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@: CAM-I > Staff & Directors > Bailey Squier

CAM-I Staff

Bailey H. Squier
Standards Program Director

1228 Enclave Circle, #301

Arlington, Texas 76011

817-461-1092  Voice

817-461-4845  Fax

bsquier@cam-i.org

Bailey Squier joined CAM-I in September of 1976, and soon became Program Director for the CAM-I Technical Programs responsible for technical research planning and managing project development. During his time at CAM-I, he has managed ten CAM-I Research Programs and has had responsibility for all CAM-I standards efforts. He managed the development of the Dimensional Measuring Interface Specification (DMIS) and established it as an American National Standard and an ISO Standard.

As past editor of the CAM-I News Alert, Bailey has written numerous articles on emerging technology, and has authored several CAM-I technical publications.  He has also contributed many articles on technical research over the years that have been published in various trade magazines and journals (including one unexpectedly published in a Japanese magazine). Bailey has been guest speaker at many industry technical and standards conferences, and served on many national and international standards committees. He was International Convener of an ISO standards Working Group for six years, and Chairman of two national standards committees.

 Prior to working for CAM-I, Bailey was a researcher at Texas Christian University (TCU), Ft. Worth, Texas, working on the development of a complete financial simulation model for a large oil company to determine the economic feasibility of enhanced oil recovery, related tax advantages, and appropriate accounting procedures. Bailey has had an interesting and varied career working as a physicist in nuclear weapons design at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, in Livermore, California; a partner in various business ventures including industrial gem production; retail supplies; and personal computer software.

 A cum laude graduate of Texas Christian University with a double major in physics and mathematics, Bailey continued his education with one year of graduate work at TCU with the same two majors. He later studied graduate courses in mathematics and physics (shock hydrodynamics) at the University of California, Davis. Upon returning to Texas, he added a year of graduate work in management science, again at TCU, then graduate courses in computer science at the University of Texas at Arlington. Bailey is an avid reader and divides his free time between reading, his computer, and writing "the book."