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Archive for January, 2009

Jan 28 2009

elektro 6.ele.001001 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . Do you recognize this metal man? Elektro was one of the world’s first robots, seen by 3.7 million people at the 1939 World’s Fair. The curious lined up for hours to watch a performance in which he walked, talked, and smoked cigarettes. http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com “Elektro was the marvel of his age,” says Andy Masich, president of the Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh, which just unveiled a replica of the robot as part of its permanent collection. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Elektro was originally built by Westinghouse, then the world leader in robotics thanks to its Televox unit which—with a twist on telephone technology—could convert a person’s voice into electronic pulses. By speaking into a telephone handset, it was possible to trigger any of Elektro’s 12 motors, thereby controlling him. A six-syllable command (Elektro, please come here) prompted him to walk; one syllable (stop!), and he halted. Elektro’s speech drew from a small repertoire of sayings recorded on 78-rpm records. Still, to dazzled audiences Elektro appeared to possess near-human communication skills. http://34819louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

Following the fair, Elektro hit the road to promote Westinghouse dishwashers and fridges. The company envisioned Elektro as the ultimate appliance, a domestic helper. “If you treat me right, I will be your slave” was one of his canned 78-rpm messages. But the clumsy giant robot never made his way into the home. Fact is, at seven feet tall, Elektro was simply too unwieldy for most houses, let alone household chores, says Jeffrey Trinkle, a roboticist at Rensellaer Polytechnic Institute. “Smoking was a great party trick, but practical robotics [like factory arms in manufacturing plants] carried the day.”

After World War II, Elektro entered a period of decline. He did a stint promoting a California amusement park and appeared in the 1960 B-movie Sex Kittens Go to College opposite Mamie Van Doren. Then it was off to a Westinghouse plant in Mansfield, Ohio, where his head was removed and given to a company engineer as a retirement gift.

What is left of the original—the partly functioning head and body—now resides at the Mansfield Memorial Museum. “He’s a piece of history,” says Scott Schaut, the museum’s curator. “He’s not going anywhere.” Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

digital 3.dig.1 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Western Digital Sharespace
Make your e-mails, music, and digital photo files nearly indestructible with Western Digital’s ShareSpace—a box with the kind of data storage capacity available only at major computing centers just a decade ago. The device hooks up to your home network, allowing any connected computer to store and retrieve data from it. The ShareSpace spreads data redundantly across up to four hard-drive disks housed inside. You can set up the system so that even if a disk fails, you won’t lose data. (Later, you can pop in a replacement disk to bring the array back up to full strength.) http://71236louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com The four-disk, four-terabyte version of ShareSpace, which can store about the equivalent of 300 movie DVDs redundantly, costs $1,000; the two-disk, two-terabyte version, which offers less data redundancy but can be upgraded, is $700. The ShareSpace has neat extra features, including the ability to back up any USB drive plugged in to its front at the touch of a button, and a folder for MP3s that lets computers with iTunes play stored music. store.westerndigital.com

Linksys Powerline Network Kit
If a WiFi network doesn’t work for you and you don’t want to run cables around your rooms, consider using the Powerline Network Kit from Linksys ($150–$180). It will let you connect a computer to your Internet modem through your building’s electric outlets. www.linksys.com. http://71236louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

D-Link Internet Surveillance Kit http://71236louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
Monitor your home while you’re away. The D-Link Internet Surveillance Kit ($290) lets you put a camera wherever you have an electric outlet. You can view a real-time feed over the Web (Internet Explorer required) anywhere in the world and receive e-mail notifications whenever the camera detects motion. www.d-life.com

eStarling Impact 8 WiFi Photo Frame Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
Digital picture frames let you run a rotating slide show of favorite images on your wall or desk, but transferring photographs to the frame can be a hassle. With the Impact 8 WiFi Photo Frame ($170), you just send your photos to the frame via a special e-mail address and they automagically appear a few minutes later. www.estarling.com

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Jan 28 2009

inauguration 2.ina.001002 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

In a little under a half hour, Barack Obama will officially take his place as the country’s next POTUS. And while the event will be brimming with historic firsts for the country, the coverage contains plenty of firsts for the integration of technology, politics, and major events. http://60339louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

Sure, there’ll be some people who actually attend the event in person—around 2 million brave souls have packed into the Mall in frigid temperatures, with questionable bathroom status (for comparison, around 400,000 showed up for Bush’s first inauguration). But for the rest of the world that didn’t make it to D.C. for the party, there’s a veritable smorgasbord of real-time coverage and information all over the airwaves. For those who still watch TV, you can see Obama take the reins on any cable or broadcast news station, or watch live feeds online from CNN, MSNBC, and just about every other news source. Then there are the liveblogs and Twitters, ot to mention Facebook statuses which, according to CNN (which has partnered with Facebook to offer simultaneous Web viewing and status-updating), are being updated at around 2,000 updates per minute, and 3,000 comments per minute. http://60339louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com Not to mention the conversation rampaging among the 4 million fans on Obama’s official Facebook page.

Text messaging the event is rampant as well, to the point where the CEO of EzTexting.com Shane Neman issued a press release saying he believes millions of text messages will be lost, on the level of New Year’s Eve.

So there you have it—500 different ways to find out what’s going on in D.C. And if you miss all of it, not to worry—the replays will show up on YouTube momentarily. http://60339louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

January 20th, 2009 Tags: obama, technology
by Melissa Lafsky in Science Goes to Washington, The 2008 Election | 2 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >
2 Responses to “The Inauguration Will Be Televised…And Facebooked, and Twittered, and Texted”

1. The Inauguration Will Be Televised¦And Facebooked, and Twittered, and Texted | MamentoMori Says:
January 20th, 2009 at 4:32 pm

[…] In a little under a half hour, Barack Obama will officially take his place … Go to Source […] http://60339louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
2. HowToMakeFastMoney Says:
January 28th, 2009 at 12:00 pm

nice interesting too !
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

motor 1.mot.02 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . Within a few decades, a surgeon may be able to make a tiny incision in a patient’s artery and insert a miniature robot that would scoot along through the blood vessel to the area of concern. The microbot could remove blockages, scrape plaque off of artery walls, remove a few cells from an organ to test for cancer, or could even, eventually, carry a tiny camera to show doctors exactly what’s going on inside the body. http://57100louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com In a major step towards that science fiction-tinged surgical scenario, researchers have built and demonstrated a motor about twice the width of a human hair that could power such a microbot.

Researcher James Friend says that miniature mechanics have been a long time coming. “If you pick up an electronics catalogue, you’ll find all sorts of sensors, LEDs, memory chips etc that represent the latest in technology and miniaturisation,” he says. “Take a look however at the motors, and there are few changes from the motors available in the 1950s” [BBC News]. http://57100louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

Doctors already snake catheters through blood vessels in many procedures to reduce the impact of surgery, but some blood vessels, like the labyrinthine network in the brain, are too narrow and delicate to reach with current technology. But a microbot might be able to reach even these most sensitive areas, and could one day be used to remove clots from stroke patients’ brains in the emergency room. The researchers have tested their motor in human blood and artificial arteries and later this year it will begin experiments in pigs, whose arteries and brains are similar to humans, before proceeding to full-scale human trials [Telegraph].

The new motor, which is described in the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, is powered by a piezoelectric material, which vibrates in response to an applied electric field. A spiral rod absorbs those vibrations and translates them into rotational forces that spin a tiny stainless-steel ball. That motion could be put to work to rotate a whip-like tail over a thousand times a second, say the team, in a similar style to the beating flagellum of a sperm cell [New Scientist]. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire .

If the idea of a microbot speeding through blood vessels on an urgent mission sounds familiar, you must be a movie buff: The idea was first floated in 1966’s Fantastic Voyage, starring Raquel Welch, in which a similar machine was placed inside a diplomat to perform life-saving surgery. The researchers … have paid homage to that film by naming their device, Proteus, after the capsule in the film [Telegraph]. In 1987, Inner Space sent a similar micro-craft on another lifesaving mission. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire .

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Jan 28 2009

waste 1.was.9953 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . It’s one of the biggest cleanup jobs the United States has ever undertaken, and it’s a long way from being done. Near the Columbia River in Hanford, Washington, contractors are decontaminating a nuclear fuel processing site that has 177 underground tanks holding 53 million gallons of nuclear waste, some of which has already leaked into the soil and groundwater. And the cleanup crew has learned that the known hazards are just the beginning. [S]loppy work by the contractors running the site saw all kinds of chemical and radioactive waste indiscriminately buried in pits underground over the 40 years Hanford was operational, earning it the accolade of the dirtiest place on Earth. In 2004, clean-up work uncovered a battered, rusted, and broken old safe containing a glass jug inside which was 400 millilitres of plutonium [New Scientist].http://41002louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

In a new study published in Analytical Chemistry [subscription required], researchers announced that the plutonium inside that jug had quite an impressive and terrible pedigree. Analyzing the sample’s isotopes and studying the historical records revealed that it was processed into plutonium-239 in December of 1944, as part of the first batch of weapons-grade plutonium ever made. Just eight months later, Hanford plutonium was used in the nuclear bomb that fell on the Japanese city of Nagasaki.

The overall cleanup of the Hanford site is expected to cost about $50 billion, and the remediation effort currently gets about $2 billion per year from the Department of Energy. But that money hasn’t been enough to keep the project on track; managers have announced that they will miss 23 deadlines this year due to lack of funds. That’s one reason senators whose districts include Department of Energy sites such as Hanford are pushing for stimulus money to rejuvenate local economies with cleanup work and, they hope, provide freshly scrubbed land for industrial development. “This is exactly the kind of thing a stimulus package should be composed of,” said Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho [AP].

The newly appointed Secretary of Energy, Steven Chu, pledged during his confirmation hearings last week to expedite the cleanup effort at Hanford and other nuclear waste sites. “Cleanup of these materials is a complicated, expensive long-term project, but I pledge to you to do my best to accelerate these efforts in order to protect human health and the environment, and to return contaminated lands to beneficial use,” Chu said…. Under questioning from Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., Chu said there should be a “significant” amount of additional cleanup money in a stimulus bill Congress is expected to consider in the coming weeks [Tri-City Herald].

Related Content:
80beats: Should Yucca Mountain Hold More Than 77,000 Tons of Nuclear Waste, or None?
80beats: EPA Sets Radiation Limit for Nevadans Living 1 Million Years From Now
DISCOVER: End of the Plutonium Age dives into the enduring mysteries of plutonium
DISCOVER: Bombs Away explains how to dismantle a nuclear warhead

Image: Department of Energy, showing the safe and the plutonium-filled bottle found at the Hanford site http://41002louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

January 21st, 2009 Tags: nuclear energy, nuclear waste, plutonium, pollution, weapons & security
by Eliza Strickland in Environment, Technology | 8 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >
8 Responses to “The “Dirtiest Place on Earth” Still Has a Lot of Nuke Waste to Clean Up”

1. Bystander Says:
January 21st, 2009 at 10:19 pm

/facepalm
2. Bill Says:
January 22nd, 2009 at 7:32 am

You know, you’d think something like this would only occur in a developing nation or other “Third World” country. But no, it’s the good old USA!!!
3. Danorock Says:
January 22nd, 2009 at 3:44 pm

This is the kind of thing that happens everywhere, except that most developing nations don’t have enough of a nuclear energy program/weapons-grade plutonium to have this much waste! Nuclear waste is one of those things that we have been “sweeping under the carpet” as if by putting our heads in the sand, it will disappear. Surprise! Nuclear waste doesn’t go away when you bury it.
4. Tommy Says:
January 27th, 2009 at 1:03 pm

I can tell you without a doubt that Hanford is not the dirtiest place on earth; that statement is just a journalistic spin of nonsense. How about all the former U.S.S.R. sites we have cleaned up….yes us the good old USA. How about China and India….I am so sick of the liberal journalistic spin to always show that the USA always does things in an endeavor as a negative and then they blow it way out of proportion and spin it as if it is only the USA with these kinds of problems to deal with….has everyone forgotten Chernobyl….or was that just and inconvenient truth. PLEASE PLEASE CAN WE GET JOURNALISM WITHOUT THE NONSENSE OF CONTEXTUALIZED FACTS.
5. geeta Says:
January 27th, 2009 at 6:17 pm

Yes, I know. But this must have been one of those wastes that could not be shipped over to a ‘developing’ or ‘third world’ country.
6. Malwae Says:
January 27th, 2009 at 6:38 pm

I have to agree with Tommy - I think there is a bias of documentation here. Hanford is in a place where journalists aren’t mangled in horrific prisons for describing something that’s less than positive about their country, so we know all about it. I lived in Nukus for 2 1/2 years (that’s where the Aral Sea used to be). Un-f****ing believable - but Uzbek journalists who write about stuff other than how awesome their president is tend not to be heard from again.

(Think chemical and biological weapons factories that were just up and abandoned in 1991 - no controlled shutdown, no containment, nothing. The local population has some crazy health issues as a result).
7. Kent Says:
January 27th, 2009 at 8:46 pm

This was the location where the largest nuclear arsenal in the world was produced. There is little chance that Uzbekistan could possibly have produced something of this magnitude. Russia, maybe - but not confirmed. So I think this is actually an accurate statement.

Also, research the Hanford downwinders if you want to see some crazy health issues.
8. Tommy Says:http://41002louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
January 28th, 2009 at 12:35 pm

The former U.S.S.R. at one time had a nuclear arsenal approx. one and half times more in numbers of missiles and subs than the USA, so once again this statement of Hanford as the “dirtiest place on earth” is total nonsense and no the USA and Russia have never shipped waste to developing or third world countries; if you are referring to the nuclear byproducts shipped to be used in the manufacturing of smoke detectors and X-ray machines then yes we have shipped byproducts not waste…and yet another fact taken out of context or twisted to validate someones belief or political leaning and agenda…and as far as Uzbekistan goes it was at one time under the iron curtain and most definitely has former U.S.S.R sites of research and development of nuclear and chemical weapons and production in general within its boarders. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

popetube 3.pop.00763 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . Are You a Vatican, Or a Vatican’t? If you’re Pope Benedict XVI, the answer is clear. The 81-year-old Pope has shown no fear or hesitation when it comes to voicing his view on modern issues and embracing technology, culminating in the rather stunning announcement that His Holiness has now created his very own YouTube channel. According to the AP:

“The Vatican said it was launching the channel to broaden Benedict’s audience while also giving the Holy See better control over the papal image online.” http://29023louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

Nice to know his Holiness is as worried about his online reputation as the rest of us. The channel will be updated daily and include clips of papal news items, with content produced by the Vatican’s television station, CTV (not to be confused with the other CTV, which produces plenty of non-Pope-approved material). The clips will be broadcast in Italian, German, English, and Spanish.

To top off his technological embrace, Benedict also gave social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace his official blessing, calling them a “gift to humanity” in their ability to foster friendships and connections.

Of course, all this Internet love doesn’t come without a caveat:

But Benedict also warned that virtual socializing had its risks, saying “obsessive” online networking could isolate people from real social interaction and broaden the digital divide by further marginalizing people.

Not to mention lead to all sorts of dangerous addictions.

Related:
Disco: Vatican Science: Pope Blames Male Infertility on…the Pill
Disco: They Tried to Make Us Go to Web Surfing Rehab But We Said LOL
RB: One Religion that’s Actually Embracing Science: Buddhism

Image: Courtesy of www.vatican.va

January 23rd, 2009 Tags: catholicism, the pope, youtube http://29023louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
by Melissa Lafsky in Science & Religion | 1 comments | RSS feed | Trackback >
One Response to ““PopeTube” Launches, Brings New Holiness to Internet” Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

1. George Says: http://29023louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com
January 24th, 2009 at 10:51 am

YouTube: Secrets of the Vatican - UFO’s in the Ancient Art:
http://cristiannegureanu.blogspot.com/2009/01/can-jesus-become-your-new-sf-hero.html Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

promote 4.pro.001002 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . Pop quizzes are frequent for students in Robert Proctor’s history of science classes. “How old is the earth?” “How many millions in a billion?” “Are you convinced that humans share a common ancestry with apes?” Proctor’s passion is figuring out not only what his students know, but also what they don’t know. His drive is to explore aspects of science that most don’t see. http://142267louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

A professor of the history of science at Stanford University, Proctor has taught courses as varied as “The Changing Concept of Race,” “Tobacco and Health in World History,” and “Human Origins: Evidence, Ideology, and Controversy.” His ever-roving eye tends to focus on bad science made during good times, good science made in bad times, and the mass of ignorance lodged in our collective minds as a result of both. http://142267louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

Proctor is living what he calls “the ultimate dabbler’s fantasy,” taking on subjects that appeal to his questioning spirit. But the motivation behind that dabbling is often principled outrage and a drive to right wrongs. Some of those wrongs are big ones—he has been the scourge of the tobacco industry, testifying against it in many cases and writing books and articles about what those in the industry knew, when they knew it, and how they campaigned to hide certain facts. Other wrongs are seemingly small: Proctor notes that the agates he collects and polishes, although unique and rare, are considered cheap, while diamonds, plentiful and homogeneous, somehow have great value. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire .

Last May saw the release of Proctor’s latest book, Agnotology: The Making & Unmaking of Ignorance, coedited with Londa Schiebinger. DISCOVER caught up with him at his Stanford office.

Just what is agnotology?
It’s the study of the politics of ignorance. I’m looking at how ignorance is actively created through things like military secrecy in science or through deliberate policies like the tobacco industry’s effort to manufacture doubt through their “doubt is our product” strategy [spelled out in a 1969 tobacco company memo [pdf]]. So it’s not that science inherently always grows. It can actually be destroyed in certain ways, or ignorance can actually be created.

How common is the active creation of ignorance?
It’s pretty common. I mean, in terms of sowing doubt, certainly global warming is a famous one. You know, the global warming denialists who for years have managed to say, “Well, the case is not proven. We need more research.” And what’s interesting is that a lot of the people working on that were also the people working for Big Tobacco.

Really?
Yeah. The techniques of manufacturing doubt were created largely within the tobacco industry, and then they were franchised out to other industries. I have a chapter in my book Cancer Wars called “Doubt Is Our Product,” which is about the hundreds and hundreds of different industries that use these techniques of sowing doubt in order to minimize hazard, as do various trade associations. One of their goals is the idea of sowing doubt or questioning statistics. And they’re very powerful. You know the old saying: For every Ph.D. there’s an equal and opposite Ph.D.

You have a unique take on the relationship between ideology and science.
Bad ideologies can produce good science, and good ideologies can produce bad science. In my book The Nazi War on Cancer, I showed that a horrific ideology can produce world-class science, and in my human origins work I showed that liberal antiracism can produce bad science.

One of the things I teach in my class is that the history of science is the history of confusion, and there are many, many confusions. In a lot of my work I look at how even crazy prejudices can sometimes create good science. For instance, we all think the Nazis were crazy, but in fact, you know, they did some amazing science—not just in spite of their ideology, but actually because of their ideology. And that’s the same with all strong ideologies. The Piltdown hoax [the 1912 discovery of a supposed skull of early man, which 40 years later was determined to be a human cranium and ape jaw fraudulently joined together] was actually perceived [as a hoax] fairly early on by creationists because they refused to believe that this could have been a real skull. http://142267louis0j0sheehan0esquire.wordpress.com

What are other examples of good science coming from bad ideologies?
We tend to forget that the first manned space flight was produced at the height of the Soviet empire. I think the example of Mayan archaeoastronomy is an interesting one. There you have very competent elites who are involved in sort of blending calendrical astronomy with human sacrifice. That gets pretty hairy.

How did you develop this line of interest?
Well, I have a lot of curiosity about the world. I’m very interested in combining science with politics and ethics. And I like to do what I call activist history of science—a history of science that is relevant to present-day policy and present-day suffering and also to historical suffering. So I like to use history to inform the present, but I also like to use the present to inform history.

It seems you have endless curiosity.
I’m amazed by people who don’t ask questions constantly. I was raised to think that the good life is asking questions and then always realizing that there are infinitely many more questions and that basically what we know is an infinitesimal part of what we might know. I’m interested in human suffering. I’m interested in the big, unanswered questions—in the massive infinity of ignorance that we swim in.
+++

Have you continued your focus on tobacco?
I recently collaborated on an exhibit of the most outrageous tobacco ads called “Not a Cough in a Carload.” It’s centered on medical-themed tobacco ads: that tobacco’s good for your T-zone, that it calms your nerves. Scientific tests prove that brand A is better than B, or, you know, 20,000 physicians recommend Camels, and so forth. The use of athletes and models, and the artwork is just beautiful.

How did this kind of marketing come about?
It was pioneered by the tobacco industry. They set out to have a massive public relations campaign to defend tobacco at all costs against science. They wanted science that was good PR. I think it’s mainly a post–World War II phenomenon, although there are a couple of exceptions if you go back earlier for specific industries. In the 1920s, lead was almost banned from both paint and gasoline, and the lead industry set out to have a campaign that softened the critiques. And then in the 1930s, you get Big Tobacco manufacturing consumer drive and convincing people this is a cool, natural thing to do, so it’s part of the history of marketing. It’s the applying of marketing techniques to science, which is rather diabolical in a lot of ways.

You’ve been very involved in tobacco litigation. What is the history of that industry’s response to challenges?

The tobacco industry started responding particularly in the 1950s with propaganda. That’s when they started their doubt campaign—the manufacturing of doubt, the manufacturing of ignorance. It was really rather new, certainly on the scale at which they pursued it. It was a new way of using science as an instrument of deception. And that’s become important recently. Franchised down into the global warming issue are the same techniques. Demanding ever-greater precision, invoking doubt, questioning the physical methods. Raising alternate possibilities. The whole realm of smoke screens and distractions.

How do you maintain the perspective essential to your kind of research?
Well, I have three emotional principles in all my work. One is wonder, another is sympathy, and the third is critique. These are virtues of different disciplines that are generally not combined. Wonder we think of as a traditional scientific discipline or motive. It’s great to wonder at the grandeur and glory of the universe, the childlike wonder, the Stephen Jay Gould wonder, the Einsteinian wonder.

But there’s also the traditional historical virtue of sympathy, which is to realize that the world we live in really is kind of a moment in time when we have the entire history of the universe behind us that we can explore as well. And when it comes to human interpretation, it’s important to see the past the way the people saw it. So I’ve written two books on Nazi medicine, and the goal there was not just to condemn them, but to see how in the world they came up with those ideas and those movements and how they justified them to themselves. So we see them as full humans and not just scarecrows, so we can actually understand the depth of the depravity or whatever. But at least we see it honestly, and that’s a traditional historical virtue.

The third principle is critique, which is to realize that we’re humans first. If we’re cosmologists or historians, we’re at least humans first and then cosmologists and historians. We need to critique and show that there’s a lot of garbage out there, and we don’t want to be apologists for some horrific status quo where people are dying by the millions. And so we don’t just want to see things through other people’s eyes and we don’t want to just wonder at the glory of nature. We want to realize that there’s horrific suffering in the world and that we, as humans and as scholars, have a duty to do something about it.

Should other scientists be driven by the same motives?
I think they’re good principles, certainly. We need to see the big picture. Scientists are often involved in work that’s just a small fraction of the picture. There are going to be specific motives for the research we do. Geology is centered on exploration for new fuels and things like that. But anytime we decide to fund one type of research rather than another, that’s a kind of political decision. It’s a social decision. It’s a collective decision about what we want to view as important.

You work in such widely different fields. Why didn’t you choose a specialty?
Something is lost when people specialize. I like to see things like an amateur. The word amateur is literally “lover,” it’s from amore. Professionalism is often the death of intellectual inquiry. So I think there’s a kind of virtue of systematic amateurism that really needs to be rekindled. If you don’t love and hate and play and joke with your objects of study, then you’re really not treating them properly. I tell my students if you’re not angry and excited and enthralled by your topic, you should choose a different one.

How difficult is it to always be sorting out truth from lies—and to spend so much time thinking about ignorance?
I’m not a skeptic; I’m a pragmatist. I think we have to live in the world and can’t be skeptical of everything. Trust is a fundamental part of being human. You have to evaluate the source, but you can’t be hypercritical or you’d drive yourself crazy. I believe in the common sense of most people. There’s a great deal of common sense in the world. There’s also a lot of common ignorance. It’s nearly boundless. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

swimming 3.swi,991992 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire . - The endangered humpback whale is on the rebound, with 18,000 of them swimming around the North Pacific Ocean, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

- A drug that mimics the effects of resveratrol, a compound found in red wine, works as an antiobesity pill—at least in mice. The drug, SRT1720, kept mice with high-calorie diets from becoming obese or diabetic, according to a study published in Cell Metabolism [subscription required].

- Small nuclear reactors, which can provide localized carbon-free power, are so popular that they are on a three-year back order from their manufacturer, Hyperion Power Generation.

The Bad News http://louis9j9sheehan9esquire.wordpress.com

- A recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling allows the Navy to continue underwater sonar testing in the name of national security, despite its potential to harm whales.

- Obese people’s brains may offer less pleasure from eating, according to a study published in Science [subscription required]. Researchers found that obese women have fewer dopamine receptors, giving them less of a high from food.

- The Department of Energy is warning that the 77,000-ton limit set for nuclear waste at the Yucca Mountain Repository already falls short of our needs.Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire.

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Jan 28 2009

rat 3.rat.00987 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. The success of one of the most ambitious and contested federal science programs in years may rest on the delicate shoulders of a one-pound albino breed of rat known as Sprague Dawley. In a hotly debated move, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has selected this unassuming rodent as the primary test animal for a vastly complex and comprehensive new chemical-evaluation program. The effort is designed to investigate many of the most vexing public-health questions of the day: Are you putting yourself, your children, or even your children’s children at risk when you microwave food in plastic containers? What is contributing to hormone-related killers like breast, uterine, and testicular cancer? And are common garden sprays—like the one you use to keep the aphids off your hybrid tea rose—affecting your unborn baby’s developing brain? http://louis8j8sheehan8esquire.wordpress.com

The EPA initiative, called the Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program, is set to begin testing some of the 87,000 chemicals identified by a federal advisory panel for their potential to interfere with the body’s endocrine, or hormone, system. As the body’s chemical messengers, hormones play a critical role in regulating biological processes including metabolism, reproduction, and brain development. The female ovaries, male testes, and pituitary, thyroid, and adrenal glands are all part of this complex system. Endocrine disruptors may mimic natural hormones or block their normal action, cause the body to produce too much or too little of a hormone, or scramble a hormone’s message so that the body thinks it should abort a fetus, for example, or produce extra insulin. If any of the thousands of chemicals in common use today adversely affect the human hormone system, the EPA’s testing program should catch them—but only if Sprague Dawley catches them first. And therein lies the controversy.

Since World War II, this white-furred rodent with beady red eyes has been among industry’s most often used lab rats for testing drugs and chemicals before they hit the market. The animal’s utility is undisputed; it has helped researchers study not just pharmacology and toxicology but everything from cancer and AIDS to obesity and aging. In this case, though, it may be the wrong rat for the job. Critics say that Sprague Dawley is a kind of superrodent whose hearty constitution may not react in ways an average human’s would. If so, the animal could give a clean bill of health to chemicals that actually pose a real threat to human well-being.

Last spring the EPA convened a scientific advisory panel to make final adjustments to the proposed testing program. One panelist was David Furlow, a University of California at Davis endocrinologist with extensive experience in rat-strain variations and how they can affect outcomes in the lab. He tried repeatedly to raise a red flag about Sprague Dawley. “I’ve known about these differences since I was an undergraduate in the 1980s,” Furlow says, citing scientific literature that suggests it is more resistant to endocrine-disrupting chemicals than other rat strains. His concerns, he says, were downplayed.

Sprague Dawley’s unique characteristics have been evident for decades. In 1946 physical chemist Robert Dawley’s company sent a letter to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) detailing how, through selective breeding, Dawley had developed a rat (Sprague was his first wife’s maiden name) with good temperament, vigor, and high rates of lactation. But Sprague Dawley’s good genes—not to mention its fecundity—could have bad consequences for humans: A prolific breeder may not be the best test subject for chemicals that may cause infertility and other reproductive problems. http://louis8j8sheehan8esquire.wordpress.com The letter to the NIH also stated that the rat strain had been bred for “high resistance to arsenic trioxide,” a toxic substance used in insecticides and herbicides and known today to be an endocrine disruptor.

“It’s a significant problem,” says Jef French, acting chief of the Host Susceptibility Branch of the National Toxicology Program at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. (French emphasized that he was speaking for himself and not the government.) “Because of Sprague Dawley’s [genetic] selection, chemicals that might be harmful to humans might be judged to be nonharmful to the rat,” he says.

The results of the EPA’s tests could guide federal regulation of numerous chemicals for many years to come, so the stakes for both the public and the chemical industry are enormous.
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The far-reaching Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program dates to 1996, when Congress ordered the EPA to begin testing chemicals for their potential to interfere with the human endocrine system. By some accounts the legislation was prompted by the publication earlier that year of a book titled Our Stolen Future. Called “an environmental thriller” by The Washington Post, the book, by two zoologists and an environmental journalist, called attention to a longtime concern of environmentalists: failing wildlife populations and strange deformities in the offspring of those that survived. For instance, there was a massive die-off of alligators after a 1980 pesticide spill in Florida’s Lake Apopka. Studies later found deformed sex organs in the offspring of the remaining gator population, even after tests showed the water in the lake to be apparently clean. Mink ranchers in the Great Lakes region who fed their animals local fish began noticing that the females weren’t producing pups, a problem later linked to PCB contamination. In California researchers found what came to be known in the press as “gay gulls”: same-sex seagull couples shacking up together in the nest, protecting eggs with abnormally thin shells that often harbored dead chicks. DDT was the suspected culprit.

Because of genetic selection, chemicals that might be harmful to humans might be judged nonharmful to the rat.

Confronted with these findings, scientists began to wonder whether small quantities of synthetic chemical compounds found in our food and water—and in everyday products like makeup, plastics, and bug spray—could be sabotaging human fertility, undermining our immune systems, or affecting prenatal development. When the public got wind of the possible threat and started demanding answers, the EPA’s Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program was born.

Twelve years and $76 million later, not a single chemical has been screened by the EPA for its potential to scramble male, female, and thyroid hormones. Before screening could begin in earnest, the agency had to make sure that the protocols used in the screens would be reliable and reproducible. In this validation phase, studies were conducted at several labs using the same protocol, with the results then compared to ensure that the screens are replicable across labs. In this preliminary phase, several rat strains were used, including ones known as Long-Evans Hooded and Wistar, but Sprague Dawley was always the top pick.

During the validation studies, Sprague Dawley and other strains were housed in polycarbonate cages with wire lids. In some tests their life spans were brief—around six to eight weeks. Juvenile males were dosed with chemicals, then decapitated and examined. Pubescent males and females were injected with atrazine and myriad other chemicals, then had ovaries removed and studied, tiny testicles weighed, and kidney and thyroid glands checked for toxic effects.

A 2003 white paper commissioned by the EPA notes that because companies have for decades conducted these kinds of tests on Sprague Dawley, there is a large database of information on them that is lacking for other strains. But a “reviewer’s appendix” to the white paper—in which an independent scientist is asked to critique the report—argues that Sprague Dawley may be a poor choice for endocrine disruptor screening because the animal was bred to be resistant to known environmental toxicants. Written by research geneticist Jimmy Spearow, then at U.C. Davis, the appendix presented evidence that other rat strains, including Fischer 344, were more sensitive to more chemicals than was Sprague Dawley. “Compared with several other strains that have been studied, the strain that is least sensitive to the most endocrine-disrupting chemicals has been identified, and the EPA is planning to use it in the screening assays,” says Spearow, now a staff toxicologist for the California EPA; he emphasizes that this is his personal opinion, based on previous work conducted at Davis. In 2007 the EPA finally acknowledged there was reason to believe that Sprague Dawley might be less sensitive to certain endocrine tests, which made critics like Spearow wonder what other toxic effects the rat had failed to catch all those years.

Which rat to use in the EPA study isn’t the only thing being fought over. There has been a pitched battle between the chemical industry and its many critics regarding the Endocrine Disruptor Screening Program itself, with some industry representatives questioning the very premise that endocrine disruption is a human health risk. At a recent industry-sponsored workshop on the endocrine disruptor program that included representatives from Procter & Gamble, Monsanto, the American Chemistry Council, and Dow, one speaker repeatedly prefaced the phrase “endocrine disruptor” with “quote unquote.”

“There will always be different interpretations of science,” says Angelina Duggan, an original member of the EPA advisory panel and today a managing scientist at Exponent, a chemical industry consulting firm. “Whether this issue is more emotion or science remains to be seen.”
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To Marion Moses, a physician who runs the Pesticide Education Center in San Francisco, there is no need for such equivocation. “It’s become a fight over process and whether one can extrapolate animal studies to humans,” she says. “It’s a charade, and it has been going on for 12 years.” Trying to nail down unassailable proof of endocrine disruption in humans is essentially a fool’s errand, in her view. Moses, who has treated farmworkers for acute poisoning, rashes, and asthma that seem to be related to the spraying season, feels that the wildlife data alone should be enough to outlaw certain pesticides. “I spent a lot of time trying to get these awful chemicals off the market,” she says while walking in a San Francisco garden-supply store. The snail bait, lawn weed-and-feed products, fungicides, and insect repellents she pulls off the shelf all contain chemicals slated for testing.

The 2003 white paper that drew such strong criticism from Spearow, who called it “disturbing” and “misleading,” was coauthored by Rochelle Tyl, another member of the EPA advisory panel. Tyl, who runs a lab in North Carolina’s Research Triangle Park where many of the screens and tests will eventually be done, acknowledges that Sprague Dawley isn’t the perfect choice. Still, she defends the report, calling Fischer 344, for instance, a “lousy” test animal because the males have reproductive problems. Asked about rats bred to be super reproducers, she waves her arm impatiently. “I know that’s the criticism, that Sprague Dawleys are good breeders. But if you don’t have an animal that gives decent litters, how do you run a study?”

Gary Timm, a senior environmental scientist with the EPA, has been working on the endocrine disruptor program since its very first days and likewise recognizes the complexity of the process. “I’ve been totally surprised at how long it’s taken,” he says. The agency felt a constant tug between “keep it simple” and “be comprehensive.”

“Compromises have been struck,” Timm continues. He, too, cites the problem of Sprague Dawley’s virility. “People say, ‘Look, these rats suffer a 50 percent decrease in sperm and they still reproduce.’ They say, ‘If you had a guy who had a 50 percent decrease in sperm, he’d be infertile!’” Asked how he responds to such criticism, he answers, “Those are just some of the things we have to allow for.”

Representative Henry Waxman and others on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform are not so sure. In 2007 the committee sent a letter to the administrator of the EPA voicing concern that public health was being put at risk by the selection of Sprague Dawley. The agency responded, “While the EPA recognizes there are reasons to believe that this strain might be less sensitive, the data currently available appear to show that it is no worse (or better) than other strains for screening for endocrine activity.”

In some ways the EPA is correct, Spearow says. No one rat strain is most sensitive to all endocrine-disrupting chemicals. “However, available data show that the Sprague Dawley rat strain is least sensitive to the most endocrine-disrupting chemicals relative to other strains that have been studied,” he says. “I’m not saying it is inappropriate for all testing, but to use it as the only test animal in this program means that we could really underestimate the effects of certain kinds of chemicals. Do we make sure they’re safe for King Kong? Or do we make sure they’re safe for you and me and Bambi?”

Congress, fed up with the EPA’s delay of more than a decade, wrote into the 2008 appropriations bill that the screening of possible endocrine-disrupting compounds was to begin last summer. Testing of the first chemicals, including the herbicides 2,4-D and atrazine and the insecticide malathion, was scheduled to follow, but the EPA pushed back its deadlines yet again, to early 2009.

Endocrine disruption, with its diffuse causes and effects that may not show up for a generation, is a hydra-headed 21st-century health challenge. Thousands of chemicals will be tested and many millions of dollars will be spent. Still, opponents of using Sprague Dawley say one nagging question remains: If the whiskered workhorse in the laboratory isn’t up to the task, who will be the real lab rats? Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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Jan 28 2009

warming 4.war.0010 Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

When people think of climate change, they think of carbon dioxide. But while CO2 represents 77 percent of all man-made greenhouse gas emissions, its relative contribution may be declining. According to two studies published late last year, atmospheric levels of other, more potent gases that also affect climate are on the rise.

One such gas is nitrogen trifluoride (NF3), which is used to make retail items like microchips and flat-screen TVs. In a study published in Geophysical Research Letters, researchers analyzed air samples and found that atmospheric NF3 seems to be growing by 11 percent each year across the globe. NF3 lingers in the air for 550 years, on average, and is 17,000 times better at trapping heat than CO2 on a molecule-per-molecule basis. http://louis7j7sheehan7esquire.wordpress.com Today the effect of NF3 on climate is just 0.04 percent that of carbon dioxide, but its role could grow dramatically if more manufacturers start using it, says study author Ray Weiss, a geochemist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. NF3 emissions are not currently regulated by any government. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

A more immediate problem for climate change is methane, which is released by landfills and melting perma­frost and through farming practices. Levels of this gas are increasing today after eight years of stasis, according to another study in Geophysical Research Letters. Methane remains in the atmosphere one-tenth as long as CO2—about a decade—but traps 20 times as much heat. http://louis7j7sheehan7esquire.wordpress.com

No one yet knows the extent to which methane and NF3 will impact global temperatures, but NASA climate scientist Ralph Kahn says one thing is certain: “We know it’s more than just CO2 that matters.” His colleague James Crawford adds, “There’s going to be a lot more looking at this, trying to understand what is going on.” Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire

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