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May 1, 1997: NASA - Ray Villard & Don Savage
Published 2 years, 6 months ago
Description
NASA public affairs officers Don Savage and Ray Villard appear on the program after the agency sends Art Bell a two-page letter defending its Hubble Space Telescope observations of Comet Hale-Bopp. The letter was prompted by listener faxes flooding NASA headquarters following claims by Richard C. Hoagland that Hubble images were being withheld or deliberately degraded.
Art presses both men on Hubble's proprietary data policies, the decision not to risk the telescope for shadow-zone observations of the departing comet, and the controversial rejection of two Europa mission proposals despite NASA scientists publicly expressing excitement about possible oceans beneath its ice. Savage explains the Discovery program's competitive selection process while acknowledging the agency plans eight additional Galileo flybys of Europa. The conversation also covers the Brookings Report's relevance to modern disclosure policy, the face on Mars, and whether NASA would immediately reveal an extraordinary discovery.
Both officials insist shuttle video feeds are transmitted without delay and that NASA operates with full transparency. The exchange provides a rare, extended opportunity for listeners to hear NASA directly address accusations of secrecy, data manipulation, and institutional reluctance to pursue evidence of extraterrestrial life.
Art presses both men on Hubble's proprietary data policies, the decision not to risk the telescope for shadow-zone observations of the departing comet, and the controversial rejection of two Europa mission proposals despite NASA scientists publicly expressing excitement about possible oceans beneath its ice. Savage explains the Discovery program's competitive selection process while acknowledging the agency plans eight additional Galileo flybys of Europa. The conversation also covers the Brookings Report's relevance to modern disclosure policy, the face on Mars, and whether NASA would immediately reveal an extraordinary discovery.
Both officials insist shuttle video feeds are transmitted without delay and that NASA operates with full transparency. The exchange provides a rare, extended opportunity for listeners to hear NASA directly address accusations of secrecy, data manipulation, and institutional reluctance to pursue evidence of extraterrestrial life.