After graduating from William and Mary, Buck was initially hired by
Gerry Brown at
Stony Brook University in
Long Island, New York, as a physics instructor. Buck taught at Stony Brook for three years, during which for one month of the year he would travel to
Los Alamos National Laboratory to work on projects. From Stony Brook, he took on a yearlong appointment at the
University of Paris in
Orsay as a staff instructor. After living in Paris, he and his wife then spent three years commuting from the
Bahamas to
Annapolis, Maryland, while living on their boat, sailing, and selling their artwork.
Hampton University After three years living at sea, Buck briefly returned to
College of William and Mary, as construction would soon commence on the
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in nearby
Newport News, Virginia. However, he soon approached
Demetrius Venable at
Hampton University about a position there, in the interest of bringing quality physics education to Black undergraduate students. Buck joined the Hampton staff as the fourth physics faculty member in 1984, and was appointed full professor in 1989. Of founding the Hampton program, Buck said:
"Part of my goal when I moved to Hampton University was to get minorities in the door for…you know, to perform world-class physics up front so we don’t have to come at the last minute and say, “How do I fit in?” You start off fitting in. You just start off fitting in, right?" and established the Nuclear High Energy Physics Research Center for Excellence (NuHEP) in 1990, a research group based at Hampton. By the time Buck left Hampton, NuHEP had six senior researchers of professorial rank, four postdoctoral fellows, 21 graduate and undergraduate students, and four full time staff members. Throughout his career he was also a member of the development team of the
Jefferson Lab.
University of Washington-Bothell In June 1999, Buck was offered a position at the
University of Washington-Bothell, and was appointed as chancellor and dean of the university. He served in the position for six years, during which he oversaw the university's transition to a four-year institution. The university also debuted its permanent campus in 2000 during Buck's tenure. After serving as chancellor until June 2005, he began teaching physics at the
University of Washington-Seattle. Throughout his teaching career and into the present, Buck has been active in various professional appointments: from 2007 to 2008, he served as co-chair of the Committee on New Opportunities in Solar System Exploration of NASA’s
New Frontiers Program; he has served on the Committee on Education of the
American Physical Society; on the board of directors of the
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility’s Users Group; and on the board of directors of the
Pacific Science Center. == Awards ==