Send an email to Steve.  He's sure the ATF will be invading his house.  This
is how the rumor got started.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve-Teachers Discount Music" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, March 03, 2003 10:21 PM
Subject: [BRASS] Our hobby is in danger...


> I just spoke to Bill Granoble... he said that a Palestinian flew an RC
plane loaded with
> C4 explosive into an Israeli builiding... I heard this morning.. I can't
confirm this...
> that all RC flyers will have to get a permit from the Bureau of Alcohol
Tobacco & Firearms
> and that your home will need to be inspected in order to get the permit...
and that they
> could inspect your home at any time...
>
> I have not been able to confirm this, but look what happened to the model
rocket hobby.
>
> Estes rockets has shut down and you can't get any rocket fuel...
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
> Model rockets may be grounded
>
> New rules from Homeland Security Act unfair, hobbyists say
> MSNBC
> By Jim Banke
> SPACE.COM
>
> HOUSTON, Feb. 25 - A provision deep within the regulations of the new
Homeland Security Act is
> threatening to shut down the popular hobby of model rocketry because the
propellant used to make
> the rocket's solid-fueled motors is now classified as explosive material.
>
>
>         THE CHANGE IN STATUS, approved in November 2002 as an update to
the Safe Explosives Act
> of 1970, imposes new restrictions on shipping and handling the rocket
motors, which have been
> safely flown by thousands of students for many years.
>        Under the new rules, which fully take effect May 24, shipping
companies are required to
> have every employee who might touch the rocket motors be certified, pass
background checks and
> get fingerprinted - an added expense the companies are unlikely to bear.
>        United Parcel Service already has stopped shipping the more
powerful versions of model
> rocket engines, according to Tim Van Milligan, president of Apogee Rockets
in Colorado Springs,
> Colo.
>        There also are reports that some trucking and railroad firms have
stopped shipping the
> motors, and Fed Ex employees have indicated to some model rocket flyers
they likely will follow
> suit in the coming weeks.
>        "It is the heart of the problem we face. Because if manufacturers
like Estes can't get
> rocket motors delivered to stores, the hobby is completely dead," Van
Milligan said.
>        U.S. Senator Michael Enzi, R-Wyo., intends to introduce legislation
as early as this week
> to make what's being called a "technical correction" to the Safe
Explosives Act so that the
> material used inside the small motors is removed from the "explosives
list."
>
>
>
>
>
>
>  .  Apollo Moon Booster Still Flies as Detailed Model Rocket
> .  Astronaut Aldrin Endorses Saturn Toy Rocket
>
>
>
>
>
>
>        "Congress defined an explosive as any chemical mixture or device
whose primary or common
> purpose is to function by explosion," Enzi wrote to Bradley Buckles,
director of the Bureau of
> Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF).
>        "I am told that the ATF claims that the primary or common purpose
of a rocket propellant
> is to explode. A rocket propellant is not designed or intended to
explode," Enzi said.
>        The model rocket scientists-turned-lobbyists are quick to point out
that if model rocket
> engines are designed to explode under the definition used by the ATF, no
rocket would get off the
> ground. It would just blow up on the pad.
>        SPACE.com contacted the ATF and left messages but no one returned
the calls. When
> informing one unnamed assistant of the topic, she said "we've been getting
a lot of calls on the
> subject of model rockets."
>
> SUPPORTERS CITE IMPACT ON SCIENCE
>        Model rocket hobbyists of all ages are preparing to fire off faxes,
e-mails, letters and
> phone calls to Capitol Hill to support Enzi's efforts. And they lined up
quickly to tell
> SPACE.com what they thought of the current law.
>  'It makes no more sense to restrict aerospace modeling than it would have
to ban rental trucks
> after they were misused in Oklahoma and New York.'
> - JAY APT
> astronaut          Jay Apt saw his first model rocket catalog at age 13 in
1962. If the name's
> familiar it's because he went on to fly four shuttle missions that
included two spacewalks and a
> mission to the International Space Station.
>        "If we are to keep challenging our technology-inclined young
people, we need to keep the
> benefits of model rocketry in mind when we pursue a tendency, natural in
troubled times, to
> restrict anything which might be abused," Apt said.
>        "It makes no more sense to restrict aerospace modeling than it
would have to ban rental
> trucks after they were misused in Oklahoma and New York."
>        There are ways to continue flying model rockets under the current
law, but they involve
> applying for permits, paying a fee, undergoing a background check and
getting finger printed.
>        "Model rocketeers are not criminals and this law treats them like
one. How would you like
> your kids to be finger printed just to fly rockets?" said Van Milligan,
who went through what he
> described as a "difficult" process.
>        For the space modeling enthusiasts, the actions of the government
make no sense,
> especially at a time when the nation is recovering from the Feb. 1 shuttle
Columbia tragedy and
> kids of all ages are asking questions about the value of such programs.
>  Advertisement
>
>
>
>
>
>          "Because of increasing legal restrictions, a lack of
understanding about model
> rocketry's excellent safety record, and a general bias against hobby
rocketry, it is becoming
> extremely difficult to get the permits and launch sites needed to expose
these young people to
> the educationally stimulating and inspirational effects of rocketry," said
Craig Cline, senior
> adviser of the Alhambra Rocketry Club in Los Angeles.
>        "Our country's leadership needs to encourage and protect, not
stifle, the ability of the
> public and our youth to engage in the activities and pursuit of knowledge
that have allowed us to
> become the world leader in scientific advancement."
>
>        © 2003 Space.com. All rights reserved.
>
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> Teachers Discount Music
> www.metronomes.net
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Phone (800) 586-3876
> Fax (540) 740-3741
>
> ------------------------------------------
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>
>


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