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> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 11/5/2004 12:03:57 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, November 05, 2004

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 5 Nov 04  Washington, DC 

 1. THE VOTE IS IN: IT'S NOW TIME TO UNITE BEHIND THE WINNER.  
 The winner of the Excalibur Prize, was the Black Hole Weapon or
 BHW, nominated by George Wallerstein.  Too dangerous to use on
 Earth, it's designed for use against any alien planet suspected
 of harboring weapons of mass destruction.  If we're wrong, who's
 to complain?  George will now receive WN without charge for an
 entire year.
      The Excalibur Prize http://www.aps.org/WN/WN04/wn101504.cfm
 was inspired by bold "outside-the-box" pioneers at the Pentagon,
 NASA and CIA, who gave us the Excalibur X-ray laser, the
 Podkletnov gravity shield, and remote-viewing.  Other brilliant
 ideas in past years included the neutrino bomb, which had an
 acoustic device to let victims know they'd been zapped by
 trillions of neutrinos.  
      Our panel of experts faced an ethical crisis when former WN
 intern Paul Gresser, who is not exactly svelte, nominated the
 Atkins bomb.  When detonated, the A-bomb coats the target area
 with bacon grease, reducing everyone to skin-and-bones with high
 blood pressure.  The countermeasure is carbs, applied with a
 device called a carburetor.  Would picking Paul's idea be viewed
 as conflict-of-interest?  One panelist, General Persiflage,
 scoffed: "At the Pentagon we always award contracts to friends;
 you gonna do favors for your enemies?"  Another idea was nano
 voodoo dolls; trillions of them on a single chip.  Jim Dukarm
 explained, "It amplifies Murphy's law based on quantum theory or
 something.  In tests it dropped a tree on a troublemaker with at
 least partial effectiveness." 
      
 2. IRAN: THE NUCLEAR CHALLENGE THAT THE CAMPAIGN MOSTLY IGNORED.
 The world is too divided to agree on sanctions, the U.S. is too
 bogged down in Iraq to threaten punitive action, and Iran sees an
 opportunity to wring concessions from a divided world.  Diplomats
 from Iran and the European Union are meeting in Paris today, but
 there seems to be little prospect of agreement.   Iran, floating
 on an ocean of oil, insists it will never abandon its  sovereign
 right to produce peaceful nuclear power.  Iran's Supreme Leader,
 Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said today that, "Our nuclear weapon is
 our devoted youth and our believing nation."  The election showed
 we're also a "believing nation."  It's our young  fundamentalist
 believers against their young fundamentalist believers.  

 3. DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS: FDA VOWS TO CRACK DOWN ON MISLABELING.  
 Don't count on it.  Passage of the 1994 Dietary Supplement and
 Health Education Act largely freed the industry from government
 oversight.  A couple of celebrity deaths has turned up the heat
 on the FDA http://www.aps.org/WN/WN04/wn040904.cfm , but this is
 a powerful industry, and it will change when the law changes.

 THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.  
 Opinions are the author's and not necessarily shared by the
 University of Maryland, but they should be.
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