President Bush will nominate two new members of the National Science Board of the National Science Foundation, the White House said Tuesday. They are Bernard F. Burke, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor of astrophysics, and W. Glenn Campbell, director of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Bush also reappoined three academics to the board: University of Michigan President James J. Duderstadt, San Diego State University President Thomas B. Day and Perry L. Adkisson, chancellor of the Texas A&M University System. The White House also announced Bush will appoint IBM Corp. Chairman John F. Akera and AT&T Chairman Robert E. Allen to the Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations. Bush also announced plans to nominate Carolyn D. Leavens of Ventura, Calif., to the board of the Overseas Private Investment Corp. She is a partner in Leavens Ranches. The White House also announced these nominations: _Robert F. Goodwin, vice president and director of governmental affairs for the Meredith Corp. of Washington, D.C., to be a commissioner of the U.S.-Canada International Joint Commission. _Army Brig. Gen. Paul Y. Chinen to the Mississippi River Commission. Chinen is the commanding general of the U.S. Army Engineer Division, Ohio River, in Cincinnati. _Holland H. Coors of Colorado to the board of trustees of the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. The White House also announced Bush will appoint Chandler R. Lindsley, a rancher from Era, Texas, to be an alternate member of the Roosevelt Campobello International Park Commission.