> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

 Date: 7/9/2004 1:26:03 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, July 09, 2004

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 9 Jul 04   Washington, DC

 Paul Gresser contributed to this week's issue of What's New.
 1. MISSILE DEFENSE: AUSTRALIA DECIDES STAR WARS II IS GOOD ONYA.
 Australia, for whatever reason, wants in on the Star Wars missile
 shield.  WN interviewed Poco Curante, a famed ICBM Hunter, who
 has been picked to head the Australian program.  "Crikey!  I wish
 you knockers would just give it a burl!  Look at this ICBM; isn't
 she byoooootiful?!" he exclaimed, gesticulating wildly.  "Picture
 some drongo in North Korea decides to lob a nuke dingo our way. 
 No worries!   All we have to do is deploy the kill vehicle and
 that'll give it the flick, and Bob's your uncle."  Informed that
 the missile defense is as useful as an ashtray on a motorbike,
 Poco fumed.  "Won't you stickybeaks shove off?  It's London to a
 brick that it'll work!  It's fair dinkum.  She'll be right. 
 She's a bonzer system.  That Bush bloke told us so."    

 2. JUNK SCIENCE: DID JOHN EDWARDS USE IT TO AMASS HIS FORTUNE?
 For twenty years John Edwards worked as a highly successful trial
 lawyer representing those he refers to as "regular people" in
 personal injury cases.  A WorldNetDaily article this week says he
 "financed his political career by winning legal cases based on
 junk science," cerebral palsy cases in particular.  Increasingly,
 medical science is exonerating doctors in cerebral palsy.  The
 question is: what did Edwards know and when did he know it?  Two
 studies in 2003, according to WorldNetDaily, undermined Edwards
 premise.  But by then he had been in the Senate for four years. 
   
 3. POLITICAL SCIENCE: UCS PROTESTS AN ADMINISTRATION LITMUS TEST
 The Union of Concerned Scientists persists in accusing the Bush
 administration of manipulating science to further its political
 agenda (WN 20 Feb 04).  In a press release yesterday, they
 contend that nominees to scientific advisory panels have been
 questioned about whether they voted for Bush.  John Marburger,
 the president's science advisor, brands the UCS accusations
 "wrong and misleading".  Among the "notable achievements" of the
 Bush Administration, Marburger includes the hydrogen fuel
 technology initiative, and "a new vision for space exploration to
 the Moon and Mars."  Sure, and the most "notable achievement" of
 What's New is a new vision of winning a Pulitzer Prize.

 4. ETHICS: NIH SCIENTISTS CUT BIG OUTSIDE DEALS WITHOUT APPROVAL.
 How does an agency deal with a doubling of its budget in only
 five years?  It's not easy.  At NIH they did it by looking the
 other way.  Researchers recruited from private companies
 maintained lucrative collaborations with pharmaceutical and
 biotechnology companies, without seeking agency approval as
 required by federal rules.  An investigation by the House of
 Representatives is expanding into 15 other agencies.

 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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