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June 11, 2009

Reviving American chestnuts may mitigate climate change...........I love chestnut.....thanks Dave


Posted by Mark Frauenfelder, June 10, 2009 12:42 PM | permalink
American chestnut trees are very fast growing and produce a hard wood suitable for furniture. They're good at sequestering carbon. In the early 1900s a blight nearly wiped out chestnut trees. They've never come back. But Douglass Jacobs, an associate professor of forestry and natural resources at Purdue University, has hybridized American chestnuts with blight-resistant Chinese chestnuts. The tress are 94 percent American chestnut, yet retain the blight resistance of Chinese chestnuts.

200906101241 (Photo by Nicole Jacobs)

Jacobs studied four sites in southwestern Wisconsin that were unaffected by the blight because they are so far from the tree's natural range. He compared the American chestnut directly against black walnut and northern red oak at several different ages, and also cross-referenced his results to other studies using quaking aspen, red pine and white pine in the same region.

In each case the American chestnut grew faster, having as much as three times more aboveground biomass than other species at the same point of development. American chestnut also sequestered more carbon than all the others. The only exception was black walnut on one site, but the American chestnut absorbed more carbon on the other study sites.

"Each tree has about the same percentage of its biomass made up of carbon, but the fact that the American chestnut grows faster and larger means it stores more carbon in a shorter amount of time," Jacobs said.

Jacobs said trees absorb about one-sixth of the carbon emitted globally each year. Increasing the amount that can be absorbed annually could make a considerable difference in slowing climate change, he said.

May 28, 2009

Mexico confirms 6 more swine flu deaths, raising toll to 95

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico is reporting six more deaths from swine flu, bringing the country's toll to 95.

The Health Department says that 4,974 people have been sickened nationwide. That number includes the 95 deaths.

Health officials say 34 percent of those who died were obese and diabetic.

Mexico says its epidemic has largely subsided, but the confirmed toll has been rising as scientists test a backlog of samples from patients.

May 19, 2009

Mother of all recessions? Census figures show increase in US babies dropped steeply last year

WASHINGTON (AP) — Did America's moms and dads see the meltdown coming before the economists?

Just before the earliest stages of the recession, there was a steep decline in the population growth of children less than a year old, newly released census figures show.

Experts have long known that with rising job cuts and home foreclosures, couples often decide the timing isn't right to have children. But the mystery here is that the pregnancy falloff reflected in the government data actually began months before Wall Street's plunge last September.

The number of babies increased only 0.9 percent between July 2007 and July 2008, a sharp drop from the record-setting 2.7 percent growth for the preceding year. The numbers hint at the tantalizing notion that America's family planners outperformed its financial planners in predicting the rough economic times.

Continue reading "Mother of all recessions? Census figures show increase in US babies dropped steeply last year" »

May 09, 2009

New flu spreads to Australia, now common in U.S.

09 May 2009 20:41:21 GMT
Source: Reuters
(For full coverage of the flu outbreak, click [nFLU])

* U.S. confirmed cases rise to 2,254

* Hong Kong frees travelers from quarantine

* China quarantines more travelers

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON, May 9 (Reuters) - The new strain of H1N1 influenza popped up in Japan and Australia and has been confirmed in more than 2,000 Americans, but health officials said on Saturday the true number of cases was underestimated.

Although most cases appear to be mild, just as in seasonal flu the swine flu strain has killed, with 48 confirmed deaths in Mexico, two in the United States, one in Canada and one in Costa Rica.

Continue reading "New flu spreads to Australia, now common in U.S. " »

April 21, 2009

EPA restores requirements for companies to disclose release of toxic chemicals

DINA CAPPIELLO | Associated Press Writer
2:32 PM EDT, April 21, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government will once again require companies to fully disclose the toxic chemicals they release into the air, onto land and into water.

The Environmental Protection Agency announced Tuesday that it was reversing a decision by the Bush administration in 2006 that reduced reporting of toxic pollution for more than 3,500 facilities nationwide.

The Bush rules allowed facilities storing or releasing smaller amounts of toxic chemicals to submit less-detailed information to the government.

More than a dozen states had sued the agency over the change saying it reduced the information available to the public about chemical hazards in communities.

Continue reading " EPA restores requirements for companies to disclose release of toxic chemicals" »

April 08, 2009

wasting my time.......Study: More bladder cancer care is no help

WASHINGTON - Patients who get more intensive treatment for early bladder cancer do not fare any better than patients who get less treatment, US researchers reported yesterday.

Medicare, the federal health insurance plan for the elderly, spent more than twice as much on the intensively managed patients without improving their survival rates, Dr. Brent Hollenbeck of the University of Michigan and colleagues found in their study.

Continue reading "wasting my time.......Study: More bladder cancer care is no help" »

April 05, 2009

Karzai seeks review of law critics say lets men rape their wives

By Jason Straziuso
Associated Press / April 5, 2009

KABUL - The Afghan president said yesterday that he had ordered a review of a new law that critics say makes it legal for men to rape their wives, responding to criticism from around the world that included sharp comments from President Obama.

If the law contravenes the nation's constitution or Sharia law, 'measures will be taken.'

WOMEN'S RIGHTS

The law, signed by President Hamid Karzai last month, is intended to regulate family life inside Afghanistan's Shi'ite community, which makes up 10 percent to 20 percent of the country's 30 million people. Under one article legislating the frequency of sexual relations between Shi'ite husbands and wives, husbands have the right to sex every fourth night unless the wife is ill.

Continue reading "Karzai seeks review of law critics say lets men rape their wives " »

April 04, 2009

Scientists prove human heart can regenerate cells

By Kylie MacLellan

LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists said on Thursday they had shown the human body regenerates heart cells at a rate of about one percent a year, a discovery that could one day reduce the need for transplants.

The study of 50 volunteers, using a dating method that detects traces of a carbon isotope left by Cold War nuclear bomb tests, raises the prospect of artificially stimulating the renewal process some day, they reported in the journal Science.

Continue reading "Scientists prove human heart can regenerate cells" »

Wordie Ice Shelf has disappeared: scientists

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - One Antarctic ice shelf has quickly vanished, another is disappearing and glaciers are melting faster than anyone thought due to climate change, U.S. and British government researchers reported on Friday.

They said the Wordie Ice Shelf, which had been disintegrating since the 1960s, is gone and the northern part of the Larsen Ice Shelf no longer exists. More than 3,200 square miles (8,300 square km) have broken off from the Larsen shelf since 1986.

Climate change is to blame, according to the report from the U.S. Geological Survey and the British Antarctic Survey, available at pubs.usgs.gov/imap/2600/B.

"The rapid retreat of glaciers there demonstrates once again the profound effects our planet is already experiencing -- more rapidly than previously known -- as a consequence of climate change," U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said in a statement.

Continue reading "Wordie Ice Shelf has disappeared: scientists" »

March 25, 2009

Drugmaker Bristol-Myers awarded CEO total compensation valued at $21.8 million for 2008

By TOM MURPHY | AP Business Writer
10:19 AM EDT, March 24, 2009

NEW YORK (AP) — Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. Chief Executive James M. Cornelius received compensation valued at nearly $22 million in 2008, as the drug company saw a profitable year and the 65-year-old executive reached retirement age.

Cornelius saw his salary rise 10 percent to $1.5 million after he was appointed chairman in February 2008, according to a proxy statement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. But most of his compensation came from stock options and restricted stock valued at $15.7 million, an 86 percent increase from 2007.

Continue reading "Drugmaker Bristol-Myers awarded CEO total compensation valued at $21.8 million for 2008" »

March 19, 2009

Puff the magic dragon


AG Signals Shift in Marijuana Policy
By AP / DEVLIN BARRETT Thursday, Mar. 19, 2009

(WASHINGTON) — Attorney General Eric Holder signaled a change on medical marijuana policy Wednesday, saying federal agents will target marijuana distributors only when they violate both federal and state law.

Continue reading "Puff the magic dragon" »

March 12, 2009

what does Al Gore know any way

Ozone levels raise respiratory death rate: study

BOSTON (Reuters) - People who live in areas with the most ozone pollution are 25 percent to 30 percent more likely to die from lung disease than those living in areas with the cleanest air, researchers reported on Wednesday.

February 28, 2009

Raw sewage spills into S.F. Bay

Last weekend 890,000 gallons of raw sewage and stormwater spilled into San Francisco Bay
On avg. human waste spills into the Bay more than 5 times a day
more than $8,000,000 from the stimulus money will go to fixing their problem

Talk about Pork Barrel spending eh.

May 02, 2006

whoah......this should make some feel good

Couple, 33 and 104, reportedly marry
Muhamad Noor Che Musa, 33, sits with his newly married wife Wook Kundor, 104, in their home.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — A 33-year-old man in northern Malaysia has married a 104-year-old woman, saying mutual respect and friendship had turned to love, a news report said Tuesday.
It was Muhamad Noor Che Musa's first marriage and his wife's 21st, according to The Star newspaper which cited a report in the Malay-language Harian Metro tabloid.

Muhamad, an ex-army serviceman said he found peace and a sense of belonging after meeting Wook Kundor, whom he said he initially sympathized with because she was childless, old and alone, the report said.

"I am not after her money, as she is poor," Muhamad reportedly said. "Before meeting Wook, I never stayed in one place for long."

He said he hoped to help his new bride to master Roman script while she taught him Islamic religious knowledge.

The report did not say if any of Wook's previous 20 husbands are still alive.

April 07, 2006

ohhhh boy

Radioactive Steam Escapes From Ill. Plant

GODLEY, Ill. (AP) -- Steam containing radioactive tritium escaped from a valve at an Exelon Corp. plant even as company officials met with local residents to discuss efforts to clean up earlier leaks.

About 500 gallons of water pooled on the grounds of the Braidwood Generating Station as the steam condensed Thursday, and some of it flowed into a ditch that lies between the plant and the village of Godley, company spokesman Craig Nesbit told the Chicago Tribune for a story on its Web site.

Tests showed no detectable levels of tritium in the water in the ditch, although levels measured in the water pooled on plant grounds were more than twice federal drinking and groundwater limits, Nesbit said. He said more precise testing would be conducted.

The company created a dirt berm around the ditch and placed a bladder in the ditch to create a dam, Nesbit said.




Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen commonly found in ground water but is more concentrated in water used in nuclear reactors. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, exposure to tritium increases the risk of developing cancer.

The Braidwood plant, located about 60 miles southwest of Chicago, has sent millions of gallons of tritium-tainted water into the ground in several leaks dating back to 1996. When Thursday's release happened, Exelon officials were meeting with residents to discuss plans to clean up earlier leaks.

March 23, 2006

for god's sake ..DON'T DRINK THE WATER

High Levels of Radioactive Material in Water

More U.S. Video





WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP) -- High levels of a radioactive material - nearly three times the amount permitted in drinking water - were found in groundwater near the Hudson River beneath a nuclear plant, the owner said Tuesday.

The groundwater does not intersect drinking supplies, and although the strontium-90 is believed to have reached the Hudson it would be safely diluted in the river, said Jim Steets, spokesman for Entergy Nuclear Northeast.

The strontium - which in high doses can cause cancer - was found in a well dug in a search for the source of a leak of radioactive water at the Indian Point complex, about 30 miles north of New York City.

The test well is among nine dug in an attempt to pinpoint the leak. Contaminated water was first found in August.

Entergy's finding matched tests by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission on the same sample, Steets said.

The sample also yielded tritium, another potential carcinogen, at levels well above the drinking water standard. High levels had been found earlier in another test well. The nuclear commission announced Monday that it would investigate releases of tritium at Indian Point and other plants.

Neil Sheehan, a commission spokesman, said the agency still believes the radioactivity - given that it is not in drinking water - is well below the level that would "pose a risk to public health and safety."

March 09, 2006

drill this ....pal

ar 8, 10:05 PM EST


Alaska Oil Spill Could Be Area's Largest

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- An oil spill in Alaska's North Slope could end up being one of the region's largest, officials said Wednesday as the cleanup continued.

Crews have recovered 58,590 gallons - or 1,395 barrels - of crude and snow since the pipeline spill was discovered Thursday in the Prudhoe Bay field, about 650 miles north of Anchorage. Most of the recovered material will probably turn out to be crude once the water is separated out, officials said.

That means the spill could be the largest ever in the North Slope, surpassing a 38,850-gallon spill in 1989. By comparison, the Exxon Valdez spilled 11 million gallons when it ran aground in Prince William Sound in 1989.

Lynda Giguere of the Alaska Department of Conservation said officials should have an estimate Thursday of how much crude spilled onto a two-acre area from the line, which leads to the trans-Alaska pipeline.

Temperatures are well below zero and are expected to approach 60 below in coming days, complicating the cleanup, officials said.

The North Slope is the region between the Brooks Range and the Arctic Ocean and contains most of Alaska's petroleum reserves.

February 11, 2006

No need to Pan (dem) ic

Spread of bird flu boosts pandemic chances
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The spread of bird flu from Asia to eastern Europe and now west Africa has increased the chance the virus will mutate and set off a pandemic, the U.N. bird flu chief said.

January 05, 2006

the birds are coming

Turkey reports 1st bird flu deaths outside Far East
ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — A Turkish teenager whose brother died of bird flu also succumbed to the disease Thursday, a doctor said, as authorities tried to determine if the siblings had the worrisome H5N1 strain of the virus.

October 11, 2005

In the begining.........thanks John

BUCHAREST (AFP) - Romania began to administer anti-flu vaccines to thousands of people amid fears that the avian flu detected the day before may be the deadly strain that has killed over 60 in southeast Asia.

Health authorities said that based on preliminary tests they feared that three ducks in the southeastern Tulcea region had been infected with the H5N1 strain transmissible to humans.

The head of Romania's National Animal Health Institute, Stefan Nicolae, told AFP Saturday that migratory birds from Russia had carried the H5N1 virus into the country.

But final confirmation of Europe's first contamination by the deadly version of the virus was being awaited from a lab in Britain.

"These first three cases of avian flu will however be analysed by a

European Union-approved British laboratory. We expect the results in the coming weeks," Nicolae said.

The H5N1 avian flu virus has mainly been found in 10 southeast Asian countries and has so far infected 112 people, of whom around 60 have died, according to the

World Health Organization.

The deadly strain has been carried by migratory birds as far north and west as Siberian regions of Russia, but has yet to cause any cases in humans there.

Health Minister Eugen Nicolaescu said that no human cases had been detected so far in Romania.

Local authorities said Saturday they had enforced quarantine measures across the southeastern Tulcea region and that the village of Ceamurlia de Jos, where the three infected ducks had been found, had been sealed off.

The ducks are thought to have been infected by migrating birds bringing the virus from Russia.

The area contains a large nature reserve, and is a key stopping point for migratory birds.

Some 500 chickens suspected of having contacted the virus were destroyed Saturday, and authorities asked local farmers to report any birds showing signs of the disease, promising compensation for any losses.

More than 700 residents of the delta were given general anti-flu vaccines on Saturday and some 3,000 people will have received the jabs by Sunday, he said.

"Romania does not have a specific vaccine for avian flu. However this anti-flu vaccine is important as it helps to enhance immunity," health ministry spokeswoman Oana Grigore told AFP.

"The risk of a disaster is remote if the population is vaccinated against influenza," Nicolaescu told news media.

A free of charge nationwide flu vaccination campaign began a week ago and some 500,000 doses have been stockpiled, according to the ministry.

"In all we need nearly 1.5 million doses. So we will be making an international appeal for donations in the next few days," Nicolaescu said, adding that Romania also planned to stock up on anti-viral drug Tamiflu.

The minister said he would ask the WHO for logistical support and a "sharing of expertise" on the disease.

"We want to know what the exact symptoms of the disease are and what the best treatment is," Nicolaescu said.

Bucharest also announced Saturday that border controls between Romania and its eastern neighbour Moldova had been stepped up, with all meat products in luggage being confiscated.

Romania has already suspended poultry imports from 15 countries.

what ever happened to the bird of paradise

Bird flu 'passed between humans'
Scientists have said a woman who died of bird flu probably contracted the disease from her daughter.
The researchers from the Thai Ministry of Public Health warn it is likely there will be more cases where the virus is passed from human to human.

Professor John Oxford, a leading UK expert, said the virus had broken down the "final door" which prevented it being spread between people.

The study is published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

This is a very important step towards the conclusion that we all wanted to avoid

Professor John Oxford, Queen Mary's School of Medicine
In 2004, avian flu infected at least 44 people in eight south Asian countries, killing 32.

Until the late 1990s, it had not been thought that the virus strain - H5N1 - could spread to humans.

Once it did, scientists began to fear it could then be spread between people.

In a "worst-case scenario", they suggested the virus could combine with a human flu virus if people were simultaneously infected with both.

If the viruses then exchanged genes, a new, highly infective virus could be created and be passed from person to person.

It is not thought that this happened in the Thai case, but experts say the fact that the evidence strongly suggests human-to-human transmission of the basic virus is worrying.

Fever

The case began with an 11-year-old girl who lived with her aunt and went to the doctors with a fever, cough and sore throat in September last year.

Chickens in the household had all died from avian flu in the preceding weeks. The girl slept and played in the area under the elevated house where the chickens were also present.

The girl's mother lived in Bangkok, but went to visit her daughter when she heard she was sick, and cared for her in hospital for two days before the child died.

Three days later, she too began to experience fever and severe shortness of breath. About a week later, she also died.

The child's aunt, who also nursed her, showed symptoms of the virus, and was hospitalised. However, she survived her illness.

The research team interviewed surviving members of the family and carried out laboratory tests on the aunt and the body of the mother to test for the presence of the virus.

The child's body had been cremated so could not be tested.

'Shiver down the spine'

Writing in NEJM, the team, led by Dr Kumnuan Ungchusak, said: "We believe that the most likely explanation for the family clustering of these three cases of avian influenza is that the virus was transmitted directly from the infected patient to her mother and to her aunt.

"Person-to-person spread of avian influenza A (H5N1) strains has been the focus of intense concern.

"If H5N1 remains endemic for months to years in the eight countries that contain more than 30% of the world's population, it is likely that such clusters will appear again."

However, they add, "it is reassuring that no further transmission of the virus has been detected" after the Thai case.

The researchers said human-to-human transmission of avian flu had probably occurred before, but that this case was unique because secondary infection - of the mother - had resulted in her death.

Professor John Oxford, a virologist at Queen Mary's School of Medicine in London, said: "This is a very important step towards the conclusion that we all wanted to avoid - the spread of this virus from human to human.

"It sends a cold shiver down the spine.

He added: "In this case, it didn't spread, but I think we have to be careful not to be over-optimistic."

September 16, 2005

birds of a feathers....tnahs John P.

Avian Flu: Is the Government Ready for an Epidemic?

Virus Poses Risk of Massive Casualties Around the World


Sept. 15, 2005 — It could kill a billion people worldwide, make ghost towns out of parts of major cities, and there is not enough medicine to fight it. It is called the avian flu.

This week, the U.S. government agreed to stockpile $100 million worth of a still-experimental vaccine, while at the United Nations Summit in New York, both the head of the U.N. World Health Organization and President Bush warned of the virus' deadly potential.
"We must also remain on the offensive against new threats to public health, such as the Avian influenza," Bush said in his speech to world leaders. "If left unchallenged, the virus could become the first pandemic of the 21st century."

According to Dr. Irwin Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, Bush's call to remain on the offensive has come too late.

September 08, 2005

Another truly amazing story

Human pesticide test limits proposed
Children, pregnant women seen at risk
By Erica Werner, Associated Press | September 8, 2005

WASHINGTON -- The Environmental Protection Agency yesterday proposed banning pesticide testing on pregnant women and children -- a move that followed criticism that the government's reliance on human pesticide tests has irresponsibly endangered vulnerable people.

Sign up for: Globe Headlines e-mail | Breaking News Alerts ''The government here is imposing strict standards for both what we will be allowed to give consideration to, and what we will allow people who are doing research on pesticides to do," Jim Jones, director of the EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs, said in an interview.

August 16, 2005

Just add Oreos

Stone the cows? Russia uses pot as animal feed Tue Aug 16, 4:55 AM ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's long winter will just fly by for a herd of Russian cows which, a newspaper reported on Tuesday, will be fed confiscated marijuana over the cold months.

Drug workers said they adopted the unusual form of animal husbandry after they were forced to destroy the sunflowers and maize crops that the 40 tonnes of marijuana had been planted among, Novye Izvestia daily reported.

"There is simply no other way out. You see, the fields are planted with feed crops and if we remove it all the cows will have nothing to eat," a Federal Drugs Control Service spokeswoman for the Urals region of Sverdlovsk told the paper.

"I don't know what the milk will be like after this."

Just add Oreos

Stone the cows? Russia uses pot as animal feed Tue Aug 16, 4:55 AM ET

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's long winter will just fly by for a herd of Russian cows which, a newspaper reported on Tuesday, will be fed confiscated marijuana over the cold months.

Drug workers said they adopted the unusual form of animal husbandry after they were forced to destroy the sunflowers and maize crops that the 40 tonnes of marijuana had been planted among, Novye Izvestia daily reported.

"There is simply no other way out. You see, the fields are planted with feed crops and if we remove it all the cows will have nothing to eat," a Federal Drugs Control Service spokeswoman for the Urals region of Sverdlovsk told the paper.

"I don't know what the milk will be like after this."

June 18, 2005

Better buy WISE....Thanks John P ( health adviser)

Public Health Advocates Cite Lack of Risk Notice on Potato Chip Bags Public health attorneys in California have potato chip makers in their sights for not listing a cancer-causing chemical present in many brands.

That chemical is acrylamide. It is an industrial chemical used in plastics, pesticides and sewage treatment that also can occur when starchy foods, such as chips, are processed at high temperatures. The World Health Organization has said acrylamide may be responsible for up to one-third of all cancers caused by diet, as demonstrated by laboratory animal studies. Acrylamide is already on California's list of chemicals known to cause cancer, but some chipmakers haven't listed it on their product packaging as required by Proposition 65 statute.

The attorneys have filed Proposition 65 notices with the manufacturers of Lays, Pringles, Kettle Chips and Cape Cod chips. Research has shown those brands have unsafe levels of acrylamide in some of their chip varieties. The study looked at one ounce servings, which ranged from 11 to 20 chips depending on the brand, and determined the acrylamide content was substantially more than the 0.2 micrograms per day amount which prompts the Proposition 65 warning.

The brands tested and cited for high levels of acrylamide are: Lay’s Baked!, Lay’s Stax BBQ, Lay’s KC Masterpiece. Lay’s Natural Country Barbecue, Lay’s Light KC Barbecue Masterpiece, Pringles Snack Stacks (Pizzalicious Flavor), Pringles Sweet Mesquite BBQ, Kettle Chips Lightly Salted, Kettle Chips Honey Dijon, Cape Cod Robust Russet and Cape Cod Classic Chips.

Processed food manufacturers have reportedly asked Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for a exemption to Proposition 65 labeling for foods with carcinogens caused by heat processing. The governor's office is expected to announce its decision by August.

Better buy WISE....Thanks John P ( health adviser)

Public Health Advocates Cite Lack of Risk Notice on Potato Chip Bags Public health attorneys in California have potato chip makers in their sights for not listing a cancer-causing chemical present in many brands.

That chemical is acrylamide. It is an industrial chemical used in plastics, pesticides and sewage treatment that also can occur when starchy foods, such as chips, are processed at high temperatures. The World Health Organization has said acrylamide may be responsible for up to one-third of all cancers caused by diet, as demonstrated by laboratory animal studies. Acrylamide is already on California's list of chemicals known to cause cancer, but some chipmakers haven't listed it on their product packaging as required by Proposition 65 statute.

The attorneys have filed Proposition 65 notices with the manufacturers of Lays, Pringles, Kettle Chips and Cape Cod chips. Research has shown those brands have unsafe levels of acrylamide in some of their chip varieties. The study looked at one ounce servings, which ranged from 11 to 20 chips depending on the brand, and determined the acrylamide content was substantially more than the 0.2 micrograms per day amount which prompts the Proposition 65 warning.

The brands tested and cited for high levels of acrylamide are: Lay’s Baked!, Lay’s Stax BBQ, Lay’s KC Masterpiece. Lay’s Natural Country Barbecue, Lay’s Light KC Barbecue Masterpiece, Pringles Snack Stacks (Pizzalicious Flavor), Pringles Sweet Mesquite BBQ, Kettle Chips Lightly Salted, Kettle Chips Honey Dijon, Cape Cod Robust Russet and Cape Cod Classic Chips.

Processed food manufacturers have reportedly asked Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for a exemption to Proposition 65 labeling for foods with carcinogens caused by heat processing. The governor's office is expected to announce its decision by August.

March 16, 2005

W. IS out of this world and his mind

Bush's Vision for Space Means Big Cuts Elsewhere at NASA
At Least 14 Facilities, Thousands of Jobs Threatened

By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 16, 2005; Page A21

President Bush's ambitious strategy for space exploration is forcing wrenching changes at NASA, putting thousands of jobs at risk, threatening closure of facilities across the country and sharply altering the way the agency does business.

Last week, NASA Associate Administrator James L. Jennings warned that the agency could lose as many as 2,680 jobs -- 15.3 percent of its 17,475-member full-time workforce -- in the next 18 months. "You have to streamline the organization and size it to the mission you're carrying out," he said. "It's essential to carry out the exploration mission."

President Bush has nominated Michael D. Griffin to be NASA's new administrator. (Johns Hopkins University Via AP)

The early target is NASA's aeronautics division, which studies such things as airport noise, pilot fatigue and experimental aircraft design. Aeronautics experts from NASA or its precursors have developed innovations including the X-15 "rocket plane" of the 1950s and 1960s, de-icing systems, and the rounded-bottom "supercritical wing" used today by virtually every commercial jetliner to increase speed, improve range and save fuel.

Under the reorganization, the three NASA centers with focuses on aeronautics -- including Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. -- could lose at least 1,800 jobs. At least 14 facilities at the same centers could close, among them 10 wind tunnels, a joint U.S.-Japan artificial-gravity project for the international space station and the lab that developed the X-43 "scramjet" that reached 7,000 mph to set the aircraft speed record last year.

Bush announced his "Vision for Space Exploration" in January 2004, reorienting U.S. space policy toward human spaceflight, a return to the moon by 2020 and eventual travel to Mars.

In the absence of a permanent NASA administrator since Sean O'Keefe's departure last month, the task of reorganizing the agency to conform to the president's priorities is being led by Associate Administrator Craig E. Steidle, a retired Navy rear admiral who runs the powerful Office of Exploration Systems.

Last week, Bush nominated Johns Hopkins University physicist-engineer Michael D. Griffin to be the new administrator, but the Senate must now confirm the appointment, a process that will not begin until April at the earliest.

He will find a Congress that has neither debated nor voted on the moon-and-Mars initiative and has regarded it with unease since its introduction. The House Science Committee plans a hearing on aeronautics today. "We hear it's called restructuring," the committee chairman, Sherwood L. Boehlert (R-N.Y.), said in an interview. "The overall concern that I have is that, more and more, there are those who are trying to make NASA a single-mission agency, and that is not acceptable to people like me and others in the Congress."

Since Bush laid out his ambitious vision, lawmakers, scientists and other space watchers have worried that by shifting its focus NASA might end up crippling some of the core activities that have defined the agency for four decades.

Besides human spaceflight and space science -- studying the solar system with the Mars rovers and other missions -- NASA has world-renowned programs in aeronautics, astronomy, astrophysics, astrobiology and Earth science, which studies the Earth from space.

Concern arose early last year with the agency's refusal to mount a servicing mission to the popular Hubble telescope. NASA said the mission was too risky, but critics said the agency canceled it because of its expense and its irrelevance to the moon-Mars initiative. Hubble's fate is still undecided.

The introduction of NASA's $16.4 billion 2006 budget last month has accelerated and deepened this disquiet. Although the agency got a slight budget increase over 2005, $426 million in lawmakers' special projects ate up much of the gain, and the White House has indicated that funding will hold steady in coming years.

"The president's vision says basically that the focus will be on exploration -- both human and robotic," said John M. Logsdon, head of George Washington University's Space Policy Institute. "In order to do that, you're going to have to stop doing some other things, and that means some hard choices."

It is unclear who is making the choices, but Jennings and other officials invoked the Office of Exploration Systems as the arbiter of whether projects and programs conform to the moon-Mars initiative. Inquiries about possible program cuts are frequently referred to Steidle's office.

W. IS out of this world and his mind

Bush's Vision for Space Means Big Cuts Elsewhere at NASA
At Least 14 Facilities, Thousands of Jobs Threatened

By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 16, 2005; Page A21

President Bush's ambitious strategy for space exploration is forcing wrenching changes at NASA, putting thousands of jobs at risk, threatening closure of facilities across the country and sharply altering the way the agency does business.

Last week, NASA Associate Administrator James L. Jennings warned that the agency could lose as many as 2,680 jobs -- 15.3 percent of its 17,475-member full-time workforce -- in the next 18 months. "You have to streamline the organization and size it to the mission you're carrying out," he said. "It's essential to carry out the exploration mission."

President Bush has nominated Michael D. Griffin to be NASA's new administrator. (Johns Hopkins University Via AP)

The early target is NASA's aeronautics division, which studies such things as airport noise, pilot fatigue and experimental aircraft design. Aeronautics experts from NASA or its precursors have developed innovations including the X-15 "rocket plane" of the 1950s and 1960s, de-icing systems, and the rounded-bottom "supercritical wing" used today by virtually every commercial jetliner to increase speed, improve range and save fuel.

Under the reorganization, the three NASA centers with focuses on aeronautics -- including Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. -- could lose at least 1,800 jobs. At least 14 facilities at the same centers could close, among them 10 wind tunnels, a joint U.S.-Japan artificial-gravity project for the international space station and the lab that developed the X-43 "scramjet" that reached 7,000 mph to set the aircraft speed record last year.

Bush announced his "Vision for Space Exploration" in January 2004, reorienting U.S. space policy toward human spaceflight, a return to the moon by 2020 and eventual travel to Mars.

In the absence of a permanent NASA administrator since Sean O'Keefe's departure last month, the task of reorganizing the agency to conform to the president's priorities is being led by Associate Administrator Craig E. Steidle, a retired Navy rear admiral who runs the powerful Office of Exploration Systems.

Last week, Bush nominated Johns Hopkins University physicist-engineer Michael D. Griffin to be the new administrator, but the Senate must now confirm the appointment, a process that will not begin until April at the earliest.

He will find a Congress that has neither debated nor voted on the moon-and-Mars initiative and has regarded it with unease since its introduction. The House Science Committee plans a hearing on aeronautics today. "We hear it's called restructuring," the committee chairman, Sherwood L. Boehlert (R-N.Y.), said in an interview. "The overall concern that I have is that, more and more, there are those who are trying to make NASA a single-mission agency, and that is not acceptable to people like me and others in the Congress."

Since Bush laid out his ambitious vision, lawmakers, scientists and other space watchers have worried that by shifting its focus NASA might end up crippling some of the core activities that have defined the agency for four decades.

Besides human spaceflight and space science -- studying the solar system with the Mars rovers and other missions -- NASA has world-renowned programs in aeronautics, astronomy, astrophysics, astrobiology and Earth science, which studies the Earth from space.

Concern arose early last year with the agency's refusal to mount a servicing mission to the popular Hubble telescope. NASA said the mission was too risky, but critics said the agency canceled it because of its expense and its irrelevance to the moon-Mars initiative. Hubble's fate is still undecided.

The introduction of NASA's $16.4 billion 2006 budget last month has accelerated and deepened this disquiet. Although the agency got a slight budget increase over 2005, $426 million in lawmakers' special projects ate up much of the gain, and the White House has indicated that funding will hold steady in coming years.

"The president's vision says basically that the focus will be on exploration -- both human and robotic," said John M. Logsdon, head of George Washington University's Space Policy Institute. "In order to do that, you're going to have to stop doing some other things, and that means some hard choices."

It is unclear who is making the choices, but Jennings and other officials invoked the Office of Exploration Systems as the arbiter of whether projects and programs conform to the moon-Mars initiative. Inquiries about possible program cuts are frequently referred to Steidle's office.

W. IS out of this world and his mind

Bush's Vision for Space Means Big Cuts Elsewhere at NASA
At Least 14 Facilities, Thousands of Jobs Threatened

By Guy Gugliotta
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 16, 2005; Page A21

President Bush's ambitious strategy for space exploration is forcing wrenching changes at NASA, putting thousands of jobs at risk, threatening closure of facilities across the country and sharply altering the way the agency does business.

Last week, NASA Associate Administrator James L. Jennings warned that the agency could lose as many as 2,680 jobs -- 15.3 percent of its 17,475-member full-time workforce -- in the next 18 months. "You have to streamline the organization and size it to the mission you're carrying out," he said. "It's essential to carry out the exploration mission."

President Bush has nominated Michael D. Griffin to be NASA's new administrator. (Johns Hopkins University Via AP)

The early target is NASA's aeronautics division, which studies such things as airport noise, pilot fatigue and experimental aircraft design. Aeronautics experts from NASA or its precursors have developed innovations including the X-15 "rocket plane" of the 1950s and 1960s, de-icing systems, and the rounded-bottom "supercritical wing" used today by virtually every commercial jetliner to increase speed, improve range and save fuel.

Under the reorganization, the three NASA centers with focuses on aeronautics -- including Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. -- could lose at least 1,800 jobs. At least 14 facilities at the same centers could close, among them 10 wind tunnels, a joint U.S.-Japan artificial-gravity project for the international space station and the lab that developed the X-43 "scramjet" that reached 7,000 mph to set the aircraft speed record last year.

Bush announced his "Vision for Space Exploration" in January 2004, reorienting U.S. space policy toward human spaceflight, a return to the moon by 2020 and eventual travel to Mars.

In the absence of a permanent NASA administrator since Sean O'Keefe's departure last month, the task of reorganizing the agency to conform to the president's priorities is being led by Associate Administrator Craig E. Steidle, a retired Navy rear admiral who runs the powerful Office of Exploration Systems.

Last week, Bush nominated Johns Hopkins University physicist-engineer Michael D. Griffin to be the new administrator, but the Senate must now confirm the appointment, a process that will not begin until April at the earliest.

He will find a Congress that has neither debated nor voted on the moon-and-Mars initiative and has regarded it with unease since its introduction. The House Science Committee plans a hearing on aeronautics today. "We hear it's called restructuring," the committee chairman, Sherwood L. Boehlert (R-N.Y.), said in an interview. "The overall concern that I have is that, more and more, there are those who are trying to make NASA a single-mission agency, and that is not acceptable to people like me and others in the Congress."

Since Bush laid out his ambitious vision, lawmakers, scientists and other space watchers have worried that by shifting its focus NASA might end up crippling some of the core activities that have defined the agency for four decades.

Besides human spaceflight and space science -- studying the solar system with the Mars rovers and other missions -- NASA has world-renowned programs in aeronautics, astronomy, astrophysics, astrobiology and Earth science, which studies the Earth from space.

Concern arose early last year with the agency's refusal to mount a servicing mission to the popular Hubble telescope. NASA said the mission was too risky, but critics said the agency canceled it because of its expense and its irrelevance to the moon-Mars initiative. Hubble's fate is still undecided.

The introduction of NASA's $16.4 billion 2006 budget last month has accelerated and deepened this disquiet. Although the agency got a slight budget increase over 2005, $426 million in lawmakers' special projects ate up much of the gain, and the White House has indicated that funding will hold steady in coming years.

"The president's vision says basically that the focus will be on exploration -- both human and robotic," said John M. Logsdon, head of George Washington University's Space Policy Institute. "In order to do that, you're going to have to stop doing some other things, and that means some hard choices."

It is unclear who is making the choices, but Jennings and other officials invoked the Office of Exploration Systems as the arbiter of whether projects and programs conform to the moon-Mars initiative. Inquiries about possible program cuts are frequently referred to Steidle's office.

February 15, 2005

I smell another frivilous lawsuit coming DOH !!!!

British cancer patient, 43, commits suicide; may have missed all-clear letter


Canadian Press


February 15, 2005


ADVERTISEMENT




LONDON (AP) - A cancer patient who hanged himself may not have received a letter from doctors saying he was clear of the illness, officials said Monday.

Colin Jackson, 43, underwent intense treatment after being diagnosed with testicular cancer last year. He was found hanging from a ledge in his apartment in Gillingham, southeast of London, on July 2.

Doctors sent Jackson a letter telling him the treatment was successful and he was free from the disease. But the local coroner's office said he may not have received the letter because he had recently registered with a different family physician.

"He'd had tests for testicular cancer, but because of the change of doctor we don't know if he'd got the all-clear," said a spokeswoman for the Mid Kent and Medway Coroner's Office.

"Although letters had gone out it seems he may not have got the information through."

The spokeswoman also said Jackson had no financial worries. Although Jackson's relationship had recently broken up "that wasn't thought to be the cause."

Coroner Stephen Beck recorded a verdict of suicide at a hearing Thursday. In British law, a coroner is an official - usually a lawyer - who makes a legal ruling on the cause of death.

Jackson's mother, Patricia Emery, said she didn't believe her son received the letter from doctors saying he was cancer-free.

I smell another frivilous lawsuit coming DOH !!!!

British cancer patient, 43, commits suicide; may have missed all-clear letter


Canadian Press


February 15, 2005


ADVERTISEMENT




LONDON (AP) - A cancer patient who hanged himself may not have received a letter from doctors saying he was clear of the illness, officials said Monday.

Colin Jackson, 43, underwent intense treatment after being diagnosed with testicular cancer last year. He was found hanging from a ledge in his apartment in Gillingham, southeast of London, on July 2.

Doctors sent Jackson a letter telling him the treatment was successful and he was free from the disease. But the local coroner's office said he may not have received the letter because he had recently registered with a different family physician.

"He'd had tests for testicular cancer, but because of the change of doctor we don't know if he'd got the all-clear," said a spokeswoman for the Mid Kent and Medway Coroner's Office.

"Although letters had gone out it seems he may not have got the information through."

The spokeswoman also said Jackson had no financial worries. Although Jackson's relationship had recently broken up "that wasn't thought to be the cause."

Coroner Stephen Beck recorded a verdict of suicide at a hearing Thursday. In British law, a coroner is an official - usually a lawyer - who makes a legal ruling on the cause of death.

Jackson's mother, Patricia Emery, said she didn't believe her son received the letter from doctors saying he was cancer-free.

I smell another frivilous lawsuit coming DOH !!!!

British cancer patient, 43, commits suicide; may have missed all-clear letter


Canadian Press


February 15, 2005


ADVERTISEMENT




LONDON (AP) - A cancer patient who hanged himself may not have received a letter from doctors saying he was clear of the illness, officials said Monday.

Colin Jackson, 43, underwent intense treatment after being diagnosed with testicular cancer last year. He was found hanging from a ledge in his apartment in Gillingham, southeast of London, on July 2.

Doctors sent Jackson a letter telling him the treatment was successful and he was free from the disease. But the local coroner's office said he may not have received the letter because he had recently registered with a different family physician.

"He'd had tests for testicular cancer, but because of the change of doctor we don't know if he'd got the all-clear," said a spokeswoman for the Mid Kent and Medway Coroner's Office.

"Although letters had gone out it seems he may not have got the information through."

The spokeswoman also said Jackson had no financial worries. Although Jackson's relationship had recently broken up "that wasn't thought to be the cause."

Coroner Stephen Beck recorded a verdict of suicide at a hearing Thursday. In British law, a coroner is an official - usually a lawyer - who makes a legal ruling on the cause of death.

Jackson's mother, Patricia Emery, said she didn't believe her son received the letter from doctors saying he was cancer-free.

February 12, 2005

swell

N.Y. doctors discover resistant HIV strain
Patient rapidly developed AIDS
By Kathleen Kerr, Newsday | February 12, 2005

NEW YORK -- For the first time, doctors have diagnosed a form of HIV that New York City health officials say has two striking characteristics: It is highly resistant to antiviral drugs in a patient who had never been treated with the medications, and it quickly developed into full-blown AIDS.

ADVERTISEMENT

The infection defied the typical HIV-to-AIDS profile by apparently developing into AIDS in a matter of months, officials said.

''This case is a wake-up call," said New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden. He said the strain is one that ''is difficult or impossible to treat and which appears to progress rapidly to AIDS."

Dr. David Ho, director of Manhattan's Diamond AIDS Research Center, where the patient was diagnosed with HIV in December, said the combination of drug-resistant infection and ''his rapid clinical and immunological deterioration is alarming."

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has alerted health care professionals and has asked them to test all newly diagnosed HIV cases not previously treated with antiviral medicines for possible drug resistance.

Resistant HIV strains have been seen before, but only in patients who have taken antiviral drugs over a period of years. And HIV infection generally takes 10 years or longer to transform into AIDS.

The patient in this case, a man in his mid-40s, was diagnosed with HIV in December and got the AIDS diagnosis recently, health officials said. He had been tested for HIV over the years and had never been found to be infected.

Officials said the man might have been infected earlier than his December diagnosis. But even if the infection occurred 20 months earlier, they said, the speed of the transformation to AIDS would be striking.

The strain, termed 3-DCR HIV, resists three of the four antiviral drug classes.

The patient has shown resistance to 19 drugs.

Officials did not disclose his identity. They said he had told them he had unprotected sex with multiple male partners in October. They also said he had used crystal methamphetamine, a recreational drug that dulls inhibitions.

''It is the only diagnosed and reported case in the country that we are aware of in which the patient has received no previous drug treatment for HIV but has resisted the drugs and rapidly progressed to AIDS," city Health Department spokesman Sid Dinsay said.

City officials are consulting with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

In a telephone interview, Dr. Ronald Valdiserri, deputy director of CDC's National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, termed the case ''very concerning," citing ''the intersection of the two phenomena that were reported" -- the drug resistance and swift progression to AIDS.

Valdiserri urged people being treated for HIV or AIDS not to risk becoming infected with the new strain.

Officials said efforts are underway to contact the man's sexual partners to offer them counseling and HIV testing.

swell

N.Y. doctors discover resistant HIV strain
Patient rapidly developed AIDS
By Kathleen Kerr, Newsday | February 12, 2005

NEW YORK -- For the first time, doctors have diagnosed a form of HIV that New York City health officials say has two striking characteristics: It is highly resistant to antiviral drugs in a patient who had never been treated with the medications, and it quickly developed into full-blown AIDS.

ADVERTISEMENT

The infection defied the typical HIV-to-AIDS profile by apparently developing into AIDS in a matter of months, officials said.

''This case is a wake-up call," said New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden. He said the strain is one that ''is difficult or impossible to treat and which appears to progress rapidly to AIDS."

Dr. David Ho, director of Manhattan's Diamond AIDS Research Center, where the patient was diagnosed with HIV in December, said the combination of drug-resistant infection and ''his rapid clinical and immunological deterioration is alarming."

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has alerted health care professionals and has asked them to test all newly diagnosed HIV cases not previously treated with antiviral medicines for possible drug resistance.

Resistant HIV strains have been seen before, but only in patients who have taken antiviral drugs over a period of years. And HIV infection generally takes 10 years or longer to transform into AIDS.

The patient in this case, a man in his mid-40s, was diagnosed with HIV in December and got the AIDS diagnosis recently, health officials said. He had been tested for HIV over the years and had never been found to be infected.

Officials said the man might have been infected earlier than his December diagnosis. But even if the infection occurred 20 months earlier, they said, the speed of the transformation to AIDS would be striking.

The strain, termed 3-DCR HIV, resists three of the four antiviral drug classes.

The patient has shown resistance to 19 drugs.

Officials did not disclose his identity. They said he had told them he had unprotected sex with multiple male partners in October. They also said he had used crystal methamphetamine, a recreational drug that dulls inhibitions.

''It is the only diagnosed and reported case in the country that we are aware of in which the patient has received no previous drug treatment for HIV but has resisted the drugs and rapidly progressed to AIDS," city Health Department spokesman Sid Dinsay said.

City officials are consulting with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

In a telephone interview, Dr. Ronald Valdiserri, deputy director of CDC's National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, termed the case ''very concerning," citing ''the intersection of the two phenomena that were reported" -- the drug resistance and swift progression to AIDS.

Valdiserri urged people being treated for HIV or AIDS not to risk becoming infected with the new strain.

Officials said efforts are underway to contact the man's sexual partners to offer them counseling and HIV testing.

swell

N.Y. doctors discover resistant HIV strain
Patient rapidly developed AIDS
By Kathleen Kerr, Newsday | February 12, 2005

NEW YORK -- For the first time, doctors have diagnosed a form of HIV that New York City health officials say has two striking characteristics: It is highly resistant to antiviral drugs in a patient who had never been treated with the medications, and it quickly developed into full-blown AIDS.

ADVERTISEMENT

The infection defied the typical HIV-to-AIDS profile by apparently developing into AIDS in a matter of months, officials said.

''This case is a wake-up call," said New York City Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden. He said the strain is one that ''is difficult or impossible to treat and which appears to progress rapidly to AIDS."

Dr. David Ho, director of Manhattan's Diamond AIDS Research Center, where the patient was diagnosed with HIV in December, said the combination of drug-resistant infection and ''his rapid clinical and immunological deterioration is alarming."

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene has alerted health care professionals and has asked them to test all newly diagnosed HIV cases not previously treated with antiviral medicines for possible drug resistance.

Resistant HIV strains have been seen before, but only in patients who have taken antiviral drugs over a period of years. And HIV infection generally takes 10 years or longer to transform into AIDS.

The patient in this case, a man in his mid-40s, was diagnosed with HIV in December and got the AIDS diagnosis recently, health officials said. He had been tested for HIV over the years and had never been found to be infected.

Officials said the man might have been infected earlier than his December diagnosis. But even if the infection occurred 20 months earlier, they said, the speed of the transformation to AIDS would be striking.

The strain, termed 3-DCR HIV, resists three of the four antiviral drug classes.

The patient has shown resistance to 19 drugs.

Officials did not disclose his identity. They said he had told them he had unprotected sex with multiple male partners in October. They also said he had used crystal methamphetamine, a recreational drug that dulls inhibitions.

''It is the only diagnosed and reported case in the country that we are aware of in which the patient has received no previous drug treatment for HIV but has resisted the drugs and rapidly progressed to AIDS," city Health Department spokesman Sid Dinsay said.

City officials are consulting with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

In a telephone interview, Dr. Ronald Valdiserri, deputy director of CDC's National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention, termed the case ''very concerning," citing ''the intersection of the two phenomena that were reported" -- the drug resistance and swift progression to AIDS.

Valdiserri urged people being treated for HIV or AIDS not to risk becoming infected with the new strain.

Officials said efforts are underway to contact the man's sexual partners to offer them counseling and HIV testing.

February 09, 2005

Liar is as a liar does

Medicare drug benefit to cost $720 billion over 10 years
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush said Wednesday Medicare is next on the government's fix-it list because the health care plan for the elderly and disabled, like Social Security, is facing financial stress with the retirements of baby boomers.
New administration estimates released Wednesday showed that the Medicare prescription drug benefit will cost taxpayers $724 billion over its first full 10 years, far higher than earlier estimates and rekindling congressional ire over its price tag.

The new estimate exceeds earlier projections chiefly because the figure now covers 2006 to 2015, a decade when prescription coverage will be in effect the entire period. Earlier calculations ran from 2004 to 2013 and included 2004 and 2005, when the program was being slowly phased in.

"There's no question that there is an unfunded liability inherent in Medicare that Congress and the administration is going to have to deal with over time," Bush said. "Obviously I've chosen to deal with Social Security first and once we accomplish — once we modernize and save Social Security for a young generation of Americans, then it'll be time to deal with the unfunded liabilities of Medicare."

Bush noted that the prescription benefit that he signed into law last year doesn't take effect until next year.

"I'm convinced they'll have cost savings for our society," Bush told reporters during a meeting with Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski. "And I know it'll make the life of our seniors better."

The figure — similar to a $720 billion figure administration officials used Tuesday — is in documents obtained by The Associated Press. When anticipated savings are not included in the calculation, the administration estimates the drug program's gross price tag over the period will be $1.19 trillion, the documents show.

The new numbers prompted outcries from Democrats. They say the White House low-balled cost estimates two years ago to win votes from conservatives when Congress narrowly approved the program, and created a program with benefits that are too stingy.

"An ethical cloud has hung over the Republican Medicare law since it was passed in the dark of night more than a year ago," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who called the new figures "staggering."

She said Congress should hold hearings on the program's costs and pass new legislation "to hold down costs and give seniors the true benefits they deserve."

The $724 billion estimate includes the effects of savings the administration expects through 2014 from higher Medicare premiums, cost sharing by states and savings the program will create for Medicaid, the health insurance program for the poor.

When Congress narrowly approved the drug legislation in 2003, the administration told wavering lawmakers that the program would cost $400 billion, including expected savings. The White House revised the estimate to $534 billion just two months later, after the law was enacted.

Liar is as a liar does

Medicare drug benefit to cost $720 billion over 10 years
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush said Wednesday Medicare is next on the government's fix-it list because the health care plan for the elderly and disabled, like Social Security, is facing financial stress with the retirements of baby boomers.
New administration estimates released Wednesday showed that the Medicare prescription drug benefit will cost taxpayers $724 billion over its first full 10 years, far higher than earlier estimates and rekindling congressional ire over its price tag.

The new estimate exceeds earlier projections chiefly because the figure now covers 2006 to 2015, a decade when prescription coverage will be in effect the entire period. Earlier calculations ran from 2004 to 2013 and included 2004 and 2005, when the program was being slowly phased in.

"There's no question that there is an unfunded liability inherent in Medicare that Congress and the administration is going to have to deal with over time," Bush said. "Obviously I've chosen to deal with Social Security first and once we accomplish — once we modernize and save Social Security for a young generation of Americans, then it'll be time to deal with the unfunded liabilities of Medicare."

Bush noted that the prescription benefit that he signed into law last year doesn't take effect until next year.

"I'm convinced they'll have cost savings for our society," Bush told reporters during a meeting with Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski. "And I know it'll make the life of our seniors better."

The figure — similar to a $720 billion figure administration officials used Tuesday — is in documents obtained by The Associated Press. When anticipated savings are not included in the calculation, the administration estimates the drug program's gross price tag over the period will be $1.19 trillion, the documents show.

The new numbers prompted outcries from Democrats. They say the White House low-balled cost estimates two years ago to win votes from conservatives when Congress narrowly approved the program, and created a program with benefits that are too stingy.

"An ethical cloud has hung over the Republican Medicare law since it was passed in the dark of night more than a year ago," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who called the new figures "staggering."

She said Congress should hold hearings on the program's costs and pass new legislation "to hold down costs and give seniors the true benefits they deserve."

The $724 billion estimate includes the effects of savings the administration expects through 2014 from higher Medicare premiums, cost sharing by states and savings the program will create for Medicaid, the health insurance program for the poor.

When Congress narrowly approved the drug legislation in 2003, the administration told wavering lawmakers that the program would cost $400 billion, including expected savings. The White House revised the estimate to $534 billion just two months later, after the law was enacted.

Liar is as a liar does

Medicare drug benefit to cost $720 billion over 10 years
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Bush said Wednesday Medicare is next on the government's fix-it list because the health care plan for the elderly and disabled, like Social Security, is facing financial stress with the retirements of baby boomers.
New administration estimates released Wednesday showed that the Medicare prescription drug benefit will cost taxpayers $724 billion over its first full 10 years, far higher than earlier estimates and rekindling congressional ire over its price tag.

The new estimate exceeds earlier projections chiefly because the figure now covers 2006 to 2015, a decade when prescription coverage will be in effect the entire period. Earlier calculations ran from 2004 to 2013 and included 2004 and 2005, when the program was being slowly phased in.

"There's no question that there is an unfunded liability inherent in Medicare that Congress and the administration is going to have to deal with over time," Bush said. "Obviously I've chosen to deal with Social Security first and once we accomplish — once we modernize and save Social Security for a young generation of Americans, then it'll be time to deal with the unfunded liabilities of Medicare."

Bush noted that the prescription benefit that he signed into law last year doesn't take effect until next year.

"I'm convinced they'll have cost savings for our society," Bush told reporters during a meeting with Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski. "And I know it'll make the life of our seniors better."

The figure — similar to a $720 billion figure administration officials used Tuesday — is in documents obtained by The Associated Press. When anticipated savings are not included in the calculation, the administration estimates the drug program's gross price tag over the period will be $1.19 trillion, the documents show.

The new numbers prompted outcries from Democrats. They say the White House low-balled cost estimates two years ago to win votes from conservatives when Congress narrowly approved the program, and created a program with benefits that are too stingy.

"An ethical cloud has hung over the Republican Medicare law since it was passed in the dark of night more than a year ago," said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who called the new figures "staggering."

She said Congress should hold hearings on the program's costs and pass new legislation "to hold down costs and give seniors the true benefits they deserve."

The $724 billion estimate includes the effects of savings the administration expects through 2014 from higher Medicare premiums, cost sharing by states and savings the program will create for Medicaid, the health insurance program for the poor.

When Congress narrowly approved the drug legislation in 2003, the administration told wavering lawmakers that the program would cost $400 billion, including expected savings. The White House revised the estimate to $534 billion just two months later, after the law was enacted.

January 18, 2005

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.

Pass on this one

Colon cancer test called worthless
Study finds 95% detection failure
By Patrick Walters, Associated Press | January 18, 2005


PHILADELPHIA -- A common screening test failed to detect potentially cancerous colon growths 95 percent of the time, falsely reassuring patients and doctors, according to a new study.

ADVERTISEMENT

Researchers found that the digital in-office test on stool samples was not as reliable as a six-sample test given to patients to do on their own at home -- although even that test detected potentially cancerous growths less than 24 percent of the time.

"What we found is that it was pretty worthless," Dr. David Lieberman, one of the study's authors, said of the in-office test. "It's a wake-up call that we shouldn't be relying on this test."

DON'T GET SICK

Cuts in disability benefits seen in Social Security plan
By Leigh Strope, Associated Press | January 18, 2005

WASHINGTON -- Disability benefits may not be safe from the across-the-board cuts that are likely in President Bush's proposal to allow personal investment accounts in the Social Security program.

Retirement and disability benefits are calculated using the same formula, so if future promised retirement benefits are cut, then disability benefits also would be reduced -- unless the program is somehow separated.

This raises big questions about how investment accounts would be structured for the disabled, especially if they are injured at a young age or are dependent on a parent. Disabled beneficiaries typically work less and need benefits sooner, so the accounts would not provide enough income to them.

"The Social Security programs are insurance programs, not investment programs, designed to reduce risk from certain life events," said Marty Ford of the Consortium for Citizens With Disabilities.