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- <text id=91TT1930>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: Crisis in The Labs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 44
- Crisis in The Labs
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Beset by a budget squeeze, cases of fraud, relentless activists
- and a skeptical public, American researchers are under siege
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by J. Madeleine Nash/Chicago and Dick
- Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Without scientific progress the national health would
- deteriorate; without scientific progress we could not hope for
- improvement in our standard of living or for an increased number
- of jobs for our citizens; and without scientific progress we
- could not have maintained our liberties against tyranny.
- </p>
- <p>-- Vannevar Bush, presidential science adviser in Science:
- The Endless Frontier, 1945
- </p>
- <p> It was the glory of America. In the decades following
- World War II, U.S. science reigned supreme, earning the envy of
- the world with one stunning triumph after another. Fostered by
- the largesse of a government swayed by Vannevar Bush's paean to
- science, it harnessed the power of the atom, conquered polio and
- discovered the earth's radiation belt. It created the laser, the
- transistor, the microchip and the electronic computer, broke the
- genetic code and conjured up the miracle of recombinant DNA
- technology. It described the fundamental nature of matter,
- solved the mystery of the quasars and designed the robot craft
- that explored distant planets with spectacular success. And, as
- promised, it landed a man on the moon.
- </p>
- <p> Now a sea change is occurring, and it does not bode well
- for researchers--or for the U.S. While American science
- remains productive and still excels in many areas, its exalted
- and almost pristine image is beginning to tarnish.
- </p>
- <p> European and, to a lesser extent, Japanese scientists have
- begun to surpass their American counterparts. In the U.S. the
- scientific community is beset by a budget squeeze and
- bureaucratic demands, internal squabbling, harassment by
- activists, embarrassing cases of fraud and failure, and the
- growing alienation of Congress and the public. In the last
- decade of the 20th century, U.S. science, once unassailable,
- finds itself in a virtual state of siege.
- </p>
- <p> "The science community is demoralized, and its moans are
- frightening off the young," says Dr. Bernadine Healy, director
- of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). "You have never seen
- such a depressed collection of people," says Stephen Berry, a
- University of Chicago chemist. "It's the worst atmosphere in the
- scientific community since I began my career more than 30 years
- ago."
- </p>
- <p> In public perception, at least, that atmosphere has been
- fouled by a multitude of headline-grabbing incidents:
- </p>
- <p>-- The federal researcher at whose urging Times Beach,
- Mo., was permanently evacuated in 1982 because of a dioxin
- scare has conceded that the draconian action was a mistake and
- that newer data suggest dioxin is far less toxic than
- previously believed. While some environmental scientists dispute
- the conclusion, the Environmental Protection Agency has launched
- a review of its strict dioxin standards, leaving the public
- confused about what to believe.
- </p>
- <p>-- In space, the inexcusable myopia of the $1.5 billion
- Hubble telescope, the balky antenna that endangers the $1.3
- billion Galileo mission to Jupiter, and even the Challenger
- disaster and the shuttle's subsequent troubles gave space
- science a bad name--notwithstanding the fact that the failures
- resulted not from scientific errors but largely from managerial
- blunders and budgetary constraints.
- </p>
- <p>-- The circus atmosphere that accompanied last year's
- announcement that cold fusion had been achieved, the subsequent
- debate among scientists and the eventual widespread rejection
- of the claim evoked public exasperation and ridicule in the
- press.
- </p>
- <p>-- Nobel laureate David Baltimore's stubborn refusal to
- concede that data reported by a former M.I.T. colleague in an
- immunology paper Baltimore had co-signed was fraudulent, and the
- shoddy treatment of the whistle blower who spotted the fraud
- aroused public suspicion about scientific integrity. Worse, from
- the viewpoint of scientists, it brought about an investigation
- by Michigan Democrat John Dingell's House subcommittee and
- fears of more federal supervision of science. By the time
- Baltimore finally apologized for his role in the affair, the
- damage to science's image had been done.
- </p>
- <p>-- Another Dingell probe, which revealed that Stanford
- University had charged some strange items to overhead expenses
- funded by federal science grants, mortified university president
- Donald Kennedy, led to his resignation and raised questions
- about misuse of funds at other universities. "I challenge you
- to tell me," said Dingell, "how fruitwood commodes, chauffeurs
- for the university president's wife, housing for dead university
- officials, retreats in Lake Tahoe and flowers for the
- president's house are supportive of science."
- </p>
- <p>-- A long-running and unseemly dispute between Dr. Luc
- Montagnier of the Pasteur Institute in Paris and Dr. Robert
- Gallo of the NIH over who had first identified the AIDS virus
- raised public doubts about the motives and credibility of
- scientists. Those concerns remained when Gallo conceded that
- through inadvertent contamination, the virus he identified had
- been isolated from a sample sent him by the Frenchman. Last week
- the journal Science revealed that a draft of a forthcoming NIH
- report about the affair criticizes Gallo and accuses one of his
- colleagues of scientific misconduct.
- </p>
- <p>-- Bowing to the demands of pro-lifers, the Bush
- Administration continued a ban on federal funding for fetal-cell
- transplants, despite the fact that the use of such tissue has
- shown promising results in treating Parkinson's disease and
- other disorders. Frustrated U.S. researchers watched helplessly
- as their European counterparts moved ahead on medical
- applications of fetal tissue.
- </p>
- <p>-- In several raids on research laboratories,
- animal-rights activists destroyed equipment and "liberated" test
- animals, setting back experiments designed to improve medical
- treatment for humans. Activists using legal means, such as
- picketing and newspaper ads, successfully brought pressure on
- some laboratories to improve treatment of test animals. But
- others campaigned to halt virtually all animal experimentation,
- a ban that would cripple medical research. All told, the
- animals-rights movement has led to a false public perception
- that medical researchers are generally callous in their
- treatment of test animals or at least indifferent to their
- welfare.
- </p>
- <p>-- Although gadfly activist Jeremy Rifkin failed in a
- legal attempt to delay the first human-gene-therapy experiment
- last year, he skillfully used the courts to set back by months,
- and even years, other scientific trials involving genetically
- engineered organisms or substances. His success in obstructing
- genetic experiments came despite the fact that in every case,
- his warnings of dire consequences proved to be unfounded.
- Favorable coverage of his views in some newspapers and on TV
- heightened public misgivings about genetic research.
- </p>
- <p> To many researchers, however, the single greatest threat
- to U.S. science, and a source of many of its troubles, is money--or a lack of it. That view came into sharp focus in January
- when Nobel laureate physicist Leon Lederman, the newly elected
- president of the prestigious American Association for the
- Advancement of Science, issued what he called his "cry of
- alarm."
- </p>
- <p> Lederman, former head of Fermilab, the high-energy physics
- center in Illinois, had conducted a survey of research
- scientists in 50 universities. Most of the nearly 250 responses,
- he reported, came from demoralized and underfunded researchers
- who foresaw only a bleak future for their disciplines and their
- jobs. "I haven't seen anything like this in my 40 years in
- science," Lederman said. "Research, at least the research
- carried out in universities, is in very serious trouble." And
- that, he warned, "raises serious questions about the very future
- of science in the U.S."
- </p>
- <p> By Lederman's calculations, if inflation is taken into
- account, federal funding in 1990 for both basic and applied
- scientific research in universities was only 20% higher than in
- 1968, while the number of Ph.D.-level scientists working at the
- schools doubled during the same time period. In other words,
- twice as many researchers are scrambling for smaller pieces of
- a slightly bigger pie. The competition for financing has forced
- scientists into fundraising efforts at the expense of research
- and has led to angry exchanges over what kind of work should
- have priority. It has also forced researchers to propose "safe"
- projects with an obvious end product.
- </p>
- <p> Those restraints are clearly detrimental to the bold and
- innovative research that has made American science great. Leder
- man's solution: "We should be spending twice as much as we did
- in 1968."
- </p>
- <p> For his alarm, and especially for his proposed cure,
- Lederman was not immediately overwhelmed by acclaim--either
- from fellow scientists or from Congress. The Bush Administration
- had already requested a generous increase in the science budget,
- critics noted. Lederman's call for a doubling of financial
- support at a time of severe budgetary restraint, they charged,
- made scientists seem petty and self-serving and suggested that
- they are out of touch with the country's political realities.
- In fact, only last year congressional budgeteers agreed to limit
- spending growth for domestic discretionary funding, in effect
- making science a "zero-sum" category. This meant that increases
- for one scientific project, for example, might have to come out
- of the hide of another.
- </p>
- <p> "I don't think that [Lederman's] argument was very
- good," says Harvey Brooks, a Harvard science-policy expert.
- "Scientists are having a hard time, and so are the homeless. You
- have to justify science because it is doing something good for
- society." Even Frank Press, president of the National Academy
- of Sciences (NAS), agrees on the need for restraint. "No nation
- can write a blank check for science," he says. "In a very tight
- deficit year, we may have to make some choices."
- </p>
- <p> In June the House of Representatives made a choice, and it
- did not sit well with scientists. The House voted to designate
- $1.9 billion of NASA's fiscal 1992 budget to continued work on
- the proposed space station, which could eventually cost as much
- as $40 billion. Because of the budgetary restraints, that money
- may be cut from other projects supported by NASA and the
- National Science Foundation (NSF). And two huge science ventures
- are already siphoning off significant chunks of the federal
- budget: the Human Genome Project, a 15-year, $3 billion program
- to identify and map all 50,000 to 100,000 genes and determine
- the sequence of the 3 billion code letters in human DNA; and the
- superconducting supercollider, a high-energy particle
- accelerator to be built in Texas at an estimated cost of $8.2
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> Several planned NASA science projects could immediately
- suffer or even be eliminated because of the space-station vote.
- They include the Comet Rendezvous Asteroid Flyby mission, in
- which an unmanned spacecraft would make close approaches to
- Comet Kopff and an unnamed asteroid; the Advanced X-Ray
- Astrophysics Facility, which will investigate X-ray sources in
- space; and the Earth Observing System for weather and pollution
- studies.
- </p>
- <p> Scientists were dismayed. Daniel Kleppner, an M.I.T.
- physicist, pointed out that the money spent on the space station
- this year will be almost as much as the total fiscal 1990 NSF
- budget, a major source of federal funding for all the sciences
- except biomedicine. Writing in The Sciences, the publication of
- the New York Academy of Sciences, he expressed his indignation:
- "It seems incredible that the government can spend billions on
- such flawed projects while allowing the world's greatest
- scientific institutions to decline for lack of relatively
- modest funds."
- </p>
- <p> By one standard, at least, the troubles of American
- science are not that obvious at first glance: the Nobel science
- awards for the past few decades have been dominated by
- Americans. For example, 14 of the 25 Nobel Prizes for Physics
- between 1980 and 1990 went to Americans. But 13 of those 14
- awards were for work done many years ago. Most of the Nobels for
- more recent research have gone to Europeans. "It appears that
- American science is coasting on its reputation," says Kleppner.
- "Today Europe is beginning to run away with the honors."
- </p>
- <p> Physics is not the only discipline that is hurting.
- Harvard's pioneering biologist E.O. Wilson, the father of
- sociobiology, is concerned that the dwindling supply of federal
- grant money to individual scientists is changing the very nature
- of research. A quarter-century ago, he says, grants were far
- more generous, and a higher percentage of proposals got funded.
- "In those days," he recalls, "a young scientist could still get
- a grant based on a promising but partly formulated idea or
- fragmentary result." Today, Wilson laments, there is far less
- interest in funding such marginal and daring proposals.
- </p>
- <p> Physicist Nicholas Samios, director of Brookhaven National
- Laboratory on New York's Long Island, has also witnessed a
- negative effect among people on his staff. "When funding gets
- tight," he says, "people get more conservative and bureaucratic.
- You don't want to make mistakes. You want to make certain you
- do the right thing. But to have science flourish, you want
- people who take chances."
- </p>
- <p> These days scientists often pick their fields of research
- with an eye to the whims of funding agencies. That was
- precisely what Jim Koh, a University of Michigan graduate
- student in human genetics, had in mind when he chose to
- specialize in cystic fibrosis. Research on the disorder, funded
- in part by the private Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, is less
- affected by federal budget problems than many other fields.
- "Fundability is a real factor in my thinking," Koh admits.
- </p>
- <p> Other young scientists are not so fortunate. University
- jobs are hard to find, and because of tight budgets will not
- become more plentiful until the older professors, the majority
- of them hired in the bountiful, go-go 1960s, retire. When a
- university slot does open, hundreds of graduate students may
- apply for it. Industry too has little to offer newly graduated
- scientists. Saddled with debt and under pressure to turn out
- favorable quarterly reports, it has cut back on money spent for
- research and development.
- </p>
- <p> All this is disillusioning to promising young scientists.
- At 34, Norman Carlin, an evolutionary biologist who has been a
- postdoctoral fellow at Harvard since 1986, is giving up. "Last
- year I decided I would go through one more year of this
- fruitless and humiliating attempt to get work," he says. "Well,
- I didn't get a single job offer from 20 universities--and I
- got into every law school I applied to. So I decided to go where
- I was wanted for a change." When he earns a law degree, Carlin
- hopes to specialize in environmental law. "I had tremendous fun
- doing science," he says, "and I'm bitterly sorry I won't be able
- to do it anymore."
- </p>
- <p> All too aware of the dearth of job opportunities at
- research universities, senior faculty members are faced with a
- dilemma. "When undergraduates come to me looking for career
- advice," says Dr. James Wilson, a gene-therapy expert at the
- University of Michigan, "I have to think long and hard about
- advising them to be scientists." Justified as it is, that kind
- of thinking alarms M.I.T.'s Kleppner. "If America's senior
- scientists cannot, in good conscience, persuade the next
- generation to follow in their own footsteps," he warns, "the
- nation is finished scientifically."
- </p>
- <p> Money is so tight that many scientific institutions are
- finding it difficult to maintain the equipment they have, much
- less buy new instruments. At Kitt Peak in Arizona, the
- structure of the National Optical Astronomy Observatories' solar
- telescope was beginning to corrode because astronomers, strapped
- for funds, had put off painting it. This year they could wait
- no longer, and instead of buying a new, badly needed $100,000
- infrared detector, they put the available money into a paint
- job. The choice, while necessary, depresses Sidney Wolff,
- director of NOAO. Although the infrared detector was developed
- in the U.S., she says, "European observatories can afford to
- purchase it, while we cannot. This is really a revolution in
- technology; if you're using five-year-old technology, you're out
- of the game."
- </p>
- <p> The budget constraints are part of an even deeper problem
- afflicting American research: Congress is reflecting an erosion
- of public confidence in a scientific establishment that not many
- years ago could seemingly do no wrong. The message from
- Washington is clear: science will receive no more blank checks
- and will be held increasingly accountable for both its
- performance and its behavior.
- </p>
- <p> Today, despite continuing brilliant work by U.S.
- scientists, attention seems focused on their failings and
- excesses, both real and perceived. Why, critics ask, after a
- decade of effort, have researchers not found a cure for AIDS,
- or why can't they figure out, after nearly a half-century, how
- to store nuclear wastes safely or build spacecraft that work?
- Why do they concoct compounds that end up as toxic waste or
- court danger by tinkering with genes?
- </p>
- <p> Some of this burgeoning antiscience sentiment springs from
- the well-meaning but naive "back to nature" wing of the
- environmental movement, some from skillful manipulation by
- demagogues and modern-day Luddites. And some is misdirected;
- science is often blamed for the misdeeds of industry and
- government.
- </p>
- <p> But scientists too must shoulder their share of the blame.
- Cases of outright fraud and waste, sloppy research, dubious
- claims and public bickering have made science an easy target for
- its critics. Says Marcel LaFollette, a professor of
- international science policy at George Washington University:
- "One of the threads that run through all this is a refusal by
- the science community to acknowledge that there is a problem.
- They continue with the attitude that scientists are part of the
- elite and they deserve special political treatment and
- handling."
- </p>
- <p> In Washington the new sock-it-to-science stance is
- personified by Congressman Dingell, who has taken the lead in
- investigating the wrongdoings of researchers. Many scientists
- consider his intrusion into their domain dangerous because it
- threatens their long-held notion that science should be
- self-governed, self-regulated and self-policed. When Dingell
- asked the Secret Service to examine the notebooks in the
- Baltimore case for authenticity, some researchers accused him
- of launching a witch hunt and trying to establish "science
- police." Because of his badgering of scientists at congressional
- hearings, he has been charged with practicing McCarthyism. Says
- Maxine Singer, a molecular biologist and president of the
- Carnegie Institution of Washington: "With Dingell, the issues
- get swallowed as he makes personal attacks on people."
- </p>
- <p> Despite Dingell's abrasive manner, however, he has rooted
- out some serious abuses in science. The Congressman makes a
- legitimate argument that science is a social tool and should be
- directed and regulated in the same manner as other social tools,
- such as defense and education. A newly contrite Baltimore now
- says Dingell's investigation was "an altogether proper exercise
- of his mandate to oversee the expenditure of federal funds."
- </p>
- <p> This month Dingell was at it again. He hauled NIH director
- Healy before his subcommittee to charge that by abruptly
- transferring a chief investigator of the NIH's internal office
- of scientific integrity, she had "derailed" investigations and
- "demoralized and emasculated" that office, which had been
- involved in the Baltimore case. Healy indignantly called the
- charges "preposterous," adding that Dingell "is a prosecutor.
- He's there to root out evil, whether it's there or not."
- </p>
- <p> Underlying the current furor over funding, and fueling
- Dingell's investigations, are the implicit assumptions that
- science can no longer be fully trusted to manage its affairs and
- that society should have a larger voice in its workings. "We
- can't just say Give us the money and don't bother us anymore,"
- acknowledges Chris Quigg, a physicist at Fermilab.
- </p>
- <p> Congressional pressure on science has been countered by a
- growing pressure on Congress--by institutions and researchers
- lobbying for science funds. Influencing the lawmakers has become
- so critical that science is recruiting the professionals of
- persuasion. Many universities pay $20,000 a month each for the
- services of Cassidy & Associates, a science-lobbying firm that
- has been successful in getting federal money earmarked for its
- clients. Some of Cassidy's trophies: $15 million for Tufts
- University's Human Nutrition Research Center and $19.8 million
- for the Proton Beam Demonstration Center at California's Loma
- Linda University. Four biochemistry societies have joined to pay
- former Maine Congressman Peter Kyros $100,000 a year to lobby
- for increased funding for biomedical research. Unfortunately,
- money appropriated for these projects bypasses the peer-review
- process used by such scientific bodies as the NSF and the NIH.
- </p>
- <p> Too often, science lobbyists find easy pickings on Capitol
- Hill, where Congressmen, courting votes, can win generous sums
- for research projects in their home districts by simply
- slipping riders onto appropriation bills. Federal legislators
- in fiscal 1991 approved at least $270 million for pork-barrel
- science projects. In many cases, this kind of financing supports
- projects of dubious value, while more worthy endeavors go
- begging. An example: a rider, attached by Alaska Senator Ted
- Stevens, provided $9 million for a facility in his state to
- study how to tap the energy of the aurora borealis. That
- project, now funded, is characterized by one University of
- Maryland physicist as "wacky."
- </p>
- <p> The NAS's Press is worried that too many scientists and
- research institutions are rushing to engage lobbyists. "They see
- that's the way the country runs, through lobbying and pressure,"
- he says. "It's possible that public confidence in scientists
- will be diminished." That may have already happened. In the
- view of some members of Congress, scientists have become simply
- another special-interest group pleading for its selfish ends.
- </p>
- <p> For all the lobbying, the scientific community has reached
- no consensus about the worthiness of various projects.
- Molecular biologists and particle physicists find it impossible
- to agree on the relative merits of the Human Genome Project and
- the superconducting supercollider. "Scientists are scared to
- death about having to make such choices," says Francis Collins,
- the University of Michigan geneticist who led the teams
- responsible for identifying the cystic fibrosis and
- neurofibromatosis genes. "It's such a contentious area that I'm
- afraid people won't be able to agree."
- </p>
- <p> What is the alternative? Researchers blanch at the thought
- of a scientifically illiterate public allotting the available
- funds through the political process. Yet if the science
- community cannot establish its own priorities, it is inviting
- Congress and the White House to make all the choices, for better
- or worse.
- </p>
- <p> While striving for a consensus, scientists would do well
- to put their house back in order. They should avoid cutting
- corners or misusing funds in a desperate effort to make
- financial ends meet. They must come down hard on transgressors,
- give whistle blowers a fair hearing and not stonewall in defense
- of erring colleagues. And they should discourage the
- ill-conceived practice of hastily calling press conferences to
- announce dubious results that have not been verified by peer
- review.
- </p>
- <p> Equally important, scientists should redouble efforts to
- help educate Congress, the press and the public about the
- importance and benefits of some of their more esoteric work. An
- example: in little publicized reports in science journals last
- month, three teams of researchers revealed that they had used
- genetic engineering to create, for the first time, mice whose
- brains develop the same kind of deposits as those found in
- humans with Alzheimer's disease. Using these mice as models, the
- scientists should now be able to learn more about the
- debilitating disease that afflicts 4 million Americans and to
- develop drugs to alleviate the disorder.
- </p>
- <p> In short, the use of genetic engineering and test animals,
- practices decried by the more fanatic critics of science, has
- provided a means by which Alzheimer's disease could be
- controlled or even cured. More aggressive promotion of this kind
- of news would certainly enhance the image of researchers, help
- restore waning public trust in science and lessen the clout of
- anti science activists.
- </p>
- <p> While scientists remain divided about the solution to
- their dilemma, they do agree, almost universally, on the need
- for ample support for basic research--research that is not
- launched with a well-defined end product in mind. Such work has
- not only been the foundation for America's brilliant scientific
- achievements but has also paid handsome financial dividends. For
- example, basic studies of bacterial resistance to viruses led
- to the discovery of restriction enzymes, the biological scissors
- that can snip DNA segments at precisely defined locations. That
- discovery in turn made possible recombinant-DNA technology,
- which spawned the multibillion-dollar biotechnology industry.
- And the laser, now the vital component of devices ranging from
- printers to compact disc players to surgical instruments, was
- a serendipitous by-product of research on molecular structure.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly a half-century ago, Vannevar Bush's clarion call
- launched America into its Golden Age of science and helped
- transform society. His words still ring true today, despite the
- social and economic woes besetting the U.S. In fact, a vigorous
- science program, properly exploited by government and industry,
- might generate the wealth needed to solve these problems. To
- create that wealth, the U.S. must increase its investment in
- science, both by allocating more dollars and making certain that
- the dollars already appropriated are spent more wisely. "We
- cannot stop investing in our future for all the problems today,"
- warns Frank Press, "or we will be mortgaging our future."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-