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Mercury Magazine Contents
Vol. 24 No. 6
November/December 1995
 

Page Article
12 A Non-Dialogue on the Two Great World Systems, by William C. Keel
Every generation entangles itself in a battle between religion and science. Caught between the fundamentalists and the cynics are people who value the achievements and critical thinking of science, but also the purpose and moral structure of religion.
16 Science in the Closet, by Madhusree Mukerjee
As they come out, gay and lesbian astronomers risk whispers at the lunch table and outright discrimination in the job market. But only by being open do many feel they will become accepted.
23 They're Out to Get Us, by William Evans
Admit it: Conspiracy theories are fun to think about and, occasionally, plausible. But when they dominate the world view of tens of millions of Americans, and increasingly implicate scientists as co-conspirators, we have a problem.
28 Things Bright and Creatures Small, by Greg Epp
The world is filled with astronomers, not all of the human variety. Many birds, moths, crustaceans, and other animals teach themselves the night sky and use their knowledge to fly, flutter, and flip from one abode to another.
32 Peering Into Peer Review, by Jill S. Price, George Musser, KarenAnn Caldwell, and Abigail A. Hafer
Critiquing a colleague's manuscript doesn't have the glamour of discovering rare spectral lines or building huge observatories, but it is central to how science functions. Increasingly, new forms of communication -- press releases, Internet postings -- bypass the peer review. Will this undermine or strengthen astronomy?
39 Index to Volume 24
  Departments
2 Editorial, by George Musser
4 Letters to the Editor
5 Society News
6 World Beat: Mexico, by Marco Arturo Moreno-Corral and Mars A. Rodriguez
Theirs was the first telescope, the first astronomy department, the first debate between astronomy and astrology in the New World. Mexican astronomers, in fits and starts, have built world-class institutions.
10 Black Holes to Blackboards, by Jeffrey F. Lockwood
If ever there were a key to teaching, the words of Aretha Franklin would be it: "All I need from you is a little respect." When you show respect, you are likely to receive it.
11 Guest Observer, by James C. White II
Tracking the Sun's motion at the winter solstice
19 Sky Calendars
36 Book Review, by W. Scott Kardel
The Guide to Amateur Astronomy by Jack Newton and Philip Teece. The Observer's Guide to Astronomy, volume 1, edited by Patrick Martinez.
38 Echoes of the Past, by Katherine Bracher
It grazed the Sun and graced our skies. Was the 1965 apparition of Comet Ikeya-Seki a foretaste of the 1997 visit of Hale-Bopp?

 

 
 

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