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Friday, October 10, 2008 - 12:56 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. I realize that this is a judgment call, but I’m miffed at the example of egregious earmarks that John McCain chose to single out during the October 7 town-hall presidential debate: “$3 million for an overhead projector at a planetarium in Chicago” — one that he said Sen. Obama had “voted for.’ He made it sound like a silly boondoggle. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
And
it would have been if it were indeed for an overhead projector — those
things geeky academics scribble formulas and arrows onto during
lectures in dark, windowless classrooms. To cost $3 million, it must be
platinum-plated, right? In fact, this earmark had been a request (and not by Obama) to purchase a new planetarium
— the device that projects stars, planets, and more onto the domed
ceiling of educational theaters. It was to replace the heart and soul
of the 78-year-old Adler Planetarium,
home to the first planetarium in America. A renowned lakefront
institution, this public museum is still operated in a building owned
by the city’s Park District. In other words, money had been
requested for an educational tool — a precision-electro-optics-laden
mechanical system used to teach astronomy to the public (mostly endless
classes of school children) in the nation’s third largest city (pop.
2.8 million). The money wasn’t for a mindless upgrade, like buying a
new car every three years whether you need it or not. Adler’s
German-engineered Zeiss planetarium is approaching 40, and its
manufacturer no longer supports nor services this instrument. Which
can be a problem, since these babies are finicky. I know that all too
well from the time I worked at Adler and watched the museum’s crack
mechanics rush to tweak and service minor malfunctions between public
planetarium shows that took place every few hours — every day of the
week. In the early 1970s, I was an astronomy major at nearby Northwestern — until I finally convinced the university’s very picky Medill School
of Journalism to let me transfer in. It was this unusual background in
both journalism and astronomy that apparently persuaded Adler’s
director (one of six staff astronomers) to take a gamble on me. He
offered this college junior her first (albeit part-time) journalism
job — and in her dream environment, a storied, world-class museum and
learning center devoted to understanding the cosmos. In putting
together what amounted to a colorful 50-page astronomy book, a guide to
the museum’s antique instruments and educational exhibits, I worked
intimately with all of the astronomers, most of whom had appointments
at Northwestern or the University of Chicago. It was Adler’s
astronomers who first introduced me to Science News.
It was at Adler that I got to touch its ancient scientific instruments
(one might think of this place as the Smithsonian of astronomy). And it
was at Adler that I sat in on dozens of shows in the Sky Theater —
public astronomy lessons (some of whose scripts I had edited), which
literally came to light via celestial imagery projected by is majestic
Zeiss planetarium. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
Let me emphasize: The museum’s mission has
always been to teach. It doesn’t make a profit. It serves the public.
And legions of children depart its architecturally arresting Art Deco
facility understanding that astronomy has nothing to do with
horoscopes, that cosmology has nothing to do with hair styling and
manicures (i.e. cosmetology). They encounter the science of black holes
and quasars, they watch as projections depict the movement of celestial
bodies over time, they absorb history lessons that mesmerize normally
fidgety pre-teens. I would argue that the money would have been well spent. Moreover, Adler president Paul Knappenberger noted in today's Chicago Tribune that planetariums in New York and Los Angeles received federal funding in recent years to replace their aging Zeiss systems. Although
Obama — and other members of the Illinois congressional delegation —
supported a similar earmark for Adler, it was never attached to a bill,
notes Sarah Beck, a spokesperson for the museum. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com So Adler never got its
requested funds and, strictly speaking, Obama can’t be blamed for
wasting money on that “projector.” But I’m curious: Was McCain’s
lambasting of this proposed earmark just his attempt to reign in all
nonessential spending in this time of economic hardship? Or was he just
looking for a chuckle by pointing to what seemed ridiculous — like
those Defense Department projects that yielded a $200,000 hammer? Or
was he indirectly arguing that major investments in public education —
like Adler’s planetarium or a Smithsonian research lab — are, by their
very nature, an inappropriate use of federal funds? Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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