
" Elephants & Egrets After Storm, Amboseli 2007"
Regular CV readers already know of John McCain’s past griping about planetariums. Well, apparently that planetarium is really stuck in his craw, because he brought it up again in the most recent debate:
(Obama) voted for nearly a billion dollars in pork barrel earmark projects, including, by the way, $3 million for an overhead projector at a planetarium in Chicago, Illinois. My friends, do we need to spend that kind of money?
If you’ve ever had the pleasure of visiting the AlderAdler Planetarium, you’d probably guess that the “overhead projector†he’s talking about is the spectacular “Sky Theater†— one of the most engrossing, gorgeous venues for displaying visuals about space. University of Chicago professor Andrey Kravstov has a wonderful defense of the theater in a comment on the New York Times website (h/t Deoliver47):
I am an Associate Professor of Astronomy at the University of Chicago (the University that today has added yet another Nobel Prize winner in the sciences for the US). I would like to comment on Sen. McCain’s statement during the today’s debate that Sen. Obama has earmarked “$3 million for an overhead projector at a planetarium in Chicago, Ill. My friends, do we need to spend that kind of money?â€
The way Sen. McCain has phrased it suggests that Sen. Obama approved spending $3 million on an old-fashioned piece of office equipment (overhead projector).
The 3 million is actually for an upgrade of the SkyTheater - a full dome projection system, which is probably the main attraction of the Adler Planetarium and is quite sophisticated and impressive piece of equipment.I find it appalling that Sen. McCain would call a science education tool for public (largely children) for
a historic planetarium with millions of visitors a year a wasteful earmark. The planetarium’s focus, as stated on their website (http://adlerplanetarium.org) is “on inspiring young people, particularly women and minorities, to pursue careers in science.†Is an investment in such public facility at the time when US
competitiveness in math and sciences is a constant source of alarm a waste?“American’s ability to compete in a 21st Century economy rests on our continued investments in math and science education,†said Rep. Brian Baird, Chairman of the Research and Science Education Subcommittee in Congress, after the passage of The 21st Century Competitiveness Act of 2007.
Considering such investments “wasteful earmarks†today, even in the face of the financial crisis, will severely cripple US economic competitiveness in the increasingly high-tech world down the road.
— Andrey Kravtsov, Chicago, IL
Aside from arguing about the “wastefulness†this particular facility, politically I’m actually surprised that McCain is going after planetariums. People like planetariums. And the AlderAdler Planetarium is a place that millions of people go to — it’s not as if the earmark funded some high-tech facility in an obscure place that would serve only a few thousand people. If he was going to attack earmarks for science, he’d be better off going back to the bear DNA.
Although it doesn't come across in the video, this Smart Car -- despite being perched atop four giant monster-truck wheels -- can still drive easily under a standard North American automobile*.
These things are great fun. I took one out for a test drive a few years back and sent the saleman into a panic as I took my turn at the wheel. Shimmying across from the passenger side, I caught my leg on the handbrake . The salesman stood on the sidewalk, aghast as the car rolled down the hill with me trapped between the seats. If only I'd been in this monster version, the little kid I ran into wouldn't have caused quite so much damage to the car.
Smart Car Monster Truck [YouTube via New Launches]
*It can't
Just Tweet It was created to make it easier for people using the popular micro-blogging service Twitter to find other “Tweeters†with similar interests.

All you need is a Twitter account to get started, then head over to Just Tweet It and add yourself to some categories and find others that share your interests, search for friends and keep up with the latest in your field.

You can subscribe to the main Just Tweet It blog and/or the Directory Feed ! If you’d like to follow twitter updates you can follow @justtweetit.
Designed and Created by Dani McDaniel and Adelle Charles.