Joyce Howard Price, "Researcher claims bias by Smithsonian" (2005)
"The Washington Times" February 13, 2005; http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20050213-121441-8610r.htm
Researcher claims bias by Smithsonian
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   THE WASHINGTON TIMES
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A former editor of a scientific journal has filed a complaint against
   the Smithsonian Institution, charging that he was discriminated against on
   the basis of perceived religious and political beliefs because of an
   article he published that challenged the Darwinian theory of
   evolution.
       "I was singled out for harassment and threats on
   the basis that they think I'm a creationist," said Richard Sternberg, who
   filed the complaint with the federal Office of Special Counsel. 
       Smithsonian officials deny the accusations.
       "We at the Smithsonian consider religion a matter
   of personal faith. The evolutionary theory is a matter of science. The two
   are not incompatible," said Randall Kremer, a spokesman for the
   Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History.
       Mr. Sternberg, who holds two doctorates in
   evolutionary biology, says he's been told by the Office of Special Counsel
   that "they take my complaint seriously and are investigating." The special
   counsel's office said it cannot discuss the case.
       Mr. Sternberg, 41, is employed at the National
   Center for Biotechnology Information, a part of the National Institutes of
   Health. But as part of his duties there, he spends half of his time at the
   Smithsonian as a research associate.
       From December 2001 until last fall, he also served
   as managing editor of an independent journal published at the Smithsonian
   called the Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington.
       Mr. Sternberg said his troubles started after the
   appearance of the August 2004 issue of the journal, which included a
   peer-reviewed article by Stephen C. Meyer. The article, titled, "The Origin
   of Biological Information and the Higher Taxonomic Categories," made the
   case for a theory known as intelligent design, or ID.
       ID contends that the origins of some biological
   forms are better explained by an unspecified intelligent agent than by
   natural processes, such as natural selection and genetic mutation, which
   are hallmarks of Darwinism.
       In his report, Mr. Meyer, a fellow at the Discovery
   Institute in Seattle, argues that ID is a more likely explanation than
   evolution for the biodiversity in the Cambrian period about 530 million
   years ago. He points to the "explosion" of phyla, which "suddenly appeared
   within a narrow 5- to 10-million-year window of geological time" during
   that period.
       "To say that the fauna of the Cambrian period
   appeared in a geologically sudden manner ... implies the absence of clear
   transitional intermediate forms connecting Cambrian animals with simpler
   pre-Cambrian forms," Mr. Meyer wrote in his defense of ID.
       The report was "peer-reviewed" by three outside
   scientists, Mr. Sternberg said, "but employees at the Smithsonian, who had
   a sharply negative reaction to the report, insinuated that editorial
   malfeasance occurred on my end. I protested vigorously."
       He says he gave up his post as managing editor of
   Proceedings in September but continued to be harassed by Smithsonian
   officials. Mr. Sternberg says he was penalized by the museum's Department
   of Zoology, which limited his access to research collections and told him
   his associateship at the museum would not be renewed because no one could
   be found to sponsor him for another three-year term.
       Because of his shortened tenure, Mr. Sternberg says
   he will not have time to complete his research on crustaceans.
       He also said one zoology official told him the
   museum "is not comfortable with religious fundamentalism and with
   creationism, so you are being treated differently."
       Mr. Sternberg also says he was "called on the
   carpet" by his bosses at NIH after they were besieged by phone calls and
   e-mails from Smithsonian staffers, seeking his ouster. He said one
   Smithsonian official even wanted to know if he is a "right-winger."
       "My lawyer called some people on Capitol Hill," who
   intervened and saved his job at NIH, Mr. Sternberg said.
       Mr. Kremer, the Smithsonian spokesman, denied that
   Mr. Sternberg's supervisor at the museum or any other museum officials
   called NIH to get him fired. He also insists Mr. Sternberg still has access
   to the collections he needs for research.
       "Research associates are here at our pleasure ...
   but every effort was made to ensure there was no discrimination, even
   though he (Mr. Sternberg) published something a lot of people didn't agree
   with," Mr. Kremer said.
