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Hi,

This is the only PIEN I received this morning. Huh?

-----Original Message-----
From: Parkinson's Information Exchange Network
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of rayilynlee
Sent: Tuesday, November 21, 2006 2:13 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Fox working for us

Michael J. Fox urges Bush, new congress to pass stem cell legislation

The Associated PressPublished: November 10, 2006

  NEW YORK: Actor Michael J. Fox, who has Parkinson's disease, on Friday
urged President George W. Bush and the newly elected Democratic Congress to
work together to pass legislation backing stem cell research.
Fox, 45, called on the Republican president to reconsider his policy of
strict limits on federal government funding.
"President Bush has acknowledged that the people of America want change, and
he has pledged to work with new Congressional leaders," Fox said in a
statement released Friday. "He could take no stronger action than signing
legislation that finally expands our nation's commitment to stem cell
research."
Fox also thanked the incoming Democratic leaders of the Senate and House of
Representatives, who won majorities in Tuesday's elections for indications
they plan to pass laws to expand stem cell research.
"I would like to thank House Speaker-elect Nancy Pelosi and incoming Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid for stating that they intend to focus on stem
cell research policy as one of their first priorities," he said.
Fox campaigned nationally for House and Senate candidates who support
government-funded embryonic stem cell research, which holds a possible cure
for Parkinson's, diabetes and other diseases.
One television ad for Missouri Democratic senate candidate Claire McCaskill,
who supports stem cell research and went on to win the election, showed Fox
rocking uncontrollably as a result of his disease.
Also on Tuesday, voters in Missouri cast ballots narrowly passed a ballot
measure that ensures that embryonic stem cell research can be conducted in
the state. Now research centers in the state are scrambling to recruit
scientists with expertise in the field.
But Fox, who has set up a research foundation dedicated to finding a cure
for Parkinson's, is urging action at the federal level. While U.S. law
allows for embryonic stem cell research, the Bush administration has sharply
restricted funding for research and has previously vetoed congressional
legislation that would expand it.
Bush has said that he personally opposes any research that sacrifices
embryonic life, even to save an existing person. In August 2001 the
president limited federal funding to research on a few dozen stem cell lines
that had been created up to that point.
The technique of using human embryos, known as therapeutic cloning or
somatic cell nuclear transfer, involves replacing the nucleus of an
unfertilized human egg with the nucleus from a skin or nerve cell. The
altered egg then is stimulated to grow in a lab dish. Researchers remove the
resulting stem cells, sacrificing the donor embryo in the process.
Many scientists insist research on embryos holds more promise than work on
adult stem cells, which can develop into only a limited number of body cells
and tissues. Embryonic stem cells have the potential of turning into any of
the body's cell types.

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