Editorial
The Leonids managed to bypass the Earth to a large extent, but seem to
have caused an upsurge of interest in meteor spotting and Astronomy as a whole - and this
can only be good for us as a society. Now is the time to grab all of your friends who are
somewhat interested in the science, and put a pen and membership application form in their
hands.
We continue the Relativity series with part 2 of Eben van Zyl's presentation, and also
continue the series on "How to make a Star" by Sten Odenwald. Bill Wheaton has
submitted a summary of the many interesting and exciting NASA projects which are either on
the go or in the pipeline at present, and we were very pleased to hear that the DS1 Ion
engine was successfully restarted as the previous issue was going to print, and is still
going strong. These engines could make interstellar exploration a viable option. Brian has
supplied us with the Sky events for the next couple of months, Danie has given us not one,
but four variables of the month, and we have an article from Wolf Lange on a visit
he made to the Carl-Zeiss Planetarium in Stuttgart, Germany.
This is the first issue of CANOPUS for 1999, and we once again express a plea for articles for our magazine. There must be plenty of budding authors out there - this is just the place to cut your teeth. We are very kind editors and promise not to reject any of your articles out of hand!
An(other) Apology
Oh no - not again!!! We really blew it this time! How many of you noticed that the cover of the last CANOPUS said "October" and not "November/December" as it should have! Would you believe that the error was only picked up as the envelopes were being filled. Well maybe your eye was caught by the great picture on the cover, and you never noticed; however, it was picked up by our astute envelope filler and pointed out to us so once again we apologise.
The Editors
Chris chris@aqua.co.za,
Lori barbour@global.co.za