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- <text id=94TT1594>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Science:Tigers in the Lab
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 86
- Tigers in the Lab
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Asian-born, U.S.-trained researchers are headed home to challenge
- the technological supremacy of the West
- </p>
- <p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Taipei--With reporting by Robert Guest/Seoul
- </p>
- <p> Like so many talented young Taiwanese, Yuan T. Lee came to
- the U.S. to study, and then to stay. He earned a Ph.D. in chemistry
- at the University of California, Berkeley. He climbed the academic
- ladder. Eventually, he won a Nobel Prize. Then earlier this
- year, at the peak of his career, the 57-year-old chemist made
- a sweeping U-turn and headed back home to run Taiwan's prestigious
- Academia Sinica, a burgeoning collection of 21 research institutes.
- </p>
- <p> The departure of such a distinguished scientist signals a dramatic
- change: the brain drain that has enriched the West with tens
- of thousands of Asia's best and brightest minds has begun to
- flow in the opposite direction. The Yuan T. Lees of tomorrow
- still flock to elite North American and European universities
- for advanced degrees, but more and more they are seeking employment
- in Asia, where opportunities to pursue careers in research are
- expanding almost as fast as sales of designer clothes and cellular
- phones.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., which last year pulled the plug on one of its most
- prestigious science projects, the Superconducting Supercollider,
- often seems to forget the value of funding research. But Asia
- has not. Japan has been building up its research capabilities
- for years, and it is being joined by the so-called Tigers of
- Asia--Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan. They are
- collectively plowing billions of dollars earned selling cars
- and computer parts into their technical universities and research
- institutes. Their goal is an ambitious one: first to catch up
- in scientific fields pioneered by the West, then to dominate
- the industries of the future.
- </p>
- <p> Asia's new willingness to invest in long-term research reflects
- not just its recent economic boom but also a radical shift in
- social outlook. "Thirty years ago, when the average person needed
- rice and bread, who could talk about science?" asks Weichen
- Tien, head of the Development Center for Biotechnology in Taipei.
- "Today science is viewed as a necessity."
- </p>
- <p> The change is as remarkable as it is recent--especially for
- those scientists making the trip back East. Just 10 years ago,
- returning to Asia would have entailed enormous personal sacrifice.
- But that was before the job market for scientists and engineers
- in the West turned sour and prospects in the East turned sweet.
- Singapore's six-year-old Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology
- finds it increasingly easy to attract promising young Ph.D.s
- with offers that start at $40,000 a year. Hong Kong's new University
- of Science and Technology, which awarded degrees to its first
- class of 576 undergraduates last month, can match the handsome
- faculty salaries offered by top U.S. universities, and has even
- started to lure some prominent non-Asians. To direct a new $4.5
- million environmental-studies program, for instance, Hong Kong
- recruited Gary Heinke from the University of Toronto. "We're
- not shy," laughs Hong Kong university president Chia-Wei Woo,
- whose resume includes a stint as president of San Francisco
- State University. "When we see someone we want, we can be very
- sticky."
- </p>
- <p> For Asian-born scientists, a sense of duty, the tug of shared
- culture, the need to care for aging parents and a thousand other
- imponderables influence the decision to return. The recent wave
- of corporate downsizing and research cutbacks in the U.S. has
- also tipped the scales. A generous retirement package helped
- persuade Lee to leave his comfortable sinecure in Berkeley and
- take on the challenge of leading Academia Sinica. "Taiwan needs
- me," says Lee, "while to the University of California, it doesn't
- make that much difference whether I'm there or not."
- </p>
- <p> But what ultimately wins over most wavering recruits is the
- sight of gleaming laboratories stocked with state-of-the-art
- equipment. In Taiwan K.H. Chen and his colleagues are using
- high-powered lasers to study ozone-destroying gases and films
- of sparkling diamonds. In Hong Kong engineers are fabricating
- computer chips in clean rooms that rival the very best facilities
- at U.S. universities. In Pohang, South Korea, scientists will
- soon start probing the structure of materials with a $180 million
- tool known as a synchrotron light source--one of only half
- a dozen such machines in the world.
- </p>
- <p> Although they have taken shape in the shadow of Japan, the scientific
- showcases of the Pacific Rim look for inspiration to California's
- Silicon Valley, where academics and entrepreneurs race to take
- ideas out of the lab and into the marketplace. In Hong Kong
- researchers are already working on projects for clients ranging
- from a small machine-tool manufacturer in Nanjing, China, to
- big multinationals like U.S.-based Motorola. Taiwan's scientists
- have taken on everything from vaccines to satellite communications,
- and many harbor even grander dreams. "In a few years," confides
- an aspiring biotechnologist, "I hope to start my own company."
- </p>
- <p> But there is a danger in too narrow a focus on products and
- patents, warns Y.H. Tan, director of Singapore's Institute of
- Molecular and Cell Biology. While these may pay off in the short
- term, they are unlikely to yield the dazzling technological
- leaps that come from tackling fundamental problems in science.
- Tan's solution: continue supporting basic research--like mapping
- the genes of the fugu, the poisonous blowfish prized by sushi
- chefs--while at the same time prospecting for new drugs in
- Southeast Asia's flora and fauna for the British giant Glaxo.
- </p>
- <p> Competition for openings in Asia's top research centers is keen.
- The Ph.D. he received from Indiana University wasn't good enough,
- jokes Huan Chang, now at Taiwan's Institute of Atomic and Molecular
- Sciences. "I had to go to Harvard as a postdoctoral fellow to
- get myself coated in a layer of gold." There is a frontier spirit
- in these fast-growing intellectual boom-towns that attracts
- job seekers with a taste for adventure. Calcutta-born Uttam
- Surana, an ambitious young biologist with a Ph.D. from the University
- of Arizona, turned down an offer from Germany's venerable Max
- Planck Institute to go to Singapore. "When you work with big
- people, you get overshadowed by their thinking," says Surana.
- "Here you can think your own thoughts."
- </p>
- <p> The scientists returning to Asia bring more than just a Westernized
- preference for cappuccino over tea. They also carry with them
- a penchant for challenging the status quo. Until recently, Asian
- funding agencies still doled out research money according to
- traditional egalitarian formulas, with little regard for quality.
- Now they are being pressured to establish peer-review panels
- staffed by scientific experts to gauge the merit of competing
- proposals. Automatic promotions, still typical at many academic
- institutions, are also coming under attack, and some brave souls
- have even mounted an assault on the Confucian ethos--particularly
- its stultifying worship of professors and its reluctance to
- question authority. Wen Chang, a young researcher at Academia
- Sinica, politely but firmly objects to being addressed as Teacher
- Chang. "I tell students that there is no authority in science,"
- she says. "Everything can be overthrown the very next day."
- </p>
- <p> While the Tigers' forays into R. and D. have begun to produce
- some first-rate scientific papers, they have yet to generate
- the trailblazing innovations that have streamed out of American
- laboratories. But the energy and exuberance alone of the Asians
- make them worth watching. Not tomorrow, perhaps, but a few decades
- from now, the U.S. may rue the policy drift that is eroding
- its research infrastructure as slowly and as surely as water
- rusts the steel girders of a bridge. For if political leaders
- in such places as Taiwan and Hong Kong are sufficiently patient
- and nurture the seedling research efforts they have planted,
- the scientific breakthroughs of the 21st century--and the
- market opportunities that follow--may be born on the Pacific
- Rim.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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