cc` !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> My Dragon's Lair Sharing is the reason for my being...

My Dragon's Lair Sharing is the reason for my being...

Altered and added new content 10-4-07 Important 5-4-07 No longer Child safe because of the links inside sites included here. Adult Humor is posted here. Template errors still. E shows wrong, and Netscape shows mostly correct. Activly learning HTML to correct and improve. Be it fun or serious I hope you enjoy and take away with you what I find to share. LI

Friday, November 02, 2007

FDA has not been inspecting foreign drug firms, watchdog finds

WASHINGTON - Two-thirds of the foreign drug manufacturers subject to inspection by the Food and Drug Administration may never have been visited by agency inspectors, a government watchdog reported to Congress on Thursday.

The FDA this year listed 3,249 foreign pharmaceutical manufacturers subject to its inspection — yet the agency cannot determine whether it has ever inspected 2,133 of them, according to a Government Accountability Office report released during a House subcommittee hearing.

While some of the more than 3,000 firms may never have exported prescription drugs or drug ingredients to the United States, others likely have.

Who are those firms and what are they shipping? asked Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., during Thursday's hearing of the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on oversight and investigations.

"We don't know and we are not certain the FDA knows," Marcia Crosse, director of health care at the GAO, replied.

The few foreign inspections the FDA does conduct in any given year hit just 7 percent of the foreign drug makers exporting to the U.S., the GAO estimates. That means more than 13 years can pass before a foreign manufacturer is visited even once, Crosse said.

In the case of China, which with 714 drug firms boasts the largest number subject to FDA scrutiny of any country, the record is far worse. The FDA is slated to inspect just 13 Chinese establishments this year, meaning just 1.8 percent will see an FDA inspector, according to the GAO report.

In India, the No. 2 country, the record is far better. There, 65 of its 410 firms, or 15.8 percent, are slated for inspection this year, according to the GAO. That's in line with the 16.8 percent of Swiss drug firms the FDA likely will inspect in 2007.

The GAO and Congress have long warned of the FDA's shortcomings in its foreign drug inspection program. The GAO findings released Thursday largely reprise many of the same warnings outlined in a 1998 report.

"It's deja vu all over again," said Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.

Most U.S. drug makers are inspected at least once every two years, as mandated by a law drawn up long before imports seized a sizable chunk of the drug market.

There is no such requirement that the FDA conduct foreign inspections with any regularity, even as imports of all kinds grow in volume. Concerns about the safety of imported drugs, food, toys and other consumer products have been at the fore for months.

"We're finding ourselves again on the brink of one more problem dealing with imports into our country," said Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas.

An estimated 80 percent of the active pharmaceutical ingredients used to make drugs sold in the U.S. are imported. Among finished drugs, an estimated 40 percent are made abroad. By ANDREW BRIDGES The Associated Press November 2, 2007
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Sunday, September 16, 2007

Explorer who found lost Peru cities dies

RENO, Nev. - Douglas Eugene "Gene" Savoy, an explorer who discovered more than 40 lost cities in Peru and led long-distance sailing adventures to learn more about ancient cultures, has died. He was 80.

Savoy died of natural causes Tuesday at his Reno home, his family said Saturday.

Dubbed the "real Indiana Jones" by People magazine, Savoy was credited with finding four of Peru's most important archaeological sites, including Vilcabamba, the last refuge of the Incas from the Spanish Conquistadors.

Hiram Bingham considered Machu Picchu to be the site of Vilcabamba after he discovered it in 1911 in the Peruvian Andes. But scientific consensus now points toward Espiritu Pampa as the Incas' last stronghold; Bingham also discovered that site but Savoy's excavation work in the mid-1960s found it to be a much larger settlement than originally realized.

In the next 40 years in the jungles of Peru, Savoy discovered more than 40 stone cities of a mysterious pre-Inca civilization known as the Chachapoyas. Among them were Gran Pajaten, Gran Vilaya and Gran Saposoa.

"Scientists thought the existence of these cities and settlements in the Peruvian rainforest was all a myth until my father found them," his son Sean Savoy said. "His discoveries opened up a whole new area of jungle archaeology that didn't exist before."

He said his father suffered hepatitis, was bitten by snakes and chased by guerrilla soldiers during his explorations.

Savoy also took to the sea to test his theories that the Incas, Aztecs and other ancient civilizations had contact with each other. From 1977 to 1982, he used a 60-foot schooner to research possible trade routes in the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Savoy wrote dozens of books, including 1970's "Antisuyo: The Search for the Lost Cities of the Amazon" about his early discoveries in Peru, and 1974's "On the Trail of the Feathered Serpent" about some of his sea journeys.

But the bulk of his books and articles concerned another consuming passion: religion.

As founder of a new theology known as "Cosolargy," he established the International Community of Christ, Church of the Second Advent. He taught that the Second Coming of Christ had already become a living reality through a miraculous celestial event.

Savoy was born in Bellingham, Wash., and served as a Navy gunner during World War II. He later was a journalist and newspaper editor in Portland, Ore.

He moved to Reno in 1971 and founded the Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club based in that city. The nonprofit organization sponsored many of his explorations.

Among other awards, he was honored with medals from the Peruvian Senate and the Peruvian Ministry of Industry and Tourism in the late 1980s. The city of Reno proclaimed "Gene Savoy Day" in October 1996.

Survivors include his children, Gene Jr., Sean and Sylvia Jamila Savoy, and three granddaughters.

By MARTIN GRIFFITH, Associated Press Writer Sun Sep 16, 2:44 AM ET

Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club (AEFOSC)
Dedicated to the advancement of historical field and oceanic research through exploration in little-known areas around the world. www.aefosc.org/

Due to strict Copyright © I have only given link. Enjoy. You'll find that his death has not yet been posted. And here are a few errors to links. Though you will find cool stuff as far as the adventures.

This Web site, www.aefosc.org, is a project of the AEF & OSC Publishing Department.Senior Webmaster: Sean SavoyCopyright © 1998-2004 Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club. All rights reserved. The AEF & OSC is a not-for-profit organization as defined under Section 501 (c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. "Andean Explorers Foundation & Ocean Sailing Club", "Spirit of Exploration", "The Compass Rose", the Seal, Flag and Pennant, and all other logos are trademarks. Use by others is strictly prohibited. Photographs appearing on this site are taken from AEF & OSC archives or othewise used by permission, and may not be copied or re-used in any manner. LEGAL NOTICE

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Saturday, August 04, 2007

Revealed van Gogh under another painting

Hidden van Gogh found at MFA - Mystery painting is under another work by artist.

By Geoff Edgers, Globe Staff Aug 4, 2007

For years, art scholars pondered a mystery: Did Vincent van Gogh create a painting that matches a sketch in Amsterdam's Van Gogh Museum?

Now a conservator at the Museum of Fine Arts has discovered the lost painting, but museumgoers will never be able to see it: The painting lies underneath another van Gogh long on display at the MFA, the museum announced yesterday.

The Dutch master created the lost painting, "Wild Vegetation," in 1889, during his stay at an asylum near Saint-Remy, France. The hidden work was found by chance when conservator Meta Chavannes X-rayed the MFA's painting, "The Ravine," about a year ago as part of a research project.

Chavannes found evidence of an image that didn't match "The Ravine," a moody landscape with swirling brush strokes of blue, gray, and green. A few weeks later, Chavannes shared the X-ray with Louis van Tilborgh, a curator at the Van Gogh Museum. He immediately recognized the image as being similar to a drawing in the museum's collection.

Van Gogh had sent the drawing, a riotous depiction of flowers and wildlife, to his brother, Theo, an art dealer in Paris. Re searchers have suggested that the drawing is one of several copies of paintings the artist sent to his brother in 1889, according to the MFA. But until now, curators were unable to determine whether a painting matching this particular drawing existed. Chavannes said she is still shocked at how quickly van Tilborgh found the drawing in his museum's collection.

"It was very absurd and surreal for him to pull out a composition so quickly," Chavannes said yesterday. The conservator says it is possible to see features of the earlier painting, including flowers, in sections of "The Ravine."

As famous for his use of dramatic brush strokes and bright colors as for his battles with mental illness, van Gogh created works that are today among the most famous and expensive of the post-Impressionist movement. The artist, who shot and killed himself at age 37 in 1890, struggled for public recognition during his lifetime. But in recent years, his paintings have sold for as much as $80 million at auction. "The Ravine," while prized by the MFA, is not one of the artist's most famous works. And until now, questions about the drawing in the Van Gogh Museum collection had attracted little attention outside the art world.

Throughout history, it has not been uncommon for artists to paint over old works, sometimes to save money, at other times because they were unsatisfied with an earlier creation. The French Impressionist Edgar Degas, for example, painted over some works more than 20 years after they were created. Typically, artists add a fresh layer of white paint to hide the older composition before creating a new one.

In his early years, van Gogh often reused canvases or turned them over and painted on the other side to make the most of his limited funds. But by 1889, a year before his death, he was being supported by his brother. Van Gogh painted over "Wild Vegetation" not because he couldn't afford to buy another canvas but because Theo was slow to send along new canvases, according to MFA curator George Shackelford.

"He was so eager to paint that he wasn't willing to wait," said Shackelford. "We deduce he decided to sacrifice a picture, maybe of the ones that he had that he liked the least, and he painted straight over the very highly patterned design of the first canvas without introducing a layer of white. It's fantastically amazing."

Chavannes was originally asked to research "The Ravine" by curators at the Phillips Collection and Cleveland Museum of Art, who were organizing a van Gogh exhibit. She found a 75-year-old X-ray in the painting's file, which piqued her interest. After taking a fresh X-ray, Chavannes saw the underlying pattern. At first, she tried to track down its source on her own.

"It became a bit of an obsession," said Chavannes. "I really wanted to see what it was showing."

She presented it to Shackelford, who couldn't identify the work. By chance, Chavannes, who is Dutch, was heading home to Amsterdam to visit family. She made an appointment with van Tilborgh.

A report on their discovery is being published this week in The Burlington Magazine, a London-based art journal. The Van Gogh museum will display the drawing in an exhibition that opens next week and runs through October.

As for "The Ravine," it remains on view in the Impressionist galleries at the MFA. The museum will hold a gallery talk on the discovery Sept. 5 and Nov. 8. It also hopes to produce a wall label explaining the discovery that will be placed next to the painting.

Geoff Edgers can be reached at gedgers@globe.com. For more on the arts, visit boston.com/ae/ theater_arts/exhibitionist.

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Friday, June 29, 2007

Scientists fly into raptures over flightless Fred

By Ed Harris 1 hour, 3 minutes ago

BOIS CHERI, Mauritius (Reuters) - The remains of a dodo found in a cave beneath bamboo and tea plantations in Mauritius offer the best chance yet to learn about the extinct flightless bird, a scientist said on Friday.

Photo

The discovery was made earlier this month in the Mauritian highlands but the location was kept secret until the recovery of the skeleton, nicknamed "Fred," was completed on Friday. Four men guarded the site overnight.

News Africa - Reuters.com
BOIS CHERI, Mauritius, June 29 (Reuters) - The remains of a dodo found in a cave beneath ... Given the nickname "Fred" after the 65-year-old who found them, ...
http://africa.reuters.com/wire/news/usnL29715732.html

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