> [Original Message]
> From: What's New <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Akira Kawasaki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Date: 5/13/2005 1:00:49 PM
 Subject: WHAT'S NEW     Friday, May 13, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 13 May 05   Washington, DC
                          
 1. VOODOO MEDICINE: TAI SOPHIA AND PENN MED FORM A PARTNERSHIP. 
 Tai who?  What's going on with the great Ivy League med schools? 
 A study at Columbia claimed to show that the prayers of complete
 strangers halfway around the world increased pregnancy rates of
 fertility patients, who were not even aware of being prayed for. 
 The study was revealed to be fraudulent.  Somebody had to tell
 them this? http://www.aps.org/WN/WN04/wn120304.cfm  Harvard too
 has been embarrassed by ties to the wacky world of alternative
 medicine.  Now, the oldest medical school in the nation, the
 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, is pandering to
 the public's obsession with mystical healing.  Medical and
 nursing students at Penn will be able to earn a master's degree in 
Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) from Tai Sophia
 Institute.  Tai Sophia began teaching acupuncture 30 years ago,
 but has since expanded into other "medical arts" that don't work. 
 Two weeks ago, Tai Sophia sponsored a Deepak Chopra conference
 http://www.aps.org/WN/WN98/wn100998.cfm.  Wayne Jonas, author of
 Healing with Homeopathy, is on the Board of Trustees. 

 2. ACUPUNCTURE: OR MAYBE YOU COULD JUST EAT A ALAPENO PEPPER.  
 JAMA, May 4, reports a randomized, controlled trial comparing 
the effectiveness of acupuncture with sham acupuncture in treating
 migraine.  There were 302 patients in the study.  Acupuncture is
 widely touted for treating migraine, but in 12 sessions over 8
 weeks, sham acupuncture, in which the needles are inserted in the
 "wrong" points, was just as effective as inserting them in the
 "correct" points.  This should greatly simplify the training of
 acupuncture specialists.  Just stick the damn needles anywhere.

 3. NASA: GRIFFIN SAYS WE CAN'T DO EVERYTHING, AND HE'LL PROVE IT.
 The good news is that NASA is working on a shuttle mission to fix
 Hubble.  Then we finish the space station and build a replacement
 for the shuttle.  And then   oops, that's it.  We're out of
 money.  We can keep an astronaut or two going in circles until
 we're ready to go back to the Moon, though I can't remember why
 it is we want to go back there.  It means we'll have to give up
 the Space Interferometry and Terrestrial Planet Finder missions,
 the top missions looking for signs of extra-solar life.

 4. PROLIFERATION: MAYBE THE N. KOREAN ARMY IS DIGGING LATRINES. 
 After the weapons-of-mass-destruction fiasco in Iraq, warnings
 from intelligence agencies are harder to take seriously.  It may
 be that Kim Jong Il, like Saddam, just wants to look dangerous. 
 "Dig a few tunnels.  If that doesn't do it, pull the fuel rods."
 
 5. LOS ALAMOS: NANOS STEPS DOWN AND KUCKUCK IS INTERIM DIRECTOR.  
 I can remember when the low turnover rate at Los Alamos was a
 matter of concern.  Making a former admiral Director solved that.

 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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