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Linda,

I may be wrong but what has the government ever cured?  They are causing us
more harm than good by proposing this drop in the bucket of $100M.  It is
just going to employ a lot of bureaucrats and subsidize more lobbyist, fund
raisers, and printers.

It seems to me if there is financial reward, private industry will figure a
way and much more efficiently and much quicker. With a million parkies in
this country, we each could give $100 dollars to Hoffman -LaRoche or Eli
Lilly and they would put the $100M to a more useful purpose like pure
research with no lobbyists or politicians input.

Any thoughts?

Larry Fleming
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-----Original Message-----
From:   Parkinson's Information Exchange
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
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Sent:   Wednesday, June 24, 1998 11:58 AM
To:     Multiple recipients of list PARKINSN
Subject:        Re: House Support for Parkinson's Disease

Today's New York Times also reported today on the Approriations
SubCommittees proposal, as was cited earlier in the Washington
Post. It said that while the NIH budget would be increased, $2.6
billion would be cut from social programs - funding for Goals
2000 education programs would be cut in half, Low Income Home Energy
Assitance would be eliminated, the Summer Youth jobs program
would be terminated, and funding for tutoring disadvantaged
children would be cut.

  The article went on to say that the President would almost
certainly veto this bill, and the stage could be set for a
standoff between the Republicans in Congress and the President,
similar to the one that shut down the government two years ago.

   Is this what we really want? It seems like this bill has
more to do with political power struggles than funding the
Udall bill fully and finding a cure for PD.

  Before offering any support to this proposal, I'd like  more
information about it. Perhaps someone from NPF, PAN, the
Parkinson's Alliance, etc. could respond?

  The New York Times article appears on p. A17 of today's
paper or online  www.nytimes.com/yr/mo/day/news/washpol/
congress-spend.html

Linda Herman
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