Supply of Crucial Leukemia Drug May Run Out in Weeks

Methotrexate, a crucial medicine to treat childhood leukemia is in such short supply that hospitals across the country may exhaust their stores within the next two weeks, leaving hundreds and perhaps thousands of children at risk of dying from a largely curable disease, federal officials and cancer doctors say.

“This is dire,” said Valerie Jensen, associate director of the Food and Drug Administration’s drug shortages program.  “Supplies are just not meeting demand.”

Methotrexate treats acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or ALL, which most often strikes children between 2 and 5 years of age.  It’s an unusually virulent cancer of white blood cells that are overproduced in bone marrow and invade other parts of the body.

To put this crisis in perspective, consider the U.S. spent $800 billion during the Iraq War.  What would Jesus do?

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Coroner Rejects Autopsy in Retired Philadelphia Cardinal’s Death

A full autopsy for Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua, a key witness in a Catholic Church sex abuse trial who died last month, is unwarranted, the coroner examining the death said on Saturday.  Bevilacqua, the retired archbishop of Philadelphia, died at age 88 on January 31, the day after a judge ruled he was competent to testify in an upcoming sex abuse trial involving clerics and a schoolteacher.

Yes, his sudden death is strangely coincidental.  But, even if he had testified, what would he say?  If, like a number of those scoundrels in the Catholic hierarchy who turned a proverbial blind eye to stories of sexual abuse within their ranks, he’d probably deny any knowledge of it.  Still, I have no sympathy for him.  And, as a former Catholic – an altar boy at that! – I have no regard for the Church.  Its disregard for basic human rights (note the current birth control debate) makes me realize it – along with other religious institutions – serves no purpose in a progressive society.

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Bumper Sticker From a Native Texan Who Drives a Truck

With no end in sight!

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February 12, 2012 – 312 days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip: Stockpile spices.  I’m not talking ginger and nutmeg!  I mean real Native American spices like juniper berry, vanilla, red chili peppers and peyoté.  These are indigenous to North America, and the native peoples utilized them both for food flavoring and as elements in their religious ceremonies.  Possession of these items will safeguard your passage across the barren wastelands of the apocalypse.  The Mayan spirits will look kindly upon you and your loved ones.  Besides, these spices are good for body and mind.  The vanilla will blot out the bad taste of the food rations you might have to consume for a while; the red chili peppers will ease any nasal congestion you might develop inhaling the fumes of all the dead bodies; and the peyoté will eliminate any remnants of your life B.A. (Before the Apocalypse).  Trust me!  I wouldn’t be passing on this advice if I hadn’t already experimented.

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Today’s Birthdays

Movie director Franco Zeffirelli (“Romeo and Juliet”) is 89.

Former professional baseball player and sports announcer Joe Garagiola is 86.

Music producer and keyboardist for The Doors Ray Manzarek is 73.

Steve Hackett, bassist for Genesis, is 62.

Singer and songwriter Michael McDonald (Doobie Brothers, Steely Dan) is 60.

Comedian, actor and former talk show host Arsenio Hall is 57.

Actress Christina Ricci (“The Addams Family”) is 32.

 

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On February 12…

1809Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the United States, was born in Hodgenville, KY.

1878Frederick W. Thayer, captain of the Harvard University Baseball Club, patented the now-familiar, baseball catcher’s mask.

1912 – The last emperor of China, Hsian-T’ung, was forced to abdicate, ending 267 years of Manchu rule in China and 2,000 years of imperial rule.

1924President Calvin Coolidge, known by many as the ‘Silent President,’ made the first presidential political speech on radio. The speech originated from New York City and was broadcast on five radio stations. Some five million people tuned in to hear Coolidge speak.

1973 – The State of Ohio went metric, becoming the first in the U.S. to post metric distance signs along Interstate 71. These new signs showed the distance in both miles and kilometers. The metric system, though standard in many nations around the world, never quite caught on in the United States, except on major-league baseball stadium fences – and on that highway in Ohio.

1973 – The release of U.S. prisoners-of-war (POW’s) began in Hanoi, Vietnam as part of the Paris peace settlement.

1994 – The XVIIth Winter Olympic Games opened in Lillehammer, Norway.  The games proceeded, despite the infamous Nancy Kerrigan – Tanya Harding clubbing fiasco.

1999 – The 5-week impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton ended with the Senate voting to acquit him on perjury and obstruction of justice charges.

2000 – Hall-of-Fame football coach Tom Landry, who led the Dallas Cowboys to five Super Bowls in 20 consecutive winning seasons, died.

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Cartoon of the Day

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Picture of the Day

A man emerges from Lisi Lake in Tbilisi, Georgia.  Poor guy!  He went in as Igor and came out Anastasia.

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Quote of the Day

“Voters with forty years of politically correct education are ecstatic to have the first Black president.  They just love the idea of it – even if we did get “Flavor Flav” instead of Thomas Sowell.”

– Ann Coulter describing President Obama at CPAC 2012

Ann’s biography is due out next month: “Meth – An American Trailer Park Tragedy.”

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Hand Carved Works of Art from the Native American Southwest

The Southwest Indian Foundation is offering hand-carved art pieces for sale.  Proceeds will be directed towards Native American communities of the Southwestern U.S.

Etched Dreamcatcher pot

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