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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Scientists’ group critical of Bush

Earl Lane Newsday

WASHINGTON — A scientists’ group leveled new charges Thursday that the Bush administration has undermined the integrity of science in policy-making, including asking proposed appointees to science advisory panels what they thought of President Bush and whether they voted for him.

The report by the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists, an advocacy group based in Cambridge, Mass., is a follow-up to a similar report by the scientists’ group in February. That one was dismissed by White House science adviser John H. Marburger III, who said Bush supports science and wants the highest scientific standards.

In a statement Thursday, Marburger said the new report “resembles previous releases in making sweeping generalizations based on a patchwork of disjointed facts and accusations that reach conclusions that are wrong and misleading.”

During a telephone news briefing on the report, Dr. Gerald Keusch, former director of the Fogarty International Center at the National Institutes of Health, said his nominees for a science advisory panel had been promptly agreed to by the Clinton administration. Under Bush, he said, superiors at the Department of Health and Human Services balked at many of his nominees.

Keusch said he had been told by administration officials that Torsten Wiesel, a Nobel laureate in medicine, had been disapproved because “he had signed too many full-page letters in the New York Times critical of President Bush.” Keusch said officials at the Department of Health and Human Services continued to forward names of people he considered unqualified for the positions.

William Pierce, a Health and Human Services spokesman, said appointments to the Fogarty center advisory panel are made by HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson and names sent forward by Keusch were recommendations only. “We are forced to make choices and decisions,” Pierce said. He said he had been unable to verify the comment about Wiesel.

The February report by the Union of Concerned Scientists accompanied release of a statement signed by 62 prominent scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates and former senior advisers to administrations of both parties, that called for “restoring scientific integrity in policy making.” Kurt Gottfried, a physicist who is chairman of the board of the scientists group, said more than 4,000 scientists have now signed the statement, including 48 Nobel laureates.