Vanishing Interest in Amateur Astronomy?

Tuesday, January 21, 2002:
the day the Boston Globe banished amateur astronomy
from its Health/Science section.

This note appeared in today’s Boston Globe as part of Alan MacRobert’s Star Watch column:

“This is the last Star Watch column that will appear in the Globe. The Health-Science section is going in new directions, and a skywatching guide is not part of the plan.”

(For more, go to the Globe’s website and click on their Health/Science section.)

Well folks, I suppose it’s a little thing in the larger scheme of events that shape our lives, but I often wonder why it is that newspaper editors so easily discard astronomy columns like Alan’s? Astronomy isn’t one of those arcane sciences that NO one thinks they can approach (like, say, nuclear physics or quantum mechanics or bio-engineering). As I and every other planetarium lecturer and amateur astronomer keeps telling anyone who will listen, astronomy is the easiest science in the world to do — you simply go out and look up. Unless you’re a mindless clod (or it’s cloudy), you can’t fail to be moved by what you see.

Well, I salute Alan for his graceful writing and dedication to spreading the good word about stargazing. We were colleagues at Sky & Telescope magazine for several years. His work will continue at SkyAndTelescope.com and you can get your astronomy fix online whenever you want — not just when a newspaper decides it’s good for you to have astronomy.

After the bad news of Alan’s column departing the Globe, it was refreshing to click on CNN.com and read a positive story about the Morgan County Observatory. For now, you can read the story here or visit the Science/Space or Travel links on their main site.

To answer the question I posed about interest in amateur astronomy up at the top of my entry — I don’t think there’s a vanishing interest in stargazing — except possibly among newspaper editors. Do a Google search on “amateur astronomy” sometime and you’ll be amazed at what comes up. Or try “stargazing.” Or better yet, the next time you have a clear night, get your buns out there and start observing! All you have to do is look up.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.