> [Original Message]
> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 9/24/2004 12:39:42 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, September 24, 2004

  WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 24 Sep 04   Washington, DC

 1. SPACE STATION: MAYBE THEY COULD USE IT TO TEST MISSILE DEFENSE
 Nature reports that if the crew still can't repair the balky
 Russian-built oxygen generator by the end of October, when the
 crew is scheduled to be replaced, ISS may have to be abandoned. 
 NASA might be privately relieved.  With every day that passes it
 becomes more evident that the $100B boondoggle is, as Bob Park
 described it in Congressional testimony in 1997, the "greatest
 single obstacle to the continued conquest of space."  From the
 beginning, the most expensive science project in history was 
 scorned by the scientists.  In 1991, Presidents of 57 scientific
 societies opposed the orbiting laboratory.  APS President Nikko
 Bloembergen, summed it up, "microgravity is of microimportance."

 2. MARS: ROBOT EXPLORERS ARE BACK AT WORK AFTER A WINTER BREAK.  
 Spirit and Opportunity resumed contact after Mars emerged from a
 couple of weeks behind the sun.  It occurred during the dead of
 winter in Mar's southern hemisphere.  Already 5 months beyond
 warranty, both rovers seem to be in good health and high spirits,
 leading NASA to extend rover operations another six months.  That
 was not an easy decision.  NASA is in serious budget trouble due
 to the cost of repairing the Shuttle fleet.  But if they abandon
 the International Space Station, they won't need the shuttle.

 3. BOOK BAN: CAMPAIGN MAILING SAYS LIBERALS WILL BAN THE BIBLE.
 According to the NY Times, the Republican Party acknowledges mass
 mailings warning residents of Arkansas and West Virginia that
 "liberals" seek to ban the Bible.  I was, of course, shocked, and
 immediately called Valery Messalina, the only liberal I know. 
 "Why," I asked, "do you want to ban the Bible?"  "This isn't the
 sort of book you want to leave around where children might read
 it," she replied.  "It's full of stories of incest and rape, and
 worse.  As a mother, I want to keep it out of our country."

 4. ETHICS: NIH BANS MOONLIGHTING WITH PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES. 
 In a major policy shift, the National Institutes of Health has
 declared a one year moratorium on private consulting arrangements
 of NIH scientists.  Considering the potential for abuse, how could
 it have been allowed in the first place?  In fact, Zerhouni saw it
 as a way to attract good people from private companies
 http://www.aps.org/WN/WN04/wn070904.cfm , but embarrassing media
 reports finally made it clear that the change was necessary.

 5. PROLIFERATION: IRAN AND NORTH KOREA FLAUNT NUCLEAR ASPIRATIONS
 With the U.S. stretched thin in Iraq, North Korea appears to be
 preparing a missile launch, and Iran is defying the International
 Atomic Energy Agency with a new round of nuclear experiments.



 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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