Canadian October home sales dip, latest sign of cooling
















TORONTO (Reuters) – Sales of existing homes in Canada fell in October from September and year-over-year sales were down as well, the Canadian Real Estate Association said on Thursday in the latest signal that the housing market is slowing.


The industry group for Canadian real estate agents said sales were down 0.1 percent in October from September. Actual sales for October, not seasonally adjusted, were down 0.8 percent from a year earlier.













The housing market, which roared higher in 2011 and the first half of 2012, started to slow after the government tightened rules on mortgage lending in July in a bid to cool the market and prevent home buyers from taking on too much debt.


Housing market trends in Canada for 2012 can be characterized as before and after regulatory changes,” TD Economics senior economist Sonya Gulati said in a research note.


“In the first half of the year, sales and price gains were modest, but positive. More stringent mortgage rules and tighter mortgage underwriting rules have ‘purposely’ knocked the wind out of the housing market sails,” she said.


The home sales data showed diverging paths in Canadian housing depending on location. In Toronto and Vancouver, where sales and price gains were red hot in 2011 and early in 2012, the market has been cooling. But markets in the resource-rich western provinces of Saskatchewan and Alberta have been gaining strength.


“Opinions differ about how sharply sales have slowed depending on the local housing market,” Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist, said in a statement.


Led by Calgary, sales in October were up from a year earlier in almost two-thirds of local markets. Sales remained blow year-earlier levels in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, CREA said.


“These results suggest that the Canadian housing market overall has returned to a more sustainable pace,” Klump said.


CREA’s Home Price Index rose 3.6 percent in October from a year earlier, the sixth consecutive month in which gains in prices slowed, and the slowest rate of increase since May 2011.


While tighter mortgage rules have worked to slow the market, TD’s Gulati said the big question is what will happen when that temporary cooling effect wears off in early 2013.


“What happens thereafter is less certain. The low interest rate environment could pull homeowners back onto the market, causing home prices to once again trek upwards. Alternatively, an absence of pent-up demand may leave the market in a bit of a lull until interest rate hikes resume in late 2013,” she wrote.


“Under either scenario, it is safe to say that there is a low probability of out-sized home price gains over the near-term.”


A total of 402,322 homes traded hands via Canadian MLS systems over the first 10 months of 2012, up 0.8 percent from the same period last year and 0.4 percent below the 10-year average for the period, the data showed.


The number of newly listed homes fell 3.8 percent in October following a jump in September. Monthly declines were reported in almost two-thirds of local markets, with Toronto and Vancouver exerting a large influence on the national trend.


Nationally, there were 6.5 months of inventory at the end of October, little changed from the reading of 6.4 months at the end of September.


(Editing by Peter Galloway)


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Tulsa Town Hall: Nutrition a valuable tool in health care

















Weil spoke as part of the Tulsa Town Hall series of speakers.













The United States has an expensive health-care system that doesn’t produce good results, he said.


“Something is very wrong with this picture,” he said. “We’re spending more and more and we have less and less to show for it.”


Changes in diet can be an effective treatment for many conditions, but American physicians are functionally illiterate in nutrition, he said.


“The whole subject of nutrition is omitted in medical education,” he said.


There are many ways of managing diseases other than drugs, he said. Integrative medicine, which can include dietary supplements and practices like meditation, is the future of health care, he said.


The health system is resistant to change because of entrenched vested interests. That includes pharmaceutical companies that do direct-to-consumer advertising, which should be stopped, he said.


“As dysfunctional as our health-care system is at the moment – and it is very dysfunctional – it is generating rivers of money,” he said. “That money is going into very few pockets.”


Weil has developed an anti-inflammatory diet based on the Mediterranean diet but with Asian influences.


Inflammation is associated with some heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease and some cancers, he said. And as a result, people should be eating real, unprocessed foods and whole grains. They should stay away from sugar-sweetened beverages, including fruit juice, he said.


“The new research that’s being done on sugar is not very comforting,” he said.


The aging process can’t be avoided, but age-related diseases can be avoided by proper care, he said.


“The goal should be to live long and well with a big drop off at the end,” he said.


Weil is the director of the University of Arizona’s Center for Integrative Medicine.


Tickets to the Tulsa Town Hall series are sold as a $ 75 subscription and cover five lectures. Tickets for individual lectures are not available.


To subscribe, visit tulsaworld.com/tulsatownhall, call 918-749-5965 or write to: Tulsa Town Hall, Box 52266, Tulsa, OK 74152.


Future speakers include journalist Ann Compton on Feb. 8; author James B. Stewart on April 5; historian and cinematographer Rex Ziak on May 10.


Original Print Headline: Speaker highlights nutrition



Shannon Muchmore 918-581-8378
shannon.muchmore@tulsaworld.com3ed48  basic Tulsa Town Hall: Nutrition a valuable tool in health care
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New driver passenger ban ‘mulled’

















Ministers may consider moves to ban young drivers in England and Wales from carrying anyone except family members as passengers, reports suggest.













Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin told the Daily Telegraph he was looking at ways of reducing road deaths involving newly-qualified motorists.


Insurers believe peer pressure on young drivers can lead them to take risks.


The Department for Transport says the issue is being considered but there are “no plans” for legislation.


The Association of British Insurers says drivers aged 17-24 are responsible for a disproportionately high number of crashes, deaths and claims.


It says an 18-year-old is more than three times as likely as a 48-year-old to be involved in a crash, and that a third of drivers killed in car accidents were under 25.


That was despite the fact that the under 25s form only one in eight of all car drivers.


In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Mr McLoughlin said he would consider measures put forward by the ABI which could cut the number of accidents involving young motorists.


Continue reading the main story

Other countries have adopted these measures and their experience has shown that they’re largely self-policing”



End Quote Malcolm Tarling Association of British Insurers


“I read regular reports where three or four young people have been killed in a car, and it’s a new driver, and you wonder what happened,” he told the newspaper.


“When I talk to young people who have recently passed their test, what they say sometimes is that peer pressure is put on them to go fast, to show off.


“They are not anticipating an accident, but something goes wrong. They are not drivers with a huge amount of experience by the very fact of their being new drivers. I think we have got to look at that.


“There is a suggestion as to whether you should look at a restriction whether anyone could carry passengers for six or nine months when they have first passed their test.


“There are suggestions about them only perhaps being allowed to take a family member to drive a car when you are learning, you have to have a qualified driver in the car. So these are all sorts of areas that I think we can look at.”


It comes six weeks after the Association of British Insurers called for an overhaul in the system – suggesting people should spend a year learning to drive and urging the introduction of a graduated licence for the first six months after passing a test.


ABI spokesman Malcolm Tarling denied that a restriction on who young drivers could carry as passengers would be difficult to enforce.


He said: “In terms of policing, you could use that argument for just about anything, really.


“Other countries have adopted these measures and their experience has shown that they’re largely self-policing.


“Of course there will always be people who will look to avoid the law, but the reality is if you impose something like this, and encourage people to follow it, international experience has shown that that is exactly what people do.”


But Neil Greig from the Institute of Advanced Motorists said forcing young motorists to carry only family members with them in the car would not necessarily make them safer drivers.


“Young drivers themselves admit that they are lacking experience, but we don’t believe that restricting people – such as curfews at night and restricting the number of passengers they can carry – is the way to develop that experience.


“They need the opportunities to get to learn, by doing these things, by carrying young people, by going out at night – how else can they learn?”


A Department for Transport spokesman said: “Improving the safety and ability of young drivers is a key priority for the government, which is why we have made the driving test more realistic – and are also considering how to improve training for drivers after they pass their test.


“There are no plans to introduce graduated licensing in England and Wales.


“However, we are working with young people, the insurance industry, and other key partners to identify what more can be done to ensure that newly qualified drivers are properly prepared and drive safely.


“We will consider carefully any ideas that reduce the risks of accidents involving young drivers.”


BBC News – Business



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Jamaica to abolish slavery-era flogging law
















KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Jamaica is preparing to abolish a slavery-era law allowing flogging and whipping as means of punishing prisoners, the Caribbean country’s justice ministry said Thursday.


The ministry said the punishment hasn’t been ordered by a court since 2004 but the statutes remain in the island’s penal code. It was administered with strokes from a tamarind-tree switch or a cat o’nine tails, a whip made of nine, knotted cords.













Justice Minister Mark Golding says the “degrading” punishment is an anachronism which violates Jamaica’s international obligations and is preventing Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller‘s government from ratifying the U.N. convention against torture.


“The time has come to regularize this situation by getting these colonial-era laws off our books once and for all,” Golding said in a Thursday statement.


The Cabinet has already approved repealing the flogging law and amendments to other laws in the former British colony, where plantation slavery was particularly brutal.


The announcement was welcomed by human rights activists who view the flogging law as a barbaric throwback in a nation populated mostly by the descendants of slaves.


“We don’t really see that (the flogging law) has any part in the approach of dealing with crime in a modern democracy,” said group spokeswoman Susan Goffe.


But there are no shortage of crime-weary Jamaicans who feel that authorities should not drop the old statutes but instead enforce them, arguing that thieves who steal livestock or violent criminals who harm innocent people should receive a whipping to teach them a lesson.


“The worst criminals need strong punishing or else they’ll do crimes over and over,” said Chris Drummond, a Kingston man with three school-age children. “Getting locked up is not always enough.”


The last to suffer the punishment in Jamaica was Errol Pryce, who was sentenced to four years in prison and six lashes in 1994 for stabbing his mother-in-law.


Pryce was flogged the day before being released from prison in 1997 and later complained to the U.N. Human Rights Committee, which ruled in 2004 that the form of corporal punishment was cruel, inhuman and degrading and violated his rights. Jamaican courts then stopped ordering whipping or flogging.


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After Garbo, Leigh, no defining “Anna Karenina”: Knightley
















LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Film adaptations of “Anna Karenina” have featured the likes of Greta Garbo and Vivien Leigh, but Keira Knightley isn’t fazed about measuring up to such silver screen luminaries with a new cinematic take on Leo Tolstoy‘s classic novel.


The British actress’s turn in the title role in the timeless story about a beautiful married socialite in 1870s Russia who embarks on a passionate affair with a cavalry officer, follows the 1935 version starring Garbo and the 1948 film with Leigh. It is released in the United States on Friday.













“Although there have been many famous actresses play her, there’s never been a definitive version of ‘Anna Karenina,’” Knightley said in an interview. “I think it’s partly because of the relationship you have with the character. She poses more questions than she answers, so it’s always open to different interpretation.”


Knightley stars opposite Jude Law as her husband, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the dashing Count Vronsky, and teams up again with filmmaker Joe Wright in their third film together after previous book-to-film collaborations with 2007′s “Atonement” and 2005′s “Pride & Prejudice.”


The film debuted at the Toronto film festival to warm reviews for Knightley‘s performance. Critics have said the film is overall technically and visually accomplished but lacks a cohesive emotional punch.


Adapted by playwright Tom Stoppard, Wright’s “Anna Karenina” takes place mostly in a theater setting and sees the title character more high-strung and less sympathetic than in previous incarnations.


The director said he cast Knightley, 27, because he felt she could tap into all the internal elements of Anna.


“She was 18 when we made ‘Pride & Prejudice‘, just a kid,” said Wright. “I’ve seen her develop from stunning ingĂ©nue to great actress. I felt that she was stronger, braver, even less conforming than she had been before.”


Knightley, newly engaged to musician James Righton, said she stood in moral condemnation over Anna,- “But am I any better than her? No.”


“I think we’re all her,” she added. “That is why she’s so terrifying. We all have bits of her personality within us. We can be wonderful, we can be loving, we can be full of laughter and full of life, and we can also be deceitful, malicious, needy and full of rage.”


WORLDS AWAY


While “Karenina” cements the perception of Knightley as a go-to actress for period pieces that also includes films like 2008′s “The Duchess” and 2004′s “King Arthur,” her career wasn’t always associated with roles grounded in the past.


Knightley spent the 1990s working in the British film and television industry before gaining international attention in the 2002 teenage soccer movie “Bend it Like Beckham.” After that, the actress said she was offered “an awful lot” of films in the teenage genre.


“The one thing that I knew right from the beginning was that I didn’t want to get into those high school movies,” she said. “I was never that interested in being a teenager. I was always interested in worlds away from my own.”


She credits the “massive” success of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” franchise – which saw her play Elizabeth Swan in the first three installments – as an integral part of her career and “a lot of the reason I was able to do other kinds of smaller films, because my name would help in financing them.”


Coming up, Knightley takes a turn away from costume dramas, in “Can A Song Save Your Life?” – a musical drama that sees her starring as an aspiring singer who meets a down-on-his-luck record producer, played by Mark Ruffalo. She’s currently shooting a reboot of the Tom Clancy thriller “Jack Ryan.”


“I got to the end of ‘Anna Karenina’ and I realized that I’d done about five years of work where I pretty much died in every movie and it was all very dark,” she said. “So I thought, okay, I want this year to be the year of positivity and pure entertainment.”


(Reporting by Zorianna Kit, editing by Christine Kearney and Patricia Reaney)


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CDC Report: Number of U.S. Adults with Diabetes Has Skyrocketed
















The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released the findings from its latest Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) on Thursday, which focused on the prevalence of diabetes among American adults. The MMWR stated that the number of new cases of diabetes, particularly type 2 diabetes, has risen dramatically in the last 15 years across the country, especially in some of the southern states.


The report looked at self-reported data collected from the participants of the study between the years of 1995 and 2010. The data was sorted and analyzed using a CDC system known as the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System to determine whether or not the average rate of diabetes had increased over time, and if so, by how much.













Here is some of the key information to emerge from the CDC’s latest MMWR release about diabetes.


* According to the MMWR, diabetes prevalence was higher than 6 percent of the adult population in only three states at the start of the study in 1995. Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., also had a greater than 6 percent prevalence of adult diabetes at that time.


* In 2010, at the conclusion of the study, every U.S. state, along with Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C., reported a prevalence of diabetes among its adult population that was greater than or equal to 6 percent. In addition, six states as well as Puerto Rico reported a prevalence of diabetes among their adult populations of greater than or equal to 10 percent.


* All of the participants in the study were 18 years or older. The study was conducted through telephone surveys.


* According to a report by Reuters regarding the study, Oklahoma was the state that had the largest increase in the percentage of adults living within its borders who have been diagnosed with diabetes. Kentucky was next, followed by Georgia, Alabama, Washington and West Virginia.


* Linda Geiss, the lead author of the study, told CNN on Thursday that she was surprised by the research team’s findings, saying that the “level of increase was shocking to me.” Specifically, Geiss was referring to the fact that the team found that the number of adults living with diabetes increased by at least 100 percent in 18 different states over the course of their research.


* The states that charted the highest percentage increases in the number of new diabetes cases also have had some of the highest increases in the number of adults who are considered obese, according to the CNN report.


* Geiss told CNN on Thursday that a person “should know that” they “can prevent the disease or delay it” by getting more exercise, adjusting their diet, and losing weight.


Vanessa Evans is a musician and freelance writer based in Michigan, with a lifelong interest in health and nutrition issues.


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China’s commerce minister voted out in rare congress snub: sources
















BEIJING (Reuters) – China‘s commerce minister was surprisingly blocked from a spot on the ruling Communist Party’s elite body during a conclave this week, sources said, a rare snub for an official that could raise questions about trade policies during his tenure.


The failure of Chen Deming to secure a seat on the 25-member Politburo marks one of the few surprises to emerge from the party’s five-yearly congress that wrapped this week with the anointing of a new slate of top leaders who will run the world’s second largest economy.













It is also the first time in more than two decades that an official designated for a Politburo spot has been voted out of the party’s 205-member Central Committee in elections. Central Committee membership is a prerequisite for a Politburo seat.


“Chen Deming was voted out during multi-candidate elections to the Central Committee,” one source told Reuters. State news agency Xinhua said there were eight percent more candidates than seats in a preliminary vote before the formal election on Wednesday.


Not being name as an alternate or full member during the party’s 18th congress means Chen, who was previously an alternate member, is almost certain to step down as commerce minister next March. Party regulations require cabinet ministers to be Central Committee members.


It is unclear why Chen, who was seen as a strong candidate for a vice premiership and at 63 is young enough to serve another five-year term under party rules, did not secure the votes for a seat on the Central Committee.


Tianjin Mayor Huang Xingguo, 58, who was elected a full member of the Central Committee, is front-runner to replace Chen as commerce minister, two sources with ties to the leadership said.


Ma Kai, 66, secretary general of the State Council, or cabinet, is tipped to become a vice premier now that Chen is out of the running, the sources said, requesting anonymity to avoid repercussions for discussing secretive elite politics.


Until now, a politician designated to become a Politburo member has not been barred from the Central Committee since 1987, when Deng Liqun, an ultra-conservative and reviled Marxist ideologue, was voted out at the 13th congress in a deeply embarrassing fall from grace.


Chen’s imminent retirement as commerce minister, a post he has held since taking over from now disgraced politician Bo Xilai in late 2007, would come as China faces growing tension with major trade partners in Europe and the United States and Chinese officials warn of increasing protectionism.


China’s leaders set a goal for 10 percent export growth this year, but it is more likely to come in at around 7 percent as the world has struggled to recover from financial crisis.


DEFENDED RECORD


Some experts suggest that Chen’s age was the main factor in his ouster.


“Minister Chen didn’t get onto the Central Committee because of his age. He was born in 1949 and that makes him too old to serve a full term,” said a Commerce Ministry official who declined to be identified.


But exceptions to the mandatory retirement age of 65 are often made for cabinet ministers and provincial governors and politicians can become a vice premier before they turn 68.


Du Qinglin, 66, a vice chairman to parliament’s advisory body, was just elected to the Central Committee.


At a news conference last week on the sidelines of the congress, Chen declined to answer questions about whether he was being considered for a vice premier post, but he defended the ministry’s record at the World Trade Organisation.


“When you consider the volume of trade cases in which China is involved, we’ve won quite a few,” Chen said. “But we haven’t bragged about our wins, whereas some of our foreign colleagues have trumpeted theirs.”


Analysts said Chen had a reputation as a competent and moderate minister, suggesting his performance may not have been at the center of his failure to secure a central committee seat, and despite the questions that are bound to arise, policy would probably not change.


“China’s overall trade policy is not set by the ministry, but by the central government,” said He Weiwen, director of the China-U.S. Trade Research Centre at the University of International Business and Economics in Beijing.


Under Chen, the ministry has increased its use of WTO legal processes, in part to gain experience. China has a relatively short history of participating in multilateral institutions and while it has lost most of WTO cases filed against it, most countries defending against complaints have the same problem.


Scott Kennedy, director of the Research Centre for Chinese Politics and Business at Indiana University said Chen’s departure from the Central Committee was puzzling and political motives could be at play.


“I don’t think he could be punished for his record as minister of commerce. I think overall he’s done a pretty decent job with the hand he has been dealt,” Kennedy said.


(Additional reporting by Lucy Hornby and Nick Edwards; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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Canada’s Carney says rate hikes “less imminent”
















TORONTO (Reuters) – Interest rate hikes have become less imminent than the Bank of Canada once expected, although rates are still likely to rise, central bank Governor Mark Carney said in an interview published on Saturday.


“Over time, rates are likely to increase somewhat, but over time, so a less imminent timing relative to our expectation,” Carney said in an interview with the National Post newspaper.













Canada’s economy rebounded better than most from the global economic recession, and the Bank of Canada is the only central bank in the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations that is currently hinting at higher interest rates.


But Carney has also made clear that there will be no rate rise for a while, despite high domestic borrowing rates that he sees as a major risk to a still fragile economy.


“We’ve been very clear in terms of lines of defense in addressing financial vulnerabilities,” he said in the interview. “And the most prominent one, obviously, in Canada, is household debt.”


He said the bank was monitoring the impact of four successive government moves to tighten mortgage lending, which aimed to take the froth out of a hot housing market without causing a damaging crash in prices.


A Reuters poll published on Friday showed the majority of 20 forecasters believe the government has done enough to rein in runaway prices, preventing the type of crash that devastated the U.S. market.


The experts expect Canadian housing prices to fall 10 percent over the next several years, but they do not expect the recent property boom to end in a U.S.-style collapse.


(Reporting by Janet Guttsman; Editing by Vicki Allen)


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With TV and film production heading overseas, should Uncle Sam get into showbiz?
















LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Is it time for Uncle Sam to go Hollywood?


With the exodus of film and TV production to foreign shores – and with the states’ incentives plans frequently out-gunned by countries outside the U.S. – there is some thought that it may be time for the federal government to step in.













The idea of the federal government helping out Hollywood while it is drowning in red ink is sure to raise hackles in some quarters. But filmmaker Michael Moore, for one, thinks it’s an idea whose time has come. And he’s not alone.


“That is one good thing the government can do in terms of being helpful and supportive, whether it’s filmmaking or other artistic endeavors,” Moore told TheWrap.


And he added, it’s also time for the states to stop fighting each other with differing tax-incentive plans. “I’ve always opposed New Mexico against North Carolina, or Michigan against L.A. I don’t like that. It’s not right. We’re Americans.”


Moore is not alone.


There are reasons to keep TV and film production from going abroad. The industry provides more than 2.4 million American jobs and adds nearly $ 180 billion to the U.S. economy annually and $ 15 billion in federal and state taxes, according to the Motion Picture Association of America.


Joe Chianese, executive VP at showbiz payroll giant Entertainment Partners Financial Solutions, believes the idea of getting the feds involved makes sense.


“You watched the debates and heard both President Obama and Gov. Romney talking about how it’s all about jobs, and they talked about how the manufacturing industry has basically been lost to overseas,” Chianese told TheWrap. “Well, we’re looking at the same sort of situation with the TV and film industry if something isn’t done.”


As he spoke to TheWrap, Chianese was about to set off for Japan, where government and film-industry officials were considering an incentive program that would align them with the more than 30 foreign countries trying to lure U.S. entertainment productions.


“You can’t blame filmmakers for taking their business elsewhere,” he said. “They’re taking their work overseas for the same reasons manufacturers are: It’s cheaper.”


Until recently, the federal government provided some help. Section 181 of the current tax code lowered the cost of capital for domestic film and TV production by providing immediate expensing on the first $ 15 million of production costs. To be eligible, 75 percent of the production had to occur in the U.S.


But it expired at the end of 2011.


California Republican Congressmen David Dreier has co-authored legislation to bring 181 back for another two years, but it is mired in Congress, along with a number of other tax-law extensions.


“Jobs are our No. 1 priority, and this bill will help more people find good jobs in California and across the U.S.,” said Dreier, who represents much of the San Gabriel Valley. “We need to create an environment that will keep entertainment productions here so that caterers, makeup artists and other small businesses that support them can create jobs too.”


Amy Lemistch, executive director of the California Film Commission, shares the world view on keeping show business here.


“We see California’s runaway production problem as a global issue,” she told TheWrap “not a state vs. state issue. People are going to the U.K. and Canada as much as they are going to other states.”


Smaller nations like Sri Lanka have begun offering breaks, and others like New Zealand have ramped up state-of-the-art production infrastructures. Even Iceland recently lured the HBO series “Game of Thrones” and the feature films “Noah” and “Prometheus.”


Particularly galling to California Film Commission officials is when productions set in the state are lured overseas. Recent examples would be the now-canceled Fox TV series “Alcratraz” and the L.A.-set movie “This Means War,” both of which shot in Vancouver.


Unlike Moore, Chianese, a tax specialist who worked with the commission when it was crafting its credits program, sees the federal incentives coming on top of state credits, rather than replacing them.


“You add, say, a 15 percent jobs credit, where companies would get 15 percent of the salary of every hire they make,” he said. “Add that on top of, say, the 25 percent credit California offers, and you’re up to 40 percent credit. That would make a real difference when it comes to keeping entertainment jobs here.”


Chianese said he’d be willing to see Section 181 go away in favor of more direct and immediate incentives. But with Obama and Congress focused on cutbacks and new taxes to pare down the national debt before the end of the year, the timing’s not good now.


It will always be an uphill fight, particularly with the House of Representatives controlled by the budget-conscious GOP.


“You’d face the same question you always do with incentives, which is: Why favor one industry over another?” Chianese said.


Not to mention major blowback from the segments of the right, which see liberal politicians as too tied to Hollywood already.


As for state credits, Hollywood breathed a sigh of relief in late September when California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a two-year extension of the state’s film and TV production-tax credit program. But no one expects it to be a game-changer when it comes to California’s fight to remain the world’s production capital.


New York, for example, is offering 30 percent tax credits, has $ 420 million available and recently added a 25 to 30 percent credit for post-production work. By comparison, California offers a 25 percent credit, has just $ 100 million available and has tougher eligibility rules.


Still, Lemisch said, the extension was critical.


“It sends a signal to the production community that California is committed in the short and long term,” she said. That’s vital, she pointed out, especially for the producers of TV dramas, which are the most desirable shows to land because they’re typically an hour long and shoot multiple episodes.


California’s output of TV dramas fell more than 11 percent last year, while While New York was hitting record production levels.


California does have some built-in advantages that aren’t going away. If you’re based in Hollywood, staying here can be cheaper than going out of state even with incentives, because you’re not paying to ship equipment and transport crews. The state’s infrastructure of studios and post-production facilities is still the most extensive.


But that doesn’t mean other states aren’t beating California to the production punch.


North Carolina – which made headlines when it enticed the feature film “Battlefield Los Angeles” to shoot there instead of in L.A. – is very busy these days. The first “Hunger Games” was filmed there, as was “Iron Man 3.’ NBC’s new drama “Revolution” and Showtime’s “Homeland” are in production there now.


Georgia, too, has seen a recent surge in feature filming. Paramount’s “Flight,” Fox’s “Parental Guidance” and Warner Bros.’ “Trouble With the Curve” all shot there.


(Steve Pond contributed to this report)


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J&J, Lilly, Merck plan clinical trial site database
















(Reuters) – Johnson & Johnson, Merck & Co Inc and Eli Lilly & Co, plan to launch a one-stop database of global clinical trial sites aimed at streamlining paperwork and speeding the process for testing new drugs.


The partners have begun securing approval from as many as 100,000 clinical investigators to enter their details into the database, Andreas Koester, head of clinical trial innovation/external alliances at J&J’s Janssen unit, said in a telephone interview.













“The feedback we have gotten so far is … they can’t wait to get rid of the administrative burden and red tape,” he said.


The initiative was limited to three companies while the kinks are ironed out, but the goal is for additional pharmaceutical companies to join in.


Ten drugmakers – J&J, Lilly, Abbott Laboratories Inc, AstraZeneca Plc, Boehringer Ingelheim, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co, GlaxoSmithKline Plc, Pfizer Inc, Roche Holding AG and Sanofi SA – announced in September the formation of the nonprofit TransCelerate BioPharma with the wider goal of simplifying and standardizing trial practices.


The clinical investigator database will contain key information such as infrastructure details and good clinical practice (GCP) training records.


“GCP doesn’t get any better if the investigator takes it repeatedly,” Koester said. “We wouldn’t have to ask each site – do you have a centrifuge, or do you have a minus 70 degrees freezer?”


J&J estimated that the investigator databank will be operational by the end of the year.


(This story corrects spelling of Lilly in headline and throughout story)


(Reporting By Deena Beasley; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer)


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TSX sinks to a 3-month low, led by mining, financials
















TORONTO (Reuters) – Canada‘s main stock index tumbled to a three-month low on Thursday, dragged down by the materials and financial sectors, as soft U.S. and European economic data dampened sentiment.


The Toronto Stock Exchange‘s S&P/TSX composite index <.GSPTSE> was down 143.03 points, or 1.20 percent, at 11,786.76 after the open. Earlier it had fallen to 11,761.34, its lowest since August 7.













(Reporting by John Tilak; Editing by James Dalgleish)


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Beating tax cheats key to Italy’s recovery plan
















ROME (AP) — Good plumbers may be worth their weight in gold, but when one was spotted zipping around in a bright red Ferrari, Italian tax police were fast on his trail.


Stamping out entrenched tax evasion is crucial to Premier Mario Monti‘s quest to keep Italy from succumbing to the European debt crisis, and it is critical to fellow eurozone members in more dire straits, such as Greece and Spain — which are also notorious for making cheating the taxman a way of life.













Indeed, Greece’s international rescue creditors have been pressing Greece for two years to reform its ailing tax system, citing poor collection as a key factor keeping the country mired in crisis. In Spain, where tax fraud is rampant, as much as €90 billion ($ 150 billion) is lost each year to tax fraud — the equivalent of the country’s national debt, according to Spain’s main tax inspectors union.


To succeed in Italy, authorities will have to catch the legions of self-employed and small business owners who brazenly lie about their earnings, like the plumber in the eastern town of Pescara, who socked away undeclared income in 30 bank accounts, or a successful pastry shop owner in Calabria, who on his tax return claimed he was earning next to crumbs.


And those are the less sophisticated schemers.


Tax police officials say that wealthy Italians, their companies and foreigners who make their money in Italy are increasingly trying to avoid taxes by using such strategies as falsely declaring that their base of operations or residence is abroad.


Another daunting challenge is the so-called “submerged” economy, a term embracing Italians who declare only a fraction or nothing at all of their earnings — and dentists, lawyers, doctors and other big-earning professionals are frequently among the worst offenders.


Tax evasion of all types in Italy totals about euros 240 billion ($ 300 billion), or 15 percent of the country’s gross domestic product of €1.6 trillion ($ 2 trillion), tax police estimate. Winning the war on tax cheats could therefore more than wipe out the country’s budget deficit, which is expected to increase to euros 42 billion ($ 53 billion), or 2.6 percent of GDP this year. That would start knocking away at the nation’s colossal public debt of €2 trillion ($ 2.5 trillion), or 125 percent of GDP.


But “big international frauds are up,” lamented Lt. Col. Gianluca Campana, in charge of the income tax unit revenue protection office at the Guardia di Finanza, Italy’s financial police corps which reports to the Economy Ministry.


The entrenched practice by many cafes, eateries, hair dressers and similar small business of neglecting to give customers mandatory cash register receipts commonly grabs the attention in crackdowns on tax evasion in Italy.


But, cautioned Campana, “one false (big business) invoice can equal no cash register receipts for coffees for two months.”


Over all of 2011, the total of non-declared income discovered by tax police amounted to some €50 billion ($ 65 billion), of which some 20 percent was due to international tax evasion, he said. By comparison, in the first nine months of this year, tax police discovered some €40 billion in undeclared income, with 30 percent of that blamed on international tax evasion, Campana said.


With the economic crisis shrinking bottom lines, and Italy increasingly on the hunt for big-time evasion, especially by big businesses, “there is a tendency to move capital abroad, using maneuvers apparently legal but which really are not,” Campana said. A classic technique consists of declaring one’s formal residence abroad in tax havens like Monte Carlo. Also common are companies that clearly have their business base in Italy but claim it is abroad in countries with far lower tax brackets.


Campana is armed with three degrees, including a masters in tax law from Milan’s Bocconi University, the prestigious economics institute formerly headed by Monti. He brings skills to this specialized police corps that are as finely tuned as sharp-shooting.


“We are going after the big cases (of evasion) in order to rake in more money,” Campana said.


The Ferrari-driving plumber hid some €2 million ($ 2.6 million) of his income over several years by giving his customers invoices — for jobs ranging from fixing leaks to installing new bathrooms — for the actual cost of his work, but kept a second, false registry of much lower figures for tax purposes, said Pescara tax police Col. Mauro Odorisio.


Armed with a 2008 law, authorities confiscated assets belonging to the plumber equivalent to the approximately €1 million ($ 1.3 million) they contend he owed in taxes, Odorisio said.


With Ferraris in red or yellow, and snazzy Porsches parked inside, Guardia di Finanza garages practically resemble luxury car dealerships.


The cars get sold to help recoup unpaid taxes and interest.


Overall, tax revenues in Italy were up by 4.1 percent, says the Economy Ministry, when comparing figures from the first eight months of 2012 with the same period in 2011, but much of that was due to new taxes, and not necessarily a revolution in citizens’ consciences about tax obligations.


Monti’s recipe relies heavily on taxes that are nearly impossible to avoid, such as sales tax. He also revived a property tax that his populist predecessor, Premier Silvio Berlusconi, had abolished in a promise to voters.


The ministry’s report last month noted that the property tax figured prominently in the “tendency toward growth” in tax revenues. But sales tax revenue dropped slightly despite higher sales tax rates, indicating that consumers were feeling the pinch of the stagnant economy.


The heavier fiscal burden seems to have driven some honest citizens to rebel against the engrained culture of tax evasion.


The number of phone calls from the public to the tax police’s hotline to report stores, restaurants and other businesses that didn’t give customers sales receipts has almost doubled in the first nine months of this year, compared with the same period in 2011.


It’s apparently dawning on Italians that shirking taxes in the end only costs them, in terms of ever-higher levies and cutbacks in public services.


Citizens now increasingly understand that “the lack of revenue over time caused by tax evaders forced the government to stiffen the tax burden on categories where you can’t evade taxes,” Campana said, referring to workers whose taxes are deducted from paychecks. Another area where evasion is close to impossible is real estate ownership.


Odorisio noted the crackdown included extending the statute of limitations on tax evasion from six to eight years and establishing prison as a penalty for big-time evasion.


Other weapons include a measure promoted by the Monti government that limits cash payments to no more than €1,000. Paying by credit card or personal check is a relatively new habit for Italians, who are used to carrying wads of cash in their pockets, even for big-ticket items like home renovations or vacations.


Past governments in Italy sometimes resorted to tax amnesties to try to boost revenues. But critics, contending some Italians counted on such a possibility, described that strategy as only perpetuating the tax cheat culture.


Spain hasn’t had much success with its own tax amnesty introduced by the conservative government in March. That measure, expiring soon, allows undeclared assets or those hidden in tax havens to be repatriated by paying a 10 percent tax without criminal penalty. The amnesty is estimated to recuperate far less than the expected €2.5 billion ($ 3.25 billion).


Greece saw demands for tax system reform from international rescue creditors added on to conditions for future rescue loan payments, as Greek authorities acknowledged that a high-profile campaign to crack down on major tax cheats has produced disappointing results.


The cash-strapped government over the last 10 months recovered just €19 million ($ 25 million) of the €13 billion ($ 17 billion) of arrears on the list. A prominent Greek magazine publisher recently tapped anger over rich tax evaders by publishing a list of people allegedly holding Swiss bank accounts. He was acquitted this month of breaching privacy laws.


Meanwhile, Italian tax police are chasing after cheats who have shown some of the most chutzpah about not paying their fair share of taxes, like the Padua woman who advertised on the Internet that she had a couple of “cash-only” bed and breakfast rooms to let.


Tax police discovered the lodgings are part of an apartment in public housing she was given after falsely declaring she was indigent on her annual tax forms.


____


AP reporters Derek Gatopoulos in Athens and Ciaran Giles in Madrid contributed to this report.


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Facebook stock up as lock-up expires on largest block of shares
















SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Shares of Facebook Inc jumped 10 percent in early trading on Wednesday, even as the biggest block of shares held by insiders became eligible for sale for the first time since the social media company’s disappointing debut in May.


In heavy morning trading, Facebook gained $ 2.02 to $ 21.89.













“While the lock-up is expiring, there is nothing requiring anybody to sell,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer at Solaris Group in Bedford Hills, New York. “Given the low price, these long-term holders are deciding to hold the stock and that is lifting it here as the fear of the expiration subsides.”


Roughly 800 million Facebook shares could begin trading on Wednesday after restrictions on insider selling were lifted on the biggest block of shares since the May initial public offering.


The lock-up expiration greatly expanded the 921 million-share “float” available for trading on the market until now.


Facebook, the world’s No. 1 online social network, became the only U.S. company to debut with a market value of more than $ 100 billion. But its value has dropped nearly 50 percent since the IPO on concerns about its long-term money-making prospects.


Insider trading lock-up provisions started to expire in August, and the rolling expirations have added to the pressure on Facebook’s stock.


Pivotal Research Group analyst Brian Wieser said he didn’t expect Facebook insiders to sell all of their shares as the lock-ups expired.


“I would expect heavy volumes over the next few weeks, but not undigestible volumes,” said Wieser. By his estimates, roughly 486 million of the nearly 800 million newly freed Facebook shares will be sold.


There is some evidence that the heavy interest in shorting the stock was dissipating, given the poor performance since it first sold shares in May.


According to Markit’s Data Explorers, about 28 percent of the shares available for short-selling were being borrowed for that purpose, down from a high of more than 80 percent in early August.


Similarly, SunGard’s Astec Analytics, which also tracks interest in shorting, noted in a comment on Tuesday that the cost of borrowing Facebook shares is down more than 50 percent since the beginning of the month.


“Everything would seem to indicate the market is losing its appetite to short Facebook,” wrote Karl Loomes, market analyst at Astec.


Several members of Facebook’s senior management have sold millions of dollars worth of shares in recent weeks through pre-arranged stock trading plans as lock-up restrictions expired.


Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg has sold roughly 530 million shares this month, netting just over $ 11 million, though she still owns roughly 20 million vested shares in Facebook.


In August, Facebook board member Peter Thiel sold roughly $ 400 million worth of Facebook stock, the majority of his stake, when an earlier phase of lock-up restrictions expired.


Facebook’s 28-year-old chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, has committed to not sell any shares before September 2013.


(Reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)


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Actor Channing Tatum dubbed People’s sexiest man alive
















NEW YORK (Reuters) – Actor Channing Tatum, who set female hearts fluttering in the summer movie hit “Magic Mike”, was named the sexiest man alive by People magazine on Wednesday.


“My first thought was, ‘Y’all are messing with me,” Tatum told the magazine after hearing the news.













The 32-year-old actor, who is married to actress Jenna Dewan-Tatum, is training to play an Olympic athlete in his upcoming film, “Foxcatcher”.


The couple, who have been married since 2009, are ready to start a family, according to People.


“The first number that pops into my head is three, but I just want one to be healthy and then we’ll see where we go after that,” he told the magazine.


Tatum joins a long list of Hollywood heartthrobs who also have also received the “sexiest man” title from the magazine including Brad Pitt, Johnny Depp, Ryan Reynolds, George Clooney and Matt Damon.


(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)


Celebrity News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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New Hope For ‘Man on Fire Syndrome’
















Pamela Costa has never known a day without agonizing pain in her legs and feet.


At age 11, the Seattle native was diagnosed with inherited erythromelalgia, a genetic condition that causes such severe pain and redness some call it “Man on Fire Syndrome.”













“Think of the feeling that you get when you come in from the cold and your hands and feet are rewarming too fast,” said Costa, 47. “I have that feeling all of the time.”


Inherited erythromelalgia is a disease of small nerves and blood vessels that causes severe pain in response to heat, pressure, exertion or stress.


“These people feel excruciating, scalding pain while putting on shoes or putting on a sweater,” said Dr. Stephen Waxman, a neuroscientist at Yale University and the West Haven Veterans Affairs Hospital. “They will keep their feet on ice to the point of getting gangrene, just to relieve the sensation.”


When Costa was growing up, playing outside would trigger the unbearable burning sensation.


“I used to come in from recess and just hold my hands on the cool metal of my school desk,” said Costa, who has more than two dozen relatives with the same affliction. “I have had cousins suffer devastating injuries from over-cooling themselves.”


Although the disease is rare, researchers are searching for clues to its cause with hopes of uncovering treatments for chronic pain of all kinds. The story starts at the molecular level within tiny nerves that conduct pain signals.


An Overactive Channel Protein


Pain comes in different forms, depending on the type of nerve that senses it. And for chronic pain patients, the pain is not quick and specific, but instead slow and sharp.


This slow pain is transmitted from the limbs and body to the brain along small nerves in the spinal cord called C-fibers. Messages move along these nerve fibers due to the action of special proteins in their membranes called channels. One specific type of channel is the Nav1.7 sodium channel, which is present in great numbers in the C-fibers of the spinal cord.


Work by Waxman and others has shown that patients with inherited erythromelalgia have a defect in their Nav1.7 channels that allows too many sodium ions to enter the C-fibers, causing an increase in the sensitivity of the nerves.


The specific atomic structure of the Nav1.7 channel has been modeled by Waxman’s lab, and the results are detailed in the current issue of Nature Communications. Armed with this new model of the Nav1.7 channel, the lab has been able to show why some patients with inherited erythromelalgia respond well to an anti-epileptic drug called Carbamazepine.


Furthermore, in studying the channel structure in many different people, Waxman and colleagues have found variations in the channel from person to person. These variations may cause some people to be more likely to experience chronic pain than others.


A New Drug Target


Patients with a completely defective Nav1.7 suffer from the opposite condition, known as congenital indifference to pain. These people do not experience pain at all, with case reports of being able to walk on hot coals without pain.


As the role of Nav1.7 in the mechanism for pain sensation becomes clearer, biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies will likely take notice, according to Waxman.


“I anticipate a race to develop Nav1.7 specific blockers,” he said.


Current drug therapies for pain include medicines like morphine, as well as aspirin and ibuprofen. While all of these decrease the sensation of pain, they also interact with other tissues such as the brain, heart and stomach, causing side effects.


Nav1.7 does not appear to be present in large quantities outside of the C-fibers of the spinal cord. As such, new drugs targeting this protein could herald a new class of pain treatments with many fewer side effects than our current drugs for pain.


Costa said she hopes to see a day where such a medicine would be available to her, providing her with full relief for the first time in her life.


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America’s Shadow Pharmacies
















In October 2003, the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions assembled for hearings on compounding pharmacies. These state-licensed retail businesses mix and sell medications, but without the federal safety approval required for mass-produced drugs. Then-Senator Christopher Bond (R-Mo.) convened the hearing by warning of “a significant number of very real problems caused by compounded drugs.” The committee, he said, had “received reports of non-sterile eye drops causing blindness; spinal injections contaminated with bacteria and/or fungus, resulting in hospitalizations and, in some cases, death; and children poisoned as a result of pharmacy compounding errors.” In one case, a pharmacist in Bond’s home state had been convicted in 2002 and sent to prison for diluting more than 4,000 doses of chemotherapy drugs.


Expert witnesses testified that to address such dangers, Congress should give the Food and Drug Administration authority over compounders. Not everyone agreed. Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) commented from the dais that he’d met privately with a physician named Steven Hotze, who was “eager to provide the committee with his input on this important topic.” That input bore the stamp of Hotze’s free-market philosophy. “Regulatory agencies,” he asserted in written testimony, “cannot prevent an individual from committing a criminal act. However, regulatory agencies can, and often do, adversely affect the efficient, safe, and productive practice of business.”













The impresario of a nationally prominent alternative-medicine practice in Houston, Hotze has helped popularize what he calls the Wellness Revolution and what others call the anti-aging movement. With roots in the timeless quest for rejuvenation, the disparate products and treatments associated with anti-aging became a booming business in the mid-1990s. Defined expansively to include everything from dietary supplements such as resveratrol to hormone-replacement capsules and creams, the anti-aging industry generates annual sales of $ 80 billion, according to the research firm Global Industry Analysts.
43750  feature pharmacy47  02  inline405 Americas Shadow PharmaciesPhotograph by Daniel SheaPharmacist Sarah Sellers quit compounding over inadequate sterilization and other practices. The influence of anti-aging compounders, she says, “has been surprising and not well-understood”


Hotze promotes an eight-step regime emphasizing “bio-identical” estrogen, testosterone, and other plant-derived hormones, which are made and sold at the Hotze Pharmacy, an arm of the 90-employee Hotze Health & Wellness Center, which resembles not a Walgreens (WAG) but a high-end spa in a suburban Houston neighborhood. Suzanne Somers, the former Three’s Company sitcom actress, Thigh Master marketer, and best-selling health-tips author, sings Hotze’s praises. So do patients who appear in his advertising videos or on his four-day-a-week Houston radio show. A conservative activist, Hotze has gone to court and coordinated online campaigns to thwart federal oversight of compounding pharmacies, many of which resemble conventional drug-dispensing stores. He and other anti-aging advocates are a vital subset of the compounding industry. Indeed, compounders continue to operate in a regulatory gray zone, in part because of Hotze and his anti-aging colleagues, according to Sarah Sellers, a pharmacist who has advised the FDA. “Their influence,” she says, “has been surprising and not well-understood.”


Congress didn’t act on compounding after the Senate hearings nine years ago. Legislation surfaced in 2007, but again, it didn’t get far. Now, in the wake of a meningitis outbreak linked to a compound pharmacy in Framingham, Mass., bills are being introduced once more. Eclipsed temporarily by the lethal hurricane in the Northeast and the presidential election, the New England Compounding Center (NECC) scandal has forced the issue. In October, NECC recalled more than 17,000 vials of a back-pain steroid after tainted doses were linked to cases of fungal meningitis. So far, 438 people nationwide have suffered infections, leading in many cases to strokes and to swelling of the membranes covering the brain or spinal column; 32 patients have died.


Neither Hotze nor other anti-aging practitioners are implicated in the meningitis outbreak. Many mainstream physicians and researchers question the efficacy and potential side effects of certain anti-aging treatments, but that’s a separate issue from whether compounding needs better oversight. This is the story of the little-noticed role Hotze and other wellness entrepreneurs play in the compounding industry—and, in particular, how they’ve helped compounders avoid more stringent federal regulation.


Hotze, 62, holds proudly defiant views on many issues, none stronger than his hostility to what he sees as government overreaching. On compounding, he says: “They want to regulate us to death. That’s what we’ve fought against.”


A 1976 graduate of the University of Texas Medical School, Hotze began his career conventionally, as an emergency room physician and then general practitioner. Mainstream medicine, though, left him frustrated. Many patients seemed not to respond to FDA-approved drugs he prescribed. In 1988 he had an awakening. An elderly woman told him: “Ever since I threw away all the medications you gave me, I feel like a million dollars.” He shared this revelation with his wife, Janie. They “knelt before God,” according to his center’s website, “and asked Him to give them a way that they could help their patients get well, and at the same time build a practice that could support their eight children.”4d74e  feature pharmacy47  03  inline405 Americas Shadow PharmaciesPhotograph by Daniel SheaThe Wellness Guru: “They want to regulate us to death. That’s what we’ve fought against”


Their prayers were answered. Hotze became a leading evangelist of alternative treatment aimed at correcting hormonal imbalances rather than “masking” symptoms with what he disparages as “anti drugs”—antibiotics, antihistamines, antidepressants, and so forth. “We are able to help you regain and prolong your quality of life by utilizing bio-identical hormones, vitamins, and minerals, and an optimal eating regime, all of which restore hormones to optimal levels, strengthen the immune system, and increase energy levels,” he promises in promotional literature. “Get back your life” is the slogan at the Hotze center. The nattily attired proprietor refers to his patients as “guests,” adding: “I’m in the hospitality business, and in that context, we provide health care.”


By the early 2000s, enterprising pharmacists all across the country were benefiting from the spreading popularity of anti-aging therapies. A central tenet of this movement is that patients ought to seek natural remedies whenever possible and avoid at all costs what Hotze calls “counterfeit” hormones manufactured under patent by large FDA-regulated corporations. He points to mainstream research showing that these drugs increase the risk of breast cancer and heart attack. He advocates instead unpatented mixtures made by compounding pharmacies—like his. His bio-identicals are formulated from yams and, he says, “fit perfectly into the hormone receptors found in the cells of the body.”


Although compounding may conjure images of cloaked apothecaries hunched over mortar and pestle, the practice was widespread until big manufacturers systematized drug production 60 to 70 years ago. Even after the FDA began regulating the safety of new drugs in 1938, state-chartered pharmacies continued to provide specialty medications that weren’t otherwise commercially available: a syrup with a flavor added to appeal to a sick child, a pill reformulated to remove an allergen, a customized intravenous solution for a cancer sufferer. Viewing compounders as a disappearing breed operating on a small scale, the FDA didn’t require that their one-off mixtures receive federal approval as new drugs.


Meanwhile, the advent of compounded wellness remedies proved a godsend for struggling mom-and-pop pharmacies competing against discount retailers, in part because most chains didn’t bother with hormones, which often aren’t covered by health insurance. In her 2010 book Selling the Fountain of Youth, author and former Businessweek senior writer Arlene Weintraub recounts how pharmacists “could go into a back room, mix up hormones according to a doctor’s instructions, and sell them straight to patients.” By 2003 more than 30 million prescriptions for compounded drugs were being written every year. Today about 3 percent of all prescriptions call for compounded drugs, according to the International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists (IACP), a trade group.


Not all pharmacists were gung-ho about the revival of compounding, which was also spurred by compounders’ ability to provide versions of drugs that large companies ceased to manufacture. As a rookie pharmacist in Florida in the early 1990s, Sellers, the former FDA adviser, observed what she considered inadequate sterilization of compounded spinal injections and a lack of potency testing. She suggested switching exclusively to patented, FDA-approved products. Her employer refused, telling her that doing so would reduce profits. Sellers quit and began doing broader research on sterile compounding. In 1998 the FDA invited her to serve on its Advisory Committee on Pharmacy Compounding. The panel was charged with helping to implement a federal law enacted in 1997 to clarify the rules that applied to compounders.


The FDA had grown concerned that some compounding pharmacies were going beyond the one-patient, one-prescription model to become, essentially, drug manufacturers. The agency took this anxiety to Congress, which, as part of the 1997 FDA Modernization Act, said compounding could remain exempt from federal safety review, but only in its traditional prescription-by-prescription form. If they produced drugs in bulk and not to fill individual patient scripts, pharmacists would be considered manufacturers. In a provision that would prove fateful, Congress sought to deter mass production by prohibiting pharmacists from advertising compounded drugs.


Some doctors and pharmacists viewed the federal action as an intrusion. “We’re regulated as it is,” Hotze says. “We have state regulation that is thorough and sufficient.” David Miller concurs. The chief executive of the IACP, to whose political action committee Hotze contributes, Miller notes that “doctors, nurses, and hospitals are all state-regulated. The FDA’s repeated efforts to oversee us—that is just an attempt to do something without jurisdictional authority. We have made our voice heard in opposition.”


That they did. In 1998, before the Modernization Act had even been enforced, pharmacists in six states (although not Hotze) filed suit in federal court in Nevada claiming their constitutional rights were endangered. When the litigation reached the Supreme Court four years later, the IACP filed a brief pointing out that compounding enjoyed a storied tradition in America: John Winthrop (1606-76), son of the first governor of Massachusetts, was one of the country’s first pharmacists in an era when compounding was the entire game. The ban on ads for compounded drugs, industry lawyers argued, infringed pharmacists’ First Amendment right to free speech. The argument worked. By a 5-4 vote, the justices ruled that preventing large-scale compounding was an insufficient rationale to justify compromising “commercial speech.”


In the years that followed, Hotze and another group of pharmacists stayed on the offensive. In 2004, nine months after he personally lobbied the Senate committee, Hotze was back on Capitol Hill, telling a House subcommittee not to trust federal drug regulators. “The drugs that the FDA approves kill Americans every day,” he said. Later that year he helped organize a group of compounding pharmacists to sue the FDA again, this time in Texas. The suit aimed to settle once and for all whether the agency had authority over the drug mixers. Instead, it added to the muddle.


A federal trial judge initially ruled for the pharmacists, but in 2008 a three-judge appellate panel said the Supreme Court’s decision six years earlier should be read narrowly to allow compounding with a modicum of FDA oversight. The upshot was that the federal agency claimed it still had some authority while compounders insisted it had almost none.


Simultaneously, Hotze spearheaded a lobbying campaign to block a bill introduced in 2007 by the late Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts that would have given the FDA the unmistakable clout to inspect and regulate compounding pharmacists. A Hotze-sponsored online group called Project: FANS (Freedom for Access to Natural Solutions) organized telephone and e-mail campaigns to urge members of Congress to oppose the Kennedy bill. FANS warned that “the bureaucrats at the FDA would determine which pharmaceutical company drug is best for you.”


Compounders know how to mobilize. During the 2007 Compounders on Capitol Hill campaign, the IACP dispatched 404 members to pay in-person visits to 285 congressional offices. Since 2000 the IACP has spent $ 1.1 million on lobbying in Washington, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics. That money has purchased the services of such engineers of influence as Parry, Romani, DeConcini & Symms and Arnold & Porter. Never a top priority for either party, the Kennedy bill died. The FDA continued to write the occasional warning letter about compounders whose conduct resembled that of an interstate manufacturer; lacking clear authority, however, the agency mostly stayed on the sidelines.


Hotze’s personal brand is familiar to many Houstonians whether or not they partake of the Wellness Revolution. On one recent morning he arrived at the health center after an appearance on Great Day Houston on the local CBS affiliate, during which he puckishly recommended that middle-aged men seek testosterone replacement therapy to “put a tiger back in your tank.” Clad in a camera-friendly cerulean blazer and paisley pocket square, the doctor hustled to his office, where a film crew from out of town was set to shoot a video for his website. “It’s all about marketing,” Hotze says. “That’s where the leads come from.”4d74e  feature pharmacy47  01  inline202 Americas Shadow PharmaciesStill life art direction by Morgan Brill


Over the past 15 years, Hotze estimates, the 20,000-square-foot center has served 25,000 guests. Hotze says 20 percent of his patients come from out of state, some because they’ve seen his ads in airline magazines. His elegantly appointed second-floor waiting area resembles a luxury hotel lounge. The mostly female staff of nurses, medical assistants, and telemarketers with headsets wear identical, trimly cut black pantsuits. In the spotless compounding lab, technicians in protective hats, tunics, and booties weigh and mix the powders and creams purchased by guests. The Hotze Pharmacy handles about 450 prescriptions a day. As many insurance companies won’t cover the remedies Hotze prescribes, customers pay out of their own pockets.


The doctor’s interests extend beyond medicine. According to the Houston Chronicle, Hotze has been “a powerhouse” in local Republican primaries. Opposing gay causes and candidates has been one of his main missions, although he hasn’t always been as successful on that score as he has in thwarting federal pharmacy regulation. In a 1990 video titled “Restoring America: How You Can Impact Civil Government,” Hotze told viewers: “There is no neutrality. Civil government will either reflect biblical Christianity, or it will reflect anti-Christian positions. You can make the difference.”


Hotze merged several of his concerns into a campaign in 2010 against President Barack Obama’s health overhaul bill. The FANS website urged citizens to lobby members of Congress to kill the legislation. “Do we want to kiss goodbye to medical innovation, like possible cures for cancer and other life-saving medical treatments?” FANS asked. “Keep the government out of medical care and let the free market work its magic.”


The NECC scandal—which, to repeat, did not involve Hotze or anti-aging therapies—has restarted the debate about whether state-level regulation is sufficient to ensure the safety of compounded drugs, or if it’s time to reconsider the type of oversight Hotze and the IACP have frustrated so far. (“What went on up there in Massachusetts, I can’t say,” Hotze notes. “I don’t know the facts.”)


In an Oct. 29 survey of pharmacy board records from all 50 states, the office of Representative Edward Markey (D-Mass.) concluded that the agencies “do not, as a general rule, appear to undertake enforcement actions that relate to the safety or scope of compounding pharmacy practices.” Rather, the states “focus more on compliance with traditional pharmacy licensing, controlled substances, and other requirements.” Massachusetts health officials have fired the director of the state’s pharmacy board for failing to investigate a complaint about NECC. Markey, in whose district NECC operated until October, has introduced a bill that would authorize the FDA to inspect and oversee compounding pharmacies.
In addition to the recent meningitis outbreak, Markey’s staff has found records documenting 23 deaths and at least 86 serious illnesses or injuries since 2001 associated with improper compounding practices. “These totals should be considered to be conservative,” the staff concluded, “since in many cases the reviewed documents noted the existence of adverse events but did not specify the type or quantity.”


Hotze and IACP note the FDA had a chance to crack down on NECC and missed it. Because of hints that the business was compounding on a large scale, the federal agency inspected NECC and in 2006 issued a warning letter. “The FDA suspected this was a drug manufacturer, not a legitimate compounding pharmacy, and they had jurisdiction to close down a drug manufacturer but did not,” Miller of the IACP says. “It seems facile,” he adds, to propose giving the FDA more power when the agency already has the ability to shut rogue drug factories. “It’s a frustration for our profession,” Miller says, “that the FDA seems intent on insinuating itself into the day-to-day practice of pharmacy.”


The FDA wants Congress to expand and clarify its authority. In anticipation of a new round of Capitol hearings on Nov. 14 and 15, the agency issued a statement asking lawmakers to strengthen federal oversight. FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg was scheduled to testify before separate House and Senate committees. While lawmakers debate the future of compounding, Hotze himself was back in Washington to monitor the hearings and meet privately with several members of Congress. “The last thing we need,” he says, referring to the NECC case, “is for Washington to overreact to one bad actor.”


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General investigated for emails to Petraeus friend
















PERTH, Australia (AP) — In a new twist to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scandal, the Pentagon said Tuesday that the top American commander in Afghanistan, Gen. John Allen, is under investigation for alleged “inappropriate communications” with a woman who is said to have received threatening emails from Paula Broadwell, the woman with whom Petraeus had an extramarital affair.


Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said in a written statement issued to reporters aboard his aircraft, en route from Honolulu to Perth, Australia, that the FBI referred the matter to the Pentagon on Sunday.













Panetta said that he ordered a Pentagon investigation of Allen on Monday.


A senior defense official traveling with Panetta said Allen’s communications were with Jill Kelley, who has been described as an unpaid social liaison at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., which is headquarters to the U.S. Central Command. She is not a U.S. government employee.


Kelley is said to have received threatening emails from Broadwell, who is Petraeus’ biographer and who had an extramarital affair with Petraeus that reportedly began after he became CIA director in September 2011.


Petraeus resigned as CIA director on Friday.


Allen, a four-star Marine general, succeeded Petraeus as the top American commander in Afghanistan in July 2011.


The senior official, who discussed the matter only on condition of anonymity because it is under investigation, said Panetta believed it was prudent to launch a Pentagon investigation, although the official would not explain the nature of Allen’s problematic communications.


The official said 20,000 to 30,000 pages of emails and other documents from Allen’s communications with Kelley between 2010 and 2012 are under review. He would not say whether they involved sexual matters or whether they are thought to include unauthorized disclosures of classified information. He said he did not know whether Petraeus is mentioned in the emails.


“Gen. Allen disputes that he has engaged in any wrongdoing in this matter,” the official said. He said Allen currently is in Washington.


Panetta said that while the matter is being investigated by the Defense Department Inspector General, Allen will remain in his post as commander of the International Security Assistance Force, based in Kabul. He praised Allen as having been instrumental in making progress in the war.


The FBI’s decision to refer the Allen matter to the Pentagon rather than keep it itself, combined with Panetta’s decision to allow Allen to continue as Afghanistan commander without a suspension, suggested strongly that officials viewed whatever happened as a possible infraction of military rules rather than a violation of federal criminal law.


Allen was Deputy Commander of Central Command, based in Tampa, prior to taking over in Afghanistan. He also is a veteran of the Iraq war.


In the meantime, Panetta said, Allen’s nomination to be the next commander of U.S. European Command and the commander of NATO forces in Europe has been put on hold “until the relevant facts are determined.” He had been expected to take that new post in early 2013, if confirmed by the Senate, as had been widely expected.


Panetta said President Barack Obama was consulted and agreed that Allen’s nomination should be put on hold. Allen was to testify at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday. Panetta said he asked committee leaders to delay that hearing.


NATO officials had no comment about the delay in Allen’s appointment.


“We have seen Secretary Panetta‘s statement,” NATO spokeswoman Carmen Romero said in Brussels. “It is a U.S. investigation.”


Panetta also said he wants the Senate Armed Services Committee to act promptly on Obama’s nomination of Gen. Joseph Dunford to succeed Allen as commander in Afghanistan. That nomination was made several weeks ago. Dunford’s hearing is also scheduled for Thursday.


___


Associated Press writer Slobodan Lekic in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.


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Day-Lewis heeded inner ear to find Lincoln’s voice
















LOS ANGELES (AP) — A towering figure such as Abraham Lincoln, who stood 6 feet 4 and was one of history’s master orators, must have had a booming voice to match, right? Not in Daniel Day-Lewis‘ interpretation.


Day-Lewis, who plays the 16th president in Steven Spielberg‘s epic film biography “Lincoln,” which goes into wide release this weekend, settled on a higher, softer voice, saying it’s more true to descriptions of how the man actually spoke.













“There are numerous accounts, contemporary accounts, of his speaking voice. They tend to imply that it was fairly high, in a high register, which I believe allowed him to reach greater numbers of people when he was speaking publicly,” Day-Lewis said in an interview. “Because the higher registers tend to reach farther than the lower tones, so that would have been useful to him.”


“Lincoln” is just the fifth film in the last 15 years for Day-Lewis, a two-time Academy Award winner for best actor (“My Left Foot” and “There Will Be Blood”). Much of his pickiness stems from a need to understand characters intimately enough to feel that he’s actually living out their experiences.


The soft, reedy voice of his Lincoln grew out of that preparation.


“I don’t separate vocal work, and I don’t dismember a character into its component parts and then kind of bolt it all together, and off you go,” Day-Lewis said. “I tend to try and allow things to happen slowly, over a long period of time. As I feel I’m growing into a sense of that life, if I’m lucky, I begin to hear a voice.


“And I don’t mean in a supernatural sense. I begin to hear the sound of a voice, and if I like the sound of that, I live with that for a while in my mind’s ear, whatever one might call it, my inner ear, and then I set about trying to reproduce that.”


Lincoln himself likely learned to use his voice to his advantage depending on the situation, Day-Lewis said.


“He was a supreme politician. I’ve no doubt in my mind that when you think of all the influences in his life, from his childhood in Kentucky and Indiana and a good part of his younger life in southern Illinois, that the sounds of all those regions would have come together in him somehow.


“And I feel that he probably learned how to play with his voice in public and use it in certain ways in certain places and in certain other ways in other places. Especially in the manner in which he expressed himself. I think, I’ve no doubt that he was conscious enough of his image.”


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