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To: JDN who wrote (37772)11/14/2000 4:41:53 PM
From: trouthead  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
It is not illegal to have requested recounts in specific counties. Bush could have done the same. Though he seems intent on making sure that the true tally is not known. What is he afraid of? I wish they would hand recount all of florida.

When is the SUNW split to become effective?

jb



To: JDN who wrote (37772)11/14/2000 5:02:17 PM
From: Steve Dietrich  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 64865
 
<<Dear JC: I am sorry but you dont understand how these readers for punch cards work. You ALWAYS pick up more votes when you hand read compared to punch card machine read. Thats because cards might be stuck together, chads folded over etc etc HOWEVER, it is believed that since the machine knows no party the errors are statistically balanced out when involving a large population. The catch is that when you ONLY hand read a few COUNTIES EACH OF WHICH IS SKEWED TO ONE PARTY then the results will be skewed to that party. ie if you pick up 100 additonal cards and one party has two thirds of the registration, chances are THAT party will pick up 66 votes. Fla. is roughly divided equal so to be fair would require handcounting the entire state, an impossible condition. JDN>>

It seems you're the one who doesn't fully understand, JDN. Different counties in Florida use different vote counting systems. And guess what, the ones in the big Democratic counties are 16 times more error prone than the ones in most of the Republican counties...

This from Salon:

"At a Tallahassee press conference on Saturday, Florida election officials revealed that in last Tuesday's election, there were far more problems in counties using the punch-card system than the optical scan system, or OpScan. In punch-card counties, 32 ballots per thousand cast had to be invalidated. But in counties using the optical scan system, or OpScan, only two per thousand were thrown out. Around Florida, and throughout the county, election reformers are trying to move away from the punch-card system. Massachussetts has stopped using them entirely; so has San Francisco County.

Coincidentally or not, Florida counties using the OpScan system tend to be Republican, while the punch-card counties are disproportionately Democratic. And one Republican county still using punch cards, Seminole, voluntarily hand counted its ballots when it conducted its state-mandated recount last week -- and gave another 98 votes to Bush, his largest county gain in the recount."

Steve Dietrich



To: JDN who wrote (37772)11/14/2000 8:02:04 PM
From: High-Tech East  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
*** OFF TOPIC *** OFF TOPIC *** OFF TOPIC ***

Abiomed Reports Progress on Heart Replacement by Jed Seltzer

NEW YORK, Nov 14 (Reuters) - ABIOMED Inc.(ABMD) on Tuesday reported positive early test results for its implantable heart system, and the company's stock soared on hopes it would make a full replacement heart available in the next few years.

"This would be a true breakthrough," said Salomon Smith Barney analyst Phil Nalbone. "We think they'll have the first successful fully implantable heart."

Shares of the company closed up $4-9/64, or about 17 percent, at $28-17/64 Tuesday on the Nasdaq. The stock's year-high is $41-11/16 and the 52-week low is $12-5/8.

The mechanical heart would be made from plastics and metals in a seamless package, precluding clotting or leakage.

The Danvers, Mass.-based company said it achieved a goal it set to test the durability and reliability of the heart system. Once the durability and reliability testing is completed in the laboratory, the company said it intends to apply for an investigational device exemption (IDE) to begin human trials.

Investigational status granted by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is the first request to test a drug or device on humans, and follows successful animal studies that suggest the treatment could work in people.

ABIOMED's durability trials on the experimental heart are intended to determine "whether it's robust...whether it can endure the tests it will go through in the human body," Nalbone said.

HUMAN TRIALS IN 2001

Nalbone said he expects ABIOMED to begin human trials in early 2001.

Scientists have researched full mechanical hearts for decades and have even experimented with patients, but all attempts have been unsuccessful so far, Nalbone said.

Mechanical heart valves have been available for years, but an entire artificial or manufactured heart to place into humans remains elusive.

Nalbone said he believed the company would charge between $75,000 and $100,000 per heart. He added that tens of thousands of patients who suffer from heart failure need transplants or replacements, but there are only about 2,500 human donors each year.

In a research note Tuesday, Banc of America analyst Kurt Kruger said the device is a landmark discovery that would significantly benefit ABIOMED.

"We believe the demand for such a device will be immense as the scarcity of natural replacement hearts leaves as many as 100,000 patients a year with no viable clinical alternatives," Kruger wrote.

"The significance of this first ever product and our growing confidence that the first human implant of the device will occur in short order certainly justifies higher levels than the current market capitalization."

Transplant patients suffer from serious side effects of drugs intended to prevent the body from rejecting the new heart, but ABIOMED's system would not require such anti-rejection drugs, Nalbone said.

However, Nalbone said, patients with a mechanical heart would be exposed to the risk of mechanical failure or potential blood clotting.

reuters.com



To: JDN who wrote (37772)11/14/2000 9:15:19 PM
From: JC Jaros  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Hey, all I know is David Boies is on CNN talking right now, with the words "Gore Campaign Attorney" under his name. :) -JCJ



To: JDN who wrote (37772)11/14/2000 10:25:46 PM
From: Charles Tutt  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 64865
 
Sorry, but vote counting isn't supposed to be an exercise in statistical sampling. EVERY vote should count, ESPECIALLY when the totals are close, IMHO.

Charles Tutt (TM)