigned.
Withdrawn May 31
Keith Lapham Brown,
of Colorado, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Denmark, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
William Andreas Brown,
of New Hampshire, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Career Minister, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Israel, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Gregory S. Dole,
of Massachusetts, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Matthew V. Scocozza, resigned, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Charles E.M. Kolb,
of the District of Columbia, to be Deputy Under Secretary for Planning, Budget, and Evaluation, Department of Education, vice Bruce M. Carnes, resigned, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Submitted June 6
Shirley Temple Black,
of California, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic.
Richard Wood Boehm,
of the District of Columbia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Sultanate of Oman, to which position he was appointed during the recess of the Senate from October 22, 1988, to January 3, 1989.
Morris Dempson Busby,
of Virginia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, for the rank of Ambassador in his capacity as Coordinator for Counterterrorism.
Michael Ussery,
of Virginia, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Kingdom of Morocco, to which position he was appointed during the recess of the Senate from October 22, 1988, to January 3, 1989.
C. Howard Wilkins, Jr.,
of Kansas, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Kingdom of The Netherlands.
Eddie F. Brown,
of Arizona, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Interior, vice Ross O. Swimmer, resigned.
Constance Bastine Harriman,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife, Department of the Interior, vice Becky Norton Dunlop, resigned.
Rockwell Anthony Schnabel,
of California, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for Travel and Tourism, vice Charles E. Cobb, Jr., resigned.
Thomas D. Larson,
of Pennsylvania, to be Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration, vice Robert Earl Farris, resigned.
Kate Leader Moore,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Janet Hale, resigned.
Edward C. Stringer,
of Minnesota, to be General Counsel, Department of Education, vice Wendell L. Willkie II, resigned.
D. Allan Bromley,
of Connecticut, to be Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, vice William R. Graham, resigned.
Deborah Kaye Owen,
of Maryland, to be a Federal Trade Commissioner for the unexpired term of 7 years from September 26, 1987, vice Margot E. Machol.
Timothy B. Atkeson,
of Pennsylvania, to be an Assistant Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, vice Jennifer Joy Manson, resigned.
Withdrawn June 6
Richard Wood Boehm,
of the District of Columbia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, Class of Minister-Counselor, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Sultanate of Oman, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Michael Ussery,
of South Carolina, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to the Kingdom of Morocco, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Becky Norton Dunlop,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife, Department of the Interior, vice William P. Horn, resigned, which was sent to the Senate on January 3, 1989.
Margot E. Machol,
of the District of Columbia, to be a Federal Trade Commissioner for the term of 7 years from September 26, 1987, vice Patricia Price Bailey, resigned, which was sent to the Senate January 3, 1989.
Submitted June 7
Janice Obuchowski,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, vice Alfred C. Sikes, resigned.
Michael J. Astrue,
of Massachusetts, to be General Counsel of the Department of Health and Human Services, vice Malcolm M.B. Sterrett, resigned.
Sherrie Sandy Rollins,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, vice Harry K. Schwartz, resigned.
Richard Harrison Truly,
of Texas, to be Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, vice James C. Fletcher, resigned.
Roy M. Goodman,
of New York, to be a member of the National Council on the Arts for a term expiring September 3, 1994, vice C. Douglas Dillon, term expired.
Submitted June 13
Joseph Bernard Gildenhorn,
of the District of Columbia, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Switzerland.
Martin Lewis Allday,
of Texas, to be Solicitor of the Department of the Interior, vice Ralph W. Tarr, resigned.
John F. Turner,
of Wyoming, to be Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, vice Frank H. Dunkle, resigned.
Deborah Wince-Smith,
of Ohio, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Technology Policy, vice D. Bruce Merrifield, resigned.
Submitted June 15
Frederick Morris Bush,
of Maryland, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Luxembourg.
Chas. W. Freeman, Jr.,