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 Date: 11/26/2005 1:03:29 PM
 Subject: [BOBPARKS-WHATSNEW] What's New Friday November 25, 2005

 WHAT'S NEW   Robert L. Park   Friday, 25 Nov 05   Washington, DC

 1. NASA: "VISION FOR SPACE EXPLORATION" IS ALREADY IN TROUBLE. 
 It was less than a year ago, that President Bush announced his
 bold plan to send people to reexplore the Moon and then explore
 Mars http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN04/wn011604.html  The plan
 is not going well.  First, we're told, the International Space
 Station must be finished as the US promised, even if it is just a
 Disney World ride for too-rich tourists.  That means 18 more
 shuttle flights, which aren't happening due to new cracks in the
 foam.  If the ISS is ever finished, it can be dropped in the
 ocean.  NASA will then get on with a crew exploration vehicle to
 go to the moon, where we were 36 years ago.  But that leaves a
 four year gap between the shuttle and the crew exploration
 vehicle with no Americans in space.  Would anyone notice? 

 2. DARWIN: AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY OPENS NEW EXHIBIT. 
 In 1987, Norman Newell, a paleontologist at the AMNH, shared the
 Scientific Freedom and Responsibility Award of the AAAS for his
 early and persistent campaign to alert scientists to the threat
 posed by creationism to scientific education.  At that time, the
 Louisiana "equal time" law was before the U.S. Supreme Court 
 http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN87/wn021987.html .  This week,
 with the Dover School Board ID case before a Federal Court in
 Pennsylvania, the AMNH opened an exhibit on the life of Charles
 Darwin, featuring a live specimen of the storied Galapagos
 tortoise.  Corporate sponsors for such educational exhibits are
 usually easy to find, but the Darwin exhibit reportedly had to
 rely on individual donors and private charities for the $3M the
 exhibit cost.  Although the ID controversy frightened off
 corporate donors, a Creationist Museum near Cincinatti,
 apparently had little trouble raising $7M for an exhibit
 featuring Adam and Eve.

 3. SHAMIFLU: THE BUSH WHITE HOUSE AND THE WAR AGAINST BIRD FLU. 
 President Bush went to Congress early this month to ask for $7B
 to prepare the nation for a possible outbreak of Asian bird flu 
 http://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN05/wn110405.html .  The federal
 government has since become the world's biggest customer for
 Tamiflu, produced by the Swiss pharmaceutical giant, Roche.  That
 was good news for Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, who doesn't have
 bird flu.  He doesn't have stock in Roche either, but he does
 have millions of dollars worth of stock in a company named Gilead
 Sciences, having been Gilead's Chairman prior to joining the Bush
 administration.  Low-profile Gilead Sciences owns the rights to
 Tamiflu, which it outsources to Roche.  There is little evidence
 that the antiviral drug would help much in a flu pandemic.

 4. JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE: LAUNCH HAS BEEN DELAYED TWO YEARS.
  To cope with its budget problems, NASA will delay the launch of
 the infrared telescope.  State Department permission is sought to
 launch JWST on the European Space Agency Ariane 5 rocket.


 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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