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Hi All,
Didn't anyone else find the 13,000 Signature Petition more than a little
impressive???

I think Gregory Wasson (the petition founder) should stand at the head
of a column 13,000 strong and take a wee bow.

This petition demonstrates that "anyone" of us can participate in an
advocacy role... without undue expense or major effort...  without even
leaving home....

This petition demonstrates that "we" can send a message to Capitol Hill.

Now we need to follow up with a personal letter to your Congressman,
your Senator, your President, your local news media...

Perserverence passed the Udall Bill and perserverence got it funded....

It's time to exercise your perserverence again.

U.S. House of Representatives
107th Congress, 1st Session
http://www.house.gov/

Scroll down to... Write Your Rep.

Write Your Representative
http://www.house.gov/writerep/

The US Senate
http://www.senate.gov/

Click on       Contacting the Senate...

Senators of the 107th Congress
http://www.senate.gov/contacting/index.cfm

Write or.... call your Representative and two Senators by dialing
the Congressional Operator at (202) 224-3121 and asking for your
legislators by name, or by giving the operator your home state or
zip code.

Urge your Representitives to fund stem cell research.....

Urge the president to fund stem cell research, asserting it may soon cure
Alzheimers, Diabetes, ALS, and Parkinson's, as well many other diseases
 - even heart disease.

I believe a personal, individual followup will get attention.

I believe no followup will ultimately result in failure.

It's now up to you and your loved ones to follow through and
lobby this cause if you want this research to proceed.

Best regards ....... murray

PS: I hate to reply to my own e-mail... but I was gettin' tired of waitin'


On 14 May 2001, at 12:33, Murray Charters wrote:

> Patient Petition Supporting Stem Cell Funding Presented
> to HHS Policy Czar by Massachusetts General Hospital
> Neurological Web Forum
> Monday May 14  8:53am
> Source: BusinessWire
> COTATI, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 14, 2001--
> Campaign by Chronically Ill Gathers 13,000 Signatures
> in Dramatic Appeal
> A petition containing 13,000 signatures, authored by members of
> the Massachusetts General Hospital Neurological Web Forum,
> urging President Bush to continue public funding for embryonic
> stem cell research, was presented last week to Health and Human
> Services Senior Policy Advisor Mary Kay Mantho to be given to
> HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson.
>
> "Federal guidelines currently allow such funding, but have been
> criticized by President Bush," said Greg Wasson, petition author
> and Parkinson's sufferer. Thompson is reviewing the guidelines at
> the president's request. The controversy over stem cells, "master cells"
> that can transform into any cell type, has grown in recent weeks.
>
> 80 Nobel Prize winners have urged the president to fund stem cell
> research, asserting it may soon cure Alzheimers, Diabetes, ALS,
> and Parkinson's, as well many other diseases - even heart disease.
>
> Many right-to life organizations oppose such research, however,
> claiming it destroys the lives of unborn children.
>
> The petition, including 750 pages of signatures and comments by
> persons with chronic illnesses and other citizens, was presented by
> Ilyce Randell, a Canavan's Disease advocate. Canavan's is an incurable
> fatal childhood illness. Her son Max, who was at the meeting, suffers
> from the disease.
>
> "Canavan's is a disease which strikes only 400 children a year,"
> said Ms. Randell. "Without therapies that can be applied to many
> different illnesses, which are likely to result from stem cell
> research, Canavan's will never attract enough dollars to produce a
> cure. Stem cell research offers the only hope for Max to live a normal
> life."
>
> Wasson said members of the Internet forum decided to write a
> petition after President Bush, who was expected to nullify the
> present guidelines, referred the matter to Thompson for review.
> The delay presented an opportunity to give a voice to those with
> the biggest stake in stem cell research -- the chronically ill.
>
> They put the petition online
> (http://www.petitiononline.com/stmcll/petition.html),
> and began a grassroots campaign to collect signatures, contacting
> family, friends, and disease organizations. Those contacted were
> asked to forward the request to others on their own e-mail lists.
>
> They also created a website to provide information about stem cells.
>
> "The response was phenomenal," said Wasson. In addition to
> signatures by the chronically ill, the petition garnered signatures from
> leading scientists such as Ole Isacson, head of Parkinson's research at
> Harvard. Dan Perry, chair of the CURE coalition of 123 organizations
> that has urged President Bush to delay a decision on the guidelines,
> said "Congratulations...the compelling voice of individuals and families
> confronting Parkinson's, ALS, and other devastating health problems is
> the most potent weapon we have in this fight."
>
> "I wish we had more time to gather signatures before sending the
> petition to Washington. But with a decision on the horizon, this was one
> party we didn't want to be late for," said John Davis, a petition
> organizer and ALS sufferer.
>
> http://finance.individual.com/display_news.asp?doc_id=BW20010514BW2275&page=news
>
> **********
>

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