From September 1951 to March 1952, he was assigned to the Air Research and Development Command, Baltimore, Maryland.
Power was then appointed commander of the Air Research and Development Command in 1954, a position he held for three years.
On his return to the United States in June, 1951, he commanded the newly formed Air Research and Development Command at Baltimore, Maryland.
Activated again under the Air Research and Development Command in April 1957, it was the first division level organization controlling intermediate range and intercontinental ballistic missiles.
He was subsequently promoted to major general, and became Deputy Commander of the Air Research and Development Command.
Then, in 1950, research and development were split off into a separate organization, the Air Research and Development Command.
In 1954 he was assigned to Holloman Air Force Base before serving with the Air Research and Development Command.
This challenge originates with the U.S. Army Research and Development Command so its roots are in the military.
Her father was in the Army Electronics Research and Development Command in Adelphi, Md.
He is retiring as commanding officer of the Navy Medical Research and Development Command.