> [Original Message]
 From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 10/1/2005 9:10:30 AM
 Subject: [BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Friday September 30, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 30 Sep 05   Washington, DC

 1. NASA: SO THE DAMNED SHUTTLE WAS A MISTAKE, WHAT DO WE DO NOW?
 This week, NASA Administrator Michael Griffin told USA Today that
 both the space shuttle and the International Space Station were
 mistakes.  His candor is admirable, but after all, these were not
 Bush initiatives, and Griffin's opinion of them was known before
 he was tapped for the top job.  What is disturbing is that
 Griffin pledged to complete the ISS before the shuttle is retired
 in 2010.  There are no plans to send a shuttle to service the
 world's greatest telescope, but the schedule calls for 18 shuttle
 flights to finish the ISS, plus 10 ISS supply missions   that's
 an average of 5.6 shuttle flights per year.  Anyone who would bet
 on getting 28 flights out of these rickety-old jalopies has been
 living on some other planet.  Even with a crew of just five,
 that's 140 rolls of the dice.  That's a big gamble to support a
 space station that is now acknowledged to be of little value. 

 2. FIRST AMENDMENT: CAMPAIGN TO DEFEND THE CONSTITUTION LAUNCHED. 
 Yesterday, a group of the nation's leading scientists, clergy and
 legal scholars announced the formation of the Campaign to Defend
 the Constitution, an online grassroots movement to combat the
 threat posed by the religious right to American democracy, public
 education and scientific leadership http://www.defconamerica.org.
 The Campaign's first "DefCon Alert" is a map showing the nation's
 top ten "islands of ignorance," where science education is under
 attack - including, of course, the Dover school district.

 3. DOVER: DISCOVERY INSTITUTE WATCHES GLUMLY FROM THE SIDELINES. 
 The first week of Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District got
 underway on Monday.  Eight families are suing the school board
 over a requirement that a statement on Intelligent Design be read 
 to students before classes on evolution.  The first witness for
 the plaintiffs was Ken Miller, a Brown U. biologist who wrote
 Finding Darwin's God, which demolishes intelligent design.  An
 attorney for the School Board, probing for softness in support of
 Darwin, asked, "Would you agree that Darwin's theory is not the
 absolute truth?"  "We don't regard any scientific theory as the
 absolute truth," Miller replied.  That just about said it all.  

 4. fiction n. Imaginative creation that does not represent truth.
 For weeks the news was dominated by Katrina and Rita, which drew
 their energy from the record warm waters of the Gulf.  The news
 this week included satellite images of an open ocean.  What made
 it news was that it was the Arctic Ocean, where the ice cap is
 rapidly shrinking.  What do you do if you're Chair of the Senate
 Environment and Public Works Committee and you've assured people
 over and over that global warming is "the greatest hoax ever
 perpetrated on the American people"?  If you're Sen. James Inhofe
 (R-OK), you hold a full committee hearing and invite a science
 fiction writer to testify.  Michael Crichton, author of "State of
 Fear," an environmental thriller in which environmentalists cook
 up evidence to keep federal bucks coming, was Inholfe's expert.

 THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND.
 Opinions are the author's and not necessarily shared by the
 University of Maryland, but they should be.
 ---
 Archives of What's New can be found at http://www.bobpark.org
 What's New is moving to a different listserver and our
 subscription process has changed. To change your subscription
 status please visit this link: http://listserv.umd.edu/cgi-bin/wa?
SUBED1=bobparks-whatsnew&A=1


Reply via email to