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- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: "What's New" jan-08-1993
- Message-ID: <93009.131915WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- From: <WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Date: Sat, 9 Jan 1993 13:19:15 EST
- Organization: Penn State University
- Lines: 65
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- Received: from STANFORD.BITNET by PSUVM.PSU.EDU (Mailer R2.10 ptf000) with
- BSMTP id 7080; Fri, 08 Jan 93 16:14:26 EST
- Date: Fri, 8 Jan 93 13:12:28 PST
- To: wtu@psuvm.bitnet
- From: "Janice Smith" <VP.APS@STANFORD.BITNET>
- Subject: What's New for 01-08-93
-
- WHAT'S NEW (in my opinion), Friday, 8 Jan 93 Washington, DC
-
- 1. PRESIDENT BUSH UNVEILS HIS FINAL DEFICIT PROJECTION! Under the
- Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, President Clinton must submit the
- real FY 94 budget to Congress by 1 Feb 93--just 12 days after he
- takes office. But meanwhile, President Bush released a "baseline
- budget" showing what federal spending--and the deficit--will look
- like if no changes are made in programs and policies. Projections
- include $859M for the SSC (up from $517M in FY 93). There is also
- $1,086M for other accelerator projects (up from $931M), including
- the main injector upgrade at Fermilab, a B-Factory at SLAC, and
- restoration of the RHIC construction schedule. Bush's projection
- also includes the final installment in the five-year doubling of
- the NSF budget. Sound good? Forget it! The bottom line, even with
- no new programs and no inflation adjustment, is a $327B deficit.
-
- 2. QUAYLE'S SPACE POLICY ADVISORS LAUNCH THEIR LAST ROCKET! "The
- current organization of space activities is not appropriate for
- the post Cold War era," according to the Vice President's Space
- Policy Advisory Board. That may not come as a major revelation
- to the incoming Administration. In a report released last week,
- the Board called for closer cooperation between the military and
- civil space programs, fewer security restraints, more cooperation
- with industry, and leadership in an international space agenda.
- The first change by the incoming Administration, however, will be
- to abolish the Space Policy Advisory Board in favor of a broader
- National Technology Council headed by Vice President Gore.
-
- 3. SHUTTLE MISSION STS-54 WILL ADVANCE THE FRONTIERS OF SCIENCE.
- The seven-day $843M mission is scheduled for a 13 Jan 93 launch.
- In the "Application Specific Preprogrammed Experiment Culture
- System Physics of Toys" test, Mission Specialist Susan Helms will
- play with a "flipping mouse," Mario Runco with "klacker balls",
- Greg Harbaugh with a basketball, and pilot Don McMonagle with a
- "balloon helicopter". After recess they can relieve themselves
- in a test of the new $30M Hamilton Standard Space Toilet. Then,
- it's on to the Extravehicular Activity test. The Intravehicular
- Crew Member (Helms) will observe as Extravehicular Crew Member 1
- (Harbaugh) and Extravehicular Crew Member 2 (Runco) manipulate
- each other in the cargo bay. As explained by NASA: "To simulate
- carrying a large object, the astronauts will carry one another;
- to simulate how well they can align an object, they will attempt
- to place each other into brackets in Endeavor's airlock."
-
- 4. GASP! THE AIR IS THINNING IN BIOSPHERE-2! A 28% drop in the
- oxygen concentration over the last fifteen months is having a
- dizzying effect on eight eco-pioneers in the "miniature world."
- "It is the kind of mystery Biosphere 2 was meant to investigate,"
- noted the systems engineer. Crews are standing by to pump in
- pure oxygen if things get worse. The experiment seems to be
- converging on a general conclusion: humans can survive in the
- enviropod if there is an external source of air, food and water.
-
- Francis Slakey (202) 662-8700 The American Physical Society
-
-
- To: WHATSNEW(Personal Dist. List)
-