Sentences with phrase «proposed federal science»

Kathy — CD45.1 and CD45.2 mice may not be functionally equivalent Rich — Relative humidity versus dewpoint (video) Dickson — Underwater photography winners Alan — Photo of a single atom Vincent — Proposed Federal science budget cuts and The Blog is Dead

Not exact matches

Disregarding sound nutritional science has real and troubling implications for all of us, regardless of what state we live in, in that it may weaken the proposed Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGA) and undercut our federal school food nutritional standards.
Holt pointed to the far - reaching implications of the proposed reductions in non-defense discretionary spending for science and engineering programs spread across the federal government.
The federal fiscal crisis is pushing NASA and National Science Foundation officials to make painful choices between present and proposed astronomy programs
He says that the proposed 1 % decline in the $ 61 billion federal science and technology budget for 2006 — which excludes the Pentagon's even larger weapons development budget — would have been much worse but for the fact that «the president really cares about science
The proposed extension would see open - access polices cover all 12 federal - science agencies, including the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Agricscience agencies, including the Department of Energy, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of AgricScience Foundation, NASA, the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Agriculture.
The president's budget proposes significant cuts to science - related programs across the federal government.
Promoting the power and consequence of science «is more important than ever right now,» particularly as critics question the role of evidence - based science in policymaking and as Congress considers significant proposed cuts to federal funding for scientific research that drives innovation, said Tobin Smith, vice president of policy at the Association of American Universities, during the March 27 S&T Policy Forum session «Advocating for Science: More Than a One - Day Activity.science «is more important than ever right now,» particularly as critics question the role of evidence - based science in policymaking and as Congress considers significant proposed cuts to federal funding for scientific research that drives innovation, said Tobin Smith, vice president of policy at the Association of American Universities, during the March 27 S&T Policy Forum session «Advocating for Science: More Than a One - Day Activity.science in policymaking and as Congress considers significant proposed cuts to federal funding for scientific research that drives innovation, said Tobin Smith, vice president of policy at the Association of American Universities, during the March 27 S&T Policy Forum session «Advocating for Science: More Than a One - Day Activity.Science: More Than a One - Day Activity.»
There is considerable overlap between AAU's recommendations for the government and measures proposed by the three bills, including a call for increased federal investment in basic research and more graduate scholarships in science and engineering.
Managed by a new associate director within the White House science office, the board would work closely with the Office of Management and Budget, which must vet all proposed regulations from federal agencies.
It's also been one of three agencies targeted for major increases as part of a proposed 10 - year doubling of federal support for the physical sciences, although Congress has whittled down the generous requests from the White House.
Instead, the two congressional committees with «science» in their titles have taken diametrically opposed approaches in proposing revisions to the 2010 COMPETES law, which renewed and extended a 2007 version that focused on strengthening federal support for the physical sciences and STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) education.
Antonio Busalacchi, president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, said UCAR is concerned that the proposed budget cuts for federal earth systems science programs will undermine scientific progress needed to protect the U.S. from natural disasters.
For several years, a slowly increasing number of engineers, architects, and physical scientists have joined together to dispute the truth of the official explanations proposed for 9/11 by the U.S. federal government (see: «Science at 9/11» at: http://www.ae911truth.org).
Washington — Warning that American schoolchildren are in danger of becoming «stragglers in a world of technology,» a national commission on science, mathematics, and technology education has proposed a 12 - year plan that would significantly increase the emphasis on these subjects in schools and would cost the federal government $ 1.5 billion in new money during the first year of its implementation.
Postscript: Randy Olson has posted an interesting piece on his Web site today proposing that the community seeking public trust and engagement on climate change would do well to study the practices of two organizations fighting for science - based behavior in very different arenas: the federal Centers For Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Science Education (on evolution in the classcience - based behavior in very different arenas: the federal Centers For Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Science Education (on evolution in the clasScience Education (on evolution in the classroom).
If the science of climate change really is «established», as popular media insist, what's wrong with cutting federal spending on climate research, as President Donald Trump's budget proposes to do?
The «Heartland Institute 2012 Proposed Budget» revealed potentially illegal plans to pay federal employees to write unscientific global warming material for K - 12 school programs and for anti-climate science reports.
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