To: lurqer who wrote (35775 ) 1/20/2004 12:54:50 PM From: lurqer Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467 With the Hubble Telescope already receiving the budgetary axe, the Halliburton connection (http://www.tompaine.com/feature2.cfm/ID/9774), and the funding, I think Bush's space initiative may be to NASA what "No Child Left Behind" has been to education.President's NASA plans lack funding In one of his most daring and longest-term plans to date, President Bush announced last Tuesday an outline that's out-of-this-world, both fiscally and otherwise, for the future of the space program. If Congress agrees to Bush's "new course," the long-term focus of the nation's space program will shift from shuttle missions and the International Space Station to a new manned space vehicle that will lift off in the next decade; NASA's three remaining shuttles would be retired. He wants America to make a return hop to the moon by 2020. (Oddly, that gives National Aeronautics and Space Administration engineers a much longer time to hash out details for a moon mission than President Kennedy did when he promised a man on the moon by the end of the '60s.) Moreover, Bush called for an eventual manned mission to Mars as early as 2030. And if high-end field trips outside earth's sphere of gravitational influence didn't command enough eyebrow raisings, the initiative calls for the stuff that afternoons of playing with Lego sets are made of: the establishment of a permanent moon base. The price tag? Well, that depends on how you do your accounting: Bush asked Congress for a $1 billion budget hike for NASA over the next five years, just a fiduciary nudge compared to NASA's current $86 billion budget. But, the plan also calls for the reallocation of $11 billion from other NASA programs. Still, big numbers and big plans aren't impressing many Americans, particularly in a recovering economy: More than half of respondents would prefer that the budget increase be spent on domestic programs, a recent Associated Press poll found. Those Americans would presumably be displeased if even this short-term projection dramatically increased, as some Capitol Hill pundits warn. "The first year after Kennedy announced the Apollo program, the NASA budget doubled," explained Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. "And in the second year it was doubled again. That's not realistic today. But 5-percent-a-year increases are not going to get us to the moon." Nelson is more than a politician concerned about fiscal accountability, too -- he's the only current member of Congress who has flown in space. ...dailyemerald.com lurqer