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> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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 Date: 6/3/2005 12:35:59 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, June 03, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 3 Jun 05   Washington, DC

 1. PRIVILEGED RELIGION: SMITHSONIAN WILL SHOW A FAITH-BASED FILM.
 Saturday's NY Times had a story about the premiere of a movie,
 "The Privileged Planet," to be held at the Smithsonian's Museum
 of Natural History.  The museum would co-sponsor the showing in
 return for a $16,000 contribution from the Discovery Institute. 
 This is the organization that's pushing "Intelligent Design" as a
 Bible-friendly alternative to evolution.  If it's the money,
 James Randi announced, he would offer $20,000 not to show the
 film.  It apparently was not the money.  Yesterday, the museum
 director stated that on further review the film is not consistent
 with the Smithsonian mission.  The museum will not sponsor the
 film and will return the money -- but space for the event is
 still being provided.  Is this the Supernatural History Museum? 
 Yesterday, the WN team viewed the film.  It went beyond the
 "intelligent design" of humans.  It seems the busy Designer-In-
 The-Sky also designed a planet for us.  Not just a place to live,
 but a room with a view, perfectly situated to let us discover the
 rest of the universe.  It's the old anthropic argument that the
 laws of Nature are fine tuned to make life possible, but with a
 discovery requirement tossed in.  So what does the Smithsonian
 do?  It lets them in free.  That means taxpayers are subsidizing
 the Discovery Institute.  Which brings up the next question: this
 is an expensive production   where does the money come from?

 2. "FOLLOW THE MONEY": THE ADVICE OF "DEEP THROAT" TO WOODWARD.
 "The Privileged Planet" was produced by Illustra Media.  When we
 asked who paid for it they said we would have to write their
 lawyers.  We were able to identify the Crowell Trust, established
 by the founder of Quaker Oats, which promotes "the doctrines of
 Evangelical Christianity."  The film was based on a book by
 Guillermo Gonsalez and Jay Richards.  It was published by Regnery, whose
authors are at the extreme right of the spectrum. 
 Richards is vice president of Discovery Institute, a non-profit
 educational foundation with deep-pocket contributors.  Gonzalez
 is an assistant research professor at Iowa State.  In the book,
 he acknowledges financial support from the Templeton Foundation.

 3. UNLOCKING THE MYSTERY: THE OTHER DISCOVERY INSTITUTE FILM. 
 Back in January, the PBS television station in Albuquerque had
 scheduled a documentary on evolution, "Unlocking the Mystery of
 Life."  The film, which came from the Discovery Institute had
 been offered as a free feed by the National Educational
 Television Association.  The Crowell Trust also helped on this
 one.  When the station realized it was funded by evangelical
 Christian groups it pulled the film, saying there was a
 scheduling conflict.  We viewed this one too.  Like "Privileged
 Planet," production values were high.  It's easy to see how it
 could pass as serious science to non-scientists unfamiliar with
 the issues.   Watson and Crick might be surprised to learn that
 the discovery of the structure of DNA proved there was an 
 intelligent designer.  The important point is that we can now
 expect them to attempt to get Privileged Planet on PBS stations.

 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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