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departments that are concerned, and just getting them to talk to each other and getting them to sit down in the council or in the subcommittee to identify and study and bring out information on the areas. Many important reports and studies have been undertaken and I hope more will be undertaken by the Federal Council.

Chairman MILLER. Do you envision, Doctor, that although these are not management agencies and shouldn't be management agencies because they would be interfering then with the work of the Government agencies involved, that they do need vigorous executives who can keep the pressure on the several agencies? Because I have seen in my own experience where one agency might surrender a little of its authority and it would be very reluctant to thwart these things. The only one I have known any great success in was the prerunner of the Marine Council. I was chairman of the Subcommittee on Oceanography. We wouldn't have gotten so very far, but Dr. Wakelin took a great interest in the thing and went out of his way to nudge other agencies into line. I wonder if you envision this is going to have to be necessary in this case.

Dr. DU BRIDGE. I only mention the Federal Council as one arm of the Office of Science and Technology. The Federal Council is staffed by the Office of Science and Technology.

OST staff frequently serve as chairmen of the committees of the Federal Council. The Director of OST serves as the chairman of the Council.

For every committee of the Federal Council there is a staff member of OST designated to serve as its chairman, chief executive officer, or member. It is the OST's job to make the committees work. But again the Federal Council is only one arm of my office. The President's Science Advisory Committee and its panels constitutes another arm. The OST staff itself constitutes the central staff for this.

Now, it is not assumed that OST can do everything I am only saying that when one comes to any kind of supervision, coordination, attempt to fill in the gaps of the many existing Federal agencies interested in science and technology, OST is the only agency there is that can have that kind of a general cognizance over the whole Government effort. It must draw on staff and other support from many agencies. But you cannot give this kind of a function to any single agency which competes with all other agencies of Government for funds and authority and prestige and so on.

Chairman MILLER. If we could continue with the report, we may have some time after you finish it.

Dr. DU BRIDGE. All right; I am almost through, Mr. Chairman.

My recommendation to leave the National Science Foundation separate from any operating agency leads me to raise the question as to whether a new operating agency, possibly called the Institutes for Applied Science, not including the Science Foundation, should be created to absorb a number of existing applied science operations. For example, some of the laboratories of the Atomic Energy Commission, of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the labs of the National Bureau of Standards, the labs of the Environmental Science Services Administration, and certain others have been mentioned as possibly operations which might be gathered together in what we might call a new Institute of Applied Science.

Now, my only question in this connection-and I hope you will examine this question of whether an Institute of Applied Science would be useful-is whether a single agency operating a variety of laboratories established for a variety of different purposes and carrying on a variety of different kinds of applied science work would provide more effective management than if these laboratories were left with the existing agencies which are responsible for them. It is my present opinion that this would not be the case. The conglomerate would not be a better management mechanism-and these are applied science and technology laboratories, so management comes into the picture. Applied science is, by definition, science with a mission, with a goal, with an end in view, and applied science laboratories should be operated by an agency whose responsibilities include that mission, that goal. Thus, the mission of NASA is to carry on space exploration and all of its laboratories are devoted to that purpose.

Combining a part of NASA, or even the whole of it, with another agency, it seems to me, would only dilute that purpose.

Similarly, the National Institutes of Health are a part of an agency, HEW, which has the health of America as one of its major functions. This function of HEW could not be pursued effectively without laboratories aimed at the progress of biomedical science and its applications.

Similarly, the Commerce Department needs the Bureau of Standards to forward and develop better standards of measurement and of control of our vast industrial complex. The Bureau could not serve that function, I believe, as well if it were part of a general purpose applied science agency, or conglomerate.

This same theme could be illustrated by many other examples, but I will summarize simply by saying that applied science, I think, should be carried on by agencies whose function incorporates the mission while basic science should be supported by an independent agency. That, of course, is the system which we now have. If this system were adequately supported by the Congress through its authorization and appropriation activities, it could be made a more effective system than it is now. It is not so much the structure of science that needs strengthening as our national commitment to it.

Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.

Mr. DADDARIO. Well, your last paragraph, Dr. DuBridge, compels me to ask you how much science support is enough to meet this national commitment?

Dr. DUBRIDGE. You are talking about science now or science and technology?

Mr. DADDARIO. Science? Basic science?

Dr. DUBRIDGE. We are studying that problem in connection with the 1971 budget. We are taking a careful look. Let's take academic science as one component. OST in collaboration with the Bureau of the Budget is taking a careful look at where academic science stands in this country, to what extent areas which are important to national welfare are neglected or receive inadequate support, to see where the national academic science budget should be in 1971, 1972, and so on.

I can't answer your question in terms of dollars. Many years ago I made a statement to the then Albert Thomas committee, the Sub

committee on Appropriations which handled the independent agencies including NSF, that it would be my recommendation that that committee should look forward to the time and work toward the time when the budget of the National Science Foundation would be at least a billion dollars a year. I think this is a modest and a reasonable level to which that agency should still be devoted. It started on the way up. At the time I said that, I suppose the budget was more like $300 or $400 million. It started on the way up and got to $500 million and got stuck there. It is still my guess that we ought to now try to change the trend and shoot toward, in the next few years, a billiondollar level for the National Science Foundation.

I am sure that we can identify important areas of science that would justify this expenditure. I have mentioned some of the areas here which are of national interest and importance to our national purpose, which are now inadequately funded or inadequately carried on. Now, this can't happen this year or next year. But I think that is the direction in which we should move. And even this assumes that the other agencies at least maintain their support of academic science at the present level or a level that at least grows with the inflationary costs. The total academic science picture of the country is inadequate. The Science Foundation I think should have a larger fraction of it, but that doesn't mean by taking it away from other agencies but by building up the gaps and repairing the inadequacies through additional support of the National Science Foundation. Now, you would think I was the Director of the National Science Foundation the way I am talking. I am a devoted friend of the Science Foundation and spent 10 years on its board. You can understand why I believe in its purposes. But as I have come into my present position it has seemed to me more and more that here is an opportunity to really build a structure of science in this country by strengthening and greater prestige and support of the Foundation, and this is more important than any structural revamping that I have been able to think of.

In other words, we have got a mechanism there, we don't need to change it, we just need to recognize its functions, its importance, and give it support. It is precisely the agency which can fill in gaps, which can do things other agencies won't or can't do and can move us forward in the science field.

Mr. MOSHER. Mr. Chairman.
Mr. DADDARIO. Mr. Mosher.

Mr. MOSHER. I certainly welcome your emphasis Dr. DuBridge, on the National Science Foundation and your emphasis on the way we have neglected it. We in Congress have neglected it. And I agree on the necessity for better funding and better support in expanding the NSF.

Nevertheless, I am somewhat troubled for fear this emphasis that you are giving to the National Science Foundation will perhaps give the impression-the impression to the public and to the scientific community-that you believe a more adequate NSF will in itself solve all our problems in the area we are discussing here, that if we increase our support for the National Science Foundation this will be enough. I am sure you don't intend to leave that impression.

On page 26, for instance, you say, "My point, however, is simple. We

have already created an agency quite competent to carry out these functions. We need only to use it more adequately and more wisely." Now, you say your point is simple. I suggest it is overly simple. Just for an example, a couple of pages earlier you were talking about the recognized needs in the marine sciences and our problems in developing an adequate program as to the use of the oceans. And, of course, I know you are very much aware of the Stratton report and its recommendation that there be created "NOAA," a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency. But on page 24 you seem to suggest that really all that is needed in this area is an increased budget for the National Science Foundation.

Well, now, the needs in the oceans go so far beyond the need for basic scientific activity, I wouldn't want anyone to interpret what you say on page 24 as implying that there is no need for a NOAA; that all we need to do is to turn it over to the National Science Foundation.

The Stratton report emphasized repeatedly the lack of fundamental technology in the use of the oceans, and I am sure you don't want to assign that job of developing technology to the National Science Foundation.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. I hope you will notice that I underlined in at least my copy that some areas of marine science are still neglected. And I want to emphasize that throughout most of my statement I have been talking about science, not technology.

Mr. MOSHER. This is the point I am underlining, really. And I want you to underline it.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. Right.

Now, I do believe that there are areas of applied science that do need strengthening, and I haven't really addressed myself to the question of how one can strengthen the applied science and technology of certain areas which are not fully supported now or fully the responsibility of a single agency now. I think it is quite possible that an independent agency for oceanographic science and technology might be a good idea. I don't think I agree with the Stratton commission recommendation of the particular structure of that agency, partly because of the political difficulties of robbing a lot of other agencies of their activities. I think ocean science, like a lot of other areas, has interests in many areas of Government. Surely the Navy isn't going to give up their interest in it to a new agency.

Mr. MOSHER. The Stratton report doesn't suggest that. Quite the opposite !

Dr. DUBRIDGE. It doesn't say that but I only suggest that as an extreme illustration. But there are other agencies I think need to have activities in the marine area. It is certainly true that the sum total of their agency activities in the applied science of the oceans is now inadequate. And it is possible that a new agency would be very useful there. I don't know-I would have no suggestions right now as to how to construct it. But it would be an applied science agency for a particular mission. When we needed an agency to develop atomic energy, we created an independent agency to do that, because it was not within the realm of other existing agencies. When we needed something to increase our efforts in space, we created an independent agency to do that. Maybe it is time to think about an agency which will increase

our efforts in the fields of the oceans. And I didn't intend in my remarks to say that that might not be a good idea.

Mr. MOSHER. The main purpose of my question was to get you to emphasize that your prepared remarks here today do not pretend to cover all the potential reorganizational needs in this area. Just by improving the National Science Foundation alone we cannot solve a lot of the problems.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. No, only in science.

Mr. MOSHER. Yes.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. Only in science.

But I hope that your committee will keep these two things separate, consider them separately: The strengthening of science, and the strengthening of applied science and technology.

And I think most of my remarks are addressed to the first and not to the second.

Mr. MOSHER. I hope that you in the executive branch, and I certainly hope that we in the Congress, won't back away from considering some necessary reorganization simply because of reasons of political expediency and because we recognize the political difficulties. You mentioned the political difficulties that are involved in the creation of NOAA.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. Yes.

Mr. MOSHER. I feel strongly that we must not back away from doing our duty there simply because we recognize that it is going to be terribly difficult.

Dr. DU BRIDGE. No, the political problems there I leave gladly to you. And I have no special competence to advise you on them.

Mr. MOSHER. Well, the executive branch is going to have to take the initiative.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. We will have to study these problems.

Mr. MOSHER. You are going to have to bite the bullet, more than just study.

Dr. DUBRIDGE. And there are studies going on in the administration on the Stratton report and its recommendations.

Mr. MOSHER. Just where is the basic consideration of that Stratton report? Is it going to be in the Marine Resources Council, or is it in the OST?

Dr. DUBRIDGE. No, it is a combined effort of the various agencies within the Executive Office of the President, including the staff of the Marine Council and the staff of OST but including also the staffs of other agencies like the Council of Economic Advisers, the Bureau of the Budget, and so on. In addition, of course, there is also the new Advisory Committee on Government Organization which I mentioned that is looking into that question.

Mr. MOSHER. Does that have any staff?

Dr. DUBRIDGE. Oh, yes. Mr. Thayer is now the chief of staff for the so-called Ash committee. I don't know just how many people he now has on the staff but the Bureau of the Budget has agreed to assist him in staffing by assigning some of their own people to this job. The staffing is going forward and Mr. Thayer and his associates are at work.

Mr. MOSHER. I am a little afraid that this committee is going to hear too often that we will have to wait until the Ash committee reports. Dr. DUBRIDGE. I realize that, sir.

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