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Pitt-Jolie Baby Photos to Benefit Charity

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AP reports that Getty Images won the opportunity to be the first allowed by Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt to photograph the famous couple’s new baby in a private photo session. Getty will pay an undisclosed amount that will be donated to a children’s charity of the family’s choice. The deal is estimated to yield several million dollars.

”While we celebrate the joy of the birth of our daughter, we recognize that two million babies born every year in the developing world die on the first day of their lives,” said the couple in a statement.

Photo: UNHCR

Alzheimer Vaccine Tests Reverse Memory Loss in Mice

Researchers report that tests of a new vaccine on mice shows promise of reversing memory loss and seriously slowing the effects of Alzheimer’s on patients. (Biosingularity )

Providing Foster Care for Deployed Troops’ Cats

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army_catArmy Staff Sgt. Aeyne Anne M. Dizicksa’s cats are her family, so their welfare was her top priority when she faced deployment:

“I knew that if I had them to return to, everything else was irrelevant — just another passing episode in my life.”

She was given only a few days’ notice before her activation in January 2005. Luckily she discovered Operation Noble Foster, which has provided more than 3,000 deployed servicemembers with individual foster homes for their cats until they return. . .

(Sweet Magnolia rests on the dryer in the home of Susan Hagrelius, her foster owner of more than a year. The 8-year-old cat will soon reunite with her owner, Staff Sgt. Aeyne Anne M. Dizicksa, a deployed Army reservist in the 719th Veterinary Medical Detachment who will return later this month.)

EPA Mandates Cleaner Diesel, Cleaner Truck Engines

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New rules issued on Thursday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency requires oil refineries to begin making ultra-low-sulfur diesel (ULSD), “a fuel with 97 percent less sulfur than ordinary diesel,” which will cut smog-forming emissions by 10 percent.

“The new EPA rule “is the biggest step toward cutting vehicle pollution since lead was taken out of gasoline two decades ago,” says Richard Kassel, director of the Clean Fuels and Vehicles Project at the Natural Resources Defense Council,” reports the CS Monitor.

“80 percent of the diesel produced for highway use (must) be ULSD-compliant… By October, all filling stations now selling diesel will be required to sell ULSD instead of or in addition to diesel.”

This is only the first step to cleaner diesel for U.S. manufactures — and less smog flowing from tailpipes of buses, trucks and cars. A transformation to an all-new clean-diesel engine has been mandated to replace sales of older, dirtier models by 2008 — this, despite heavy lobbying efforts by Mac and other truck engine makers.

The new rules will have far-reaching implications for people’s health because of the cleaner air, but also for their pocketbooks. The new cleaner burning engines get 20 to 40 percent better mileage per gallon.
(CSMonitor)

Idle Computers Get To Work on Cancer Cure

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kepboardMore than 60,000 people are donating idle computer power to a project that is ultimately trying to find cures for diseases like cancer and AIDS. The number-crunching power of all those PCs working together is the equivalent of one supercomputer. If the research team can increase that number tenfold, major scientific breakthroughs are possible. . .

Lifeboat Rescues Deer Swimming out to Sea

A lifeboat crew has rescued a young deer which was spotted swimming out to sea from Arbroath Harbour in the UK. The disoriented animal was likely spooked and escaped into the water. (bbc reports )

Gay Couples Parent Just Like Everybody Else

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Hearing the voices recently insisting that it is best for a child to grow up with one father and one mother reminds me of a powerful documentary that aired this January on MTV called, I Have Gay Parents. Part of the ThinkMTV series entitled True Life, I Have Gay Parents follows three teens through their every day lives in a riveting look at what it means to have gay parents.aidanandmoms

REVIEW

Hope is an adopted dark-skinned girl growing up on Staten Island with two white dads. She is preparing to leave for Wellesley College and her dads are shown fussing and worrying about her needs and desires (in one case, her yen for a tattoo — about which they are not happy). They obviously care deeply about her and are having a difficult time letting their chick leave the nest.

Aidan’s story was more suspenseful as she was trying out for the position of drum major at her conservative high school in Richmond, VA. . .

(photo- Aidan with two moms, from MTV’s True Life: I Have Gay Parents)

Federal Judge Rules Oklahoma Gay Adoption Ban Unconstitutional

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scalesofjusticeUS District Court Judge Robin Cauthron Friday struck down a two year-old amendment to the Oklahoma Constitution that prevented the state from recognizing adoptions by gay parents. In her ruling, she wrote:

"The very fact that the adoptions have occurred is evidence that a court of law has found the adoptions to be in the best interests of the children… To now attempt to strip a child of one of his or her parents seems far removed from the statute’s purpose…" (Jurist)

Recovery of Lake Offers Hope for Acid Rain-Ravaged Region

Updates to the Clean Air Act in the early 90’s tightened controls on Midwestern coal-fired power plants, which substantially reduced acid rain. Lakes began to recover…

A crystalline Adirondack lake once held up as an example of a "dead" lake devastated by acid rain has now become a symbol of nature’s ability to heal itself once pollutants are curbed. The surprising thing about the recovery of Brooktrout Lake was how fast it happened. (AP story )

Sanctuary Cares For Hundreds of Misfit Pigs

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sowandpigletAn 80-acre sanctuary near Phoenix is a refuge to more than 400 pigs, casualties of the potbellied pig craze of the 80’s and 90’s. Some were abused, some neglected and many abandoned. Sometimes their owners had been duped by pig marketers promising chic and tiny pets before actually delivering animals that grew rapidly becoming unmanageable. The sanctuary is funded entirely by donations and energized by the concern and caring of Mary Schanz. (read more of this AP story at abc15.com)

Tumors Stalled in Women with Advanced Breast Cancer

A new drug stalls the growth of tumors in women with advanced breast cancer. Testing was stopped after noting the drug’s effectiveness, so that all the women could be given the chance to benefit:

A novel experimental drug (Tykerb) delayed the growth of tumors nearly twice as long as standard chemotherapy did in patients who had stopped responding to Herceptin, doctors reported Saturday. (Boston.com via AP Medical writer )

Boeing 747 Transformed to Fight Fires

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747fireplaneA Boeing 747 aircraft that has been transformed into a fire fighting prototype is on a mission to win approval from federal aviation authorities.

Evergreen International Aviation is touring five states demonstrating its firefighting 747 Supertanker, which can hold seven times more water or retardant than commonly used planes. Besides the bigger payloads, supertankers could add more range and cut time between drops, company officials say.

The company has invested three years and more than $40 million to develop a whole new generation of firefighting aircraft that can "disperse retardant at high pressure for an overwhelming response, or drop retardant at the speed of falling rain in single or several segmented drops." The capabilities are being weighed against the cost by politicians and officials nationwide.

Ditch the Tie To Cut Air-Conditioning, Urges Japan

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tieAn innovative campaign by the Japanese government to encourage the nation to use less air-conditioning is called the "Cool Biz" casual clothing campaign. Politicians are ditching their suits and ties at the highest levels.

The prime Minister has pledged to discard his tie throughout the summer campaign, except when meeting foreign dignitaries. "It feels nice not having to wear a tie," he said as he emerged from his Tokyo residence dressed in a loose Okinawan-style white shirt, Kyodo News reported.

The Whale Rescuer, Hero of Southern Calif. Coast

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“I couldn’t have gotten a clearer sign that this is my calling,” explained Peter Wallerstein. “Saving such magnificent, once almost-extinct creatures is a privilege.”

seagull Since that first rescue in 1984, Wallerstein has dedicated his every waking moment to saving the injured sea creatures along L.A. county’s very diverse coastline. From San Pedro to Santa Monica, Peter is the man to call whenever whales, sea lions, seals, dolphins and sea birds are in trouble. (Read this beautifully written article by Barbara Rabinowitz for AnimalConcerns.org)

And join his Whale Rescue Team!

Expanding Coverage to More Pregnant Women in Texas

From the Student Operated Press comes this good news for low-income pregnant women. A U.S. program expands access to prenatal health care in nine states: Arkansas, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Rhode Island and Washington, and now Texas:

More low-income pregnant women living in Texas will have access to critical prenatal care the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced today. The State of Texas estimates that 66,916 pregnant women will receive prenatal health care under this expansion of its State Children’s Health Insurance Program. (sop newswire)

Horses Heal Wounded Soldiers’ Limbs, Confidence

Horses in Arlington, Va. are helping amputee soldiers in their long struggle to learn to walk again, to regain strength and to believe in their new limbs.

“It gives me the confidence to know that I lost an arm and a leg but not the ability to do certain things,” 1st Lt. Ryan Kules, 25, a Tempe, Ariz., native who was injured by a roadside bomb in Iraq in November, said Friday. (AP story, photo )

New Orleans Levees Repaired as Storm Season Starts

The US Corps of Engineers has finished repairing the 169 miles (270 km) of battered levees around New Orleans in time for hurricane season. The Corps reported today that their June 1 target has been met, and residents of New Orleans “can be confident in its hurricane protection system because it is better and it is stronger.”  (Reuters story)

German Shepherd Carries Two Baby Ducks in Mouth to Safety

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germanshepherdA spokesman at the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, commented on recent behavior by a Scottish German shepherd:

"The fact is, the actions of this dog have saved the lives of these animals, as once they are lost from their mother they would be picked off quite easily by scavengers…The dog is a modern day Rin Tin Tin, and to pick them up in his mouth without harming them is quite something… To then try and wash them is just amazing behaviour." (The Scotsman)

New EU Rules Strengthen Safety of Kids’ Medicine

Currently, more than 50 percent of medicines used to treat children in Europe have not been specifically tested on them or authorised for their use.

Thus, doctors in the EU are having to guess the best dosage levels for children. New rules will require that all medicines still in the development stages be researched as to the safety and effectiveness of their products in children. (BBC )

Natural Reconstruction of Breasts from Stem Cells in Fat

Cytori Therapeutics is testing a breast reconstruction therapy that uses stem cells derived from fat to reconstruct breast tissue in women who have undergone partial mastectomies. (Wired )