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: Master of Life and Death by Silverberg Robert - Science fiction; Overpopulation Fiction Science Fiction
e solar system could be made habitable by human beings.
Appended to that was FitzMaugham's skeptical, slightly mocking reply; the old man had kept everything, it seemed, even letters which showed him in a bad light.
After that came more letters from Lang, urging FitzMaugham to plead terraforming's case before the United States Senate, and FitzMaugham's increasingly more enthusiastic answers. Finally, in 2212, a notation that the Senate had voted a million-dollar appropriation to Lang--a miniscule amount, in terms of the overall need, but it was enough to cover preliminary research. Lang had been grateful.
Walton skimmed through more-or-less familiar documents on the nature of the terraforming project. He could study those in detail later, if time permitted. What he wanted now was information on the current status of the project; FitzMaugham had been remarkably silent about it, though the public impression had been created that a team of engineers headed by Lang was already at work on Venus.
He shoved whole handfuls of letters to one side, looking for those of recent date.
Here was one dated 1 Feb 2232, FitzMaugham to Lang: it informed the scientist that passage of the Equalization Act was imminent, and that Lang stood to get a substantial appropriation from the UN in that event. A jubilant reply from Lang was attached.
Following that came another, 10 May 2232, FitzMaugham to Lang: official authorization of Lang as an executive member of Popeek, and appropriation of--Walton's eyes bugged--five billion dollars for terraforming research.
Note from Lang to FitzMaugham, 14 May: the terraforming crew was leaving for Venus immediately.
Note from FitzMaugham to Lang, 16 May: best wishes, and Lang was instructed to contact FitzMaugham without fail at weekly intervals.
Spacegram from Lang to FitzMaugham, 28 May: arrived at Venus safely, preparing operation as scheduled.
The file ended there. Walton rummaged through the huge heap, hoping to discover a later communiqu?; by FitzMaugham's own request, Lang should have contacted Popeek about four days ago with his first report.
Possibly it had gone astray in delivery, Walton thought. He spent twenty minutes digging through the assorted material before remembering that he could get a replacement within seconds from the filing computer.
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