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> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 2/4/2005 12:16:03 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, February 04, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 04 Feb 05   Washington, DC

 1. STATE OF THE UNION: OUR ANNUAL LOOK AT WHERE SCIENCE FITS IN. 
 This will be brief, since I fell asleep.  However, we did a word
 search on the transcript.  Bingo!  We got a hit on "scientific
 research."  It came up in a discussion of the need "to build a
 culture of life."  (When was it that "life" became a code word?)
 The President thanked Congress for doubling NIH funding, but he
 urged the lawmakers to quit dawdling on his energy strategy,
 "including safe, clean nuclear energy."  That was it for science.

 2. HUBBLE: WILL EARTH'S MOST PRODUCTIVE SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENT DIE?
 In his opening statement at a hearing on Hubble options, Sherwood
 Boehlert (R-NY), Chair of the House Science Committee, observed:
 "One can't help but root for it"; surely he can do more than that. 
 It's widely expected that on Monday the President's asking budget
 will only include funds to dump Hubble in the Ocean.  What madness
 compels this act?  Hubble, Joe Taylor testified, "is still in the
 prime of its scientific life."  Steven Beckwith, director of the
 Space Telescope Institute, said it's the nation's "most productive 
 science facility."  It was designed to be serviced by the shuttle. 
 The James Webb Space Telescope won't go on line before 2011.  Even
 more powerful, we will no doubt come to view JWST with the kind of
 affection we now feel for Hubble.  But long before that happens
 Hubble is posed to explore dark energy and extrasolar planetary
 systems.  The official explanation for cutting the service mission
 to Hubble is that, at more than $1B, it's too expensive.  Whoa!
 Lou Lanzerotti testified that it would cost no more than a flight
 to the ISS, and the nation is committed to 25-30 shuttle flights
 to the ISS.  Would someone tell us what the ISS is doing?  And how
 is NASA paying for 25-30 flights at $1-2B each?  Is Ken Lay doing
 NASA's books?  As we pointed out years ago, shuttle arithmetic is
 not that hard.  You just divide the cost of the shuttle program by
 the number of flights http://www.aps.org/WN/WN93/wn032693.cfm . 
 President's budget or not, it's Congress that controls the purse.

 3. PUBLIC ACCESS: AT NIH, ZERHOUNI ANNOUNCES A NEW ACCESS POLICY. 
 The public pays for research done on federal grants as well as the
 cost of publishing it; they shouldn't have to pay again to see it.
 Under a new policy that goes into effect on May 2 researchers on
 NIH grants will be "asked" to submit their results to a public Web
 site within one year after publication in a scientific journal.
 There are advantages to having articles in one federal database.
 However, most journal publishers, including APS Editor in Chief
 Marty Blume, oppose the policy, fearing it will cut into their
 subscription base.  A leading proponent of free access, former NIH
 Director Harold Varmus, only regretted that scientists were
 "asked" to submit their data.  He would have preferred "expected." 

 THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.  
 Opinions are the author's and not necessarily shared by the
 University of Maryland, but they should be.
 ---
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