Xref: utzoo sci.space.shuttle:560 sci.space:4627 Path: utzoo!linus!husc6!rutgers!princeton!phoenix!pucc!EWTILENI From: EWTILENI@pucc.Princeton.EDU (Eric Tilenius) Newsgroups: sci.space.shuttle,sci.space Subject: Paul Simon on NASA and Space Policy -- Official Statement Message-ID: <4523@pucc.Princeton.EDU> Date: 18 Feb 88 02:14:22 GMT Expires: 8-Aug-88 Reply-To: EWTILENI@pucc.Princeton.EDU Organization: Princeton University, NJ Lines: 46 Disclaimer: Author bears full responsibility for contents of this article The following is out of Democratic Presidential candidate Paul Simon's official "position book" and was obtained from the Simon campaign. This statement was written on 11/12/87. - - - - - - - - - PAUL SIMON ON NASA AND SPACE POLICY "The 1986 Challenger disaster has forced us to reexamine our previous directions in civilian space policy. Now that we are building a replacement shuttle, we have to make decisions about America's long-term access to space. We need different launch vehicles so that we're not caught again in the present situation of not being able to get into space in a timely fashion. "Budgets will continue to dominate the space agenda. The space station, for example, will be very costly if we adopt a go-it-alone attitude. An international effort will reduce costs and ensure that it will be used only for peaceful ends. We should also pursue joint U.S.-Soviet research and planetary missions, as well as missions with other nations, as an alternative to placing weapons in space. "Our space science efforts have lagged. We should study our solar system and galaxy, through such missions as the Mars Observer, Magellan, Galileo, and Ulysses. We should study comets and asteroids up-close, as we are now able to do. We should not rule out manned missions, but neither should we allow them to continue to drive NASA's major programs. As a rule, it is more cost effective and efficient to conduct missions without people aboard. "NASA should be restored to its original mission of studying the universe. NASA should not be forced to use its scarce resources to carry out the Pentagon's military space missions. NASA can reclaim its legacy of excellence in research. "As President, I will chart a long-range civilian space policy that will provide technological and research leadership into the 21st century." - - - - - - - For more information, write to: Paul Simon for President, 302 Fifth Street, NE, Washington, D.C. 20002. - ERIC - * Another proud CoCo 3 user * ______________ | | BITNET:ewtileni@pucc | ARPA:ewtileni@pucc.Princeton.EDU | ColorVenture | CompuServe: 70346,16 | MCI Mail and/or Delphi: TILENIUS |______________| PHONE :609-734-0092 | UUCP:{rutgers,cbosgd,cmcl2}!psuvax1!pucc.BITNET!ewtileni