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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: epicure who wrote (15525)6/5/2001 10:32:28 AM
From: Solon  Respond to of 82486
 
One word with the value of a page...



To: epicure who wrote (15525)6/5/2001 5:03:51 PM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 82486
 
washingtonpost.com

The Post Health section is all about bullying. I haven't read it yet, but there's lotsa stuff.

Karen



To: epicure who wrote (15525)6/6/2001 8:02:21 AM
From: Lane3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 82486
 
X, I noticed this film on tonight's schedule. The subject matter seems appropriate to recent thread discussions. Are you familiar with it?

The Sorrow and the Pity (1970) (270 min) PG
Filmmaker Marcel Ophuls' examination of public acquiescence to Nazi barbarity during the German occupation of France.
Category: Documentary
Black & White, Video
8:00 pm to 12:30 am on Turner Classic Movies

Karen



To: epicure who wrote (15525)6/6/2001 9:12:29 PM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 82486
 
Gates Donates Additional $2B to Foundation

By David Bank
Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
Bill Gates donated an additional $2 billion to his philanthropic foundation,
reinforcing the Microsoft Corp. chairman's intention to play a major role in
global health policy.
The donation brings the endowment of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,
which already was the nation's largest, to more than $23 billion. In the
past three years, the foundation has emerged as a significant new source of
funds for global health initiatives, particularly in the development and
distribution of vaccines for diseases that affect the developing world.
The latest gift increased speculation about the role the foundation may play
at the United Nation's General Assembly devoted to AIDS later this month.
Mr. and Mrs. Gates both have expressed support for U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan's call for a a global fund of $7 billion to $10 billion a year to
fight AIDS, as well as malaria and tuberculosis.
In March, Bill Gates met with Mr. Annan to urge him to create a central
framework through which governments could increase their funding for AIDS
prevention and treatment. A Gates Foundation spokesman said Mr. Gates's
latest contribution was unrelated to the activity at the U.N. and said no
decisions had been made about how to best support Mr. Annan's efforts.
Gordon Perkin, director of the foundation's global health program, said the
foundation is unlikely to make a direct donation to the fund, but is
discussing several new initiatives that might complement the U.N. effort.
Among those is increased research into microbicides that could be used to
reduce sexual transmission of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, and a plan to
offer debt relief to poor countries to enable them to increase their
anti-AIDS funding. The foundation already has committed about $300 million
to AIDS-prevention efforts, including more than $125 million to the
International AIDS Vaccine Initiative.
In her first major health policy speech last week, Mrs. Gates urged the U.S.
and other governments "to commit unprecedented resources to the fight
against AIDS." She said progress was possible, "but only if wealthy
countries, starting with the U.S., increase their funding in a very dramatic
way." The Bush administration has committed $200 million to the nascent U.N.
global AIDS fund.
At the Global Health Council's annual awards dinner in Washington, D.C.,
Mrs. Gates said her husband and she were outraged that some vaccines, such
as for hepatitis B, were available many years earlier in the U.S. than in
underdeveloped parts of the world. "When an AIDS vaccine becomes available,
we will make it available everywhere," she promised.
At the end of last year, the Gates foundation had total assets of $21.15
billion, and was liable for $2.11 billion in grant awards, according to the
foundation's annual report. Last year's grants of $1.54 billion outstripped
income from investments of $304 million.
Contributions from Mr. Gates come in the form of Microsoft shares, which are
immediately sold, with the proceeds held in a diversified portfolio. In
addition to global health, the foundation also makes grants for education
and for activities in the Pacific Northwest.
According to the Chronicle of Philanthropy, the Gates Foundation had the
most assets of any foundation in the country. Following it on the list,
published in February, were the Lilly Endowment, with $15.2 billion in
assets; the Ford Foundation, with $14.2 billion; the David and Lucile
Packard Foundation, with $9.8 billion; and the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation, with $8.7 billion.
(END) DOW JONES NEWS 06-06-01
09:02 PM