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SCIENCE IN THE NEWS - April 9, 2002: Digest
VOICE ONE:
This is Sarah Long.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Doug Johnson
with Science in the News, a VOA Special English program about recent
developments in Science. Today we tell about President Bush's choices
for the two top medical positions in the United States government. And
we tell about the winner of one of the world's largest prizes.
((THEME))
VOICE ONE:
President Bush has nominated
candidates for the nation's two top medical positions. He named Elias
Zerhouni (EL-ee-ahs Zur-HOH-nee) to direct the National Institutes of
Health. The N-I-H, near Washington, D-C, is the government's medical
research agency.
The president chose Richard
Carmona (Car-MOAN-ah) to be surgeon general. The surgeon general is
the government's chief policy advisor and spokesperson about health
issues. The Senate must approve both nominations.
VOICE TWO:
The National Institutes
of Health has lacked a director for more than two years. Cancer researcher
Harold Varmus left that position at the end of Nineteen-Ninety-Nine.
Doctor Zerhouni currently
serves as a top official at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
in Baltimore, Maryland. He also is chief of radiology at the university's
hospital. Doctor Zerhouni is nationally known for excellence in radiology
and research administration.
He is an expert in the
science that uses X-rays and other techniques to find and treat diseases.
These techniques include magnetic resonance imaging that shows soft
body tissue. He also has earned praise for developing a process that
takes moving pictures of the heart.
Some critics say Doctor
Zerhouni is not especially known for performing research. By comparison,
the former N-I-H director, Harold Varmus, won a Nobel Prize for Medicine
in Nineteen-Eighty-Nine for research on the genetics of cancer.
VOICE ONE:
Elias Zerhouni is fifty-one
years old. He is an American citizen who was born in Algeria. He completed
his medical education at the University of Algiers in Nineteen-Seventy-Five.
That same year, he and his wife arrived in the United States without
family or friends in this country and with little money. He began his
training as a doctor at Johns Hopkins.
In the early Nineteen-Eighties,
Doctor Zerhouni taught at the Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk.
He returned to Johns Hopkins in Nineteen-Eighty-Five. Ever since, he
has held increasingly important responsibilities there. He also has
established or helped establish two medical companies. One of these
companies made it possible for patients to have magnetic resonance imaging
without going to a hospital.
Last year, Doctor Zerhouni
helped get private money to start the Institute for Cell Engineering
at Johns Hopkins. The institute is working to develop research with
special cells called stem cells. Scientists believe this research may
result in treatments for a number of diseases.
VOICE TWO:
President Bush says he
is sure Doctor Zerhouni will defend Administration positions on important
medical research issues. These include stem cells and cloning -- creating
genetic copies of living things.
If confirmed by the Senate,
Doctor Zerhouni will lead a huge medical research organization. N-I-H
occupies more than one-hundred-twenty hectares in Bethesda, Maryland.
It has twenty-seven separate institutes or centers. They employ fifteen-thousand
people.
The N-I-H budget for
Two-Thousand-Three is expected to be more than twenty-seven-thousand-million
dollars. This is about one-hundred percent more than in Nineteen-Ninety-Eight.
N-I-H scientists supervise
about forty-thousand research projects. They search for causes and treatments
for many diseases. However, N-I-H carries out its main research on cancer,
heart disease, AIDS and genetic diseases. It also has increased research
on chemicals used in possible terrorism attacks.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
President Bush has chosen
Richard Carmona to be the country's new surgeon general. Doctor Carmona
is fifty-two years old. He is an expert in emergency medical care. He
operates hospital emergency rooms in Tucson, Arizona. He also serves
as a police officer.
Two years ago, the National
Association of Police Organizations named him one of nation's best policemen.
About ten years ago, Doctor Carmona rescued a person trapped on a dangerous,
snowy mountainside. He did this while suspended from a helicopter. This
heroic action became the subject of a movie.
VOICE TWO:
If confirmed as surgeon
general, Doctor Carmona will direct the Commissioned Corps of the Public
Health Service. More than five-thousand-five-hundred public health workers
belong to this organization. Its members work during national emergencies.
For example, they worked during the terrorist attacks in New York City
and near Washington, D-C, last September.
The surgeon general also
prepares reports on public health issues. President Bush said he has
asked Doctor Carmona to speak to the nation about alcohol and drug problems.
The president also wants him to urge Americans to get more physical
exercise.
VOICE ONE:
Richard Carmona grew
up in a poor Hispanic family in New York City. He left high school before
completing the requirements. At age seventeen, he joined the United
States Army. He won Purple Heart medals after being wounded two times
during the Vietnam War.
Richard Carmona finished
his high school education after returning from the war. Then he attended
college and medical school at the University of California in San Francisco.
He continued his medical
education at hospitals in San Francisco. He moved to Arizona in Nineteen-Eighty-Five.
There he started the first emergency care program in the area. He became
director of these trauma services at Tucson Medical Center.
VOICE TWO:
Richard Carmona serves
as a doctor for the Pima County police. He helps lead their special
crisis force team. He also teaches at the University of Arizona in Tucson.
Friends describe him as one of the most energetic people they have known.
Democratic Senator Edward
Kennedy of Massachusetts heads the Senate committee that will question
Doctor Zerhouni and Doctor Carmona. He has praised both men. Senator
Kennedy says he looks forward to hearing their positions on health issues.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
A British physicist who
became a Christian clergyman has been awarded one of the world's largest
prizes. The Reverend John Polkinghorne is this year's winner of the
Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion.
The Templeton Prize is
worth about one-million dollars. It is named for British businessman
John Templeton. Mister Templeton established the award in Nineteen-Seventy-Two
to honor people for their work in religion. The winners for the past
four years have been scientists.
The Reverend John Polkinghorne
is a mathematical physicist. His writings on the links between science
and religion have helped increase public interest in the subject.
VOICE TWO:
John Charlton Polkinghorne
was born in England in Nineteen-Thirty. His family was very religious
and often attended Church of England services. As a boy, John became
interested in mathematics. He completed his education at the University
of Cambridge.
He later became a professor
of mathematical physics at Cambridge. His mathematical programs for
estimating the movement of fast-moving particles are considered his
most important scientific findings. His work led to his membership in
the Royal Society, Britain's leading scientific organization.
Professor Polkinghorne
decided to leave his teaching position to study religion in Nineteen-Seventy-Nine.
Three years later, he became a Christian clergyman.
VOICE ONE:
Father Polkinghorne has
written more than twenty books. The best known ones include "Belief
in God in an Age of Science" and "The Faith of a Physicist."
Father Polkinghorne says he believes in both science and religion. He
says he sees them as helping each other, not as opponents. He says the
idea of a huge explosion creating the universe does not affect his belief
in God as creator.
Father Polkinghorne will
receive the Templeton prize in a private ceremony in London later this
month. He says he will use the prize money to aid the study of science
and religion.
((THEME))
VOICE TWO:
This Science in the News
program was written by Jerilyn Watson and George Grow. It was produced
by Cynthia Kirk. This is Sarah Long.
VOICE ONE:
And this is Doug Johnson.
Join us again next week for more news about science in Special English
on the Voice of America.
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