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- From: briang@halcyon.com (Brian Gregory)
- Subject: The search continues.
- Date: 14 Jan 94 20:14:13 GMT
- Organization: Northwest Nexus Inc.
-
-
- Saw this on the wires the other day. Glad to see we continue to look.
-
- MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. _ Three months after Congress killed NASA's
- search for life on other planets, the project was revived by millions of
- dollars in private funds.
-
- Astronomers in the SETI project said Wednesday they have raised $4.4
- million
- of the $7.3 million they need to keep the quest going for another year.
-
- ``I look forward to a day, perhaps not far off, when we hear the first
- evidence proving we are not alone in the universe,'' said Frank Drake,
- president of the SETI Institute, a private Mountain View group that organized
- the money-raising campaign.
-
- The institute will manage a more limited version of SETI, which stands for
- search for extraterrestrial intelligence. The revived search has been renamed
- ``Project Phoenix'' after the mythological bird that perishes and is
- reborn in
- fire.
-
- Donors included Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft Corp. and owner of the
- Portland Trail Blazers basketball team, science-fiction writer Arthur C.
- Clarke, Hewlett-Packard Co. co-founders David Packard and William Hewlett and
- Intel Corp. co-founder and chairman Gordon Moore. Amounts were not
- disclosed.
-
- The money will let researchers make major improvements in the radio
- receiving equipment they operated for nearly 10 months last year at the
- Arecibo
- radio astronomy observatory in Puerto Rico.
-
- In early 1995, they plan to put highly sensitive signal detectors at
- the huge
- Parkes radio astronomy observatory in Australia, said astrophysicist Jill
- Tarter. The former project scientist for the NASA effort is now manager of
- Project Phoenix.
-
- Congress originally committed $100 million to a 10-year radio search for
- signals from distant planets. Astronomers already have spent $60 million
- developing equipment and starting the search.
-
- But in October, Congress axed SETI's $12 million appropriation amid
- arguments by some lawmakers that looking for life elsewhere in the
- universe was
- pointless.
-
-
- --
- o__
- _.>/ _
- (_) \(_) briang@halcyon.com
- Seattle, WA.
-
-