Office of Science & Technology - Vol. 1 - 04.20.04
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Volume 1 - April 20, 2004
Letter from the Editor Print E-mail

by Philipp Steger

Dear Reader,

Learning “by the seats of one’s pants”, an American expression I had until recently been unfamiliar with, came up quite frequently during the many conversations I had in the course of preparing an article about science journalists in the USA. Because this is how most of them apparently learn their profession: by the seats of their pants.

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Science Journalism in the U.S. and Austria Print E-mail

by Philipp Steger

American science journalism: the art of story telling
A young scientist, who has decided she wants to become a science journalist, starts her application essay with the simple, yet emotionally powerful description of an idyllic childhood growing up on a 700 year old farm in the “gentle green hills” of Lower Austria. She gets accepted into one of the country’s most coveted programs for science journalists.

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The Federal R&D Budget 2005: Details, Numbers and Views Print E-mail

by Christian Neumann

In a repeat of past budgets, the FY 2005 budget proposes record funding for federal R&D due to large increases in defense and homeland security R&D; however, with tight constraints on other discretionary spending, most federal R&D programs would see flat funding or cuts, and even favored R&D agencies of past years would see increases barely above the expected rate of inflation of 1.3 percent.

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Austria, a Model for Life Sciences and Scientists’ Lives Print E-mail

by Philipp Steger

with expert contribution on
GEN-AU – The Austrian Genome Research Program by Maria Bürgermeister and Maria Fiala

“Look, scientists are also human beings,” says Georg Wick, the president of the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), emphatically and continues, “The high quality of life in Austria is an added bonus for any scientist.” As he is saying this, we are benefiting from an unexpected interlude of summer and sitting in an outdoor café in the vicinity of Vienna’s Business University where Wick has just talked to business students about his organization’s mission. Wick, a longtime resident of Innsbruck and professor at the University Institute for Pathophysiology there, gives an example of that particular quality of life: “Last Friday I spent at the lab, in the evening I attended a concert with the Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra and Anne-Sophie Mutter conducted by André Previn. Saturday morning I worked at the lab again, in the afternoon we went on a ski-tour, then to the Sauna and in the evening to the movies. Sunday morning it was the lab again, then cross-country skiing in Seefeld and the opera in the evening. And between all of that, there was enough time to read the scientific journals.”

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