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Mercury Magazine Contents
Vol. 24 No. 5
September/October 1995
 

Page Article
12 A Brief History of Quantized Time, by William G. Tifft
Maybe the universe isn't expanding after all; maybe dark matter isn't necessary to explain the behavior of galaxies and galaxy clusters. If we revise our ideas of time, many of the strange properties of the universe start to make sense.
16 Astronomy at the Cultural Crossroads, by Pamela Eastlick
On the Pacific islands of Micronesia, people often feel part neither of the global village nor of their traditional culture. Many believe science is incompatible with their way of life. But astronomy educators are trying to prove otherwise.
23 The Prodigal Sister, by Nadine G. Barlow
If you think Venus is a hellhole now, be thankful you weren't there 500 million years ago. Those were the days, many planetary scientists believe, of apocalypse on our sister world: Volcanoes wracked the land, while greenhouse gases broiled the air. Is this the Earth's fate, too?
28 The Double Life, by Jill S. Price, Abigail A. Hafer, and KarenAnn Caldwell
Can you have a baby and be an astronomer, too? One astronomer had to quit her job because she was denied maternity leave; another astro-parent was told by her professor that she should have gone to work at Burger King. Battered by skimpy benefits and the pressure to publish, parents are calling on the professional societies to do something.
32 The Astronomer's Disease, by William Lowell Putnam and Charles Snead Houston
Air gets in the way of observing, but it's nice to have around when you're breathing. The dilemma is acute for astronomers who observe at high altitudes. Fortunately, they can avoid illness and debilitation by taking some basic precautions.
  Departments
2 Editorial, by George Musser
4 Letters to the Editor
6 Society News
7 World Beat: Croatia, by Vladis Vujnovic
The situation in ex-Yugoslavia deteriorates almost by the day. Croatian astronomy is a happy exception.
8 Black Holes to Blackboards, by Jeffrey F. Lockwood
What better way to teach science than to have kids do science? The whole idea sounds intimidating to many teachers, but all it takes is some planning and help from local scientists.
9 Guest Observer, by James C. White II
To get you involved in observing, every issue will outline a simple project and ask you to submit your findings for publication in a future issue. The first project: the October total eclipse of the Sun.
10 Point-Counterpoint, by Norman H. Sleep, Kenneth L. Tanaka
Did Mars have plate tectonics?
19 Sky Calendars 
35 Echoes of the Past, by Katherine Bracher
The Mars opposition of 1995 came and went, but no one reported seeing canals or other last-ditch (so to speak) engineering feats by drought-stricken civilizations. A hundred years ago, even 40 years ago, scientists were not so sure.
36 Bruce Medalist Profile: Alfred Fowler, by Joseph S. Tenn
Alfred Fowler was to stars what Scotland Yard is to criminals. In his laboratory, spectra became a way to fingerprint stars and deduce their composition. Yet for years Fowler's efforts went unrecognized, because his boss took the credit.
38 Book Review, by W. John Cocke
Soul: God, Self, and the New Cosmology by Angela Tilby. The Last Three Minutes by Paul Davies. The Origin of the Universe by John D. Barrow.

 

 
 

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