|
Some of the strongest critics of our welfare system are the people who have become dependent on it . |
|
Their complaint : the system discourages working because unemployment provides benefits that many entry - level jobs do n |
|
That |
|
We help people train for and find jobs that make it possible for them to get off of welfare . |
|
Last year , Goodwill placed 511 people in jobs , more than double the number we placed in 1993 . |
|
While the debate on welfare reform is gathering like a storm at sea , the people who need jobs are floundering . |
|
We need your support to continue getting people off of public assistance . |
|
Welfare is not the answer . |
|
And welfare reform is an uncertain solution with an unknown starting date . |
|
Goodwill works . |
|
Right now . |
|
Please give the largest gift you can to Goodwill today . |
|
Sincerely , |
|
Jack Dustman Chairman |
|
ID: MIT -1 . |
|
City workers pretended to be victims of the attack . |
|
QN : Were the city workers harmed by the attack ? |
|
ID: MIT -2 . |
|
The Defense Department has awarded BioPort Corporation a contract to manufacture , test , bottle and store anthrax vaccine , the company has announced . |
|
QN : Does the Defense Department want BioPort Corporation to manufacture anthrax vaccine ? |
|
ID: MIT -3 . |
|
Chemical weapon projectiles contain a blasting tube which can be seen in an X-ray . |
|
QN : Is the blasting tube visible outside the projectile ? |
|
ID: MIT -4 . |
|
The incident at Mayak was the third shooting in recent weeks involving nuclear weapons or facilities in Russia . |
|
QN : Did the incident at Mayak involve nuclear weapons or facilities ? |
|
ID: MIT -5 . |
|
Utah |
|
QN : Who chose the Dugway Proving Ground as a site to test vaccines ? |
|
ID: MIT -6 . |
|
The Russian Emergencies Ministry predicts a further increase in 1999 of the concentration of toxic agents in marine burials of chemical weapons . |
|
QN : Has the concentration of toxic agents in marine burials of chemical weapons increased prior to 1999 ? |
|
ID: MIT -7 . |
|
The Army |
|
QN : Who destroyed 5 million pounds of GB nerve agent ? |
|
ID: MIT -8 . |
|
The military is training for the day a terrorist sets off not just a bomb , but a chemical or biological weapon that would spew out an invisible death . |
|
QN : Will a terrorist set off a chemical or biological weapon ? |
|
ID: MIT -9 . |
|
Virginia is ill prepared for a large-scale terrorist attack using chemical , biological or nuclear weapons , state officials say . |
|
QN : Is Virginia prepared for a small-scale terrorist attack using chemical , biological or nuclear weapons ? |
|
ID: MIT -10 . |
|
Unlike nuclear or chemical weapons , biological weapons can be made with readily available materials or equipment . |
|
QN : Can nuclear weapons be made with readily available materials or equipment ? |
|
ID: MIT -11 . |
|
Sudan says it |
|
QN : Will Sudan produce chemical weapons in the future ? |
|
ID: MIT -12 . |
|
The Scud C has a range of 500 kilometers and is manufactured in Syria with know-how from North Korea . |
|
QN : Can a Scud C fly 500 kilometers ? |
|
ID: MIT -13 . |
|
Some of the 14 alleged bin Laden associates arrested in Jordan in December have begun talking to investigators . |
|
QN : Was an associate of bin Laden arrested in the Middle East ? |
|
ID: MIT -14 . |
|
The U.S. Senate on Thursday unanimously approved legislation designed to punish Russia and other countries if they help Iran develop weapons of mass destruction . |
|
QN : Will Russia help Iran develop weapons of mass destruction ? |
|
ID: MIT -15 . |
|
To date , Congress has authorized more than $4.7 billion for U.S. programs aimed at helping Russia and other newly independent states reduce the threats posed by their weapons of mass destruction . |
|
QN : Does the U.S. want the threat posed by Russia |
|
ID: MIT -16 . |
|
A father and a son were admitted to hospital with strychnine poisoning after consuming Herron products . |
|
QN : Did the Herron products contain poison ? |
|
ID: MIT -17 . |
|
About 400 of the more than 2,600 village residents were hospitalized in July and August . |
|
QN : Were some of the village residents not hospitalized in July and August ? |
|
ID: MIT -18 . |
|
The only bacterial attack in America came in 1984 , when a cult poisoned a salad bar in Oregon with salmonella , sickening 700 people . |
|
QN : Has a biological attack occurred in the U.S. ? |
|
ID: MIT -19 . |
|
Blix said the new weapons inspection team is composed of scientists from around the world , including South America , Thailand , Bangladesh and Eastern Europe . |
|
QN : Are scientists from Hungary members of the new weapons inspection team ? |
|
ID: MIT -20 . |
|
Biological select agents include about 40 viruses , bacteria , rickettsia , fungi , and toxins whose transfer within the United States is controlled . |
|
QN : Is the transfer of biological select agents within the United States controlled ? |
|
ID: MIT -21 . |
|
During his trip to five Arab capitals and Israel , which ended last Monday , Powell proposed easing sanctions on Iraqi imports . |
|
QN : Where did Powell travel to ? |
|
ID: MIT -22 . |
|
The Chemlab , for instance , is about the size of a Palm Pilot and will be able to detect a range of biological agents . |
|
QN : Is the Chemlab a handheld device ? |
|
ID: MIT -23 . |
|
Russia could suspend the destruction of its stockpile of chemical weapons if foreign aid is not increased , a senior official and negotiator was quoted as saying by the AVN Military News agency . |
|
QN : Does Russia have a stockpile of chemical weapons ? |
|
ID: MIT -24 . |
|
BioPort Corp. of Lansing , Michigan is the sole U.S. manufacturer of an anthrax vaccine . |
|
QN : Are there three U.S. manufacturers of anthrax vaccine ? |
|
ID: MIT -25 . |
|
Two Al Qaeda computers have been found in Kabul . |
|
QN : Did the computers belong to Al Qaeda ? |
|
ID: MIT -26 . |
|
The White House has ordered a purge of information from government agency websites that could be exploited by terrorists seeking weapons of mass destruction . |
|
QN : Do government agency websites contain information that could be exploited by terrorists ? |
|
ID: MIT -27 . |
|
Agriculture accounts for 22 million jobs and 16.4 percent of the nation |
|
QN : Are 22 million people employed in agriculture ? |
|
ID: MIT -28 . |
|
The Pentagon is considering a resumption of anthrax vaccinations for U.S. troops . |
|
QN : Have anthrax vaccinations of U.S. troops occurred previously ? |
|
ID: MIT -29 . |
|
Libya said on Wednesday it is not developing chemical , biological or nuclear weapons , denying allegations made by a US official . |
|
QN : Did a U.S. official claim that Libya is developing chemical , biological or nuclear weapons ? |
|
ID: MIT -30 . |
|
Al Wafa is one of the organisations whose assets have been frozen in the United States amid suspicions that it might be giving support to Osama Bin Laden |
|
QN : Who has given support to al-Qaeda ? |
|
Ohio Congressman Arrives in Jordan |
|
AMMAN , Jordan ( AP ) U.S. Representative Tony Hall arrived in Jordan on Saturday en route to Iraq , where he is expected to look into the plight of Iraqis after nearly 10 years of U.N. trade sanctions . |
|
Hall , an Ohio Democrat and one of very few U.S. congressmen to visit Iraq since the 1991 Gulf War over Kuwait , is scheduled to embark Sunday the 12-hour overland trip to the Iraqi capital , Baghdad . |
|
He did not speak to reporters in Jordan , but he told The Associated Press before leaving the United States that he hopes to `` separate the humanitarian work from the political issues . |
|
During his four days in Iraq , Hall said he wanted to investigate reports from relief agencies that a quarter of Iraqi children may be suffering from chronic malnutrition . |
|
He said he would pay particular attention to what happens to food and medicine entering the country under the U.N. oil-for-food program . |
|
If supplies are not reaching the people who need them , Hall said , he wanted to find out whether the United Nations or relief agencies needed to handle things differently , or whether `` Iraq needs to get out of the way and let us do the job . |
|
The Iraqi government blames the embargo for the malnutrition , infant mortality and other hardships . |
|
The sanctions can not be lifted until U.N. inspectors certify that Iraq has eliminated its weapons of mass destruction and the means to produce them . |
|
Iraq says it has done so and has barred inspectors since late 1998 . |
|
At least one other congressman has visited Iraq . |
|
Energy Secretary Bill Richardson went to Baghdad in 1995 while a representative for New Mexico . |
|
Date : Wed , 25 Jul 2001 16:45:08 -0700 ( PDT ) |
|
From : rpearson @ oilstates.com |
|
To : don.baughman @ enron.com |
|
Subject : RE : Unclassified rules |
|
HOWDY , |
|
WHAT |
|
I HAVE NOT TALKED TO YOU IN A WHILE . |
|
GIVE YOU THE SCOPE OF WHATS BEEN GOING ON WITH ME . |
|
I LEFT OILSTATES BACK IN MARCH WITH ANOTHER COMPANY . |
|
DID A LOT OF TRAVELING AND THEY ( OILSTATES ) MADE ME A SWEET OFFER TO COME BACK . |
|
SO I AM BACK . |
|
WHO |
|
SOUNDS LIKE THIS IS GOING TO BE A GREAT BACHELOR PARTY . |
|
GIVE ME A CALL SOMETIME CELL : 713 991 - 5621 . |
|
ROB |
|
Text for Event Extraction Workshop |
|
The United Nations says Somali gunmen who hijacked a U.N. - chartered vessel carrying food aid for tsunami victims have released the ship after holding it for more than two months . |
|
End of text . |
|
Nuclear Overview |
|
North Korea has joined , violated , and withdrawn from the Nuclear Non - Proliferation Treaty ( NPT ) in the course of activities apparently dedicated to the production of nuclear weapons . |
|
On 23 April 2003 in Beijing , North Korean Deputy Foreign Minster Li Gun ( Lee Gu ( n ) reportedly told U.S. Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs James Kelly that North Korea possesses nuclear weapons . |
|
Li made the statement during trilateral talks between delegations from the United States , China , and North Korea . |
|
On 10 February 2005 , the North Korean Foreign Ministry confirmed Li |
|
North Korea has not conducted a nuclear test , but in early May 2005 , press reports indicated that U.S. satellite imagery had detected signs that North Korea could be preparing for a nuclear test to be conducted in June . |
|
As of May 2005 , there had been three rounds of six - party talks in Beijing . |
|
The six parties include China , Japan , North Korea , Russia , South Korea and the United States . |
|
The six parties have agreed to hold working - level talks , and all sides have stated they have the ultimate goal of a non - nuclear Korean peninsula . |
|
However , in February 2005 , Pyongyang announced that it was suspending indefinitely its participation in the six - party process until the the United States chanegd its `` hostile policy towards North Korea . |
|
Many analysts now believe the talks are dead , and in early May 2005 there were reports that Washington and Tokyo were preparing to refer the issue to the UN Security Council . |
|
On 12 May 2003 , North Korea announced that the bilateral `` Joint Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula |
|
Under the agreement , North and South Korea pledged not to produce nuclear weapons , not to reprocess plutonium , and not to enrich uranium . |
|
Under the Agreed Framework of October 1994 , Pyongyang also agreed to fulfill its commitments under the joint declaration . |
|
On 10 January 2003 , North Korea notified the International Atomic Energy Agency ( IAEA ) and the UN Security Council that Pyongyang was withdrawing from the NPT , and that the withdrawal would be effective the next day . |
|
The treaty requires 90 - day notice before a withdrawal , but North Korea claims this is not necessary since Pyongyang already declared its intention to withdraw in 1993 , only to `` suspend its intention withdraw |
|
89 days later . |
|
The NPT withdrawal swiftly followed a December 2002 announcement that North Korea was lifting the freeze on its nuclear program , in response to the U.S. decision to suspend heavy fuel oil ( HFO ) shipments under the Agreed Framework . |
|
Pyongyang said it was lifting the freeze to generate electricity to compensate for the loss of HFO supplies , and North Korean technicians were able to remove seals and disable monitoring cameras at nuclear facilities in Yo ( ngbyo ( n-kun within a matter of days . |
|
The IAEA |
|
The Central Intelligence Agency estimates that North Korea has one or two nuclear bombs that were assembled with plutonium reprocessed between 1989 and 1991 . |
|
If so , it is unclear if these devices have been `` weaponized |
|
Furthermore , a plutonium bomb would have to be tested before North Korea could use it with confidence . |
|
However , some analysts speculate that North Korean scientists were present during Pakistan |
|
In the spring of 2003 , US intelligence detected activities around the Radiochemisty Laboratory , a reprocessing facility in Yo ( ngbyo ( n-kun , that indicate North Korea was probably reprocessing the 8,000 spent fuel rods that had been in a temporary storage pond . |
|
In September 2003 , a North Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman said that North Korea had completed the reprocessing of this spent fuel , which would give North Korea enough plutonium for about four to six nuclear bombs . |
|
In January 2004 , a delegation of American private citizens confirmed that the cannisters in the temporary storage pond were empty . |
|
There are also concerns about North Korea |
|
In the summer of 2002 , US intelligence reportedly discovered new evidence about transfers of HEU technology and/or materials from Pakistan in exchange for ballistic missiles . |
|
In October 2002 , a delegation led by James Kelly , US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs , visited Pyongyang and notified North Korean officials that the United States was aware of Pyongyang |
|
Compared to plutonium - production facilities , the type of HEU production facilities that the DPRK may be developing would be difficult to detect , and therefore , it is difficult to accurately assess the program |
|
In early 2004 , Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr . A. Q. Khan revealed that he had sold gas - centrifuge technology to North Korea , Libya and Iran . |
|
Libya has since abandoned its nuclear ambitions and is cooperating with the IAEA and the United States , which has revealed much about Khan |
|
In April 2003 , Egyptian customs officials intercepted 22 tons of aluminum tubing from Germany , which would be enough for about 100 - 200 centrifuges . |
|
In the spring of 2004 , it was reported that Khan visited North Korea and was shown three nuclear devices . |
|
However , the report lacks details , and its contents have not been confirmed . |
|
History |
|
North Korea first became embroiled with nuclear politics during the Korean War . |
|
Although nuclear weapons were never used in Korea , American political leaders and military commanders threatened to use nuclear weapons to end the Korean War on terms favorable to the United States . |
|
In 1958 , the United States deployed nuclear weapons to South Korea for the first time , and the weapons remained there until President George Bush ordered their withdrawal in 1991 . |
|
North Korean government statements and media reports often cite a `` nuclear threat from the United States , |
|
There is no reason , however , to believe that this allegation is true . |
|
There are different schools of thought on the motivations behind Pyongyang |
|
Those who believe North Korea is a revisionist state argue that Pyongyang |
|
This school of thought has ample evidence to support its claims : North Korea |
|
Many analysts also argue that Pyongyang |
|
On the other hand , some people believe North Korea is a state satisfied with the status quo and that it seeks peaceful coexistence with South Korea and the international community . |
|
Proponents of this school often argue that North Korea |
|
Evidence to support this argument includes the July 4 North - South Joint Communiqu� of 1972 ; the Agreement on Reconciliation , Nonaggression , and Exchanges and Cooperation between North and South Korea of 1991 ( the so-called `` Basic Agreement |
|
However , critics argue that Pyongyang |
|
Regardless of North Korean motivations toward South Korea and the United States , Pyongyang |
|
In the early 1950s , North Korea began establishing the institutional base to train the human resources for its nuclear development program . |
|
The Atomic Energy Research Institute was established along with the Academy of Sciences in December 1952 , but the nuclear program did not begin its take - off until North Korea established cooperative agreements with the Soviet Union . |
|
Pyongyang signed the founding charter of the Soviet Union |
|
In 1959 , North Korea and the USSR signed an agreement on the peaceful use of nuclear energy that included a provision for Soviet help to establishment a nuclear research complex in Yo ( ngbyo ( n-kun , North P |
|
In the early 1960s , the Soviet Union provided extensive technical assistance while North Korea constructed its Yo ( ngbyo ( n Nuclear Research Center , which included the installation of a Soviet IRT- 2000 Nuclear Research Reactor , and other facilities ( see Yo ( ngbyo ( n Nuclear Research Center ) . |
|
The small research reactor has been used to produce radioisotopes and to train personnel . |
|
The cabinet and the Academy of Sciences were given operational and administrative oversight of the nuclear facilities , but ultimate control of the program and decisions over weapons development belonged to North Korean leader Kim Il Sung . |
|
The program appeared to begin as a peaceful one , but whatever Kim |
|
Indigenous Development |
|
Kim Il Sung appreciated Soviet and Chinese support during the Korean War , but he had expected more , particularly from the Soviets , and he was dissatisfied that the war had ended in a stalemate . |
|
In 1961 , Pyongyang signed `` treaties of friendship , cooperation , and mutual assistance |
|
First , Kim had to question the credibility of Moscow |
|
Only two months later , the Korean Workers |
|
Second , there are reports that Kim Il Sung asked China to share its nuclear weapons technology following China |
|
Shortly thereafter , North Korean relations with China began to deteriorate and they worsened during China |
|
In the late 1960s , North Korea continued to expand its educational and research institutions to support a nuclear program for both civilian and military applications . |
|
By the early 1970s , North Korean engineers were using indigenous technology to expand the IRT- 2000 research reactor and Pyongyang began to acquire plutonium reprocessing technology from the Soviet Union . |
|
In July 1977 , North Korea signed a trilateral safeguards agreement with the IAEA and the USSR that brought the IRT- 2000 research reactor and a critical assembly in Yo ( ngbyo ( n-kun under IAEA safeguards . |
|
The Soviets were included in the agreement since they supplied the reactor fuel . |
|
The early 1980s was a period of significant indigenous expansion , which included uranium milling facilities , a fuel rod fabrication complex , and a 5MW ( e ) nuclear reactor , as well as research and development institutions . |
|
The early 1980s also marks the beginning of high explosives test that are required for the triggering mechanism in a nuclear bomb . |
|
By the mid - 1980s , Pyongyang began construction on a 50MW ( e ) nuclear power reactor in Yo ( ngbyo ( n-kun , while expanding its uranium processing facilities . |
|
Some of technology and equipment acquired during this period had dual - use applications for a uranium enrichment program that was not revealed until the late 1990s . |
|
North Korea |
|
This period coincided with the expansion of North Korea |
|
In the early 1980s , Pyongyang was also exploring the acquisition of light water power reactors , and agreed to sign the NPT in December 1985 in exchange for Soviet assistance in the construction of four light water reactors . |
|
After signing the NPT , countries have 18 months to complete a safeguards agreement with the IAEA . |
|
In North Korea |
|
Nevertheless , North Korea failed to meet the extended deadline , as Pyongyang demanded that the United States withdraw its nuclear weapons from South Korea , and that Washington and Seoul terminate the joint military exercise `` Team Spirit . |
|
In September 1991 , President George Bush announced that the United States would withdraw its nuclear weapons from South Korea , and on 18 December 1991 , President Roh Tae Woo declared that South Korea was free of nuclear weapons . |
|
North and South Korea then signed the `` Joint Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula , |
|
The agreement also bound the two sides to forgo the possession of `` nuclear reprocessing and uranium enrichment facilities . |
|
The agreement also provided for a bilateral inspections regime , but the two sides failed to agree on its implementation . |
|
North Korea finally signed an IAEA safeguards agreement on 30 January 1992 , and the Supreme People |
|
Under the terms of the agreement , North Korea provided an `` initial declaration |
|
Six rounds of inspections began in May 1992 and concluded in February 1993 . |
|
Pyongyang |
|
However , IAEA analysis indicated that Korean technicians reprocessed plutonium on three occasions -- 1989, 1990 , and 1991 . |
|
When the agency requested access to two suspect nuclear waste sites , North Korea declared them to be `` military sites |
|
1994 Crisis and the Agreed Framework |
|
After the IAEA was denied access to North Korea |
|
Under the terms of the treaty , withdrawal is not effective until 90 days after giving notice . |
|
However , following intense bilateral negotiations with the United States , North Korea announced it was `` suspending its withdrawal from the NPT |
|
Pyongyang agreed to `` suspend |
|
Under this `` special status , |
|
As talks with the United States over North Korea |
|
By the spring of 1994 , the reactor core was burned up , and the spent fuel rods had to be discharged . |
|
On 14 May 1994 , Korean technicians began removing the spent fuel rods without the supervision of IAEA inspectors . |
|
This action worsened the emerging crisis because the random placement of the spent fuel rods in a temporary storage pond compromised the IAEA |
|
The Clinton administration announced that it would ask the UN Security Council to impose economic sanctions , but Pyongyang then declared that it would consider economic sanctions `` an act of war . |
|
The crisis was defused in June 1994 when former President Jimmy Carter traveled to Pyongyang to meet with Kim Il Sung . |
|
Carter announced from Pyongyang that Kim had accepted the broad outline of a deal that was later finalized as the `` Agreed Framework |
|
Under the agreement , North Korea agreed to freeze its gas - graphite moderated reactors and related facilities , and allow the IAEA to monitor that freeze . |
|
Pyongyang was also required to `` consistently take steps to implement the North - South Joint Declaration on the Denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula , |
|
In exchange , the United States agreed to lead an international consortium to construct two light water power reactors , and provide 500,000 tons of heavy fuel oil per year until the first reactor came online with a target date of 2003 . |
|
Furthermore , the United States was to provide `` formal assurances against the threat or use of nuclear weapons by the US . |
|
Collapse of the Agreed Framework |
|
While the Agreed Framework froze North Korea |
|
The United States was dissatisfied with the postponement of safeguards inspections to verify Pyongyang |
|
In fact , Pyongyang had demanded compensation from Washington , but the US position has been that 2003 was only a `` target date |
|
After coming to office in 2001 , the new Bush administration initiated a North Korea policy review that was completed in early June . |
|
The policy review concluded that the United States should seek `` improved implementation of the Agreed Framework , verifiable constraints on North Korea |
|
From Washington |
|
In October 2002 , bilateral talks between the United States and North Korea finally resumed when US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs James Kelly visited Pyongyang . |
|
During the visit , Kelly informed First Vice Foreign Minister Kang So ( k Chu and Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Kwan that Washington was aware of a secret North Korean program to produce highly - enriched uranium ( HEU ) . |
|
The US State Department claims that North Korean officials admitted to having such a program during a second day of meetings with Kelly , but North Korea now claims that it has only admitted to having a `` plan to produce nuclear weapons , |
|
The United States responded in December 2002 by suspending heavy oil shipments , and North Korea then retaliated by lifting the freeze on its nuclear facilities , expelling IAEA inspectors monitoring that freeze , and announcing its withdrawal from the NPT on 10 January 2003 . |
|
Initially , North Korea claimed it had no intention of producing nuclear weapons , and that the lifting of the nuclear freeze was necessary to generate needed electricity . |
|
On 10 February 2005 , the Foreign Ministry announced that North Korea had manufactured nuclear weapons , and in early April 2005 Pyongyang shut down its 5MW ( e ) nuclear reactor . |
|
If the spent fuel in the reactor core is reprocessed , North Korea will be able to obtain enough weapons - grade plutonium for 1 - 3 nuclear bombs . |
|
BW - PREP / DEFENSE / RESPONSE - U.S. |
|
Ground to be Broken at Biodefense Center |
|
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security was scheduled to break ground Monday at its National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center . |
|
The center , which has drawn criticism from arms control experts and local activists , will be the first department lab to focus strictly on biodefense . |
|
The laboratory |
|
The facility also will be used to assess threat vulnerabilities and potential consequences and conduct forensic analysis of evidence from terrorism and biological crimes . |
|
The $128 - million center will be part of Fort Detrick |
|
It is scheduled to begin operating in 2008 . ( WTOP , 26Jun06 ) ( Link ) |
|
Making , fighting diseases of terror |
|
Biologists at Fort Detrick |
|
One of the biologists |
|
But some arms control specialists worry that the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center -- now operating out of borrowed lab space at the Frederick base and elsewhere -- might develop new vaccine - resistant or lethal microbes without solid evidence of a terrorist plot to unleash similar bugs . |
|
The result , they say , could increase the risk that nasty new organisms will be unleashed on the world. ( Baltimore Sun , 26Jun06 , Douglas Birch ) ( Link ) |
|
US FDA [ United States Food and Drug Administration ] grants Orphan Drug status to Elusys |
|
Elusys Therapeutics Inc. , a privately - held biopharmaceutical company , announced that the United States Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) has granted Orphan Drug Designation to Anthim ( ETI-204 ) , the company |
|
The FDA |
|
Orphan Drug designation is awarded to compounds that offer potential therapeutic value in the treatment of rare diseases , defined as those affecting fewer than 200,000 Americans . |
|
This designation provides companies with financial and regulatory benefits during the course of orphan drug development , including tax credits related to clinical trial expenses and a possible exemption from the FDA - user fee . |
|
Anthim is a high - affinity monoclonal antibody that targets the protective antigen component of anthrax , blocking the bacteria |
|
In animal efficacy studies , Anthim demonstrated complete protection against an anthrax spore challenge with a single prophylactic dose and has shown significant protection when administered up to two days after a lethal challenge. ( Pharmabiz.com , 26Jun06 ) ( Link ) |
|
CW - DESTRUCTION - U.S. |
|
ANCDF [ Anniston Chemical Agent Disposal Facility ] receives third consecutive Safe Operating Facility of the Year Award |
|
Westinghouse Anniston and the Anniston Chemical Agent Disposal Facility ( ANCDF ) received its third consecutive Safe Operating Facility of the Year Award from Washington Group International this week . |
|
`` Our employees and those of our subcontractors work safely every day and that |
|
`` Awards like this reflect the safe work the employees do each and every day as they protect themselves , the environment and the community . |
|
I |
|
The employees deserve the recognition . |
|
Westinghouse Anniston , its subcontractors and the Anniston Chemical Agent Disposal Facility have more than 8.7 million safe work hours , 2,214 safe work days and a recordable injury rate of 0.49 per 200,000 hours worked as of the end of May . |
|
This makes working at the chemical weapons destruction facility in Anniston one of the safest places in the nation to work , according to statistics from the National Safety Council . ( U.S. Army Chemical Materials Agency , 23Jun06 , Washington Group International ) ( Link ) |
|
CW - PREP / DEFENSE / RESPONSE - SINGAPORE |
|
Portable kit developed to screen nerve agent |
|
A portable kit designed to screen a large number of people for exposure to deadly nerve agents has been developed in Singapore to deal with potential biochemical threats , a published report said on Saturday . |
|
DSO National Laboratories , the country |
|
DSO |
|
Other portable kits measure the biological indicators in blood , which drop when a person is exposed to nerve agents. ( iol [ South Africa ] , 24Jun06 ) ( Link ) |
|
CW - THREAT - U.S. |
|
Cyanide Gas Device `` Probably Did n |
|
The device reportedly developed by al-Qaida to disperse deadly cyanide gas in subway cars and other confined spaces has never been used in a terrorist attack and probably would not be very effective , say experts . |
|
`` What you would get , in all probability , is a big bang , a big splash , but very little gas , |
|
Leitenberg , who has worked on arms control and chemical and biological weapons issues for 40 years , told UPI that `` a best case scenario |
|
The device , called a Mubtakker -- Arabic for `` invention |
|
The book , The One Percent Doctrine , by Pulitzer Prize winner Ron Suskind , says that designs for the device were found in February 2003 on a computer seized in Saudi Arabia after the arrest of a jihadist there , and that , a month later , U.S. intelligence separately uncovered an aborted plot to use several of them in an attack on the New York subway system. ( The Post Chronicle , 26Jun06 , Shaun Waterman ) ( Link ) |
|
SUB - STATE NUCLEAR - PREP / DEFENSE / RESPONSE - U.S. / INDIA |
|
Bush accords top priority to India nuclear deal |
|
The Bush administration has mounted a concerted campaign to get quick Congressional approval for the India - US nuclear deal , with the White House declaring it the president |
|
Republican Senator John Cornyn , who leads the India Caucus in the US Senate along with Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton , Friday took the floor to answer Byron Dorgan , a critic of the deal who has vowed to do all to delay if not stop it . |
|
The deal is in the best interests of the United States as it will make them partners with the world |
|
For it will permit peaceful civilian use of nuclear power while avoiding the threat of proliferation and the possibility that terrorists might acquire a nuclear weapon or it might proliferate to some other irresponsible party and then endanger America or its allies . |
|
Nowhere is the threat of nuclear war or nuclear terrorism , or the need to safeguard nuclear weapons more important than in South Asia , the home to Al Qaida , who seeks nuclear weapons , Dorgan said describing it as an area where relations among regional nuclear powers - China , India , Pakistan - have historically been tense. ( DailyIndia.com ; 25Jun06 ; Arun Kumar , Indo - Asian News Service ) ( Link ) |
|
SUB - STATE NUCLEAR - PREP / DEFENSE / RESPONSE - RUSSIA |
|
Putin submits nuclear terrorism convention for ratification |
|
President Vladimir Putin Monday introduced a new convention on the fight against nuclear terrorism and several other documents for ratification by the lower house of Russia |
|
Putin signed the International Convention for the Suppression of Acts of Nuclear Terrorism in New York on September 14, 2005 . |
|
The convention was adopted by the UN General Assembly in April last year on Russia |
|
The document `` defines the act of nuclear terrorism as the use or threat to use nuclear material , nuclear fuel , radioactive products or waste , or any other radioactive substances with toxic , explosive , or other dangerous properties , |
|
WMD - HISTORY - U.S. |
|
Project Pacific |
|
A Humboldt veteran |
|
In the 1960s , Ferndale resident Jack Alderson commanded a group of light tugs that made trips to the islands that last week were declared a monument , as well as other remote atolls in the region . |
|
The boats were part of Project SHAD -- Shipboard Hazard and Defense -- experiments to test biological and chemical weapons . |
|
Before and after those tests , which the U.S. Department of Defense now admits exposed thousands of crew members to live biological and chemical agents , Alderson |
|
They were there to study migrating birds , information the military would use to determine if chemicals and diseases could be transported across borders and so be used as vectors by -- or against -- an enemy . |
|
In the sizable number of recent news reports about President Bush |
|
But 20 years after the bird cruises , the Washington Post Magazine dug up the controversial alignment between the Defense Department and the Smithsonian Institution . ( The Times-Standard ; 26Jun06 ; John Driscoll , Eureka Times Standard ) ( Link ) |
|
WMD - PREP / DEFENSE / RESPONSE - U.S. / IRAQ |
|
[ Washington ] Post : Ex - CIA agent |
|
A former CIA officer says he made repeated efforts to alert top agency officials to problems with an Iraqi defector |
|
CIA officer Tyler Drumheller said he personally crossed out a reference to the labs from a classified draft of a U.N. speech by Secretary of State Colin Powell because he recognized the source as a defector , code-named Curveball , who was suspected to be mentally unstable and a liar . |
|
Drumheller told the Post he was surprised when a few days later , on February 5, 2003 , Powell told the U.N. Security Council that `` we have first-hand descriptions of biological weapons factories on wheels and rails . |
|
He said he also issued warnings before President Bush |
|
WMD - THREAT - ISRAEL |
|
Al-Aksa claims chemical capabilities |
|
The Aksa Martyrs Brigades announced on Sunday that its members have succeeded in manufacturing chemical and biological weapons . |
|
In a leaflet distributed in the Gaza Strip , the group , which belongs to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas |
|
According to the statement , the first of its kind , the group has managed to manufacture and develop at least 20 different types of biological and chemical weapons . |
|
The group said its members would not hesitate to add the new weapons to Kassam rockets that are being fired at Israeli communities almost every day . |
|
It also threatened to use the weapons against IDF soldiers if Israel carried out its threats to invade the Gaza Strip . ( The Jerusalem Post , 25Jun06 , Khaled Abu Toameh ) ( Link ) |
|
WMD - THREAT - U.K. |
|
Islamists will set off dirty bomb , spy bosses believe |
|
Spy chiefs fear that it is a case of `` when , not if |
|
Islamist terrorists launch a `` dirty bomb |
|
Security sources have disclosed that the belief amongst most intelligence agencies is that a chemical , biological , radiological or nuclear ( CBRN ) attack , using a so-called dirty bomb , is now inevitable . |
|
The warning comes three weeks after 250 police officers stormed the home of two Muslim brothers in Forest Gate , east London , in the mistaken belief that they were attempting to develop a chemical bomb . |
|
It follows growing concern among members of Britain |
|
Tuesday |
|
In only one presidential election year prior to 1948 did more than 20 % of the nation |
|
Now that percentage routinely equals a third and twice has been above 40 % . |
|
As we know , voters tend to favor Republicans more in races for president than in those for Congress . |
|
In every presidential election over the past half century , except for the Goldwater presidential candidacy , the GOP has captured a greater percentage of the major-party popular vote for president than it has of congressional seats or the popular vote for Congress . |
|
Prior to 1932 , the pattern was nearly the opposite . |
|
What accounts for the results of recent decades ? |
|
A simple economic theory may provide at least a partial explanation for the split personality displayed by Americans in the voting booth . |
|
The theory relies on three assumptions : |
|
1 ) Voters can `` buy |
|
2 ) Congressional representatives have two basic responsibilities while voting in office -- dealing with national issues ( programmatic actions such as casting roll call votes on legislation that imposes costs and/or confers benefits on the population at large ) and attending to local issues ( constituency service and pork barrel ) . |
|
3 ) Republican congressional representatives , because of their belief in a minimalist state , are less willing to engage in local benefit-seeking than are Democratic members of Congress . |
|
If these assumptions hold , voters in races for Congress face what in economic theory is called a prisoner |
|
If they put a Republican into office , not only will they acquire less in terms of local benefits but their selected legislator will be relatively powerless to prevent other legislators from `` bringing home the bacon |
|
Each legislator , after all , is only one out of 535 when it comes to national policy making . |
|
In races for the White House , a voter |
|
Although a GOP president may limit local benefits to the voter |
|
The individual voter |
|
While this theory is exceedingly simple , it appears to explain several things . |
|
First , why ticket splitting has increased and taken the peculiar pattern that it has over the past half century : Prior to the election of Franklin Roosevelt as president and the advent of the New Deal , government occupied a much smaller role in society and the prisoner |
|
Second , it explains why voters hold Congress in disdain but generally love their own congressional representatives : Any individual legislator |
|
Third , the theory suggests why legislators who pay too much attention to national policy making relative to local benefit-seeking have lower security in office . |
|
For example , first-term members of the House , once the most vulnerable of incumbents , have become virtually immune to defeat . |
|
The one exception to this recent trend was the defeat of 13 of the 52 freshman Republicans brought into office in 1980 by the Reagan revolution and running for re-election in 1982 . |
|
Because these freshmen placed far more emphasis on their partisan role -- spreading the Reagan revolution -- in national policy making , they were more vulnerable to defeat . |
|
Fourth , the theory indicates why the Republican Party may have a difficult time attracting viable candidates for congressional office . |
|
Potential candidates may be discouraged from running less by the congressional salary than by the prospect of defeat at the hands of a Democratic opponent . |
|
To the extent that potential Republican candidates and their financial backers realize that the congressional prisoner |
|
Fifth , the theory may provide at least a partial reason for why ticket splitting has been particularly pronounced in the South . |
|
To the extent that Democratic legislators from the South have held a disproportionate share of power in Congress since 1932 and have been able to translate such clout into relatively more local benefits for their respective constituencies , voters in the South have had an especially strong incentive to keep such Democrats in office . |
|
Finally , the theory suggests why Republicans generally have fared better in Senate races than in campaigns for the House . |
|
Since local benefit-seeking matters more and national policy making matters less in the lower chamber of Congress , this is precisely the pattern one would expect if Republicans are less willing to engage in local benefit-seeking than their Democratic counterparts . |
|
Is there any empirical support for this theory ? |
|
Three pieces of evidence corroborate the key assumption that Democratic legislators are more willing to engage in local benefit-seeking than their Republican colleagues . |
|
First , economists James Bennett and Thomas DiLorenzo find that GOP senators turn back roughly 10 % more of their allocated personal staff budgets than Democrats do . |
|
To the extent that the primary duty of personal staff involves local benefit-seeking , this indicates that political philosophy leads congressional Republicans to pay less attention to narrow constituent concerns . |
|
Second , if the key assumption is valid , Democrats should have lower attendance rates on roll-call votes than Republicans do to the extent that such votes reflect national policy making and that participating in such votes takes away from the time a legislator could otherwise devote to local benefit-seeking . |
|
This is indeed what the data indicate , particularly in the case of the House . |
|
The Democratic House attendance rate has not exceeded the Republican House attendance rate since 1959 . |
|
Finally , as shown in the table , Democrats allocate a higher proportion of their personal staffs to district offices -- where local benefit-seeking duties matter more and national policy making activities matter less relative to Washington offices . |
|
An examination of changes in personal staffing decisions in the Senate between 1986 and 1987 ( when control of that body changed party hands ) , moreover , reveals that the personal staffing differences noted in the table can not be attributed to the disproportionate control Democrats exercise , due to their majority-party status , over other resources such as committee staff . |
|
An additional piece of evidence from the Senate : Holding other factors constant , such as incumbency advantages and regional factors , the difference between popular votes for Republican presidential and senatorial candidates in states conducting a Senate election turns out to be a positive function of how onerous the federal government |
|
Put more simply , GOP candidates for president are looked on more kindly by voters than Republican candidates for the Senate when the prisoner |
|
Moreover , ticket splitting appears to take the same peculiar pattern at the state government level as it does at the federal level . |
|
State government is more typically split along Republican-governor/Democratic-legislature lines than the reverse . |
|
A cross-state econometric investigation , furthermore , reveals that , holding other factors constant , the difference between a state |
|
In sum , at both the federal and state government levels at least part of the seemingly irrational behavior voters display in the voting booth may have an exceedingly rational explanation . |
|
Mr. Zupan teaches at the University of Southern California |
|
|