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- Organization: Penn State University
- Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1993 16:58:21 EST
- From: <WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Message-ID: <93004.165821WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: "What`s New" Jan-1-93
- Lines: 58
-
-
- WHAT'S NEW (according to Bob), Friday, 1 Jan 93 Washington, DC
-
- 1. PRESIDENT-ELECT PICKS JOHN GIBBONS OF OTA FOR SCIENCE ADVISOR.
- A nuclear physicist, Gibbons has served as director of the Office
- of Technology Assessment of Congress since 1979. In the 1960's,
- he led important experimental work related to stellar evolution;
- in the 70's he turned to environmental problems. He was recipient
- of the Federation of American Scientists' Public Service Award in
- 1990; in 1991, the APS Szilard Award for physics in the public
- interest; and in 1992, the AAAS Abelson Prize for contributions
- of a public servant to advancing science. The selection of
- Gibbons appears to mark a transition from the "chief scientist"
- role of his predecessor to a politically astute facilitator who
- can be trusted not to upstage the Vice-President. The low profile
- of the science advisor is reflected in the meager coverage given
- to the Gibbons appointment, but at least Clinton did not delay
- for four months as President Bush did before naming Bromley. In
- his acceptance, Gibbons stressed basic research: "We place very
- great weight on the intrinsic value of basic science, out of
- which has flowed extraordinary and often unanticipated benefits
- to society, including enormous enrichment of the human spirit."
-
- 2. ONE OF THE ISSUES GIBBONS MUST CONFRONT IS THE SPACE STATION.
- Although Clinton and Gore endorsed the space station during the
- campaign, some of their key economic advisors are reported to be
- advising them to reconsider. An article in the Washington Post
- notes that Leon Panetta, who has been picked by Clinton to head
- the White House Office of Management and Budget, was a foe of the
- station while in Congress. Rep. Louis Stokes (D-OH), who replaces
- Bob Traxler (D-MI) as the chair of the VA/HUD/IA appropriations
- subcommittee, also voted against the bloated boondoggle. In the
- Senate, Sam Nunn (D-GA) and Pete Domenici (R-NM) now call for
- killing the station along with the space shuttle. The most ardent
- Senate supporter of the orbiting budget buster, Jake Garn (R-UT),
- will not be returning. That leaves born-again trekkie Barbara
- Mikulski (D-MD) as the most influential champion of the station.
-
- 3. ROBERT E. MARSHAK, FORMER PRESIDENT OF THE APS, IS DEAD AT 76.
- One of the last of the giants of physics who had developed the
- atomic bomb at Los Alamos and gone on to become the leaders of
- American science, Bob Marshak remained active in particle theory
- to the very end. He stepped down as President of City College of
- New York in 1979, a job he had taken in 1970 out of a desire to
- help the socially disadvantaged. The same commitment was evident
- in 1982 when Marshak became APS President and initiated programs
- to assist physicists in China and South America. By then he had
- moved to Virginia Tech and undergone heart by-pass surgery. One
- of my jobs was to accompany him on long walks he took before and
- after meetings of the APS Council as part of his recovery. It was
- an adventure. An impatient man, he sent off sparks. According
- to press accounts, he died while swimming in Cancun, Mexico, "far
- from the shore." Bob Marshak never stayed close to the shore.
-
- Robert L. Park (202) 662-8700 The American Physical Society
-
- To: WHATSNEW(Personal Dist. List)
-
-