Bush: US Determined to Carry on Space Exploration
Washington, Feb. 4 2003 (VOA News) -- President Bush
says America is determined to carry on the space exploration
that was so important to the crew of the space shuttle
Columbia. Mr. Bush says the seven astronauts were
on a scientific mission intended to benefit all mankind.
The
president says the members of the shuttle crew lost
their lives in the name of scientific discovery. "The
seven brave men and women from the Columbia will be
remembered for their achievements, their heroism and
their sense of wonder," he said.
Mr.
Bush said their mission had all the promise of answering
scientific problems that "elude us here on earth."
He vows, despite the loss, America will move ahead
to explore the new frontiers of space.
"And
while we grieve the loss of these astronauts, the
cause for which they died will continue. America's
journey into space will go on," he said.
The
president spoke to an audience at the National Institutes
of Health, the government's main medical research
facility. He said the spirit of modern science embodied
in the space program can also be found at NIH.
He
urged the agency to keep up its efforts to find cures
for dangerous diseases and ease human suffering. But
he added, the nation's medical researchers have an
added responsibility in the days following the September
11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States.
"Now,
our scientists have been called to face a different
kind of challenge: Man's efforts to use diseases as
weapons of war and terror. This threat has placed
research scientists at the center of our mission to
defend the American people," he said.
The
president appealed to Congress to approve his request
for $6 billion over 10 years to develop and stockpile
improved vaccines or drugs for smallpox, anthrax and
botulism toxin.
"We
will have a better and safer smallpox vaccine, antibodies
to treat botox, sophisticated devices that can confirm
a case of anthrax infection almost instantly,"
he said.
The
president unveiled his plan, formally known as Project
Bio-Shield, last week in his State of the Union address.
The trip to the National Institutes of Health, originally
scheduled to promote the proposal, took on a new meaning
after the shuttle disaster.
Earlier
in the day, Mr. Bush met in private with the administrator
of the national space agency, Sean O'Keefe. White
House Spokesman Ari Fleischer told reporters, the
president got an update on the investigation, and
stressed his pride in the people of NASA. On Tuesday,
Mr. Bush will travel to Houston, Texas, to attend
a memorial service for the shuttle crew at the Johnson
Space Center.
--
Paula Wolfson
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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