[Original Message]
 From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 12/3/2004 12:11:50 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, December 03, 2004

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park  Friday, 3 Dec 04   Washington, DC
                                                        
 1. COLD, COLD FUSION: SO AFTER 15 YEARS, WHAT HAS BEEN LEARNED? 
 We've learned that DOE should stop playing games with the Federal
 Advisory Committee Act while shrouding its review in secrecy
 http://www.aps.org/WN/WN04/wn091704.cfm.  Beyond that, we haven't
 learned much.  The report released this week is an attempt to
 summarize individual comments from 18 unidentified reviewers. 
 The conclusions at the end of the report were: 1) "significant
 progress has been made in sophistication of calorimeters," and
 2)"conclusions reached by reviewers today are similar to those
 found in the 1989 review."  That's it?  After 15 years we've got
 better calorimeters?  The 1989 review called for no more cold
 fusion research.  Good advice.  Proponents now prefer "low energy
 nuclear reactions," but "no more" is still good advice. 

 2. PROLIFERATION: IRAN IS STILL MAKING NUCLEAR-WEAPONS HEADLINES.
 The question is: is Iran making nuclear weapons?  Nobody seems to
 know.  Last week, WN reported that Iran said it would continue to
 operate 20 uranium enrichment centrifuges for peaceful research,
 violating a deal it had just made with European nations.  The
 next day Iran flip-flopped again agreeing to give up the civilian
 centrifuges.  Citing new intelligence, the International Atomic
 Energy Agency is now seeking access to two military locations to
 look for evidence of nuclear weapons development, leading to
 speculation that the civilian flip-flops had been a diversion.

 3. PRAYER STUDY: COLUMBIA PROFESSOR REMOVES HIS NAME FROM PAPER.
 We have been tracking the sordid story of the Columbia prayer
 study for three years http://www.aps.org/WN/WN01/wn100501.cfm . 
 It claimed that women for whom total strangers prayed were twice
 as likely to become pregnant from in-vitro fertilization as
 others; it was published in the Journal of Reproductive Medicine. 
 At the time we were unaware of the background of the study, but
 knew it had to be wrong; the first assumption of science is that
 events result from natural causes.  The lead author, Rugerio
 Lobo, who at the time was Chair of Obstetrics, now says he had no
 role in the study.  The author who set up the study is doing five
 years for fraud in a separate case, and his partner hanged
 himself in jail.  Another author left Columbia and isn't talking. 
 The Journal has never acknowledged any responsibility, and after
 withdrawing the paper for "scrutiny," has put it back on the web. 
 Nor has the Journal published letters critical of the study. 
 Columbia has never acknowledged any responsibility.  All of this
 has come out due to the persistence of Bruce Flamm, MD.  The
 science community should flatly refuse all proposals or papers
 that invoke any supernatural explanation for physical phenomena.

 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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