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Academic Journals
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From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 35, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedWith the end of the border wall brouhaha, Congress passed omnibus legislation that set funding levels for fiscal year 2019. As anticipated, the budget includes substantive increases for key science agencies including...
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From:Air & Space Operations Review (Vol. 1, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe Department of the Air Force should be renamed the Department of the Air and Space Forces, signaling a coequal status between the leads for the air and space military domains. As part of this effort, key structures...
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From:Database (Vol. 17, Issue 6)Federal government agencies run over 200 bulletin board systems (BBS), many of which contain information not found on the Internet in an easy to use interface. Most of these BBSs are free and can be accessed through the...
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From:Science (Vol. 291, Issue 5510) Peer-ReviewedScientists are happy about another huge proposed boost for NIH, but they say there's more to science than biomedical research Don't get mad, get moving. That seems to be the scientific community's reaction to...
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From:Parameters (Vol. 51, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedLooming budget cuts will necessitate adept management to retain a military capable of competing and winning by avoiding the mistakes made in prior drawdowns. This article presents a framework for government and defense...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 14)The Social Security Administration hired Andersen Consulting of Chicago to assist with the implementation of the Integrated Human Resources System. Norman Data Defense Systems Inc. of Fairfax, Va., won a $5 million...
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From:Science (Vol. 292, Issue 5515) Peer-ReviewedThe Bush Administration this week tried to prove Albert Einstein's maxim that mathematics isn't necessarily reality. While officials talked up the president's 2002 budget request--the details of which were released on 9...
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From:BioScience (Vol. 39, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedFY 1990 budget: Bush's words, Reagan's numbers In his address to Congress and his budget document, Building a Better America, President George Bush pledged support for basic research, environmental programs, and...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 10, Issue 10)The General Services Administration (GSA), one year after demonstrating secure data communications over the FTS 2000 packet-switching network utilizing encryption, has yet to put encryption to full-scale use. GSA...
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From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 34, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedA funny thing happened on the way to the White House 2019 fiscal year budget, which the Trump administration released on February 12, 2018: Congress adopted a sweeping deal to substantially increase the budget's...
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From:Arctic Research of the United States (Vol. 18) Peer-ReviewedThe Department of Health and Human Services supports and conducts Arctic health research through the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Institutes of Health...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 18, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPresidents and executive branch agencies often have adversarial relationships. Early accounts suggest that these antagonisms may have been deeper and broader under President Trump than under any recent President. Yet...
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From:Air & Space Operations Review (Vol. 1, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe legality of honorary promotions accomplished outside of legislation is questionable. An examination of proposed promotions for US Army officer William Mitchell and US Air Force officers Claire Chennault, James...
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From:Science (Vol. 247, Issue 4941) Peer-ReviewedGramm Rudman: $64 Billion Question Mark With the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings fiscal chainsaw poised to bear down on federal spending for the fourth year in a row, budget battles will once again dominate Congress's agenda. The...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedPresident Trump and his administration have been regarded by news outlets and scholars as one of the most hostile administrations towards scientists and their work. However, no study to-date has empirically measured how...
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From:Science (Vol. 247, Issue 4942) Peer-ReviewedBush Budget Highlights R&D LIKE A PROUD FATHER displaying his first offspring, D. Allan Bromley, President Bush's science adviser, introduced the Administration's 1991 budget to a packed press conference on 29 January:...
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From:Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (Vol. 98, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT The United States has had three operational numerical weather prediction centers since the Joint Numerical Weather Prediction Unit was closed in 1958. This led to separate paths for U.S. numerical weather...
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From:Environmental Law (Vol. 49, Issue 4)The Stevens Treaties of 1854 and 1855 guaranteed, among other things, tribal rights to hunt and fish. In recent years, court enforcement of the Stevens Treaties has led to complex injunctions that, as in United States v....
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From:Science (Vol. 291, Issue 5512) Peer-ReviewedThe new administration's science budget, sketchily outlined in a request to Congress, brought March in like a lion for the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Although that is likely to please our biomedical readers,...
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From:The Public Manager (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedHurricane Sandy came ashore along the coast of New Jersey and New York City on October 29, 2012, as a powerful storm spanning 1,100 miles. Early estimates of damage approximating $75 billion make it one of the most...