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Tuesday, January 25

The Columbus Dispatch Online: Archival Article  


The Columbus Dispatch Online: Archival Article:
SOME CONCERNED GUARD HAS BEEN STRETCHED TOO THIN
Published: Monday, January 24, 2005
NEWS 02D
By Jeb Phillips
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

Some of their most important goals remain protecting the state and helping it through emergencies. But the men and women of the Ohio National Guard keep getting sent elsewhere.

About 1,500 members of the state's Army National Guard are in Iraq; 1,000 are in Kosovo; 500 are in Kuwait; another 500 are deployed across the United States, mostly providing security at military bases. Just under 300 Air National Guard members are deployed in various missions.

As of Jan. 18, the Ohio National Guard had 3,651 members incapable of protecting the state, because they're helping in other places.

And this has started to bother some people.

State legislators, for example, have asked Guard officials if there could be a problem if a local crisis should arise and the forces are too depleted.

And this is the answer the Guard is giving:

"Emphatically no," said Mark Wayda, a Guard spokesman. "The Guard is available."

Because 3,651 Guard members are on federal duty outside Ohio, that means 11,613 Guard members are still here. Seventy-six percent of the 15,264 total can still help. Some helped with snow removal after the Christmastime storms. Some helped with cleanup in eastern and southeastern counties after flooding in August and September. At least one liaison officer has been involved in helping after flooding in the past two weeks.

"They've been a constant resource," said Rob Glenn, spokesman for the Ohio Emergency Management Agency.

Last year, the state needed about 300 Guard members for help in emergencies, less than 3 percent of the available force. The Army Guard has 125 soldiers that can be ready to respond to a state emergency in six to eight hours; another 375 soldiers can be ready in 24 hours.

Enlistments, retirements, call-ups and units returning from deployment all affect the number of Guard members available in the state, Guard spokesman James Sims said. So the numbers now are just a snapshot. They'll likely change daily or weekly.

All of that may have left the impression of a depleted force, Sims and Wayda said. But the federal government keeps an eye on how many Guard members remain at home when it decides to mobilize a unit for federal service, Wayda said. It's rare that any state would have more than half of its Guard members deployed in federal service at any time.

Ohio is well above that mark. And those numbers allow the Guard to respond to anything they might need to.

"Be it a natural disaster or -- God forbid -- a terrorist incident, we are trained and ready to go," Wayda said.

jeb.phillips@dispatch.com
Fair use doctrine declared.

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Rocky Mountain News: Local  


Rocky Mountain News: Local:
A Denver police sergeant is under investigation for allegedly threatening to arrest a woman Monday for displaying on her truck a derogatory bumper sticker about President Bush.

"He told her that this was a warning and that the next time he saw her truck, she was going to be arrested if she didn't remove the sticker," said Alinna Figueroa, 25, assistant manager of The UPS Store where the confrontation took place. "I couldn't believe it."

Denver police have initiated an investigation into the alleged incident, said Police Chief Gerry Whitman. He declined to comment further.

About 11 a.m., Shasta Bates, 26, was standing in the shopping center store in the 800 block of South Monaco Parkway when a man walked in and started arguing with her about a bumper sticker on the back of her truck that had "F--- Bush" in white letters on a black background.
Part of me can't believe me, then again, I can see this happening. Especially around here in rural Florida. Amazing.

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Thursday, January 20

Support for War in Iraq Hits New Low  


Support for War in Iraq Hits New Low
WASHINGTON — Support for the war in Iraq has continued to erode, but most Americans still are inclined to give the Bush administration some time to try to stabilize the country before it withdraws U.S. troops, the Los Angeles Times Poll has found.

The poll, conducted Saturday through Monday, found that the percentage of Americans who believed the situation in Iraq was "worth going to war over" had sunk to a new low of 39%. When the same question was asked in a similar poll in October, 44% said it had been worth going to war.
<snarkism>Why is it that high?</snarkism>

Silly me!

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Friday, January 14

Funny editorial about medicine  


The Columbus Dispatch - Editorials
Medicine is giving us a dose of mixed messages
Friday, January 14, 2005
ELLEN GOODMAN


I kind of miss seeing Dorothy Hamill glide across those Vioxx commercials on her silver blades. The Gold Medal winner reminded me of the old joke about the man who asks his surgeon if he’ll be able to play the piano after the operation. When the doctor says yes, the man says, "That’s funny, I couldn’t play it before."

I never got beyond a figure eight in my local rink. But I began to have a fantasy that if I popped a couple of Vioxx I could finally do a triple Lutz before I got on Medicare.

This heart’s desire collapsed when the drug to relieve arthritis was found to increase the risk of heart problems. Vioxx could give you pain relief without ulcers but you might have a heart attack, and you could get an ulcer just worrying about that.

So, Vioxx went off the market and Dorothy went off the air. Celebrex pulled its ads and the enthusiasm for all the Cox-2 inhibitors was, well, inhibited.

But did you notice the next wave of research saying that Vioxx reduced polyps that could lead to colon cancer? Then last week, yet another study said the protein CRP was worse for heart disease than cholesterol. Guess which drugs lower your CRP? You got it. Cox-2 inhibitors.

What we have seen is the medical equivalent of a triple axel. Medical researchers take off on one foot, do three complete swirls, and land on the other foot, without ever falling on the ice.

This wasn’t the first time I have watched this feat performed. Nor is it the first time I’ve seen a drug with a split personality.

I have been something of a connoisseur of the medical good-bad news. I have a collection of studies showing how alcohol may increase the risk of breast cancer and decrease heart disease, and how running may be good for your lungs and bad for your shins. Not to mention why worrying about all this raises your stress level, which is bad for your everything.

I started out as an observer of the raging hormonal imbalance. The early research promised that hormones would virtually eliminate symptoms of age. Then along came the updated research suggesting they might simply eliminate old age — by strokes and heart attacks.

By now I have spent years skating ahead of the cracking ice of science.

Of course, I try to look at the sunny side of this, although everyone knows that sun gives you skin cancer. On the other hand, maybe shade gives you cancer. The most up-to-date reports send off the alarm that Americans are suffering from an national deficiency of vitamin D, which ups the odds on the Big C. Of course, they say if you don’t want to sun yourself you can feed yourself vitamin D from three of four servings of salmon a week. Except for the warnings of other researchers that farmed salmon has PCBs that also give you cancer.

In the slippery alphabet of news, doses of vitamin E were thought to provide protection from Alzheimer’s and dementia. Now we are told that as the dosage of E increases, so does the mortality. Which do you prefer: mind or matter?

The true health culprit is still smoking, but the latest battery of statisticians believes that we have traded Virginia Slims for National Obesity. Meanwhile the anxious attention to obesity has up-ticked so far that it should prompt you to go on a diet. Except for the studies this month showing that none of the commercial diet programs work very well.

You will be not be surprised to know that I have developed a theory about the good, the bad and the unintended consequences. I suspect that it’s a direct side effect of an age of specialization. One scientist goes off looking for a cure for the hip bone forgetting that it’s attached to the thigh bone. The cardiologists don’t dance with the orthopedists and nobody talks to the neurologists.

We, the sole owners of used bodies, are the last living generalists. We are left to supervise our own personal risk assessment plans, balancing every ulcer and polyp, while we overdose on this week’s information that may be next week’s misinformation.

All this should lead you to pray for guidance. But beware of where you’re praying. The very latest bulletin from the Netherlands suggests that church may be good for your soul but bad for your lungs. All those candles and incense? They produce air pollution, which means that, yes, fellow sufferers, even church can give you cancer.

Ellen Goodman writes for The Boston Globe.

ellengoodman@globe.com
Having just gotten out of the hospital (more in a later entry, when I have the energy… Sigh.), I find this extremely funny yet truthfull.

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Article Index

The Columbus Dispatch Online: Archival Article
Rocky Mountain News: Local
Support for War in Iraq Hits New Low
Funny editorial about medicine
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