86 THE FIVE-YEAR OUTLOOK 



Council were reviewed by individual specialists, and the 

 entire set was subsequently reviewed by a steering group 

 including representatives of the Council, the Assembly of 

 Behavioral and Social Sciences of the National Academy 

 of Sciences, and the Center for Advanced Study in the 

 Behavioral Sciences. 



The 11 Federal agency papers published in the second 

 Source Volume were drafted by representatives of 22 

 Federal agencies who worked together in task groups 

 convened by NSF. Each agency with a science- and tech- 

 nology-related mission within a given functional area 

 provided draft material to the group, and the contributions 

 were integrated by a designated lead agency representa- 

 tive into a single draft narrative. This procedure was 

 meant to provide as comprehensive a view as possible of 

 interactions among Federal science and technology agen- 

 cies with responsibilities in the same broad areas. Lead 

 agency drafts were revised, prior to final transmission to 

 NSF, in the light of comments by staff of OSTP, 0MB, 

 and NSF. Participating agencies were: 



Department of Agriculture 



Department of Commerce 

 National Bureau of Standards 



National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 

 Department of Defense 

 Department of Education 

 Department of Energy 

 Department of Health and Human Services 



Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health 

 Administration 



Centers for Disease Control 



Food and Drug Administration 



National Institutes of Health 

 Department of Housing and Urban Development 

 Department of the Interior 

 Department of Labor 



Occupational Safety and Health Administration 

 Department of State 

 Department of Transportation 

 Agency for International Development 

 Consumer Product Safety Commission 

 Environmental Protection Agency 

 National Aeronautics and Space Administration 

 National Science Foundation 

 Nuclear Regulatory Commission 

 Veterans Administration 



Appendix C 

 Acknowledgements 



The National Science Foundation is grateful to the Na- 

 tional Research Council, the American Association for 

 the Advancement of Science, the Social Science Research 

 Council, and the Federal agencies listed in Appendix B 

 for their contributions to the source materials for the Five- 

 Year Outlook. Special thanks are due to the following 

 persons who provided continuing advice and guidance in 

 the design, preparation, and review of the Five-Year 

 Outlook: 



Harvey Brooks, Harvard University 



Eileen Clifford, New Mexico Public Service 

 Commission 



Matina Homer, Radcliffe College 



Melvin Kranzberg, Georgia Institute of Technology 



Anne Krueger, University of Minnesota 



Franklin A. Long, Cornell University 



William McElroy. University of California/San Diego 



Arnold J. Meltsner, University of California/Berkeley 



Jaime Oaxaca, Northrop Corporation 



Richard Rettig. Rand Corporation 



Riley O. Schaeffer, University of New Mexico 



Willis H. Shapley, Washington, D.C. 



Stephen Toulmin, University of Chicago 

 N. Richard Werthamer, Exxon Corporation 

 Seymour L. Wolfbein, Temple University. 

 Thanks are due to the following faculty members at five 

 universities, and to their graduate students, whose exten- 

 sive evaluations of the first Five-Year Outlook on science 

 and technology provided a basis for the second: 

 John Logsdon, George Washington University 

 Daryl Chubin and Fredrick Rossini, Georgia Institute 



of Technology 

 Susan Hadden and Jurgen Schmandt, University of 



Texas 

 Edward Wenk, Dael Wolfle, and Robert Fleagle. Uni- 

 versity of Washington 

 Robert Morgan and William Darby, Washington 



University. 

 Other individuals outside the National Science Founda- 

 tion who made specific contributions to this Five-Year 

 Outlook and whose assistance is appreciated are: 

 Carson E. Agnew, Stanford University 

 William G. Agnew. General Motors Research 

 Laboratory 



