Asri-unix.687
net.space
utcsrgv!utzoo!decvax!ucbvax!ARPAVAX:C70:sri-unix!POURNE@MIT-MC
Thu Feb  4 02:37:28 1982

       The whole space community, with, I thnk, particular
credit to L-5 Society, deserves a couplee attaboys.  I'll take a
bit of the plaudits because of the Citizens Council activity
(and Danny Graham's efforts, plus Newt Gingrich's were somewhat
influenced and aided by the Council.)  Anyway--it is not what we
wanted, but it is less than we feared.
       We could get into next year's state of the union if we
worked it right; it means more coordinated work...

   Date: 03 Feb 1982 2335-PST
   From: John McCarthy <JMC SU-AI AT>

   I think you deserve considerable credit for this result.

   a013  2242  03 Feb 82
   PM-Space Budget,450
   Reagan OKs Planet Program Money
   By HOWARD BENEDICT
   AP Aerospace Writer
       WASHINGTON (AP) - Overriding his fiscal advisers, President Reagan
   is proposing in his new budget that much of the U.S. planetary
   exploration program be kept alive.
       Just three months ago, the Office of Management and Budget
   recommended killing most deep space exploration projects in its drive
   to cut federal spending.
       The effort met strong opposition from scientific organizations and
   congressmen on key space committees who took their case to the White
   House.
       As a result, Reagan has put money for several deep-space projects in
   his fiscal 1983 budget. Included is $92.6 million to continue
   development of the Jupiter-orbiting Galileo satellite; $21 million to
   move ahead with several European nations on a joint sun-probe
   mission; and money to maintain the deep space tracking network and to
   allow the Voyager 2 spacecraft to travel on to Uranus and Neptune.
       If OMB had succeeded in dropping the planetary programs, it would
   have meant the loss of about 1,200 jobs at NASA's Jet Propulsion
   Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., which manages the deep-space efforts.
       The president is to submit his full 1983 budget to Congress on
   Monday. The Associated Press on Wednesday obtained an advance copy of
   the National Aeronautics and Space Administration section.
       Reagan proposes total NASA spending of $6.6 billion. Factoring in
   inflation, that's about equal to 1982's $5.98 billion.
       A major share of the 1983 budget, $1.7 billion, is for the manned
   space shuttle, which is to complete its test program with flights in
   March and July and to start cargo-carrying operational missions in
   November. A second shuttle, the Challenger, is to join the Columbia at
   Cape Canaveral, Fla., in June.
       Another $1.7 billion is earmarked for space flight operations,
   mainly for the shuttle.
       Reagan is a strong supporter of the reusable spaceship, primarily
   because of its potential military applications.
       NASA didn't get all it wanted in deep space. It lost a Venus orbiter
   and a probe to Halley's comet. Other projects were scaled down or
   stretched out. But, considering the bleak outlook a couple months ago,
   it came out pretty well.
       The proposed budget also includes $137.5 million, $61.7 million and
   $34.5 million, respectively, for continued development of three major
   orbiting satellites: a space telescope, an advanced Landsat Earth
   Resources payload and a gamma ray observatory; $100 million for
   construction of facilities; and $1.17 billion for research and program
   management.
       Aeronautical research dipped slightly, from $233 million in 1982, to
   $232 million. Heaviest cuts were in technology for transport aircraft
   and advanced propulsion.
       The budget projects total NASA employment of 21,219 by the Sept. 30,
   1983, the end of fiscal 1983. This would be a drop of more than 400
   from the projected 1982 figure of 21,652.

   ap-ny-02-04 0137EST
   ***************

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