Latest Episodes for this Channel
Wed November 12 2008
MAKING OF A NATION: Andrew Jackson served as president of the United States from eighteen twenty-nine to eighteen thirty-seven. His first term seemed ...
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MAKING OF A NATION: Andrew Jackson served as president of the United States from eighteen twenty-nine to eighteen thirty-seven. His first term seemed to be mostly a political battle with Vice
President John C. Calhoun. Calhoun wanted to be the next president. Jackson believed his secretary of state, Martin Van Buren, would be a better president. And Van Buren wanted the job. He won the
president's...
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MAKING OF A NATION: Andrew Jackson served as president of the United States from eighteen twenty-nine to eighteen thirty-seven. His first term seemed to be mostly a political battle with Vice
President John C. Calhoun. Calhoun wanted to be the next president. Jackson believed his secretary of state, Martin Van Buren, would be a better president. And Van Buren wanted the job. He won the
president's support partly because of his help in settling a serious political dispute. This week in our series, Harry Monroe and Kay Gallant continue the story of Andrew Jackson and his presidency.
Andrew Jackson President Jackson's cabinet was in great disorder. Vice President Calhoun was trying to force out Secretary of War John Eaton. Eaton would not resign, and the president would not
dismiss him. Van Buren designed a plan to gain Eaton's resignation. One morning, as Jackson discussed his cabinet problems, Van Buren said: "There is only one thing, general, that will bring you
peace -- my resignation." "Never," said Jackson. Van Buren explained how his resignation would solve a number of Jackson's political problems. Jackson did not want to let Van Buren go. But the next
day, he told Van Buren that he would never stop any man who wished to leave. The president wanted to discuss the resignation with his other advisers. Van Buren agreed. He also said it might be best
if Secretary of War Eaton were at the meeting. The advisers accepted Van Buren's resignation. Then they went to Van Buren's house for dinner. On the way, Eaton said: "Gentlemen, this is all wrong. I
am the one who should resign!" Van Buren said Eaton must be sure of such a move. Eaton was sure. President Jackson accepted Eaton's decision as he had accepted Van Buren's. But he was unwilling to
give up completely the services of his two friends. He named Van Buren to be minister to Britain. And he told Eaton that he would help him get elected again to the Senate. Jackson then dismissed the
remaining members of his cabinet. He was free to organize a new cabinet that would be loyal to him and not to Vice President Calhoun. Even with a new cabinet, Jackson still faced the problem of
nullification. South Carolina politicians, led by Calhoun, continued to claim that states had the right to reject -- nullify -- a federal law which they believed was bad. (MUSIC) Jackson asked a
congressman from South Carolina to give a message to the nullifiers in his state. "Tell them," Jackson said, "that they can talk and write resolutions and print threats to their hearts' content. But
if one drop of blood is shed there in opposition to the laws of the United States, I will hang the first man I can get my hands on to the first tree I can find." Someone questioned if Jackson would
go so far as to hang someone. A man answered: "When Jackson begins to talk about hanging, they can begin to look for the ropes." The nullifiers held a majority of seats in South Carolina's
legislature at that time. They called a special convention. Within five days, convention delegates approved a declaration of nullification. They declared that the federal import tax laws of eighteen
twenty-eight and eighteen thirty-two were unconstitutional, and therefore, cancelled. They said citizens of South Carolina need not pay the tax. The nullifiers also declared that if the federal
government tried to use force against South Carolina, then the state would withdraw from the union and form its own independent government. President Jackson answered with a declaration of his own.
Jackson said America's constitution formed a government, not just an association of sovereign states. South Carolina had no right to cancel a federal law or to withdraw from the union. Disunion by
force was treason. Jackson said: "The laws of the United States must be enforced. This is my duty under the Constitution. I have no other choice." Jackson did more. He asked Congress to give him the
power to use the Army and Navy to enforce the laws of the land. Congress did so. Jackson sent eight warships to the port of Charleston, South Carolina, and soldiers to federal military bases in the
state. While preparing to use force, Jackson offered hope for a peaceful settlement. In his yearly message to Congress, he spoke of reducing the federal import tax which hurt the sale of southern
cotton overseas. He said the import tax could be reduced, because the national debt would soon be paid. Congress passed a compromise bill to end the import tax by eighteen forty-two. South Carolina's
congressmen accepted the compromise. And the state's legislature called another convention. This time, the delegates voted to end the nullification act they had approved earlier. They did not,
however, give up their belief in the idea of nullification. The idea continued to be a threat to the American union until the issue was settled in the Civil War which began in eighteen sixty-one.
(MUSIC) While President Jackson battled the nullifiers, another struggle began. This time, it was Jackson against the Bank of the United States. Congress provided money to establish the Bank of the
United States in eighteen sixteen. It gave the bank a charter to do business for twenty years. The bank was permitted to use the government's money to make loans. For this, the bank paid the
government one and one-half million dollars a year. The bank was run by private citizens. The Bank of the United States was strong, because of the great amount of government money invested in it. The
bank's paper notes were almost as good as gold. They came close to being a national money system. The bank opened offices in many parts of the country. As it grew, it became more powerful. By making
it easy or difficult for businesses to borrow money, the bank could control the economy of almost any part of the United States. Nicholas Biddle During Jackson's presidency, the Bank of the United
States was headed by Nicholas Biddle. Biddle was an extremely intelligent man. He had completed studies at the University of Pennsylvania when he was only thirteen years old. When he was eighteen, he
was sent to Paris as secretary to the American minister. Biddle worked on financial details of the purchase of the Louisiana territory from France. After America's war against Britain in eighteen
twelve, Biddle helped establish the Bank of the United States. He became its president when he was only thirty-seven years old. Biddle clearly understood his power as president of the Bank of the
United States. In his mind, the government had no right to interfere in any way with the bank's business. President Jackson did not agree. Nor was he very friendly toward the bank. Not many
westerners were. They did not trust the bank's paper money. They wanted to deal in gold and silver. Jackson criticized the bank in each of his yearly messages to Congress. He said the Bank of the
United States was dangerous to the liberty of the people. He said the bank could build up or pull down political parties through loans to politicians. Jackson opposed giving the bank a new charter.
He proposed that a new bank be formed as part of the Treasury Department. A political drawing from 1832 about the Bank of the United States. President Jackson is shown as a cat defending the United
States from rats that steal. The president urged Congress to consider the future of the bank long before the bank's charter was to end. Then, if the charter was rejected, the bank could close its
business slowly over several years. This would prevent serious economic problems for the country. Many of President Jackson's advisers believed he should say nothing about the bank until after the
presidential election of eighteen thirty-two. They feared he might lose the votes of those who supported the bank. Jackson accepted their advice. He agreed not to act on the issue, if bank president
Biddle would not request renewal of the charter before the election. Biddle agreed. Then he changed his mind. He asked Congress for a new charter in January eighteen thirty-two. The request became a
hot political issue in the presidential campaign.
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Wed November 12 2008
EDUCATION REPORT: We are now ten weeks into our Foreign Student Series on higher education in the United States. So far we have talked about planning ...
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EDUCATION REPORT: We are now ten weeks into our Foreign Student Series on higher education in the United States. So far we have talked about planning for school and about subjects like online
education and diploma mills. Last week the subject was getting a travel visa. Today we discuss something else that every foreign student needs to know about: SEVIS. SEVIS is the Student and Exchange
Visitor I...
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EDUCATION REPORT: We are now ten weeks into our Foreign Student Series on higher education in the United States. So far we have talked about planning for school and about subjects like online
education and diploma mills. Last week the subject was getting a travel visa. Today we discuss something else that every foreign student needs to know about: SEVIS. SEVIS is the Student and Exchange
Visitor Information System. More than nine thousand American colleges, universities and exchange visitor programs are required to use this electronic system. It links them with Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, or ICE, in the Department of Homeland Security. The terrorist attacks in 2001 led to the creation of the department. But SEVIS was being developed even before the attacks as a
way to improve record keeping on foreign students in the United States. Some of the September eleventh hijackers entered the country on student visas. With SEVIS, a school enters information about a
student. The system lets the school know when the student has arrived. The school must then provide reports on whether or not the student is attending classes. Students who violate the terms of their
visa can be expelled from the country and may be denied future entry. Two examples of violations are failing to begin classes by the required date and working at a job without permission. Other
violations are not attending classes full time and not leaving the country after completion of studies. SEVIS currently lists more than one million active, nonimmigrant students and exchange visitors
and their dependents. Students and exchange visitors are charged fees to help pay for the system. The fee for students increased to two hundred dollars in September. This is the visa application
charge we talked about last week. Immigration and Customs Enforcement says the fee must be paid before going to an embassy or consulate for the visa interview. All the information you need to know
about SEVIS can be found on the Internet at ice.gov. That's i-c-e dot g-o-v.
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Wed November 12 2008
AMERICAN STORIES. Our story today is called Tale For A Frosty Morning. It was written by Merrill Pollack. Here is Shep O'Neal with our story. Ben was ...
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AMERICAN STORIES. Our story today is called Tale For A Frosty Morning. It was written by Merrill Pollack. Here is Shep O'Neal with our story. Ben was awakened by a gunshot. The sharp noise came
through the thick stone walls of the house. It was cold in the bedroom and Ben Newman was shaking as he got out of bed. He put on his eyeglasses and went over to the window. The field was covered
with white...
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AMERICAN STORIES. Our story today is called Tale For A Frosty Morning. It was written by Merrill Pollack. Here is Shep O'Neal with our story. Ben was awakened by a gunshot. The sharp noise came
through the thick stone walls of the house. It was cold in the bedroom and Ben Newman was shaking as he got out of bed. He put on his eyeglasses and went over to the window. The field was covered
with white frost. Nothing moved out there in the deep quiet just before sunrise. Ben looked past the field to the thick woods. Two weeks ago he saw a deer among the trees. He held his breath with
excitement; then the deer walked off. Ben wondered where the shot had come from. He thought perhaps he had dreamed he heard a gunshot. He looked out toward the frozen lake. Near the trees he saw a
shining piece of metal. When it moved, Ben saw that it was a long gun. A minute later a man came out of the woods. He wore hunting clothes. Suddenly a bird flew upward. The man quickly put the gun to
his shoulder and shot. Ben watched the bird, praying it had not been hurt. It flew near the ground and went into some tall grass. Safe, Ben thought. The hunter did not move for a moment, then he
began to follow the bird. Hate for the hunter burned inside of Ben. "Hey!" he shouted. His voice cut through the stillness. The hunter stopped, but then continued to follow the bird. Ben shouted
again, but this time the hunter did not stop and Ben started to move toward him. But Ben was in his night clothes and he did not go far. Istead he returned to the house. He got a metal shovel and hit
the stone sides of the house so that the noise would warn the birds and animals of danger. The hunter looked back at Ben. "No hunting!" Ben shouted, "No hunting on my land!" The man called back,
"Where can I hunt?" "South," Ben said, "go South," and pointed behind the man. The hunter started to walk away. Ben had just bought this house in the woods. He wanted to protect everything on his
land. He thought that everyone would obey the signs: "No Hunting." Ben had just finished putting on his clothes when he heard another gunshot. He walked toward the lake. He did not want to fight, but
the man must go. He walked quietly. He wanted to surprise the hunter. But then, what would he do? He could not fight the hunter. Suddenly he heard a bird's wings beating the dry grass. Ben moved
quickly toward the sound. He saw a colored head ... the head of a beautiful pheasant bird. The bird did not move until Ben came close. Then it tried to fly away, but one wing was broken. Ben lifed
the bird and held it close against his body. The bird fought ot escape, but soon lay quietly in Ben's arms. Its body was warm and heavy. Ben decided to take the bird home and fix its broken wings so
that it could fly again. He was almost tbroug the woods when he heard the hunter behind him. "You just find that bird?" the hunter asked. "Yes," Ben answered. "It is mine!" Ben was afraid and tried
to answer, but his mouth was too dry to speak. But be wet his lips and said "No." "I shot him and I say he is mine!" "But he is not dead yet," Ben answered, "and besides, anything on my land belongs
to me." The hunter reached out for the bird. "I will have to kill it," he said. "Tbe bird will soon die anyway." Ben got angry. "Get out of here!" he said. "I told you before and I am telling you
again: get off my land!" The hunter looked down at the little man and smiled. "Say, who are you?" Ben's voice shook with both fear and anger. "I own this land. There are signs everywhere that say,
"no hunting." "No need to get angry, mister," the hunter said. "Control youself." There was something threatening in the man's cool quiet voice. And he had a gun. His arms were free and Ben's were
not. The hunter stepped closer and said, "Give me that bird!" Ben was white with anger. "No!" he answered. His eye glasses became wet and he had to look over top of them to see the other man. "Give
me the bird and I will go away," the hunter said. "You get off my land," Ben told him. "Get off right now...you do not belong here!" The man's face got red. "Mister," he said, "l nave been hunting
here all my life. I grew up here." "That is a thing of the past," Ben said. "I do not know who you are and I do not care. I own this place now and I am telling you to leave. You go back through the
woods and get off my land!" "Now look, mister," the hunter said, "be reasonable." "I am trying to be as reasonable as I can," said Ben,holding the bird tightly. "I just want you to get off my land."
The hunter raised his gun. A cold wind blew across Ben's face. He looked into tbe hunter's gray eyes. Ben was frightened. It was not too late, he thought. He could still give the bird to the hunter
and return safely home...that would end this whole ugly business. The bird struggled weakly and made a wild, strange noise. Then Ben knew he could never give this bird to the hunter. This feeling
gave Ben great strength, and he was no longer afraid. "I will never let you kill this bird," he said. "Get away from here. If you try to take this bird, I will fight...you have a gun and you are
bigger, but that does not worry me. You will never get this bird...you will have to kill me first." The two men looked at each other. Ben's fear returned. His knees began to shake and he felt sick.
Yet he stood straight, wondering what would happen next. They stood close to each other for a long time. The woods were strangely guiet. Then the hunter's rough voice broke the silence. "You are a
fool." And then to Ben's surprise, he slowly walked away. Ben watched until he was gone. His arms hurt, his body felt was and cold... he went to the house. Ben carried the bird into the kitchen and
put it gently on the floor. It did not move. Ben took off his foggy glasses and dried his face. The bird watched him. Ben smoothed its feathers with gentle fingers. He carefully studied the injured
wing. There seemed to be no hope. The wing was pulled almost away from the body. The bullet had smashed the bone. Ben knew the bird was dying ...there was nothing he could do to help it. He wondered
if birds felt pain. He wondered how long it took a bird to die. The hunter was right, the bird would soon die. There was just one thing to do now to stop its suffering. Ben could kill it quickly. He
put his hands around the bird's neck. But when he felt the warm life under his fingers, he could not kill this beautiful thing. Tears filled his eyes. He knew now what he would do ... he would stay
with the bird, smoothing its feathers until it died.
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Tue November 11 2008
EXPLORATIONS: Today we tell about the trade in diamonds, a worldwide business worth billions of dollars. (MUSIC: "Diamonds Are Forever") Diamonds have...
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EXPLORATIONS: Today we tell about the trade in diamonds, a worldwide business worth billions of dollars. (MUSIC: "Diamonds Are Forever") Diamonds have long been a sign of wealth and power The use of
valuable stones like diamonds goes back thousands of years. Rulers of many ancient cultures used gemstones to show wealth and importance. Diamonds still represent power and fame. Rich and famous
people...
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EXPLORATIONS: Today we tell about the trade in diamonds, a worldwide business worth billions of dollars. (MUSIC: "Diamonds Are Forever") Diamonds have long been a sign of wealth and power The use of
valuable stones like diamonds goes back thousands of years. Rulers of many ancient cultures used gemstones to show wealth and importance. Diamonds still represent power and fame. Rich and famous
people around the world wear diamonds. And, most women in the United States receive a diamond ring when they agree to a marriage proposal. Diamonds are mined from the Earth. They are cut, made to
shine and then sold at high prices. The nation of South Africa is famous for its supply of diamonds. For generations, men have gone deep down into the Earth to bring out the rough stones. It is very
difficult and dangerous work. But recently, technology has helped. Diamonds were formed millions of years ago from carbon under extreme heat and pressure more than one hundred kilometers below the
Earth's surface. They are found in volcanic "pipes" called kimberlite. The name comes from Kimberley, the place in South Africa were diamonds were found in the nineteenth century. The DeBeers company
bought the Kimberley mine and soon became the biggest mining company in South Africa. DeBeers employed thousands of workers there. In the late twentieth century, it improved working conditions and
offered miners a share of the company's profits. (MUSIC) All over the world, valuable stones are mined from deep in the ground, from areas near rivers or coasts and in open gravel pits. Botswana is
now the largest diamond producer in Africa. The stones are also mined in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Namibia and Sierra Leone. Other major diamond-producing nations include Australia,
Canada and Russia. DeBeers still controls half of the world's diamond production. Most of their rough stones are sent to the company's headquarters in London to be sold to a few dealers. But
independent buyers are also part of the process. Gemstones come to Mumbai to be cut and polished One million people work in the diamond industry in India. Shrenuj and Company is one of the main
diamond factories in the city of Mumbai. Workers cut and shine, or polish, gemstones there. Most of the world's diamonds, mostly small stones, are polished in India. The diamonds are examined and
sorted by color. The most valued color has really no color. Experts make the rough diamonds appear larger with the help of computers, so they can see how best to cut them. Diamonds are the hardest
natural material. Only a diamond can cut another diamond. So diamond cutters use diamond dust on a device called a polisher's wheel. It is difficult work. One wrong move and a stone can break. Sanjay
Kambne has been performing this work for years. He says he has to be very careful while working with the stones. The history of valuable gems in India goes back many centuries. Sanjay Kothari heads
India's Gem and Jewelry Export Promotion Council. He says India has valued diamonds, jewelry and gold since the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Gems became big business in India in
the nineteen fifties and sixties. Mister Kothari says diamond exports from India last year were worth twenty billion dollars. (MUSIC) Halfway across the world, Antwerp, Belgium is the world's largest
diamond trading center. Philip Claes is secretary-general of the Antwerp World Diamond Center. PHILIP CLAES: "Eighty percent of all the rough diamonds are traded in Antwerp and fifty percent of all
polished diamonds worldwide are traded in Antwerp. In figures, it means that we have a turnover here in Antwerp of more than forty billion dollars each year." Antwerp has more than one thousand eight
hundred diamond companies. That is why George Read comes to the city. He is a senior vice present with Shoregold, a diamond mining company in Canada. He goes to Antwerp to have his diamonds revalued.
Diamonds are weighed and valued in carats. One carat equals two hundred milligrams. In addition to carat weight and color, a gemstone's value is based on its clearness and cut -- the shape of the
polished stone. Antwerp once had about twenty-five thousand people working as diamond cutters and polishers. Now only a few hundred remain. Belgian cutters lost their jobs to workers in India because
they are paid less. (MUSIC) The international trade in diamonds is worth an estimated eighty billion dollars a year. This has helped some countries develop economically. It has provided jobs for
workers in some of the world's poorest countries. However, the diamond trade has also been used to support wars, frighten civilians and keep dictators in power. Men in Ivory Coast look for diamonds
The diamond mines in South Africa are clean. Machines are used to help the workers. But this is not true in other parts of Africa. More than one million people search for diamonds in Africa. They dig
in pits and near rivers by hand. They earn less than one dollar a day. In recent years, armed militias and rebels in some countries used diamonds to pay for civil wars. Thousands of civilians were
killed and injured in conflicts in places like Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Sierra Leone. So these gems are called "conflict diamonds" or "blood diamonds." Global Witness was one of
the first non-governmental organizations to call attention to the issue. Annie Dunnebacke says the group's goal was to show the tragedy of conflict diamonds. She says Sierra Leone was one of the
worst cases. Hundreds of thousands of people died as a result of the country's civil war in the nineteen nineties. Rebels cut off the arms and legs of innocent people and forced children to fight.
The Revolutionary United Front controlled the eastern part of Sierra Leone. This is where the diamond fields are. The diamonds were an economic reason for the war to continue. Efforts to report the
link between the war and the diamonds were successful. Two years ago, the movie "Blood Diamond" helped bring more attention to the situation. The movie takes place during the civil war in Sierra
Leone. Leonardo di Caprio plays a man who sells arms to the rebels in exchange for diamonds. He is involved in a chase for a rare and valuable pink diamond. But in the end, he gives up the diamond,
fights off the rebels and helps others learn about the illegal trade. Global Witness was an adviser on the film. Annie Dunnebacke says it influenced public opinion. ANNIE DUNNEBACKE: "I think that
bringing the message in sort of Hollywood terms to a much wider audience than possibly our reports get to -- it does have value." International pressure made the diamond industry take action in an
effort to prevent the trade in blood diamonds. In 2003, the Kimberley Process was established. It requires member governments to prove that exports and imports do not include blood diamonds. Tom
Tweedy is a spokesman for DeBeers, the world's largest producer of rough diamonds. He says the Kimberley Process is a good step forward. TOM TWEEDY: "We have a system and however imperfect it may be
it is probably the only comprehensive system of its type in the world." Philip Claes of the World Diamond Center says conflict diamonds represented four to fifteen percent of rough diamonds traded
worldwide before the Kimberley Process. Today, he says conflict diamonds represent only two-tenths of one percent of rough diamonds traded worldwide. However, Annie Dunnebacke says some diamonds are
being moved illegally between African countries. Experts say diamonds are not the only valuable gems that are linked to trouble in the world. For example, more than ninety percent of the world's
rubies come from Burma. The military government controls the sale of the country's gems. This trade helps keep the government in power. Human rights activists are working to increase restrictions
against Burmese rubies. Activists are hoping that people will start to ask more questions about the jewelry they buy.
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Tue November 11 2008
HEALTH REPORT: Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., is home to the National Institutes of Health. N.I.H. calls itself "the Nation's Medical Rese...
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HEALTH REPORT: Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., is home to the National Institutes of Health. N.I.H. calls itself "the Nation's Medical Research Agency." But it supports research worldwide
with its budget of almost twenty-nine billion dollars. Elias Zerhouni Federal agencies will get new leaders when Barack Obama is president. But the head of N.I.H. resigned early. Elias Zerhouni left
at...
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HEALTH REPORT: Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., is home to the National Institutes of Health. N.I.H. calls itself "the Nation's Medical Research Agency." But it supports research worldwide
with its budget of almost twenty-nine billion dollars. Elias Zerhouni Federal agencies will get new leaders when Barack Obama is president. But the head of N.I.H. resigned early. Elias Zerhouni left
at the end of October after six and a half years as director. For now, the acting director is Raynard Kington. Doctor Kington has been deputy director for the past five years. Directors are appointed
by the president and confirmed by the Senate. The National Institutes of Health had strong financial support during Doctor Zerhouni's first two years. But Congress did not increase the budget
very much after that. Albert Reece is dean of the University of Maryland medical school. He says that since 2004, N.I.H.'s budget has been reduced by more than thirteen percent after
considering inflation. Doctor Reece, writing in the Baltimore Sun, urged President-elect Obama to increase the funding. It would not only improve the nation's health, he says, but also help
restart the economy. Medical centers funded by N.I.H., he said, support more than three million full-time jobs. Right now, the Obama team is looking at executive orders signed by President Bush.
Those that conflict with Mister Obama's positions could be canceled or amended. One area being looked at is stem cell research. Stem cells can grow into any kind of tissue in the body.
President Bush has restricted federal support for research on embryonic stem cells because of his beliefs about protecting life. Others say the embryos would be destroyed anyway because they are
unused embryos from fertility clinics. Mister Obama says the research may lead to improved treatments for Alzheimer's disease and other conditions. He says other treatments being studied are not
substitutes for research on embryonic stem cells. He has called for expanded federal support. Doctor Zerhouni told Congress last year that he thought the limits were interfering with research.
Political appointees have to resign when the administration changes in January. But Elias Zerhouni says he left before the election so the next president would have to start thinking early about
N.I.H. He says he wants to work on writing projects and explore other professional opportunities.
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