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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
House Adopts Resolution Honoring Group That Unites Police And Residents; State Rep. Kenyatta Johnson D-Philadelphia www.pahouse.com/johnson
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PA State Representative
Kenyatta Johnson
State Rep. Kenyatta Johnson
D-Philadelphia
www.pahouse.com/johnson
House Adopts Resolution Honoring Group That Unites Police And Residents
HARRISBURG, June 30 – The state House today adopted a resolution (H.R. 346) authored by state Rep. Kenyatta Johnson, D-Phila., honoring the 17th District Imperial Dance Squad for their dedication to the community of South Philadelphia and their efforts to strengthen the bonds of trust between the Philadelphia Police Department and South Philadelphia residents.
"Over the years, the relationship between Philadelphia police officers and young people has deteriorated and trust has been lost," Johnson said. "The 17th District Imperial Dance Squad is helping to build up this trust again so the two groups, youths and police, can interact positively in our city."
Two Philadelphia police officers, Sharon Bailey and Frank Holmes, developed the dance team in an effort to unite police officers and young adults in a positive manner to build relationships. The group, comprised of 21 dancers, has performed at numerous events throughout South Philadelphia, most notably during a Philadelphia 76ers game where they raised funds for the Philadelphia Police Department's Fallen Officer Fund.
FPN's Antoinette Cook Meet And Greet With Philly Connection Fan Club by Antoinette Cook antoinettecook@verizon.net
Director, Chuck Hopkins, Director, Kimberly Irving,
Director, Lisa Jones, Debbie Morton, Founder and
Director, David Exum, body guard, Quanda Moore,
member, Director, Delores Wright, in the middle,
and Director, Antoinette Cook.
The Philly Connection Fan Club.
This organization is responsible for artist like New Edition, Whodini, LL Cool J, and The Jackson Five appearances at particular concerts. Philly Connection is being honored during the up coming Old School Hip Hop concert featuring Chubb Rock, Whodini, and Dana Dane. The concert will taken place on July 3rd in Chester, PA at the Chester Park. The concert is free and will begin at 6:00 pm.
The Philly Connection Fan Club will be dedicating the show to the King of Pop, Michael Jackson.
For more information about the Old School Hip Hop concert contact me, Antoinette Cook, at antoinettecook@verizon.net.
AT 5 MINUTES AND 6 SECONDS AFTER 4, ON THE 8TH OF JULY, THIS YEAR,; by Joel Perlish joelperlish@aol.com
City Contracts Expire Tuesday Night at Midnight; No Immediate Strike Threat Seen
by Mark Abrams and Al Novack
Four union contracts covering Philadelphia's municipal workers were expiring at midnight Tuesday night, but don’t look for the workers to walk off the job just yet.
For the 13,000 or so "non-uniformed" workers represented by District Council 33 (blue collar) and District Council 47 (white collar), there hasn’t even been a strike-authorization vote by either group. Union leaders say they’re still at the bargaining table.
For full story go to: http://www.kyw1060.com/Phila. Clergy, DA Plead for Peaceful Surrender of Fugitives
A group of Philadelphia pastors is appealing to those who have outstanding arrest warrants to come to them and surrender with dignity.
"Philadelphia Peaceful Surrender" is being launched by a coalition of pastors from five churches in North Philadelphia, South Philadelphia, West Philadelphia, and Mount Airy.
Rev. Damone B. Jones Sr. (second from left in photo), pastor of Bible Way Baptist Church in West Philadelphia, is coordinating the outreach to those who have outstanding warrants for any kind of criminal activity. He says the pastors or their representatives will accompany those in trouble to law enforcement to surrender:
For full story go to: http://www.kyw1060.com/Phila. Activist Group Demands Action on Home Mortgages
Members of the activist group "Acorn" demonstrated on Tuesday outside the building at 18th and Market Streets where the Philadelphia offices of Goldman Sachs are located.
Acorn lead organizer Keith Crosby:
"Goldman Sachs, which owns Litton Loans, has refused to take part in the Obama administration's 'Making Homes Affordable' plan. One of the things we are trying to push for is that Goldman Sachs, which has received $22 billion in taxpayer money, does their part and takes part in this process."
Cheryl Harvey says foreclosures are affecting her neighbors:
For full story go to: http://www.kyw1060.com/SEPTA Embraces Internet for Customer Information Delivery
Septa has unveiled new web-based tools which it says will enhance communication and improve customer access to service information.
General manger Joe Casey made the announcement:
"I'm pleased to announce the introduction of two new technology tools..."
Now, you'll be able to find out how to get around on mass transit by going to googlemaps.com.
Farrah Fawcett being remembered at LA funeral
Pall bearers accompany actress Farrah Fawcett's casket as it arrives for her funeral services on Tuesday, June 30, 2009, in Los Angeles. |
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The life of "Charlie's Angels" star Farrah Fawcett is being celebrated at a private funeral in the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles.
Her longtime companion, Ryan O'Neal, was among pallbearers who accompanied the casket, covered in yellow and orange flowers, into the Roman Catholic cathedral Tuesday afternoon.
Fawcett's friend Alana Stewart and "Charlie's Angels" co-star Kate Jackson were among early arrivals before the hearse arrived, accompanied by 10 motorcycle officers.
Fans and news media are watching from across a street.
Fawcett died Thursday at age 62 after a public battle with cancer. O'Neal and Stewart were at her side.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The life of "Charlie's Angels" star Farrah Fawcett is being celebrated Tuesday at a private funeral held, fittingly, at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.
Her longtime companion, Ryan O'Neal, and her friend, Alana Stewart, both wore black as they entered the service, which was closed to media and the public.
Fawcett died Thursday at age 62 after a public battle with cancer. O'Neal and Stewart were at her side.
"After a long and brave battle with cancer, our beloved Farrah has passed away," O'Neal said in a statement last week. "Although this is an extremely difficult time for her family and friends, we take comfort in the beautiful times that we shared with Farrah over the years and the knowledge that her life brought joy to so many people around the world."
Diagnosed with a rare cancer in 2006, Fawcett's battle with the disease was documented in "Farrah's Story," which aired last month on NBC.
Stewart, a producer of the documentary, said Fawcett was "much more than a friend; she was my sister."
"Although I will miss her terribly, I know in my heart that she will always be there as that angel on the shoulder of everyone who loved her," Stewart said in a statement.
Fawcett and O'Neal, 68, have a son, 24-year-old Redmond, who has been jailed since April 5 on drug charges.
Last week, a judge granted his request to attend Fawcett's funeral. The order by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Jane Godfrey allows Redmond O'Neal to be released for three hours and wear street clothes to attend the funeral.
Jackson family lawyer says will has surfaced
Fans watch as a work truck goes through the gates of the late Michael Jackson's former residence, Neverland Ranch, in Los Olivos, Calif., Tuesday, June 30, 2009. |
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A will for Michael Jackson has surfaced and is expected in court soon, a lawyer for the family said Tuesday, countering their previous claim that he died without such a document. "My clients are now aware after filings that a will has been presented," said L. Londell McMillan. "His various advisers over time are looking for additional documents."
No further details were disclosed, and a copy of the document was not immediately available.
The word came just a day after the family said in court documents it believed the entertainer had died without a valid will. That could complicate a petition by Jackson's mother Katherine to become the administrator of his lucrative, but debt-encumbered estate.
A will almost always names an executor, and if validated, it would negate the petition of Jackson's mother to control the estate, said John Novogrod, an estate lawyer and partner at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel LLP in New York.
"If there is a will and if the will is a valid will, the whole petition to be named administrator will just fall away," Novogrod said.
Jackson was recently in shaky financial health. In the most detailed account yet of the singer's tangled financial empire, documents obtained by The Associated Press show Jackson claimed to have a net worth of $236.6 million as of March 31, 2007. But less than $700,000 of that amount was in cash - a relatively paltry sum given his opulent lifestyle, prodigious borrowing and seven-figure shopping sprees.
Meanwhile, Sheriff's Lt. Butch Arnoldi said authorities met Tuesday based on speculation over a possible memorial at Neverland, but Jackson's family had yet to reach out to them for assistance with any kind of memorial.
"We have not been contacted by any member of the family or any representative of the family, talking about or requesting any kind of event," he said.
Neverland is located in the rolling hills of central California's wine country, about 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles. A public funeral there on a busy holiday weekend could bring the rural area's roads to a standstill.
A statement from Santa Barbara County officials said the county "cannot confirm that any such funeral or memorial plans for Michael Jackson will occur here despite widespread reports today by the news media that a funeral or memorial event is planned for the area."
California Highway Patrol spokesman Rick Quintero said the CHP had not received a request for a motorcade.
"They would definitely need to notify us because it's going to impact the motoring public," Quintero said.
In an open letter to the Santa Barbara community, Thomas J. Barrack Jr., who set up a joint venture with Jackson that took ownership of the 2,500-acre property, warned residents that the world will quickly descend on Santa Barbara and Neverland as fans grieve.
"We must also prepare to accommodate Michael's family's wishes as they contemplate the location of his final resting place and their own return to the tranquil grounds of the Michael Jackson family compound."
It was unclear whether Jackson could be buried at the ranch. California Funeral Directors Association executive director Bob Achermann said state law would prohibit Jackson's uncremated remains from being interred at Neverland.
The state's health and safety code makes interring any uncremated remains outside of a cemetery a misdemeanor, he said. Cremated remains can be kept in a home or private mausoleum outside a cemetery, he said.
At once a symbol of Jackson's success and excesses, Neverland became the site of a makeshift memorial after his death Thursday. Scores of fans have streamed past the gated entrance to leave handwritten notes, photographs, balloons and flowers.
He was 29 and at the height of his popularity when he bought the ranch, naming it after the mythical land of Peter Pan, where boys never grow up. There, he surrounded himself with animals, rides and children.
Jackson fled the ranch - and the country - after his acquittal on charges that he molested a 13-year-old cancer survivor in 2003 at the estate after getting him drunk.
Meanwhile, Jackson fans converged on New York City's famed Apollo Theater Tuesday for a public tribute to the performer, clutching photographs, cheering and dancing to his music at the legendary venue that launched the one-time child star's career.
The Rev. Al Sharpton gave a rousing speech praising the pop star to hundreds of fans who crammed into the theater as others waited in line outside to pay their respects.
"Michael made young men and women all over the world imitate us," Sharpton said. "Before Michael, we were limited and ghettoized. But Michael put on a colorful military outfit, he pulled his pants up, he put on the one glove, and he smashed the barriers of segregated music."
Gunmen fire on group of Detroit teens, wounding 7
Bria Wilson, who was near a shooting in west Detroit, is questioned in a police car near the scene where gunmen in a green minivan opened fire on a group of teenagers waiting at a bus stop near a Detroit school on Tuesday, June 30, 2009. The gunmen wounded at least seven including two who were in critical condition, authorities said. |
DETROIT (AP) -- Gunmen in a green minivan opened fire on a group of teenagers waiting at a bus stop near a Detroit school on Tuesday, wounding seven including two who were in critical condition, authorities said.
Five of the teens had just left Cody Ninth Grade Academy, where they were taking summer classes, when they were shot at the nearby bus stop.
The gunmen exited a vehicle and "asked for a person by name" before they "opened fire at the crowd," said Detroit Public Schools Police Chief Roderick Grimes.
Detroit Police were looking for two suspects in a green minivan, said spokesman Rod Liggons. Officers were interviewing some of the victims in the hospital Tuesday evening, he said.
Four boys and three girls ranging in age from 14 to 17 years old were hospitalized, two of them - a 16-year-old boy and a 17-year-old female - in critical condition, said Deputy Chief James Tolbert.
Gas station owner Steve Hakim said he saw two people with T-shirts covering their heads run across his lot toward the bus stop. Then he heard about 10 gunshots, saw a boy and a girl fall down and called 911.
"It's pretty scary," Hakim said. "Somebody's got to do something."
Police were reviewing video taken from the gas station's security cameras and took a disc containing the footage, Hakim said.
Another summer school student, 15-year-old Bria Wilson, said she was standing at the bus stop when she heard the gunfire. She said she was facing away from the shooters and ran away after the shots were fired. But she saw a 16-year-old male friend lying on the ground, bleeding.
"They were so close - it almost hit me," she said.
Schools spokesman Steve Wasko said there was "nothing that we're aware of at this time" linking the shootings with any fight or dispute at the school.
He said the shootings happened about 2:15 p.m., about 15 minutes after summer school students were dismissed for the day.
Nutritionist: Michael Jackson begged for sedative
In this May 6, 2009 image released courtesy of Michael Jackson, pop star Michael Jackson is shown in Los Angeles during rehearsals for his upcoming concert in London. Jackson, 50, died in Los Angeles on Thursday, June 25, 2009. |
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Michael Jackson was so distraught over persistent insomnia in recent months that he pleaded for a powerful sedative despite warnings it could be harmful, says a nutritionist who was working with the singer as he prepared his comeback bid.
Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse whose specialty includes nutritional counseling, said Tuesday that she repeatedly rejected his demands for the drug, Diprivan, which is given intravenously.
But a frantic phone call she received from Jackson four days before his death made her fear that he somehow obtained Diprivan or another drug to induce sleep, Lee said.
While in Florida on June 21, Lee was contacted by a member of Jackson's staff.
"He called and was very frantic and said, `Michael needs to see you right away.' I said, 'What's wrong?' And I could hear Michael in the background ..., 'One side of my body is hot, it's hot, and one side of my body is cold. It's very cold,'" Lee said.
"I said, `Tell him he needs to go the hospital. I don't know what's going on, but he needs to go to the hospital ... right away."
"At that point I knew that somebody had given him something that hit the central nervous system," she said, adding, "He was in trouble Sunday and he was crying out."
Jackson did not go to the hospital. He died June 25 after suffering cardiac arrest, his family said. Autopsies have been conducted, but an official cause of death is not expected for several weeks.
"I don't know what happened there. The only thing I can say is he was adamant about this drug," Lee said.
Following Jackson's death, allegations emerged that the 50-year-old King of Pop had been consuming painkillers, sedatives and antidepressants. But Lee said she encountered a man tortured by sleep deprivation and one who expressed opposition to recreational drug use.
"He wasn't looking to get high or feel good and sedated from drugs," she said. "This was a person who was not on drugs. This was a person who was seeking help, desperately, to get some sleep, to get some rest."
Jackson was rehearsing hard for what would have been his big comeback - his "This Is It" tour, a series of performances that would have strained his aging dancer's body. Also, pain had been a part of his life since 1984, when his scalp was severely burned during a Pepsi commercial shoot.
Several months ago, Jackson had begun badgering Lee about Diprivan, also known as Propofol, Lee said. It is an intravenous anesthetic drug widely used in operating rooms to induce unconsciousness. It is generally given through an IV needle in the hand.
Patients given Propofol take less time to regain consciousness than those administered certain other drugs, and they report waking up more clear-headed and refreshed, said University of Chicago psychopharmacologist James Zacny.
It has also been implicated in drug abuse, with people using it to "chill out" or to commit suicide, Zacny said. Accidental deaths linked to abuse have been reported. The powerful drug has a very narrow therapeutic window, meaning it doesn't take doses much larger than the medically recommended amount to stop a person's breathing.
An overdose that stops breathing can result in a buildup of carbon dioxide, causing the heart to beat erratically and leading to cardiac arrest, said Dr. John Dombrowski, a member of the board of directors of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.
Because it is given intravenously and is not the kind of prescription drug typically available from pharmacists, abuse cases have involved anesthesiologists, nurses and other hospital staffers with easy access to the drug, Zacny said.
In recent months, Lee said, Jackson waved away her warnings about it.
"I had an IV and when it hit my vein, I was sleeping. That's what I want," Lee said Jackson told her.
"I said, 'Michael, the only problem with you taking this medication' - and I had a chill in my body and tears in my eyes three months ago - 'the only problem is you're going to take it and you're not going to wake up," she recalled.
According to Lee, Jackson said it had been given to him before but he didn't want to discuss the circumstances or identify the doctor involved.
The singer also drew his own distinctions when it came to drugs versus prescription medicine.
"He said, `I don't like drugs. I don't want any drugs. My doctor told me this is a safe medicine,'" Lee said. The next day, she said she brought a copy of the Physician's Desk Reference to show him the section on Diprivan.
"He said, 'No, my doctor said it's safe. It works quick and it's safe as long as somebody's here to monitor me and wake me up. It's going be OK,'" Lee said. She said he did not give the doctor's name.
Lee said at one point, she spent the night with Jackson to monitor him while he slept. She said she gave him herbal remedies and stayed in a corner chair in his vast bedroom.
After he settled in bed, Lee told Jackson to turn down the lights and music - he had classical music playing in the house. "He also had a computer on the bed because he loved Walt Disney," she said. "He was watching Donald Duck and it was ongoing. I said, `Maybe if we put on softer music,' and he said, `No, this is how I go to sleep.'"
Three and a half hours later, Jackson jumped up and looked at Lee, eyes wide open, according to Lee. "This is what happens to me," she quoted him as saying. "All I want is to be able to sleep. I want to be able to sleep eight hours. I know I'll feel better the next day."
Lee, 56, is licensed as a registered nurse and nurse practitioner in California, according to the state Board of Registered Nursing's Web site. She attended Los Angeles Southwest College and the Charles Drew University of Medicine and Sciences in Los Angeles.
Comedian Dick Gregory, who knows Lee and her work, said he believes Jackson's insomnia had its roots in the pop star's 2005 trial on child molestation charges. Jackson's health had deteriorated so much that his parents called Gregory, a natural foods proponent, for help.
Gregory said Jackson wasn't eating or drinking at the time, and after he was persuaded by Gregory to undergo testing, ended up hospitalized for severe dehydration.
But Jackson obviously was healthy enough to withstand the level of medical scrutiny needed to insure him for the upcoming high-stakes London concerts, Gregory said. "That you don't trick," he said of the exams.
Lee, who has also worked with Stevie Wonder, Marla Gibbs, Reynaldo Rey and other celebrities, said she was introduced to Jackson by the mother of one of his staff members. Jackson's three children had minor cold symptoms and their pediatrician was out of town.
Lee said she went to the house in January, the first of about 10 visits there through April, and treated the children with vitamins. Michael, intrigued, asked what else she did and took her up on her claim she could boost his energy.
After running blood tests, she devised protein shakes for him and gave him an intravenous vitamin and mineral mixture - known as a "Myers cocktail," after Dr. John Myers - which Lee said she uses routinely in her practice.
"It wasn't that he felt sick," she said. "He just wanted more energy."
Lee said she decided to speak out to protect Jackson's reputation from what she considers unfounded allegations of drug abuse or shortcomings as a parent.
"I think it's so wrong for people to say these things about him," she said. "He was a wonderful, loving father who wanted the best for his children."
As forwarded from Facebook.com: Israel navy intercepts boat with ex-U.S. Rep. McKinney
Former U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney
JERUSALEM (CNN) -- The Israeli navy took control of a boat reported to be carrying humanitarian aid, a former U.S. congresswoman and a Nobel laureate Tuesday after the boat violated an Israeli blockade and crossed into Gazan waters, the Israel Defense Forces said.
The boat's crew included former U.S. Rep. Cynthia McKinney, according to the Free Gaza Movement, a human rights group that sent the boat it calls "Spirit of Humanity" from Cyprus.
Along with McKinney, who served six terms in the House of Representatives from Georgia and was the Green Party's presidential nominee in 2008, Israeli authorities took 20 people into custody, the group said.
Without naming individuals on the boat, IDF confirmed the incident it described was the same one detailed by the Free Gaza Movement.
According to the Free Gaza group, McKinney said, "This is an outrageous violation of international law against us. Our boat was not in Israeli waters, and we were on a human rights mission to the Gaza Strip," before authorities confiscated cell phones.
"President Obama just told Israel to let in humanitarian and reconstruction supplies, and that's exactly what we tried to do. We're asking the international community to demand our release so we can resume our journey," McKinney said, according to the group
IDF said the aid aboard the boat would be delivered to Gaza "subject to authorization."
"Any organization or country that wishes to transfer humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip can legally do so via the established crossings between Israel and the Gaza Strip with prior coordination," IDF said.
Free Gaza said the Spirit of Humanity voyage is the eighth such trip the group has launched. Five succeeded, the group said, but the Israeli military stopped attempts in January and December 2008.Also aboard, the group said, was Mairead Maguire, who co-founded a group that worked for peace in Northern Ireland. Maguire and co-founder Betty Williams received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1977 for their work.
IDF said the Israeli navy contacted the boat, which it called the Arion, while it was still at sea and warned the crew they would not be allowed to enter Gazan waters "because of security risks in the area and the existing naval blockade."
Disregarding all warnings, the boat entered Gazan coastal waters, IDF said. An Israeli navy force intercepted, boarded and took control of the boat, directing it toward Ashdod, Israel, IDF said.
The boat's crew, the military said, would "be handed over to the proper authorities."
GOP's Coleman concedes, sending Franken to Senate
Former Republican Sen. Norm Coleman laughed at a question as he addressed the media Tuesday, June 30, 2009 at his St. Paul, Minn., home after the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that Democrat Al Franken won the contested U.S. Senate race in Minnesota. At left is his daughter Sarah. |
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -- Republican Norm Coleman conceded to Democrat Al Franken in Minnesota's contested Senate race Tuesday, hours after a unanimous state Supreme Court ruled the former "Saturday Night Live" comedian should be certified the winner.
Coleman announced his decision at a news conference in St. Paul, bringing an end to a nearly eight-month recount and court fight over an election decided by only a few hundred votes.
"The Supreme Court has made its decision and I will abide by the results," Coleman told reporters outside his St. Paul home.
Franken, accompanied by his wife, told reporters outside his downtown Minneapolis town house that "Franni and I are so thrilled that we can finally celebrate this victory."
"I can't wait to get started," he added. "I've been trying to keep abreast of what's going on, and I'll do the best I can"
Coleman, appearing relaxed and upbeat, said he had congratulated Franken, was at peace with his decision to concede and had no regrets about the fight, which started almost immediately after the Nov. 4 election.
"Sure I wanted to win," said Coleman, who called the ruling a surprise. "I thought we had a better case. But the court has spoken."
He declined to talk about his future plans, brushing aside a question about whether he would run for governor in 2010.
Franken's victory will give Democrats control over 60 Senate seats, the number needed to overcome any Republican filibusters to health care, energy, or other legislation they or the Obama administration is seeking.
But to exercise that strength, they will need to remain as united in support of a bill as Republicans are in opposition, regardless of regional differences, ideology, or political self-interest.
The situation is further complicated by the illness of two senior Democrats who have been absent from the Capitol for weeks. West Virginia Sen. Robert C. Byrd was recently released from a hospital after undergoing treatment for a staph infection, and Massachusetts Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is battling brain cancer. It is not known when, or whether, either will be able to return to the Capitol.
An early test could come next month, when health care legislation reaches the Senate floor. Democrats have been seeking agreement on a bipartisan plan with a handful of Republicans. But if those talks falter, they and the White House may end up in a situation where 60 votes would be needed to advance one of the administration's highest priorities.
The White House issued a statement saying President Barack Obama looks "forward to working with Senator-Elect Franken to build a new foundation for growth and prosperity by lowering health care costs and investing in the kind of clean energy jobs and industries that will help America lead in the 21st century."
According to Betty K. Koed, the assistant Senate historian, the 60-vote majority marks the first time either political party has reached that level since the late 1970s.
Coleman's appeal hinged largely on an argument that local election officials had inconsistently applied the state's requirements for absentee voters. He and his lawyers had hoped to bring thousands of disqualified absentee votes into the count, but the state's high court sided with a lower court and rejected that argument.
Because voting absentee is an option, voters who choose to do so have to comply with the law, the justices wrote. And they said there was no valid reason to apply a more lenient standard in judging absentees, as Coleman wanted, than the law required.
"Because strict compliance with the statutory requirements for absentee voting is, and always has been required, there is no basis on which voters could have reasonably believed that anything less than strict compliance would suffice."
Coleman could have carried his fight into the federal courts, but it was unlikely a federal court would have overturned the state Supreme Court decision. That possibility created months of intrigue over whether Gov. Tim Pawlenty would sign an election certificate if Coleman continued an appeal - a possibility that quickly became moot with Coleman's concession.
Pawlenty said he would sign the certificate later Tuesday.
Franken declared his candidacy more than two years ago, and he and Coleman have combined to spend $50 million in pursuit of the seat. That's more than double what it cost candidates in 2002, when Coleman won the seat that had been held by the late Paul Wellstone.
In the months since Election Day, both men have kept comparatively low profiles. After Coleman's term expired in January, he took a job as a consultant and strategic adviser to the Republican Jewish Coalition, a group that advocates in Washington on Jewish issues.
But Coleman also frequently appeared at the lower-court proceeding that handled his legal challenge, in contrast to Franken, who stayed away. Aside from some trips to Washington to meet with Reid and other Senate leaders, Franken has spent his time in private, saying he was studying issues to be prepared if seated.
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar said Franken told her Tuesday he's "ready to get started immediately." The Democrat said Franken is expected to immediately dive into the health care reform debate.
"This victory was hard earned for Al Franken and his family," she said. "Franni Franken had a suitcase packed, ready to go to Washington at a moment's notice, like you do when you're waiting to have a baby. She had a toothbrush, clothes, all of that, ready to go."
Monday, June 29, 2009
What Will be Your Last Move by Mary A. Jones – MAJones777@gmail.com
From the "Pen of a Ready Writer"
MAJones
Mary A. Jones
Michael Jackson, a childhood star that became a walking legend by leaps and bounds because of the moves he made. As a child he rocked the world and stole the hearts of girls during his time. His music, his childhood innocence, and his ability to win the world made him the greatest performer in the music industry. He revolutionized music and earned the title “King of Pop”.
When Michael Jackson and the Jackson 5 came on the scene they were an instant success. At that time I was a few years older than Michael Jackson and wondered what does he know about love and not to mention asking a girl to give him one more chance. But his high pitch boy-like voice, the lyrics of ABC, and the moves of an up and coming star did nothing but send a power surge of energy throughout the world. He was hot! During this era where racial tension and prejudices were high, Michael Jackson was able to penetrate the atmosphere with his God given talent and sing his way into the hearts of mankind.
The Late Great Michael Joe Jackson
Michael’s life took many turns throughout his career and the moves that he made on stage were none to compare to the moves made off stage. What man or woman does on stage gives him or her an opportunity to live out a dream, a fantasy, or even a personality that wants to come out from the imagination of that mind. But what we do offstage, when we leave the office, when we go home and shut the door, the decisions, or moves we make determines the course our lives will take. This sets forth the name that we establish for ourselves. At the end of the day the conclusion of the matter and all that has been done will be culminated into our name.
Mankind has always been given a free will by its Creator, the Almighty God. In His creation He made us a living soul and when He breathed the breath of life, His spirit, in us He gave us a conscious. “And the LORD God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul.” (Genesis 2:7) This separates us from the animal kingdom. This conscious(ness) tells us when we are right or wrong, displaying behavior of good, bad, or evil. We have from the very foundation of this world within us the ability to choose the course of our lives. In Deuteronomy 30:19 it says “I call heaven and earth to record this day against you, that I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live:” The Almighty Elohim, the supreme Being, in His infinite wisdom put before us the will. This will is the will to choose. This will allows us to make the moves that determine our destiny and dictate to our purpose. This determines the legacy that we leave and it will show forth the character and integrity that we have chosen for our name by the moves that we make. But He is so glorious that He tells us what the right choice is for us to make. This choice is His will and this choice will give us life here in the earth and life eternal where our souls shall live throughout eternity. That choice is salvation through Jesus Christ. He did not want us to make a mistake and choose the wrong move. When we choose Christ that is the last move that we make and from that point forward it is His will that is in motion. What will be your last move? The choice is yours.
Our hearts are before the Lord in prayer for the family of Michael Jackson and that the peace of God and His comfort that is here in the Holy Spirit will comfort and care for his family and his loved ones.
Reverend Mary A. Jones
The Monster by Tracey "Zipporah" Johnson traceyzipporahonyx@gmail.com
Tracey "Zipporah" Johnson
Last night I watched the BET Awards with my Family and Friends on Facebook and Twitter. The interaction of my social networks was a priceless addition to watching the last minute thrown together Tribute Show to the amazing Michael Jackson. I was looking forward to this show because of what I was hearing from various Artists & Musicians concerning the changing of sets in order to honor the legend and legacy left to us by MJ. For the most part I loved the show. The appearance of Janet was the highlight of the Show for me. There were wonderful performances, mediocre performances and shameful performances all making for a pretty good show being that the changes were made 48 - 72 hours before the airing of the live show. For me, a creative individual, things do not have to perfect. It is the imperfections that make things interesting, entertaining as well as makes for intriguing dialogue. There are some cases in which I expect perfection only because that is what I have come to expect through experience from certain folks like Beyonce, always the consummate perfectionist. Also expect perfection from Ton3x, and Ne-yo who never disappoint when they hit the stage.
But for those that are still finding their “space” on stage I am patient with them. I enjoy watching their process, must be why I love reality shows – the professional ones not the ones about dating and finding love, hate those. But the ones about competition for career passions I really dig. What I find most interesting about these awards shows, after parties, post award shows and reality shows is that the media aka “monster” makes grand attempts to shape the perception of the masses concerning a particular thing. I mean let’s look at how they are covering the passing of Michael Jackson. I mean we want to know but damn we really don’t need to know everything. Let us have our memories, our experiences, our love for someone with whom we have shared our lives for most of our lives, in my case all of my life. They are working to uncover all the ugly aspects but what the media has not been able to do regarding him is kill the love that they had for the creative genius that he is. Michael’s London tour of which the 50 shows were sold out for $85 million in two hours showed everyone that it just doesn’t matter what or how media covers people. We all have flaws, made mistakes, have secret addictions, habits and thorns in our side – the difference is that we are not public figures, at least not of that magnitude. We will never know what it is like to live life in a fishbowl like that. MJ is not the only one who has fallen prey to the media, so many others have as well and their testaments to the how media can either blow up or blow apart their lives is something that we can be thankful that we will never experience. The bravery in which many government officials, celebrities, and athletes go about their normal duties after scandal, misunderstanding or mistakes is always astounding to me – to live life knowing that the judgmental, critical eyes of the world are watching is just crazy. I give kudos and a standing ovation to those that have successfully lived past their mistakes.
Late Great Michael Jackson
People are using the media and reality shows to their advantage these days to tell their side of the story. They are cashing in on the monster that created them. First they use scandal, some premeditated to blast them into stardom, television interviews, video guest appearances, modeling contracts and such, and then they get a reality show to change the perception that they willingly entered into with the monster they sold their soul to. I would think for the most part that they did not enter into that contract for that sole purpose but once in it’s hard to get out. But I also believe that some of them did it intentionally. Which is why I respect so highly people that have kept their private lives just that…private. Others have tried but only a few have succeeded and to them I say good job. On another note I watched the reality show I promised myself I wouldn’t watch after the post award show called Tiny & Toya. I am not interested in a show that focuses on the loves of well-known rappers but the sneak peek gave me more than I bargained for. The show is not about the material blessings these ladies get to enjoy at the hand of their significant others but these ladies have real struggles just like us. They have family issues, elder care, self-esteem, motherhood, and occupational choices. I found it interesting and intriguing and actually I related to them, on so many levels. I would recommend the show to anyone, specifically ladies because everything is pretty much in that one mini episode that I viewed. It was pretty emotional because it focused on their relationship with their parents, their children, the love of their spouse, the choice between domestication and occupation; something we can all relate to so in that aspect they are using the monster media to their advantage. I was hoping that it would change my perception of them, and it did…for the better. So good to know that the monster doesn’t always win.
Views & Opinions at Phila. Front Page News; My Strawberry Mansion is a neighborhood in the United States by Janet Powell
Janet Powell
Strawberry Mansion is a neighborhood in the United States City of Philadelphia, Pa. Located east of Fairmount Park in North Philadelphia. The neighborhood is bounded by 33rd street in the west, 29th street in the east, Lehigh Ave. and Oxford St. in the north. This is my neighborhood.
My first memory of where I grew up is watching the house that was directly across the street. It was a three-story brownstone with a round corner window on the second floor. The windows allowed views on 27th St both north and south, from Cumberland to York Sts. I was fascinated by that window. I would at the age of 6, watch that house either from the step out front, or the 2nd floor living room window. I would watch the goings and comings of the German family that were our neighbors. One of the sons who lived in that house rode a motorcycle. It was an amazing site and sound at my age. On Saturday’s his mother would hoist her windows, hang out and beat her rugs and wave at me while I watched her. When they moved, I was sad. It was not because our families were close but because they were familiar.
Strawberry Mansion was home to a number of Philadelphia wealthy families in the 19th century. Almost into the mid 1920’s it was a mixed income, predominately Jewish neighborhood. It was after WW11, when up from the south came “Black” southerners looking for work and prosperity. They came, worked in the factories, the laundries, the navy yard, the clothing industries, The Budd Company, Mrs. Paul’s, Tastykake, Campbell’s Soup in Camden, NJ and some opened businesses. My grandfather opened Powell Funeral Home in 1929. There were many 1st generations “Black” owned businesses in the neighborhood. Our dentist and doctor was Black. Ironically, the prosperity was a segregated prosperity. We purchased goods from the Jewish merchants. They hired Black women to clean their houses. Blacks were clients of the Black lawyers, doctors, dentists, realtors, and funeral homes. They too purchased from the Jewish merchants. The money earned allowed Black resident’s children to go on to college. Ironically, those children had to attend colleges back in the south were their parents had migrated from. Upon their return to Philadelphia after graduating, the children of the second generation either opened offices or joined their family’s businesses in Strawberry Mansion, as did my Mom.
I am the third generation of the business started by my grandfather. It was that generation of both trades’ people and business owners who grew the city of Philadelphia. All also financially supported and grew center city. There were no suburbs as there are today. It was the economic evolution through separatism that made prosperity for everyone who were residents of the Strawberry Mansion neighborhood, renamed ‘The Village “by its’ current residents.
I attended Walton Elementary School, on 27th St, as did my mother. By the time I reached 6th grade, fear overwhelmed the psyche of the residents. Fear on both sides from the history about who we all are. As the cultures divided, houses sold and services were also sold. Fear remains in the area today.
Modern Strawberry Mansion has acquired the reputation as one of the most dangerous areas of Philadelphia. I remain. I am the only Black business owner still operating in the Strawberry Mansion neighborhood since the days of a collective and separated prosperity. It is an area that is treated with disdain by outsiders. It is however, a neighborhood that can teach the rest of Philadelphia a few survival techniques at this time of economic challenges. It is a neighborhood of residents who are at home and who live quite well, in spite of poorly educated children, and the elders who live invisibly. The residents are also victims of ego driven leadership.
City fathers need to remember the legacy dreamed and worked by the elders. It is imperative that they remember the legacy of responsibility. We are all challenged to work hard. We need just a little help like Business Privilege Tax breaks to keep and start businesses. Instead of cutting much needed resources and services to its children and elders, rescind the tax abatements. Release vacant properties to those that can work and invest in them for the change we’re being asked to initiate.
The Strawberry Mansion area is about to be the thorn that will destroy the integrity of a city hall that is headed by the party that is encouraging care and concern and fairness in services and education for all of its residents. Yes, increased police presence is apparent but very few of these areas children are criminals. Fairness in this community is not the order of the day. It may take “The Village “.
Janet Powell
janetwarmwind@aol.com
Racism's Hidden Toll: African Americans Getting Sick and Dying Younger by Morning Nyemah Sunday-hettleman
Immigrants come to America, they learn the language, learn skills, absorb the values of surrounding, community. Their members enter the criminal underworld, others, toil in the underground economy, but the biggest numbers are the ones in the middle , we call them middle class, they push, learn salable skills, educate themselves and their children, buy homes, gp to church and pay their taxes on time. They are in lockstep, becoming a part of Americans Melting Pot. Increased income, markets respond to you. Before there were large numbers of African Americans buying, using health insurance, there was little reason to do research on the effects of genetic, lifestyle choices, issues such as sickle cell, diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity . Insurance companies and the federal government, who is the largest buyer of health insurance, needed to rein in health care cost. Research followed, quality of care improves, quaility of life improves and increasing life spans of African Amercans.
But high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity may represent poor life style choices. We can get better incomes, access to health care professionals, but poor life style choices ie salt intake, lack of exercise, excessive alcohol , stress, quality of air, poor food choices can take your out on a heart beat. When we will learn, that' it is up to you to take care of you.
Janet Jackson Makes Emotional Tribute At BETs
Janet & Michael
LOS ANGELES — Some of the biggest stars on the planet turned back into gushing Michael Jackson fans at the BET Awards, donning single gloves, swapping stories about their idol and singing The King of Pop's standards. One person who perhaps knew him best, though, brought the night into perspective: his sister.
"To you, Michael is an icon," a somber Janet Jackson told the crowd at the end of Sunday's show. "To us, Michael is family and he will forever live in all of our hearts."
It was a stirring emotional climax for a telecast that was completely revamped to recognize the legacy of Jackson, who died Thursday at age 50. For the most part, it was a joyous wake.
"He's the man who made it possible for me to be on the stage; I love you and I miss you," said Ne-Yo, who sang one of Jackson's most sensual songs, "Lady In My Life."
Host Jamie Foxx kicked off the show with a re-enactment of the choreography from Jackson's iconic "Beat It" video in front of the star-studded crowd, on its feet from the start of the show.
Throughout the night, Foxx also regularly turned up in some of Jackson's signature looks, like the wide-collar black leather outfit from "Billie Jean." Sean Paul, Estelle and Alicia Keys were among the celebrities who at one point donned single gloves as part of their ensembles.
Ciara sang Jackson's humanitarian anthem, "Heal the World," dressed in a jacket that had Jackson's signature military epaulets.
oe Jackson, the singer's father, also was on hand to represent the grief-stricken family, though he did not appear on stage during the show. "I just wish he could be here to celebrate himself," he said on the red carpet. "Sadly, he's not here, so I'm here to celebrate for him."People close to Michael Jackson have said since his death that they were concerned about his use of painkillers. Los Angeles County medical examiners completed their autopsy Friday and said Jackson had taken unspecified prescription medication. But an official cause of death could take weeks to determine.
Jackson's family has sought a private autopsy, in part because of questions about Dr. Conrad Murray, the man hired to keep an eye on the pop star ahead of a planned comeback.
Edward Chernoff, a lawyer for the doctor, said Sunday that Jackson still had a faint pulse and his body was warm when Murray found him in bed and not breathing. The doctor immediately began administering CPR, Chernoff said.
Chernoff said any drugs the doctor gave Jackson were prescribed in response to a specific complaint from the entertainer. Murray never prescribed or gave Jackson the drugs Demerol or OxyContin, Chernoff said.
Paramedics were called to the mansion while the doctor was performing CPR, according to a recording of the 911 call.
Because Jackson was so frail, Murray "administered with his hand behind his back to provide the necessary support," Chernoff said. Some have speculated the doctor botched the CPR. "He's a trained doctor," Chernoff said. "He knows how to administer CPR."
Murray was interviewed by investigators for three hours Saturday. His spokeswoman called Murray "a witness to this tragedy," not a suspect in the death, and police described the doctor as cooperative.
Jackson's death prompted BET producers to scramble to meet the moment. While Beyonce, Lil Wayne and Ne-Yo each took home awards, giving out trophies was an afterthought: Honoring Jackson became the show's main focus.
"This is for you, Michael Jackson," said Beyonce, as she held her trophy for best female R&B artist skyward, calling the singer "my hero."
While some artists performed their own hits, most made sure to incorporate some of the man who influenced them in their performances. A chant of "Michael Jackson, Michael Jackson!" was heard while Keri Hilson performed, and Foxx's "Blame It" incorporated some of the Jacksons' dance hit "Blame It On the Boogie."
"We all know none of us in this room wouldn't be here for Michael Jackson," said Lil Wayne, as he picked up his award for best male hip-hop star.
Backstage, Ciara recounted talking on the phone with her idol and her regrets that she never got to meet him. As she talked, she started to cry. "He meant so much to me," she said through tears.
While Jackson's incredible influence stretched across genres, races and cultures, he had a unique place in the world of black entertainment. His influence is arguably most visible in urban music, seen in stars like Usher who mimic his dance moves, to Ne-Yo, whose music is marked by its Jackson-isms. But that influence went beyond music: Jackson was black America's biggest star, who broke racial barriers that allowed for so many other superstars to follow.
"Michael Jackson was so important to our world, to our country, to this network," said BET Chairwoman Debra L. Lee. "Michael was truly a musical deity."
New Edition, the 1980s teen sensations who were considered that generation's Jackson 5 with their own version of bubble-gum soul, ran through several of the Jackson 5's greatest hits, from "I Want You Back" to "ABC," mirroring their idols right down to the group's original choreography.
And Eddie Levert of the classic R&B group the O'Jays talked about how much he'd miss Jackson _ even as his group was honored with a lifetime achievement award.
Jackson connections were inescapable: Even the building where the ceremony took place, the Shrine Auditorium, was where Jackson's hair and scalp were burned during the filming of a Pepsi commercial in 1984. It was also the location for several of his Grammy and American Music Award performances.
The night ended when Janet Jackson _ in her first public appearance since her brother's shocking death _ emerged and elicited the most emotion as she vowed his memory would live forever.
"On behalf of my family and myself, thank you for all of your love, thank you for all of your support," she said. "We miss him so much, thank you so much."
Afterward, Ne-Yo and Foxx performed a somber version of the Jackson 5 classic "I'll Be There," as photos of Jackson flashed across the screen.
Katherine Jackson Granted Temporary Guardianship, Files For Control Of Son's Estate
FILE - In this May 20, 2005 file photo,
Michael Jackson, background, and his
mother Katherine Jackson pass through
a security check point on the way to his
child molestation trial at the Santa Barbara
County Courthouse in Santa Maria, Calif.
LOS ANGELES — Michael Jackson's mother asked a Superior Court judge on Monday to name her administrator of her late son's estate so she can ensure the King of Pop's three children are its beneficiaries.
The court filing states that Jackson's parents believe he died without a valid will.
Supporting Katherine Jackson in her petition bid to administer the estate was Jackson's father, Joe Jackson.
The court documents state that Katherine Jackson "intends to marshal assets of the decedent for the exclusive use of the decedent's three children _ her grandchildren _ after payment of debts and expenses of administration."
Earlier, Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff granted Katherine Jackson's request to assume temporary guardianship of her son's children but did not immediately rule on her request to administer their estate.
Beckloff scheduled hearings for July 6 and Aug. 3 to take up the matters, including whether to also approve a request by Jackson to become permanent guardian of her son's children.
So far, a will for Michael Jackson, which might spell out his wishes for care of his children and his estate, has not surfaced.
Jackson never told his family who he had in place to handle his business affairs, a person close to the family has told The Associated Press. The person, who requested anonymity because of the delicate nature of the situation, said they were told by the singer's phalanx of advisers that he likely had a will, but it may be many years old.
Council to Decide This Week on Cost-Of-Living Raises
The leadership of Philadelphia City Council is getting together early this week to figure out whether all 17 members should say "no thanks" to a five percent cost-of-living increase, due to automatically kick in on Tuesday.
Under a 2003 ordinance, city council set up the automatic raise - the COLA, cost of living adjustments - are based on the consumer price index. Councilwoman Maria Quinones Sanchez says the financial crisis should guide them:
"We need to do whatever we have to do to freeze this, and in light of what we're asking, not only our workforce to do but our unions to do."
For full story go to: http://www.kyw1060.com/Sports At Phila. Front Page News; Federer reaches quarterfinals at Wimbledon
The roof on centre court closes during a break in play between Dinara Safina of Russia and Amelie Mauresmo of France in their fourth round singles match on centre court at Wimbledon, Monday, June 29, 2009. |
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -- Centre Court fans applauded Roger Federer's latest win at Wimbledon. And they really roared for the roof.
Five-time champion Federer advanced to the quarterfinals on a day Wimbledon went indoors. Some 90 minutes after Federer was done Monday, rain halted play with Amelie Mauresmo leading top-ranked Dinara Safina, 6-4, 1-4, and officials ordered the new retractable roof closed for the remainder of the match. Safina rallied to win, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.
Federer hit 23 aces, never lost serve and beat familiar foil Robin Soderling 6-4, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5). Federer improved to 11-0 against Soderling, including a victory in the French Open final three weeks ago to complete a career Grand Slam.
This time the No. 2-seeded Federer came through on a handful of key points. He earned the only service break of the match in the ninth game of the opening set, when Soderling committed five unforced errors to fall behind for good, 5-4.
Soderling led in the final tiebreaker but double-faulted on the next-to-last point, then hit an errant return.
"Today was hard to get through a really dangerous match," Federer said. "Not many rallies, so maybe not as much fun for the people. But I stayed calm, waited for my chance."
With all 16 fourth-round matches scheduled, the Williams sisters remained on course to play an all-family final for the second year in a row.
Five-time champion Venus led 6-1, love-1 when Ana Ivanovic retired with a left thigh injury. Two-time champion Serena beat Daniela Hantuchova 6-3, 6-1. Venus beat Serena in last year's final.
American 17-year-old Melanie Oudin's surprising run ended when she lost to No. 11-seeded Agnieszka Radwanska, 6-4, 7-5.
In men's play, No. 22 Ivo Karlovic hit 35 aces and beat No. 7 Fernando Verdasco 7-6 (5), 6-7 (4), 6-3, 7-6 (9). The 6-foot-10 Karlovic, who has yet to lose his serve in four matches, will face Federer on Wednesday.
Unseeded Lleyton Hewitt, the 2002 champion, rallied from a two-set deficit for the sixth time in his career to beat No. 23 Radek Stepanek 4-6, 2-6, 6-1, 6-2, 6-2. No. 4 Novak Djokovic broke seven times and beat Dudi Sela 6-2, 6-4, 6-1.
On the hottest day of the tournament, the temperature reached 87 degrees on Centre Court before the rain arrived. The roof, built to ensure continuous play on the most famous court in tennis, wasn't needed during the first week of the tournament.
When the roof closed, many spectators responded with a standing ovation. Safina liked the new environment, too.
"It was great," she said. "Very nice. You can't compare it with anything. It's a really nice atmosphere, especially with the crowd, because it's getting like louder so it's even nicer to play. I mean, I won, so everything was perfect."
Coincidentally, play resumed on the outer courts at about the same time.
Soderling had only two break-point chances against Federer - both at 4-all in the third set - and failed to put either return in play. Federer lost just eight points on his first serve and committed only eight unforced errors in the match.
Federer said he has regained the confidence he lacked early this year.
"No signs of panics, what I maybe had, you know, six months ago when I played. I would just feel uneasy. I wouldn't be exactly sure what the right plays were. Now I feel perfect."
He needs three more victories this week for his 15th major title, which would break the record he shares with Pete Sampras. Federer doesn't have to worry about defending champion Rafael Nadal, who missed the tournament with bad knees.
An injury ended Ivanovic's Wimbledon, too. She said she hurt her thigh hitting an ace to erase a break point in the opening game of the second set.
"I didn't feel anything up until that point," she said. "When I landed, I just felt a sharp pain on my inner thigh, and I couldn't step on my leg ever since."
Ivanovic took a 10-minute break to have her thigh taped by a trainer. She returned for two more points, but after hitting a service winner to take the game, she began crying as she walked to her chair and told the umpire she was retiring.
Then she hugged a sympathetic Williams.
"I don't even know the last time that I had these circumstances," Williams said. "I don't think ever in a Slam. I think she was in a lot of pain. You know me - I'm one of those players, I just only pay attention to what's going on my side of the net. But today I felt really sad for her actually. She was really upset.
"This is Wimbledon. It's the last place you want to have an injury that you can't overcome. So I'm wishing her a lot of luck in her recovery."
Williams next plays Radwanska, who took advantage of some shaky moments by Oudin, a qualifier from Marietta, Ga. ranked 124th.
"I'm very proud of myself how I did here," said Oudin, who made her Wimbledon debut this year and pulled the biggest upset in the first week by beating former No. 1 Jelena Jankovic.
No. 8-ranked Victoria Azarenka beat No. 10 Nadia Petrova 7-6 (5), 2-6, 6-3, and she'll face Serena Williams on Tuesday.
FDA weighs options to reduce painkiller overdoses
FILE - In this Dec. 12, 2007 file photo, Tylenol drugs are shown in the drug department at Costco in Mountain View, Calif. During a two-day meeting that started Monday June 29, 2009, the FDA is asking more than 35 experts what additional steps can be taken to reduce accidental overdose with the over-the-counter and prescription pain relievers. |
ADELPHI, Md. (AP) -- The makers of Tylenol, Excedrin and other medications are trying to dissuade regulators from placing new restrictions on their popular painkillers, including possibly removing some of them from store shelves.
The Food and Drug Administration has assembled more than 35 experts to discuss ways to prevent overdose with acetaminophen - the pain-relieving, fever-reducing ingredient in Tylenol and dozens of other prescription and over-the-counter medications.
Despite years of educational campaigns and other federal actions, acetaminophen is the leading cause of liver failure in the U.S., sending 56,000 people to the emergency room annually, according to the FDA.
The agency on Monday asked its experts to consider a range of options: adding a "black box" warning label to the products, lowering the drug dosage in some products, or pulling certain types of medications off the market.
The drugs that could be pulled off shelves are combination medications, such as Procter & Gamble's NyQuil or Novartis' Theraflu, which combine acetaminophen with other ingredients that treat cough and runny nose.
The FDA says patients often pair them with a pure acetaminophen medication, like Tylenol, exposing themselves to unsafe levels of the drug.
But the industry group that represents Johnson & Johnson, Wyeth and other companies defended the products Monday, saying they pose a relatively small risk to patients.
Only 10 percent of deaths linked to acetaminophen medications involved over-the-counter combination cold medications, according to the Consumer Healthcare Products Association.
The majority of deaths were caused by either single-ingredient drugs or prescription strength combination drugs like Percocet, which combines oxycodone and acetaminophen.
"We believe there is a clear health benefit of over-the-counter combination products containing acetaminophen," said Linda Suydam, the group's president.
The FDA is not required to follow the advice of its panels, though it usually does. The panel vote is scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.
Manufacturers could lose hundreds of millions of dollars in sales if combination drugs are pulled from the market. Total sales of all acetaminophen drugs reached $2.6 billion last year, with 80 percent of the market comprised of over-the-counter products.
Tylenol-maker Johnson & Johnson also pushed back against a proposal to lower the maximum daily dose of acetaminophen, which is currently 4 grams daily, or eight pills of a medication like Extra Strength Tylenol.
While taking more than 4 grams per day can cause liver injury, J&J argued that taking the exact dose is proven to treat osteoarthritis pain.
J&J also warned panelists that any new restrictions on acetaminophen would force patients to switch to nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which carry risks of gastrointestinal bleeding and sometimes fatal kidney injury.
"When switching occurs, the risk of death increases," said Dr. Kenneth Rothman, a consultant for J&J. According to figures from Rothman, a 30 percent switch away from acetaminophen would result in an additional 5,000 deaths per year.
Top-sellers in the anti-inflammatory drug market include Bayer AG's aspirin and Wyeth's Advil.
Executives from Wyeth scheduled a series of media briefings last week, arguing there's no evidence that the reduced use of acetaminophen would cause more negative side effects with their drug.
"There are major flaws in their arguments that are not born out in real world experience," said Dr. Paul Desjardins, a vice president with Wyeth.
Desjardins pointed out that the U.K. has put tighter safety measures in place for acetaminophen without causing increased problems with Advil and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
For its part, the FDA has made clear it will not play king-maker in the market for over-the-counter medications. The agency says its only goal is to reduce liver injury, "not to decrease appropriate acetaminophen use or to drive people to use NSAIDS instead."
Medical examiner: Pitchman Mays had heart disease
FILE - In this Dec. 6, 2002 file photo,TV pitchman Billy Mays poses with some of his cleaning products at his Palm Harbor, Fla., home. Tampa police say Mays, the television pitchman known for his boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean, has died. He was 50. |
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -- Television pitchman Billy Mays likely died of a heart attack in his sleep, but further tests are needed to be sure of the cause of death, a medical examiner said Monday.
Hillsborough County Medical Examiner Vernard Adams said Mays suffered from hypertensive heart disease, and the wall of the left ventricle of Mays' heart and the wall of one of his arteries were enlarged. The boisterous, bearded 50-year-old known for hawking OxiClean and other products on national commercials was found dead Sunday by his wife in their Tampa condominium.
"The heart disease is perfectly consistent with sudden death," Adams said.
An official cause of death will be issued after toxicology and other tests are completed in eight to 10 weeks.
"While it provides some closure to learn that heart disease took Billy from us, it certainly doesn't ease the enormous void that his death has created in our lives," his wife, Deborah, said in a statement. "As you can imagine, we are all devastated."
Adams said Mays was taking the prescription painkillers Tramadol and hydrocodone for hip pain, but there was no indication of drug abuse. Mays had planned to have hip-replacement surgery Monday.
Mays told his wife he didn't feel well when he went to bed sometime after 10 p.m. Saturday. Earlier in the day, he said he was hit on the head when his flight from Philadelphia had a rough landing at Tampa International Airport. The airline said no passengers reported serious injuries.
Adams said the autopsy showed no evidence of head trauma.
In a 911 tape released Monday, a frantic woman tells emergency operators she found Mays cold and unresponsive. The woman isn't identified, but police have said Deborah Mays found her husband dead.
When asked what had happened, the caller says she doesn't know.
A second person got on the phone as the operator encourages them to get Mays on the floor to start CPR.
"We can't get him up, ma'am," the woman says. "He's gone."
Born William Mays in McKees Rocks, Pa., on July 20, 1958, Mays developed his style demonstrating knives, mops and other "As Seen on TV" gadgets on Atlantic City's boardwalk. For years he worked as a hired gun on the state fair and home show circuits, attracting crowds with his booming voice and genial manner.
After meeting Orange Glo International founder Max Appel at a home show in Pittsburgh in the mid-1990s, Mays was recruited to demonstrate the environmentally friendly line of cleaning products on the St. Petersburg-based Home Shopping Network, now known as HSN.
Commercials and informercials followed, anchored by the high-energy Mays using them while tossing out kitschy phrases like, "Long live your laundry!"
HSN released a statement Monday morning, praising Mays as a "legend in the electronic retail history whose personality, entrepreneurial spirit and thoughtfulness for others have always been larger than life."
His ubiquitousness and thumbs-up, in-your-face pitches won Mays plenty of fans for his commercials on a wide variety of products. People lined up at his personal appearances for autographed color glossies, and strangers stopped him in airports to chat about the products.
"I enjoy what I do," Mays told The Associated Press in a 2002 interview. "I think it shows."
Mays liked to tell the story of giving bottles of OxiClean to the 300 guests at his wedding, and doing his ad spiel ("powered by the air we breathe!") on the dance floor at the reception. Visitors to his house typically got bottles of cleaner and housekeeping tips.
Besides his wife, Mays is survived by a 3-year-old daughter and a stepson in his 20s, police said.
White firefighters win Supreme Court appeal
Firefighter Frank Ricci's mother Nancy Ricci reacts to the news that the Supreme Court overturned a ruling, Monday, June 29, 2009 in New Haven, Conn. Frank Ricci is the lead plaintiff in the firefighter reverse discrimination case ruled on Monday by the Supreme Court. |
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Supreme Court ruled Monday that white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., were unfairly denied promotions because of their race, reversing a decision that high court nominee Sonia Sotomayor endorsed as an appeals court judge.
The ruling could alter employment practices nationwide and make it harder to prove discrimination when there is no evidence it was intentional.
New Haven was wrong to scrap a promotion exam because no African-Americans and only two Hispanic firefighters were likely to be made lieutenants or captains based on the results, the court said Monday in a 5-4 decision. The city said that it had acted to avoid a lawsuit from minorities.
The ruling could give Sotomayor's critics fresh ammunition two weeks before her Senate confirmation hearing. Conservatives say it shows she is a judicial activist who lets her own feelings color her decisions. On the other hand, liberal allies say her stance in the case demonstrates her restraint and unwillingness to go beyond established precedents.
Coincidentally, the court may have given a boost to calls for quick action on her nomination.
The court said it will return Sept. 9 to hear a second round of arguments in a campaign finance case, and with Justice David Souter retiring there would be only eight justices unless Sotomayor has been confirmed by then.
In Monday's ruling, Justice Anthony Kennedy said, "Fear of litigation alone cannot justify an employer's reliance on race to the detriment of individuals who passed the examinations and qualified for promotions." He was joined in the majority by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
In dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said the white firefighters "understandably attract this court's sympathy. But they had no vested right to promotion. Nor have other persons received promotions in preference to them."
Justices Souter, Stephen Breyer and John Paul Stevens signed onto Ginsburg's dissent, which she read aloud in court Monday. Speaking dismissively of the majority opinion, she predicted the court's ruling "will not have staying power."
Kennedy's opinion made only passing reference to the work of Sotomayor and the other two judges on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals who upheld a lower court ruling in favor of New Haven.
But the appellate judges have been criticized for producing a cursory opinion that failed to deal with "indisputably complex and far from well-settled" questions, in the words of another appeals court judge, Sotomayor mentor Jose Cabranes.
"This perfunctory disposition rests uneasily with the weighty issues presented by this appeal," Cabranes said, in a dissent from the full 2nd Circuit's decision not to hear the case.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said Sotomayor should not be criticized for the unsigned appeals court decision, which he asserted she did not write. "Judge Sotomayor and the lower court panel did what judges are supposed to do, they followed precedent," said the Vermont Democrat who will preside over Sotomayor's confirmation hearings next month.
Leahy also called the high court decision "cramped" and wrong.
In New Haven, Nancy Ricci, whose son, Frank, was the lead plaintiff on the lawsuit, carried a large cake decorated with red, white and blue frosting into the law office where the firefighters were celebrating their victory.
The ruling is "a sign that individual achievement should not take a back seat to race or ethnicity," said Karen Torre, the firefighters' attorney. "I think the import of the decision is that cities cannot bow to politics and pressure and lobbying by special interest groups or act to achieve racial quotas."
At a press conference on the steps of city hall in New Haven, firefighter Frank Ricci said the ruling showed that "if you work hard, you can succeed in America."
Monday's decision has its origins in New Haven's need to fill vacancies for lieutenants and captains in its fire department. It hired an outside firm to design a test, which was given to 77 candidates for lieutenant and 41 candidates for captain.
Fifty-six firefighters passed the exams, including 41 whites, nine blacks and six Hispanics. But of those, only 17 whites and two Hispanics could expect promotion.
The city eventually decided not to use the exam to determine promotions. It said it acted because it might have been vulnerable to claims that the exam had a "disparate impact" on minorities in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The white firefighters said the decision violated the same law's prohibition on intentional discrimination. The lawsuit was filed by 20 white plaintiffs, including one man who is both white and Hispanic.
Kennedy said an employer needs a "strong basis in evidence" to believe it will be held liable in a disparate impact lawsuit. New Haven had no such evidence, he said.
The city declined to validate the test after it was given, a step that could have identified flaws or determined that there were no serious problems with it. In addition, city officials could not say what was wrong with the test, other than the racially skewed results.
"The city could be liable for disparate-impact discrimination only if the examinations were not job related" or the city failed to use a less discriminatory alternative, Kennedy said. "We conclude that there is no strong basis in evidence to establish that the test was deficient in either of these respects."
But Ginsburg said the court should have assessed "the starkly disparate results" of the exams against the backdrop of historical and ongoing inequality in the New Haven fire department. As of 2003, she said, only one of the city's 21 fire captains was African-American.
Until this decision, Ginsburg said, the civil rights law's prohibitions on intentional discrimination and disparate impact were complementary, both aimed at ending workplace discrimination.
"Today's decision sets these paired directives at odds," she said.
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