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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 11 declined, 3 accepted (14 total, 21.43% accepted)

Government

Submission + - KGB Material released by Cold War Project (wilsoncenter.org) 1

pha7boy writes: The Cold War International History Project just released the "Vassiliev Notebooks." The notebooks are an important new source of information on Soviet intelligence operations in the United States from 1930 to 1950. Though the KGB's archive remains closed, former KGB officer turned journalist Alexander Vassiliev was given the unique opportunity to spend two years poring over materials from the KGB archive taking detailed notes--including extended verbatim quotes--on some of the KGB's most sensitive files.

Though Vassiliev's access was not unfettered, the 1,115 pages of densely handwritten notes that he was able to take shed new and important light on such critical individuals and topics as Alger Hiss, the Rosenberg case, and "Enormous," the massive Soviet effort to gather intelligence on the Anglo-American atomic bomb project.

Alexander Vassiliev has donated his original copies of the handwritten notebooks to the Library of Congress with no restriction on access. They are available to researchers in the Manuscript Division. Electronic copies of the original notebooks, transcribed Russian versions, and translated English versions are available for download free of charge from CWIHP

Space

Submission + - The Herschel Telescope close to blastoff

pha7boy writes: The Herschel space observatory, the European Space Agency's answer to the Hubble Telescope, is about to be sent into orbit. With a mirror 1.5 times the size of the Hubble mirror, the Herschel will look at the universe in the infrared and sub-millimetre range. This "will permit Herschel to see past the dust that scatters Hubble's visible wavelengths, and to gaze at really cold places and objects in the Universe — from the birthing clouds of new stars to the icy comets that live far out in the Solar System." More on the BBC News site
NASA

Submission + - NASA awards space cargo grant.. Space FedEx soon (space.com)

pha7boy writes: NASA has made a recent award of 171 million dollars to Orbital Sciences Corp. of Virginia in order to aid the company in developing a feasable space cargo delivery service.

The U.S. space agency intends to hold an open competition in the years ahead for actual space station cargo-delivery contracts, but Orbital of Dulles, Va., is one of two companies receiving financial help from NASA to develop their proposed systems. The other is Space Exploration Technologies of El Segundo, Calif.
since the space shuttle is slated to retire in 2010, and relations with the Russians are likely to sour further, developing a cheap, reliable method to deliver cargo and personel in space seems like a major imperative.

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