Sunday, July 31, 2011

Million March In Harlem August 13th: Stop the Bombing of Libya

 




 
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African-American - News

African-American - News July 31, 2011

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Air Force Chief of Staff speaks about diversity at NAACP dinner
Air Force Chief of Staff speaks about diversity at NAACP dinner (Robins Rev-up)
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Norton Schwartz addresses the audience at the NAACP's Annual Armed Services and Veterans Affairs Awards Dinner held in Los Angeles on July 26, 2011.

Hispanics have to claw their way to the top: Political Insider (NJ)
Published: Saturday, July 30, 2011, 2:47 PM Updated: Saturday, July 30, 2011, 2:56 PM View full size Journal photo There's nothing wrong with a parade, but it would be nice if a community could muster as much enthusiasm for a local election.

Few, proud and black (CNN)
Edwin J. Fizer got off the train to report for training at Montford Point, North Carolina in the summer of 1942.

The Rev. Philip L. Pryor and other members of the First Baptist...
The Rev. Philip L. Pryor and other members of the First Baptist... (Port Clinton News Herald)
The former First Baptist Church building has a rich history. The building, which housed the first African-American congregation in Port Clinton, is slated for demolition.

Black teen's unusual talent: Singing Chinese opera (Asbury Park Press Online)
Tyler Thompson rehearses with the Great Wall Youth Orchestra in Oakland, Calif. The 15-year-old Oakland native, who sings traditional Chinese opera in Mandarin, plans to perform in China this summer.

White supremacist principal worries parents

 

A firebrand educator with ties to a white supremacist group is running a Bronx Catholic school where most of the students are black and Latino, the Daily News has learned.

White supremacist principal worries parents
CORINNE LESTCH, DAILY NEWS WRITER
Sat, 30 Jul 2011 20:50:00 GMT

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Ticket-Fixing Tension Leads to Precinct House Fistfight

Ticket-Fixing Tension Leads to Precinct House Fistfight

July 28, 2011 11:53am | By Murray Weiss, DNAinfo Columnist

On the Inside
By Murray Weiss

Murray Weiss is an award-winning investigative journalist, author, columnist and editor, and is considered an expert on government, law enforcement, criminal justice, organized crime and terrorism.

A New York City police officer stands on patrol on April 6, 2010 in New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

The NYPD ticket-fixing scandal has tensions running so high in precinct houses around the city that it's being blamed for a fight between ranking officers that ended with a detective punching a lieutenant in the face, DNAinfo has learned.
The detective, a 24 year veteran, was suspended immediately following the fracas at the front desk of the 43rd Precinct in the Bronx.
No discipline, however, was taken against the lieutenant, who had slapped the detective's hand (he was pointing his finger) before the detective belted him.
“If this is the way management is going to handle things, slapping detectives, then they better start getting in shape,” a detective said.
While the two officers involved in the scuffle may not have had anything to do with fixing a ticket, their precinct house is ground zero for this scandal. The cop whose alleged criminal activities led to the chain of events that launched the widespread probe two years ago was a former union delegate from the 43rd Precinct.

Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/20110728/manhattan/ticketfixing-tension-leads-precinct-house-fistfight?utm_content=blackcotton212%40gmail.com&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=Ticket-Fixing%20Tension%20Leads%20to%20Precinct%20House%20Fistfight&utm_campaign=Ticket-Fixing%20Tension%20Leads%20to%20Precinct%20House%20Fistfightcontent#ixzz1TbGbOOiB

Friday, July 29, 2011

Fw: Longwood Art Gallery Call for Artists' Proposals

 
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Longwood 30th Logo-web 2

Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos
Call for Artists' Proposals:
Games and Toys With A Twist
Deadline:
Wed, Aug 10, 2011 / 5:00pm
Exhibition Dates: 
Dec 7, 2011 through Feb 1, 2012


Click here for printable flyer



Exhibition Concept:
Games and Toys With A Twist will focus on how visual artists investigate the conceptual, physical, emotional, political and social aspects, aesthetics and functions of video games and toys. 

Eligibility Requirements:
Open to emerging artists working with audio, artists' books, crafts, drawings, design, illustration, installation, mixed media, painting, performance, photography, printmaking, sculpture, video, web-based or interactive computer/mobile device applications are encouraged to submit work utilizing video games and toys of any kind (stuffed animals, sex toys, wooden blocks, board games, etc.) to comment on the construction of gender roles and its stereotypes and hierarchies of power, consumerism, globalization, migration, memory and loss, fantasy, representation, the environment, love, war, violence and urban and popular culture. Please only submit work related to our theme.

To apply:

Please submit:

  • One-page description of artwork or project idea;
  • One-page artist resume or CV (curriculum vitae). Please include contact information (phone number, e-mail address, and postal address);
  • One-page artist statement;
  • Documentation of the work—CD with minimum of 5 maximum of 8: JPEG's (max. 800 x 600 pixels 300dpi) on a CD (PC format);

or

  • One DVD, 3-5 minutes (cue sample please). One page checklist of artworks or description of work sample;
  • Postcard with correct postage for us to notify you when we have received your application materials.

DO NOT SUBMIT: Original objects, prints or articles—submission materials will not be returned. DO NOT E-MAIL YOUR SUBMISSION.

APPLICATION DEADLINE: Wednesday, August 10, 2011 by 5:00pm.

Please mail your submission materials to: 
Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos
450 Grand Concourse, C-190
Bronx, NY 10451
Attn: Games and Toys With A Twist 

For more information or questions, please contact: longwood@bronxarts.org or call 718-518-6728. Applications will be reviewed in August 2011. Applicants will be notified by e-mail by September 2011. Incomplete applications will not be processed.

NO PHONE CALLS OR E-MAILS PLEASE.

About Longwood Art Gallery and its mission:
Longwood Arts Project, celebrating its 30th anniversary, is the contemporary art center of the Bronx Council on the Arts with a mission to support artists and their work, especially emerging artists from under-represented groups such as people of color and women, through Longwood Art Gallery @ Hostos, Digital Matrix Commissions Program, and public programs that provide opportunities for free and open dialogue. Longwood Arts Project presents solo and group exhibitions of works of art produced in various media or through interdisciplinary practices that connect artists, communities, and ideas within and beyond the Bronx.
 



Phil Cardone, Information Manager
Bronx Council on the Arts / 718-931-9500 x33
1738 Hone Avenue, Bronx NY 10461




Bronx Council on the Arts
1738 Hone Ave
Bronx, New York 10461
US

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

Police Search for Two Girls Missing Since Monday

Police Search for Two Girls Missing Since Monday

July 27, 2011 9:41am | By Tuan Nguyen, DNAinfo

Queen Sutherland, 14, (L) and Janell Johnson, 13, were last seen in Harlem July 25, 2011. (NYPD)

UPPER EAST SIDE — Police are seeking the public’s help to locate two girls who have been missing since Monday night.

Queen Sutherland, 14, of E 102nd Street and Janell Johnson, 13, of Brooklyn, were last seen around 9:00 p.m. in Sutherland’s house in Harlem. The girls are cousins, police said.

Sutherland is described as 4-foot-11-inches tall and weighing 100 pounds. She has black and blond braids and was last seen wearing an orange t-shirt, blue jeans and neon green and gray sneakers.

Johnson, who stands five-foot-six-inches tall and weighs 115 lbs., has long black hair that she often wears in a ponytail. She was last seen wearing a white t-shirt with the words “Don't Hate Me Because I'm Pretty” and purple pants, and white and purple Airmax sneakers.

Anyone with information is asked to call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477) or send their tips or text 274637 (CRIMES) then enter TIP577.

All calls are strictly confidential.

Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/20110727/harlem/police-search-for-two-girls-missing-since-monday?utm_content=chiefcharley472%40gmail.com&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=Police%20Search%20for%20Two%20Girls%20Missing%20Since%20Monday&utm_campaign=Pol%20Calls%20for%20Notification%20Whenever%20Sewage%20Enters%20City%20Waterwayscontent#ixzz1TQQeLlwg

African-American - News

African-American - News July 28, 2011

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New Census Data Show Disparities (WVNS-TV)
According to data from the 2010 census, West Virginia males outnumbered females in every year of age from birth to 46.

Belafonte: Hollywood won't yield to those of color
Belafonte: Hollywood won't yield to those of color (Dayton Daily News)
Harry Belafonte says Hollywood has yet to explore the breadth of black experience and that the industry will "never ever yield to the needs of people of color." The 84-year-old entertainer made the remarks at a presentation on artists and activism held Wednesday during the 102nd annual National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's ...

High school student alleges racial bias in valedictorian choice (WTTV Indianapolis)
A black high school valedictorian says in a federal lawsuit that her school discriminated against her when they made her share the stage with a white "co-valedictorian" who had a lower grade point average.

NAACP urges minorities to up vote in 2012 (Salon)
The NAACP plans a big push to increase minority turnout in the 2012 elections, hoping to gain political influence and turn back what the civil rights group says are efforts in various states to deny minorities the right to vote.

What It Means To Be 'Black In Latin America'
What It Means To Be 'Black In Latin America' (National Public Radio)
Between 1502 and 1866, 11.2 million Africans disembarked from slave ships in the New World during the Middle Passage.

Fight for gay marriage subject of new doc (EDGE)
Out filmmaker Thomas Allen Harris was stunned to learn of State Representative Byron Rushing's leadership role in the fight for and the passage of the Massachusetts same sex marriage equality legislation.

Republicans turn back redistricting challenges (Windsock)
The state Senate on Monday approved a new congressional political map and both the Senate and the House adopted their own legislative plans.

Black teen's unusual talent: Singing Chinese opera
Black teen's unusual talent: Singing Chinese opera (St. Augustine Record)
Tyler Thompson is an unlikely star in the world of Chinese opera. The black teenager from Oakland has captivated audiences in the U.S. And China with his ability to sing pitch-perfect Mandarin and perform the ancient Chinese art form.

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

USPS Mulls Closing Six Branches in Manhattan

USPS Mulls Closing Six Branches in Manhattan

July 26, 2011 7:25pm | By Ben Fractenberg, DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

Postal Service officials say they plan to close upwards of 3,700 branches throughout the country. (DNAinfo/Julie Shapiro)

By Ben Fractenberg

DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

MANHATTAN — Through rain, sleet or snow — though maybe not email.

The United States Postal Service announced Tuesday they are considering 3,700 branches across the country for possible closure due a decreased demand created primarily by the Internet.

There are six locations on the possible chopping block: the Port Authority, 26 Federal Plaza Downtown, the Fort Washington branch in Washington Heights, College Station in Manhattanville, a Roosevelt Island branch and the Appraisers Stores branch in Clinton. There are three dozen locations in New York City being considered for closure.

Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/20110726/midtown/usps-mulls-closing-six-branches-manhattan?utm_content=chiefcharley472%40gmail.com&utm_source=VerticalResponse&utm_medium=Email&utm_term=USPS%20Mulls%20Closing%20Six%20Branches%20in%20Manhattan&utm_campaign=Gross%20Midtown%20Block%20to%20be%20Cleaned%20Upcontent#ixzz1TJZ5u7T2

African-American - News

African-American - News July 27, 2011

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NAACP President Jealous Calls Out Racist Voting Bills at Convention
NAACP President Jealous Calls Out Racist Voting Bills at Convention (The Afro American Newspaper)
NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous evoked biblical characters and said faith is what the nation's oldest civil rights organization has to have in order to follow through on the mission it started 102 years ago.

Venable, Belmont Fastest Growing Neighborhoods in Charlottesville (WCAV)
Charlottesville neighborhoods have grown and the population has become more diverse in the past decade, according to a report by demographers at the University of Virginia's Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service.

Early birth link to stress disorder (BBC News)
Post traumatic stress disorder is a risk factor for premature birth, research suggests.

Black student sues over valedictorian flap (MSNBC)
PINE BLUFF, Ark. - A black teenager is suing an Arkansas school district, contending her high school discriminated against her by refusing to let her be sole valedictorian even though she had the highest grade-point average.

Being a White Female Rapper Does Not Give You Permission to use the N Word (womanist-musings)
All right, I am sure some of you have been following the mess that Kreayshawn and her crew, White Girl Mobs have created since their first single. There are many reasons why I find these women distasteful (note that's me being nice) and chief amongst their justification of their continual usage of the N word. Little Miss Gucci Gucci had no problem say the word nigga on twitter. Yeah, heaven save us from White folks and their lived experience when it comes to race. Yes, growing up poor in a classist society is a form of oppression but in no way does that give one the right to utilize racist language, because no matter how much you feel like you have been in trenches right next to Black folks, you have not. What galls me about this is that this woman absolutely knows that what she is saying is offensive and yet she has found a twisted way to justify this.

NAACP Discusses Same Sex Marriage (NBC Los Angeles)
Gay rights are an awkward topic for the NAACP. And an appearance by Comic Wanda Sykes may have made some attendees squirm at a panel discussion in Downtown L.A. "I didn't have to 'come out' Black," offers Comic Wanda Sykes.

Recession Study Finds Hispanics Hit the Hardest (HendersonvilleNews)
Hispanic families accounted for the largest single decline in wealth of any ethnic and racial group in the country during the recession, according to a study published Tuesday by the Pew Foundation.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

African-American - News

African-American - News July 26, 2011

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Study Shows Racial Wealth Gap Grows Wider (National Public Radio)
There's long been a big gap between the wealth of white families and the wealth of African-Americans and Hispanics.

NAACP head likens voter ID measures to Jim Crow (WSBT)
The head of the nation's oldest and largest civil rights group on Monday condemned state laws requiring photo identification of voters as an attempt to disenfranchise minorities through some "of the last existing legal pillars of Jim Crow." NAACP President Benjamin Jealous said a wave of newly enacted photo-ID requirements stemmed from what he saw ...

Wealth gap widens between whites, minorities
Wealth gap widens between whites, minorities (KMOV-TV Saint Louis)
The wealth gaps between whites and minorities have grown to their widest levels in a quarter-century. The recession and uneven recovery have erased decades of minority gains, leaving whites on average with 20 times the net worth of blacks and 18 times that of Hispanics, according to an analysis of new Census data.

The Critical Partnership (City News Ohio)
Now, more than ever, a strong partnership is needed between The National Newspaper Publishers Association and the National Association of Black Journalists - this strategic alliance will help to ensure our independence as we pursue our common goals.

NAACP chief focuses on voting laws (Las Cruces Sun-News)
NAACP President Benjamin Todd Jealous says the black community must mobilize to fight restrictive voting laws that have surged since the election of Barack Obama to the White House.

Aging and HIV
Aging and HIV (EDGE)
The NIH, under the leadership of Dr. Anthony Fauci, is funding significant research into HIV and aging As we enter the fourth decade of AIDS, the crisis continues largely unabated.

Fascination with natural, African American hair (CNN)
Tamara Winfrey Harris tells a story of being in a chain restaurant with her husband when their names were called for a table.

Crouch: A victory for all of our children (New York Daily News)
United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew lost in court in an unjustified suit.

Monday, July 25, 2011

HARLEM NWS AND VIEWS

News
 
City promises $75 million Harlem affordable-housing development plan
New York Daily News
The facade of 2730 Frederick Douglass Blvd. In Harlem, one of 14 Harlem buildings that will be kept affordable for moderate income families for the next 30 years under a deal with the city. The city has inked a $75 million deal that will keep 14 Harlem ...
See all stories on this topic »

New York Daily News
Raw Sewage in Hudson a 'Continuous Problem,' Experts Say
DNAinfo
(DNAinfo/Jeff Mays) HARLEM — The 200 million gallons of raw sewage that flowed into the Hudson River after a fire at Harlem's North River Wastewater Treatment Plant last week has been described as "calamitous" and "devastating" by environmental ...
See all stories on this topic »

DNAinfo
FC Harlem youngsters treated to Man. United clinic
Major League Soccer
Ahead of Wednesday's MLS All-Star Game (8:30 PM ET; ESPN2/TeleFutura/TSN), the Red Devils' affiliated youth soccer program brought that philosophy to New York City, where it hosted a clinic for local players at Jacob Schiff Soccer Field in Harlem on ...
See all stories on this topic »

Major League Soccer
HARLEM CONDO DEVELOPMENT, PS90, ANNOUNCES 80% OF UNITS ARE CLOSED OR UNDER ...
RealEstateRama (press release)
... Halstead Property Development Marketing and West 147th Street Associates LLC, an affiliate of L+M Development Partners, Inc., today announced that 80% of the units are closed or under contract at PS90, a premier residential development in Harlem. ...
See all stories on this topic »
Augusta State basketball star Daniel Dixon signs with Harlem Ambassadors
Examiner.com
The basketball phenom has been contracted to play for a community organization, the Harlem Ambassadors. The Ambassadors aren'ta typical basketball team. Ever heard of the Harlem Globetrotters? Well, they are in the same realm as the—remember from your ...
See all stories on this topic »
The Closeted Truth: Harlem Renaissance And Homosexuality
News One
Quiet as it's keep, many of the most notable writers of the Harlem Renaissance identified themselves — openly or not-so-openly — as homosexual, bisexual or sexually ambiguous. Luminaries of the New Negro movement such as Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, ...
See all stories on this topic »

News One
This Week: Better Transit in Flushing, Safer Streets in Harlem
Streetsblog New York (blog)
7:00 PM Wednesday: Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Boulevard in Harlem is a dangerous speedway where people have suffered serious and fatal injuries in separate crashes over the past few months. NYC DOT and Manhattan Community Board 10 are putting on a ...
See all stories on this topic »
Hotels for Young, Hip Crowd
Wall Street Journal
The Aloft in Harlem, which opened last year, maintains the W's hip vibe. But the Aloft, a three-year-old brand by Starwood Hotels and Resorts Worldwide Inc., also lacks such basics as a restaurant, full closets or bathtubs. This keeps the price down, ...
See all stories on this topic »

Drug Prices To Plummet Due To Expiring Patents

 

The cost of prescription medicines used by millions of people every day is about to plummet.

The next 14 months will bring generic versions of seven of the world’s 20 best-selling drugs, including the top two: cholesterol fighter Lipitor and blood thinner Plavix.

The magnitude of this wave of expiring drugs patents is unprecedented. Between now and 2016, blockbusters with about $255 billion in global annual sales will go off patent, notes EvaluatePharma Ltd., a London research firm. Generic competition will decimate sales of the brand-name drugs and slash the cost to patients and companies that provide health benefits.

Top drugs getting generic competition by September 2012 are taken by millions every day: Lipitor alone is taken by about 4.3 million Americans and Plavix by 1.4 million. Generic versions of big-selling drugs for blood pressure, asthma, diabetes, depression, high triglycerides, HIV and bipolar disorder also are coming by then.

The flood of generics will continue for the next decade or so, as about 120 brand-name prescription drugs lose market exclusivity, according to prescription benefits manager Medco Health Solutions Inc.

“My estimation is at least 15 percent of the population is currently using one of the drugs whose patents will expire in 2011 or 2012,” says Joel Owerbach, chief pharmacy officer for Excellus Blue Cross Blue Shield, which serves most of upstate New York.

Those patients, along with businesses and taxpayers who help pay for prescription drugs through corporate and government prescription plans, collectively will save a fortune. That’s because generic drugs typically cost 20 percent to 80 percent less than the brand names.

Doctors hope the lower prices will significantly reduce the number of people jeopardizing their health because they can’t afford medicines they need.

Dr. Nieca Goldberg, director of The Women’s Heart Program at NYU Langone Medical Center in Manhattan, worries about patients who are skipping checkups and halving pills to pare costs.

“You can pretty much tell by the numbers when I check the patient’s blood pressure or cholesterol levels,” that they’ve not taken their medications as often as prescribed, she says.

Even people with private insurance or Medicare aren’t filling all their prescriptions, studies show, particularly for cancer drugs with copays of hundreds of dollars or more.

The new generics will slice copayments of those with insurance. For the uninsured, who have been paying full price, the savings will be much bigger.

Daly Powers, 25, an uninsured student who works two part-time jobs at low wages, says he often can’t afford the $220 a month for his depression and attention deficit disorder pills. He couldn’t buy either drug in June and says he’s struggling with his Spanish class and his emotions. He looks forward to his antidepressant, Lexapro, going generic early next year.

“It’d make all the difference in the world,” says Powers, of Bryan, Texas.

Generic medicines are chemically equivalent to the original brand-name drugs and work just as well for nearly all patients.

When a drug loses patent protection, often only one generic version is on sale for the first six months, so the price falls a little bit initially. Then, several other generic makers typically jump in, driving prices down dramatically.

Last year, the average generic prescription cost $72, versus $198 for the average brand-name drug, according to consulting firm Wolters Kluwer Pharma Solutions. Those figures average all prescriptions, from short-term to 90-day ones.

Average copayments last year were $6 for generics, compared with $24 for brand-name drugs given preferred status by an insurer and $35 for nonpreferred brands, according to IMS Health.

Among the drugs that recently went off patent, Protonix, for severe heartburn, now costs just $16 a month for the generic, versus about $170 for the brand name. And of the top sellers that soon will have competition, Lipitor retails for about $150 a month, Plavix costs almost $200 a month and blood pressure drug Diovan costs about $125 a month. For those with drug coverage, their out-of-pocket costs for each of those drugs could drop below $10 a month.

Jo Kelly, a retired social worker in Conklin, Mich., and her husband, Ray, a retired railroad mechanic, each take Lipitor and two other brand-name medicines, plus some generic drugs. Both are 67, and they land in the Medicare prescription “doughnut hole,” which means they must pay their drugs’ full cost by late summer or early fall each year. That pushes their monthly cost for Lipitor to about $95 each, and their combined monthly prescription cost to nearly $1,100.

Generic Lipitor should hit pharmacies Nov. 30 and cost them around $10 each a month.

“It would be a tremendous help for us financially,” she says. “It would allow us to start going out to eat again.”

For people with no prescription coverage, the coming savings on some drugs could be much bigger. Many discount retailers and grocery chains sell the most popular generics for $5 a month or less to draw in shoppers.

The impact of the coming wave of generics will be widespread – and swift.

Insurers use systems that make sure patients are switched to a generic the first day it’s available. Many health plans require newly diagnosed patients to start on generic medicines. And unless the doctor writes “brand only” on a prescription, if there’s a generic available, that’s almost always what the pharmacist dispenses.

“A blockbuster drug that goes off patent will lose 90 percent of its revenue within 24 months. I’ve seen it happen in 12 months,” says Ben Weintraub, a research director at Wolters Kluwer Pharma Solutions.

The looming revenue drop is changing the economics of the pharmaceutical industry.

In the 1990s, big pharmaceutical companies were wildly successful at creating pills that millions of people take every day for long-term conditions, from heart disease and diabetes to osteoporosis and chronic pain. The drugs are enormously profitable compared with drugs that are prescribed for short-term ailments.

The patents on those blockbusters, which were filed years before the drugs went on sale, last for 20 years at most, and many expire soon.

In recent years, many drug companies have struggled to develop new blockbuster drugs, despite multibillion-dollar research budgets and more partnerships with scientists at universities and biotech companies. The dearth of successes, partly because the “easy” treatments have already been found, has turned the short-term prognosis for “big pharma” anemic.

“The profit dollars that companies used to reinvest in innovation are no longer going to be coming,” warns Terry Hisey, life sciences leader at consultant Deloitte LLP’s pharmaceutical consulting business. He says that raises “long-term concerns about the industry’s ability to bring new medicines to market.”

But pharmaceutical companies can save billions when they stop promoting drugs that have new generic rivals, and U.S. drug and biotech companies are still spending more than $65 billion a year on R&D.

Drug companies have received U.S. approval for 20 drugs this year and expect approval for other important ones the next few years. Eventually, those will help fill the revenue hole.

For now, brand-name drugmakers are scrambling to adjust for the billions in revenue that will soon be lost. Typically, they raise prices 20 percent or more in the final years before generics hit to maximize revenue. Some also contract with generic drugmakers for “authorized generics,” which give the brand-name company a portion of the generic sales.

Brand-name companies also are trimming research budgets, partnering with other companies to share drug development costs and shifting more manufacturing and patient testing to low-cost countries.

Pharmaceutical companies have cut about 10 percent of U.S. jobs in four years, from a peak of about 297,000 to about 268,000, according to Labor Department data. Nearly two-thirds of the cuts came in the last 1 1/2 years, partly because of big mergers that were driven by the need to bulk up drugs in development and boost profits in the short term by cutting costs.

Drug companies also are trying to grow sales by putting more sales reps in emerging markets, such as China and India, and by diversifying into businesses that get little or no generic competition. Those include vaccines, diagnostic tests, veterinary medicines and consumer health products.

As the proportion of prescriptions filled with generic drugs jumped to 78 percent in 2010, from 57 percent in 2004, annual increases in prescription drug spending slowed, to just 4 percent in 2010. According to the Generic Pharmaceutical Association, generics saved the U.S. health care system more than $824 billion from 2000 through 2009, and now save about $1 billion every three days.

The savings are only going to get greater as our overweight population ages. People who take their medicines regularly often avoid costly complications and hospitalizations, says AARP’s policy chief, John Rother, which produces even bigger savings than the cheaper drugs.

In addition, many patients taking a particular brand-name drug will defect when a slightly older rival in the same class goes generic.

Global sales of Lipitor peaked at $12.9 billion in 2006, the year Zocor, an older drug in the statin class that reduces bad cholesterol, went generic. Lipitor sales then declined slowly but steadily to about $10.7 billion last year. That still will make Lipitor the biggest drug to go generic.

For patients, it’s a godsend.

Douglas Torok, 59, of Erie, Pa., now spends nearly $290 every three months for insulin for his Type 2 diabetes, plus four daily pills – Lipitor, Plavix and two generics – for his blood pressure and cholesterol problems. The $40,000-a-year foundry supervisor fears not being able to cover the out-of-pocket costs when he retires and doesn’t have a generous prescription plan.

In the meantime, once Lipitor and Plavix get generic competition his copayments will plunge.

“I will pay $16 for 90 days,” says Torok, who hopes to travel more. “It’s a big deal for me on my income.”

RELATED:

Family Says Doctor’s Prescription Screw-Up Killed Son

9-Year-Old Dies After States Accidentally Ends His Medicaid

Drug Prices To Plummet Due To Expiring Patents
Associated Press
Mon, 25 Jul 2011 15:55:44 GMT

African-American - News

African-American - News July 25, 2011

See African-American Weather

Live from the 2011 NAACP Convention in Los Angeles
Live from the 2011 NAACP Convention in Los Angeles (Washington Times)
LOS ANGELES , July 25, 2011 - The 2011 NAACP Convention was held at the Los Angeles Convention Center, a short drive from my home.

Black Tea Partiers to Protest NAACP National Convention in LA (Gateway Pundit)
Black tea partiers are planning a protest against the far left NAACP at their annual conference in Los Angeles.

Hundreds visit Bonine house (Dowagiac Daily News)
More than 500 people toured the Bonine House in Vandalia July 16 and 17. Some wandered around the inside of the home for hours, exploring the living room, dining room, kitchen and two parlors downstairs and the six bedrooms up the house's staircase.

African Americans Face Unique Medical Demands
African Americans Face Unique Medical Demands (CBS Local)
Every person is unique and so are their health concerns and problems. But some illnesses and conditions do have a tendency to appear in members of certain demographics.

Did did a large number of black troops fight for the Confederacy? (WTOP-FM Washington)
The letter from Louisiana Gov. Henry Allen to Confederate President Jefferson Davis requesting the use of black troops to fight for the south on display at the African American Civil War Museum.

Reinventing our community: Can metro Birmingham move beyond race? (Alabama Live)
"I have a dream, that one day, down in Alabama with its vicious racists, with its governor having his lips dripping with the words of interposition and nullification -- one day, right there in Alabama, little black boys and black girls will be able to join hands with little white boys and white girls as sisters and brothers." The Rev.

Among the book's illustrations is the cover of the program for Marian ...
Among the book's illustrations is the cover of the program for Marian ... (Statesman Journal)
The gravestone of Mary Parks Bonter and Marion Parks, sister and brother, are documented in "Perseverance: A History of African Americans in Oregon's Marion and Polk Counties." / Special to the Statesman Journal at a glance Title: "Perseverance: A History of African Americans in Oregon's Marion and Polk Counties" Cost: $25 ISBN: 978-1-4507-4878-0 ...