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Rick Faurot

08/07/04 1:09 PM

#10040 RE: Rick Faurot #10029

Iraq shuts Al-Jazeera's Baghdad office

Qatar-based TV network to close in capital for one month
Saturday, August 7, 2004 Posted: 12:40 PM EDT (1640 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Iraq's interim government has closed the Baghdad office of the Qatar-based Al-Jazeera television network for one month, citing national security concerns.

"This decision was taken to protect the people of Iraq and the interests of Iraq," Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's told a news conference Saturday.
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Rick Faurot

08/10/04 11:01 AM

#10080 RE: Rick Faurot #10029

Stem Cell Research Gains Political Life
Kerry criticizes Bush's limits on the science.
And as polls show voters favor less
restrictive policies, the president aims to recast his stance.
August 10, 2004

http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/2004/la-na-stem10aug10,...

THE RACE TO THE WHITE HOUSE

By Peter Wallsten and James Rainey, Times Staff Writers

WASHINGTON - The sleeper issue of stem cell
research leapt into the center of the presidential race
Monday as Sen. John F. Kerry's campaign attacked
President Bush with renewed vigor for limiting the
scope of the work and the White House launched a
multifront drive to show that the president supported
using the science to find cures for debilitating diseases.

The Bush administration, stung by evidence that many
voters favored less restrictive policies, said the
president's fundamental position had not changed. But it
sought to recast Bush's image on the highly charged
issue by portraying him as a champion of stem cell
research, as well as of moral limits on scientific inquiry.

First Lady Laura Bush, a top administration science
advisor and the chief White House spokesman all
emphasized Bush's support in 2001 for the first federal
funding of the research.

The president provoked controversy at the time by
insisting that federally funded scientists work only with
existing cell lines and not with tissue derived from new
human embryos or eggs.

Democrats have long favored a less restrictive policy on
the use of embryonic tissues, but Republicans are
working to mobilize antiabortion activists and
conservatives who oppose the use of human stem cells.

At the same time, Bush is trying to attract undecided
voters who, polls show, are increasingly supportive of
research that advocates say could offer cures for spinal
cord injuries, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and other
diseases.

Poll data suggest public support for stem cell research
cuts across party lines.

On Monday, vice presidential nominee John Edwards
led the charge for the Democrats, saying in an afternoon
conference call that a Kerry administration would
remove the Bush ban on creating new lines of stem
cells.

Edwards said it was "against our national character to
look the other way while people are suffering," and promised that a Kerry
administration would at least quadruple federal spending on stem cell research -
to $100 million a year - and remove restrictions so that scientists could work
with new lines of stem cells.

He said that he and Kerry would make sure that a series of ethical guidelines
were followed.

The Democrats planned to keep highlighting the issue this week.

"There is no question this is a very significant sleeper issue which we are trying to
awaken," said Mark Mellman, Kerry's pollster.

The White House said Bush's position had been misrepresented and
misunderstood.

"This president is delivering when it comes to advancing medical research and
combating disease," White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan told
reporters. "He is the first president to authorize federal funding to explore the
promise and potential of embryonic stem cell research."

McClellan's sentiments were echoed in separate remarks by the first lady in
Pennsylvania and by former White House advisor Jay Lefkowitz in a conference
call with reporters arranged by the Bush campaign.

"Although you might not know about it from listening to the news lately, the
president also looks forward to medical breakthroughs that may arise from stem
cell research," Mrs. Bush said. "Few people know that George W. Bush is the
only president to ever authorize federal funding for embryonic stem cell research."

The research involves the use of fertilized embryos or unfertilized eggs to create
stem cells - master cells that can turn into any tissue in the body, potentially
patching spinal chord injuries and forestalling disease.

Scientists say they are concerned that Bush's restrictions limit the use not only of
fertilized embryos but of unfertilized human eggs that can be activated into stem
cells.

Ann Kiessling of Harvard Medical School, a leading researcher in the field, said
Bush deserved credit for providing the first federal funds to promote stem cell
research in 2001.

But the president's insistence that the work be limited to cells derived before
August 2001 meant that there were only about eight cell lines available to publicly
funded researchers in the United States, she said.

"If you are going to spend just on those cell lines and not on the other stem cell
lines, that is very limiting. That's still a big problem," Kiessling said in an interview.

She noted that the cells available for research funded by the National Institutes of
Health were not appropriate for therapeutic treatment of humans because they
were derived in part through the use of animal cells.

The stem cell issue has been debated by scientists and bioethicists for more than
three years.

But what has catapulted it to the forefront of the campaign are developments that
began with the death of former President Reagan, who suffered from Alzheimer's
disease.

Recent polls show many voters are closer to Kerry's position than Bush's.

Findings released Monday by the University of Pennsylvania's National
Annenberg Election Survey showed that about two out of three American adults
- including more than half of Republicans - favored research using stem cells
taken from human embryos.

Andrew Kohut, director of the nonpartisan Pew Research Center for the People
and the Press, said the preliminary findings of a poll he was conducting showed
intense interest in the issue among undecided voters.

"On most issues, swing voters are less engaged than committed voters," Kohut
said. In this case, "they're moderates. And a lot of middle-age people are more
interested in this than they were a few years ago."

While pollsters and Republican strategists say it remains unclear whether the stem
cell issue will prove decisive for swing voters, they agree that the White House
was stung by the issue's sudden rise in prominence after the death of Reagan, a
conservative icon.

In a speech at the Democratic National Convention, Reagan's son Ron charged
that Bush was standing in the way of medical progress.

Former First Lady Nancy Reagan, who has spoken out against the
administration's policy on stem cells, has thus far declined an invitation to attend
the Republican National Convention.

"The catalyst was Ron Reagan's speech," said a Bush campaign strategist,
speaking on the condition of anonymity. "He elevated the issue, elevated it in a
way that was not honest and not fair to the president."

The White House is worried about voters like Doris Blankinship, a 47-year-old
Republican from Orlando, Fla. She voted for Bush four years ago but said in a
recent interview that she wondered why the president had "put so much political
stuff" on the stem cell question.

"I have friends that have juvenile diabetes and have friends that have Parkinson's,"
Blankinship said. "If something can be done to help them, I don't see why it can't
be done…. I don't understand why President Bush is so against it."

The White House effort to refurbish Bush's image on the issue coincided with the
third anniversary of the president's decision to allow federal funding of some
embryonic stem cell research - a compromise intended to allow for scientific
progress while allaying concerns of antiabortion activists and religious
conservatives who morally oppose the use of human embryos.

Bush and his campaign have attacked Kerry for shifting his stances on issues,
which Republicans say contrast with the president's resolve. The stem cell
question is a point on which the Massachusetts senator holds the less nuanced
stance.

Presidential spokesman McClellan, speaking from the White House press room,
said, "I've seen a lot of misreporting about this issue recently that seems to imply
that we put a ban on stem cell research."

The first lady contended that the president's critics had not only misstated his
position but exaggerated how quickly the research might pay off.

"I hope that stem cell research will yield cures," she said. "But I know that
embryonic stem cell research is very preliminary right now, and the implication
that cures for Alzheimer's are around the corner is just not right, and it's really not
fair to people watching a loved one suffer with this disease."

Wallsten reported from Washington, Rainey from Los Angeles.