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Some such relevance should (and probably does) exist in proposals for outside basic research submitted to the 7 organizations listed by you under "current possibilities" (1).

There is no question in my mind that an improved organization of basic and other forms of research is a highly desirable thing. However, the nature of the animal is such that too close a rein might do more damage than no reins at all. Sincerely yours,

Hon. EMILIO Q. DADDARIO,

Chairman, House Science Subcommittee,

U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C.

WILLIAM VAN ROYEN.

LOWELL OBSERVATORY, Flaggstaff, Ariz., June 30, 1969.

DEAR CONGRESSMAN DADDARIO: The recent action of the House to cut 80 million dollars from the fund request of the National Science Foundation will be met with great concern and misgivings by scientists and educators throughout the country. They will also note with gratitude and satisfaction your remarks on behalf of the National Science Foundation and its growing responsibilities.

As a research astronomer whose work is largely supported by NFS grants, and whose career includes positions in the academic field, the U.S. Civil Service, and a private research facility, I have given considerable thought to what I think would be the proper role of our Government in the funding and administering of basic research.

I believe that scientists and managers of scientific activities are themselves largely responsible for the reduction in government research funds that confronts them now and probably in the immediate future. The abundance of money available to the physical sciences during much of the post-Sputnik period has brought into basic research the tendency to simply use money, not ingenuity, in solving problems, to purchase solutions, rather than to accomplish them. People rushed into research not always because it offered intellectual challenge, but because it promised above-average pay.

Personal research has often given way to team projects and systems operations that may be impressive when measured by the number of people they employ and by the amounts of money they devour, but that are failures when judged by their results. Capable scientists have become incapable, bungling managers, accepting responsibilities for which they usually have no training and often no talent. Numerous "research laboratories" and "scientific establishments" have been created and are being sustained in government departments, notably within the Department of Defense, which, aside from often being hardly necessary or justifiable, are in many instances administered strictly in the spirit of the Civil Service hierarchy-with subordination being the order of the day and empire building the ultimate goal.

I believe that the time has come when funding and administering of basic research by the Federal Government should largely be divorced from any of the existing departments and instead coordinated and consolidated within a single, new department of Cabinet rank. Such a new department does not have to be limited to caring for the physical sciences alone, but may well be broad enough in its scope to include the social sciences and the arts as well. The National Science Foundation might provide one nucleus for such a new department. The Government's interest in science and in the arts should not, as is often the case, be judged and measured merely by the amount of money it spends, but mostly by the manner in which it allocates and administers these funds. A single Department for the Arts and Sciences could avoid duplication of efforts (and expenditures) where such duplication is unnecessary, it could encourage it whenever it may seem desirable. But most of all, it could and should be firm in its insistence that results produced be commensurate in quantity and quality with the funds expended.

I am convinced that greater centralization of effort at the highest level of government, coupled with some shift of emphasis from the managed (or often mismanaged) large scale team work to individual research, stimulated and guided by personal interest, involvement and dedication, will help us cope with the problem of the high and ever rising cost of science. I also believe that arts, science, and education in the United States may well reach new levels of competence and excellence if we accept and welcome the challenge of learning how to spend less money more wisely than we may have done in recent years.

Respectfully yours,

OTTO G. FRANZ.

Hon. EMILIO Q. DADDARIO,

BAYSIDE, N.Y., July 2, 1969.

Chairman, Subcommittee on Science, Research, and Development, Committee on Science and Astronautics, House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. DEAR MR. DADDARIO: I recently received a copy of the May 29, 1969 report entitled, "Centralization of Federal Science Activities." This was prepared at your request by the Science Policy Research Division of the Library of Congress. I have reviewed the report and wish to submit some comments.

It is a well-written and documented report which examines both sides of the issue a centralized science organization vs. the diffuse types of science agencies. In my opinion, the case for a centralized form of organization is incontrovertible. The benefits to be derived by the Federal Government and the people of the United States from a centralized science department far exceed any shortcomings that may arise in the course of its activities.

I was particularly impressed with Part IIC (page 14), "Liaison with the Scientific Community," and VIB (page 66), "Liaison," and more importantly with the last sentence of Part IIH, "Exchange of Science Information," on page 15 of the report. This states: "The planning and coordination of government-wide research programs require immediate knowledge of ongoing research projects prior to the normal publication which follows the completion of the work."

This statement is the crux of any R&D program. The technical data and findings must be delivered as soon as generated to those scientists and engineers who require this information, in order to solve the problems with which they are confronted.

It is in the above context that I wish to call your attention to an organization within the Department of the Air Force-The Air Force Systems Command's Scientific and Technical Liaison Office-which is concerned with the immediate transfer and exchange of scientific and technical knowledge as it is generated. Attachments 1 and 2 are papers describing this organization, presenting its mission, functions, and its interfacing between the Air Force and the industrial and scientific community. A prime purpose of this organization includes the immediate transfer of scientific and technical information generated by the community in independent research and development programs, to appropriate scientists and engineers in the Air Force. This objective is in direct consonance with the committee's report on the implications inherent in the Federal support of science and technology.

Unfortunately, due to budgetary and manpower constrictions, the Air Force Scientific and Technical Liaison Offices are due to be phased out by the end of September (Attachment 3). Recognizing that the Department of the Air Force was faced with a dilemma in addressing itself to national budgetary restrictions, it seems rather paradoxical that one element of the government emphasizes the importance of liaison with the scientific community in the exchange of science information, while another element of the government is in some measure eliminating these roles. In Attachment 4, there is a proposal for maintaining a viable Air Force liaison organization during the period of budgetary restrictions. However, it appears that even this minimum cost proposal will not be implemented. The effects of the discontinuance of this Air Force organization will be detrimental to the exchange of scientific and technical information, particularly with reference to ongoing research and development programs of the Small Business community, as well as those of large R&D industrial organizations.

The Scientific and Technical Liaison Offices can serve as an immediate nucleus for the formation of a national liaison organization or a government interagency liaison organization in the exchange and transfer of ongoing, current, undocumented technological information. Should the personnel of the Liaison Offices be dissipated, it will take considerable time, effort, and expenditure of funds to revitalize an effective organization and reestablish a liaison rapport with the industrial and scientific community.

It is interesting to note that Dr. H. Heffner, who has been appointed the Deputy to Dr. Lee Du Bridge at the Office of Science and Technology, is a former Scientific Liaison Officer for the Office of Naval Research.

Very truly yours,

(Attachments are in committee files.)

MORTON M. PAVANE.

Hon. EMILIO Q. DADDARIO,

Congress of the United States,

House of Representatives, Washington, D.C.

PERFORMANCE RESEARCH, INC.,
Washington, D.C., August 5, 1969.

DEAR MR. DADDARIO: Thank you for sending me the copy of the report "Centralization of Federal Science Activities" prepared by the Science Policy Research Division of the Library of Congress. I would like now to share with you a few of my reactions to it.

Since the words "science and research" have many meanings I should point out that my frame of reference is that of a social scientist who has been on the receiving end of government grants and contracts for the last ten years. Part of the time I was in several of the sponsored research groups which work at George Washington University, and part of the time I have been with a small corporation.

One of my first concerns is with the tortuous route which must currently be followed to obtain government funds. Research organizations follow one or two routes: 1) the request for a proposal (RFP), and 2) the unsolicited proposal. The RFP is particularly wasteful because there is usually only one winner out of a rather large number of bidders. Frequently there are twenty or thirty proposals, and one recent OEO RFP attracted over 100 proposals, with each bidder having spent several thousand dollars in preparing his proposal. The cost of preparing proposals is eventually passed on to the federal government through higher overhead rates, but it is a poor way of doing business. There are many abuses in this system and, as a result, researchers often avoid the RFP route, prefering to work through the chinks and crannies of the agencies with the unsolicited proposal. This is the favorite route of the smaller research organization, which seems to fare especially poorly in submitting RFP's. While this system seems to work a little better, researchers still find that there are large numbers of projects competing for a rather limited amount of money. With more centralized control I fear we would have fewer chinks and crannies to work through, and more RFP's.

There is a second feature of the current system which is poor and which would become even poorer with more centralized control, namely, that federal administrators feel they must develop programs of research. The obvious disadvantage of the administrator's program is, that once set, any proposed research which does not fall within the program is apt to be excluded. In this connection we are still patiently awaiting the departure of some administrators who date as far back as the Kennedy Administration, so that meaningful research in their areas can start again. This situation of course leads to a decline in the diversity of research, particularly research in new areas or in inter-disciplinary areas which do not correspond with a program the administrator has thought about.

But an even more serious problem is that a great deal of what passes for research is not research at all. In the social sciences for example, we have hundreds of studies which make evaluations of various agency programs or projects that do not contribute to our understanding of social processes. Instead these studies provide a kind of measuring service for agencies, specific to one program for a certain group of citizens with certain kinds of problems. Valuable though these studies may be for the operation of these agencies, they are deflecting the attention of scientists away from a more imaginative look at our social problems.

And lastly I would like to turn to the matter of dissemination of our research findings which is already woefully inadequate and which, if we had even more centralized control, would become even more inadequate. Part of the problem is that we have fewer studies that make concise journal articles, and more that make longer reports. In the social sciences we have organizations like the Science Information Exchange of the Smithsonian or ERIC of the U.S. Office of Education. If a researcher has a well known topic he stands a good chance of being able to get a bibliography through these organizations, but with a less known topic his chances are almost nil. When these organizations are able to identify studies which are relevant to a topic, the best they can provide is an abstract.

If the researcher wishes to have the full text of a study his best chance is to write the author, and authors are not terribly good sources because they are usually limited to reproducing no more than twenty-five or so copies of their study under the terms of their grant or contract. Only in those cases where the author contributes his own funds to have additional copies run, are many reports available. Under the plan for more centralization, I see the government moving into the dissemination field with still larger organizations while their smaller organizations are still unable to cope with the problem. If we had the technology to deal with the information explosion, you might make a case for centralization, at least in the dissemination area. But clearly the application of computers, microfiches, dry copiers and so forth has not resolved the problem, and we must rely on informal contact.

In summary I feel that while centralization of federal science activities might provide a larger source and more constant source of funds, the price would be: a) that funds would become all the more difficult to obtain, especially for the smaller organizations which lack agency contacts, b) that diversity and innovation in research would tend to be replaced by "programs" established by government research administrators, c) that more "nonresearch" would be offered as research, and d) that distribution and dissemination of research results would become even more limited.

Cordially,

RICHARD MYRICK, Ph. D.,
President.

APPENDIX D

CENTRALIZATION PROPOSALS APPEARING IN CURRENT LITERATURE

[Brooks, Harvey. The Government of Science, Cambridge, the M.I.T. Press, 1968, 343 pages, at pp. 1-18]

ONE THE GOVERNMENT OF SCIENCE

At the beginning of the Kennedy Administration in 1961 there was a rather searching review of the organization of the Executive Office for the coordination of national science policy. Various proposals for a Cabinet level Department of Science were seriously debated both within the Administration and within the Congress. The following chapter is a slightly edited version of a memorandum I prepared during the summer of 1961 for the President's Science Adviser, Dr. Jerome B. Weisner, setting forth as objectively as I could the arguments both for and against a Department of Science. In reviewing this paper in the light of the experience of the past six years I find surprisingly little reason to alter the views expressed at that time. Some of the examples and some of the general intellectual and political climate toward science and technology now appear dated, but the basic conclusions and arguments do not seem to me to have been altered by subsequent events and experience.

INTRODUCTION

The phenomenal growth of the national scientific enterprise since 1950, especially that stimulated by federal support since 1957, has led to intensified discussion of the means by which this vast effort is planned and managed. Within the last few years, there has been a realization that while federal research and development expenditures represent a very modest fraction of national economic resources, they engage a much larger fraction of one of our scarcest national resources, namely, scientific and technical manpower. Furthermore, since the points of growth in our national economy appear to follow closely research and development expenditures, to the extent that these are channeled by decisions of the federal government, the whole thrust of our economy is determined. In sum, the social and economic leverage of the 2 percent of the gross national product which is expended on research and development by the federal government is out of proportion to the actual amount of money involved, yet the extent of this leverage is only now beginning to be appreciated.

Nevertheless, concern with our national scientific and technological strength, and with the influence of government upon it, has been manifest for some time. Many of the issues involved in the discussion of the management and planning of science in the federal government find a focus in the argument concerning whether there should be a Cabinet Department of Science. The present article is devoted to setting forth some of the pros and cons of such a department, not so much because I believe the issue itself is so central as because the arguments provide a framework within which it is easy to illuminate many of the problems and issues that are of current concern in the management of the federal science effort.

WHAT IS INCLUDED IN A DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE?

Proposals for a Department of Science range all the way from very comprehensive centralization to relatively modest consolidation of a few of the more basically oriented government scientific activities.

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