Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (343)
Search Results
- 343
Academic Journals
- 343
-
From:Science (Vol. 236) Peer-ReviewedSupercollider Faces Budget Barrier THE speaker of the House of Representatives, James Wright, Jr. (D-TX), was in West Virginia for a Democratic strategy meeting on 30 January when he got the news from a reporter that...
-
From:Science (Vol. 228) Peer-ReviewedTechnology transfer legislation is not likely to start moving through Congress until fall, but provisions in the House and Senate bills already are creating a stir. The proposals' aim is to enhance productivity of the...
-
From:Science (Vol. 232) Peer-ReviewedUncertainty Clouds R&D Budget ADOPTED hastily by Congress last fall, the now famous Gramm-Rudman-Hollings legislation has set the nation on a course to sharply cut the annual deficits of the federal budget. But the...
-
From:Science (Vol. 234) Peer-ReviewedUnited States Floats Proposal to Help Prevent Global Ozone Depletion NEXT month international negotiations begin in Geneva on controling future emissions of chlorofluorocarbons (CFC's). The aim is to prevent the...
-
From:Science (Vol. 244, Issue 4901) Peer-ReviewedAgricultural Groups Push Research Plan A POWERFUL COALITION of agricultural organizations is about to mount a massive lobbying effort to boost the Department of Agriculture's support for peer-reviewed basic research....
-
From:Science (Vol. 243, Issue 4895) Peer-ReviewedWatkins Takes the Helm at DOE Admiral James D. Watkins, President Bush's choice to head the Department of Energy (DOE), says the most serious problem before the department is the operation of the nuclear weapons...
-
From:Science (Vol. 243, Issue 4894) Peer-ReviewedLederman to Leave Fermilab After 10 years of running Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and overseeing the construction of the world's most powerful particle accelerator, the Tevatron, Leon Lederman is heading back to...
-
From:Science (Vol. 242, Issue 4881) Peer-ReviewedTexas Lands the SSC ENERGY SECRETARY John Herrington has chosen Texas as the host state for the world's largest proton-proton particle accelerator. The selection of the state is expected to add needed momentum to the...
-
From:Science (Vol. 239, Issue 4841) Peer-ReviewedInvestor Takes Major Position in Bio Technica BioTechnica International, Inc., is turning to an undisclosed "institutional investor" to provide up to $50 million over the next 4 years. The Cambridge, Massachusetts,...
-
From:Science (Vol. 239, Issue 4842) Peer-Reviewedcongress's handiwork on the R&D Budget An analysis of the budget that Congress finally passed in the waning days of 1987 indicates that overall federal support for research and development will rise by just $2 billion...
-
From:AAOS NowPeer-ReviewedOsteosarcoma is the most common kind of bone cancer in children. Found mostly in teenagers, these tumors have a very high propensity for local invasion and distant metastasis. Nearly 1,000 new cases are diagnosed in the...
-
From:Science (Vol. 231) Peer-ReviewedOSTP Ponders Plant Research Initiatives DESPITE the souring outlook for science budgets in the next 4 years, a handful of federal agencies are garnering support for funding up to $50 million annually in new plant...
-
From:Science (Vol. 238, Issue 4830) Peer-ReviewedSoviet Physicists Map Collider Strategy Soviet scientists attending a meeting of the International Committee for Future Accelerators have provided additional details about their government's plans for expanding...
-
From:Science (Vol. 237) Peer-ReviewedSSC, Fusion Machine Hit a Roadblock The Senate Appropriations Committee is refusing to fund early construction activities for the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) and the Compact Ignition Tokamak (CIT). Language...
-
From:Science (Vol. 228) Peer-ReviewedWhen Congress cut $31 million from the 1985 magnetic fusion energy budget last summer it sent shock waves through the fusion laboratories. After almost a decade of growing budgets for the drive to bottle the awesome...
-
From:Science (Vol. 228) Peer-ReviewedIn another time, Washington lobbyists for industrial research would declare war on a plan that junked the investment tax credit and stretched out depreciation schedules. But research and development companies are being...
-
From:Science (Vol. 239, Issue 4846) Peer-ReviewedBig Science Falters at First Hurdle Spending for two of the Reagan Administration's highly touted science projects, the Space Station and the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) could be far below the President's...