USERNAME 
PASSWORD 
Subscriber? · Lost password?
Lost username? · More help

Cancer

33-43
64-74
9-11
43-53
18
70-75
25
6-11
12-21
41-59
43-44
44
47
48
49-50
50
55
56
56
57
57
58
58-59
59
60
61
61-62
62
62
45
46
94-102
100-105
62-66
42-45
25-30
32
82-86
51-61
83-87
634-637
25-32
257-268
764-773
919-923
Aug 2006

Percentage by which white women who often spend time in the sun are less at risk of breast cancer than those who do not: 34

Source:

Esther M. John, Northern California Cancer Center (Fremont)

Jun 2006Minimum amount that a Massachusetts special-ed teacher received in donations from 2003 to 2005 by faking cancer: $35,000
Source:

Bristol County District Attorney's Office (New Bedford, Mass.)

Feb 2005Number of states where women seeking abortions are required to be told that abortion increases the risk of breast cancer: 3
Source:

Planned Parenthood Federation of America (N.Y.C.)

Feb 2005Number of the eighty-nine experts convened in 2003 by the National Cancer Institute who found any evidence of a link between abortion and breast cancer: 1
Source:

National Cancer Institute (Bethesda, Md.)

Jun 2003Average quality-of-life rating researchers assign U.S. children with cancer, on a scale of 1 to 100: 69
Source:

Dr. Jeffrey B. Schwimmer, University of California, San Diego

Jun 2002Chance of contracting a "fairly common" form of colon cancer reported on in the New York Times April 4: 1 in 8,000
Source:

"Promising Drug Fails in Test Involving a Kind of Cancer," New York Times, 4/4/02

Aug 2001Ratio of the cancer rate on Puerto Rico's main island to that on Vieques: 5:6
Source:

Central Cancer Registry (San Juan, P.R.)

Aug 2001Chance that a baby born in Belarus will contract thyroid cancer in his or her lifetime: 1 in 4
Source:

Chernobyl Children's Project (Cork, Ireland)

Jul 2001Rank of cancer and suicide, respectively, among the top causes of death of Japanese bureaucrats last year: 1, 2
Source:

Embassy of Japan (Washington)

Jul 2001Chance that a case of cancer diagnosed in the U.S. last year was a skin cancer: 1 in 2
Source:

American Cancer Society (Atlanta)

Jul 2001Chance that an American will develop skin cancer in his or her lifetime: 1 in 5
Source:

American Cancer Society (Atlanta)

Sep 2000Percentage by which the cancer death rate in the area around Sydney's Olympic Village exceeds the rest of the city's: 8.5
Source:

Green Games Watch 2000 (Bondi Junction, Australia)

Sep 2000Number of the three cancer survivors on the Supreme Court who are also over 70: 2
Source:

U.S. Supreme Court

Jan 2000Percentage change since 1930 in the annual U.S. death rate for cancer: +11
Source:

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta)/American Cancer Society (Atlanta) /Harper'sresearch

Jul 1999Percentage by which the incidence of skin cancer rises for every 1 percent decrease in the size of the ozone layer: 2
Source:

United Nations Environment Program (Nairobi, Kenya)

Sep 1998Chance that a caller to the government's cancer-information line gets a busy signal or is put on hold until they hang up: 1 in 3
Source:

Office of Inspector General, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Sep 1998Chance that a cancer patient in a nursing home over the age of 85 does not receive adequate pain medication: 1 in 3
Source:

Dr. Giovanni Gambassi, Brown University (Providence, R.I.)

July 23, 2007Executive power was transferred to Vice President Dick Cheney for two hours and five minutes while President George W. Bush underwent a routine colonoscopy. Spokesman Scott Stanzel announced that five small polyps had been removed, but “none appeared worrisome,” and the president was soon able to ride his bike.
Source 1:

MSNBC

Source 2:

AFP via Taipei Times

January 9, 2007Capsaicin, a substance in jalapeño peppers, was said by scientists to thwart cancer by attacking mitochondria in cancer cells, triggering cell death.
Source:

BBC

October 19, 2006 South Korean scientists announced the development of a new genetically altered strain of adenovirus capable of destroying cancer cells.
Source:

AFP via Breitbart

July 19, 2006 Scientists learned that Britain's wealthy neighborhoods may cause cancer in children.
Source:

Washington Post and Cruises.about.com

March 9, 2006Former Texas Governor Ann Richards announced that she had been diagnosed with cancer.
Source:

AP via Yahoo! News

November 17, 2005A Swedish study linked oral sex to mouth cancer.
Source:

News24.com

August 21, 2005In Edinburgh, Scotland, 10,000 bagpipers piped against cancer.
Source:

BBC News

June 13, 2005Researchers found that one in five women would consider having their breasts removed if it reduced their odds of contracting cancer.
Source:

Reuters

May 24, 2005A San Diego doctor was training a dog named Ginger to detect cancer by sniffing human urine.
Source:

Sign On San Diego

May 17, 2005 Kylie Minogue announced that she has breast cancer.
Source:

BBC News

April 6, 2005 Peter Jennings announced that he has lung cancer.
Source:

New York Times

February 3, 2005 Scientists determined that sunlight helps fight cancer.
Source:

The Australian

January 5, 2005The Dingman family of Virginia was auctioning off the right to pay for surgery on a tumor infecting their 9-year-old son. Bids reached as high as $200.
Source:

The Washington Post

December 21, 2004A study found that lung cancer runs in families.
Source:

MSNBC

November 5, 2004Elizabeth Edwards, the wife of John Edwards, was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Source:

New York Times

November 1, 2004Chief Justice William Rehnquist, who underwent a tracheotomy last week, was recovering from treatment for thyroid cancer and was unable to return to work.
Source:

Reuters

October 10, 2004 Jacques Derrida died of pancreatic cancer.
Source:

New York Times

August 19, 2004 Children living next to gas stations, a French study found, are four times more likely to develop leukemia.
Source:

New Scientist

August 16, 2004 Korean researchers found that leukemia deaths are 70 percent higher among people who live near AM radio broadcasting towers.
Source:

Wired

July 4, 2004A dead woman was suing the late Dr. Robert Atkins for giving her inadequate cancer-treatment advice.
Source:

New York Daily News

June 24, 2004New research suggested that needle biopsies might help spread breast cancer to the sentinel node.
Source:

Reuters

May 20, 2004The EPA approved an air-pollution rule on formaldehyde emissions based on a cancer risk model created by the Chemical Industry Institute of Toxicology; the new standard is 10,000 times weaker than the EPA's previous regulation for such emissions.
Source:

Los Angeles Times

May 10, 2004An EPA study found that household "air fresheners" could be causing a carcinogenic smog in people's homes.
Source:

Nature.com

April 30, 2004Researchers discovered a molecule, used by some cancer tumors, that prevents cells from dying.
Source:

New Scientist

April 6, 2004American scientists announced that frequent ejaculation can help prevent prostate cancer.
Source:

New Scientist

January 24, 2004Frequent underarm shaving together with deodorant use could increase the risk of breast cancer.
Source:

New Scientist

January 23, 2004Women who have used dark hair dye for at least 24 years have a greater chance of developing cancer, a study found.
Source:

Reuters

January 21, 2003 Japan's Imperial Household Agency revealed that Emperor Akihito has prostate cancer.
December 11, 2001In Missouri, a pharmacist admitted to diluting cancer drugs; he did it because he needed to raise money to pay $1,000,000 in taxes and a pledge to his church.
November 13, 2001The first clinical trial of marijuana released preliminary findings suggesting that pot is a “wonder drug” for people suffering from osteoporosis, cancer, AIDS, arthritis, spinal injuries, and some forms of mental illness.
October 2, 2001Some people in India were using cow urine to cure indigestion and skin cancer.
August 28, 2001A Minnesota man filed suit against the U.S. government after a veteran's hospital mistakenly removed his testicles, misdiagnosing his arthritis as cancer.
July 31, 2001One of the world's largest paintings, by French fauvist Raoul Dufy, was found to be coated in cancer-causing asbestos; the Paris Museum of Modern Art will spend a million dollars scraping it off.
June 12, 2001A jury ordered Philip Morris to pay $3 billion to a former heroin addict who was unable to quit smoking and developed lung cancer.
May 8, 2001 Japanese researchers found that eating sushi reduces a smoker's risk of developing lung cancer.
April 10, 2001Two beggars in Chisinau, Moldova, were arrested for selling human body parts, which were apparently taken from a cancer clinic, as dog food.
March 13, 2001Browne & Williamson Tobacco Corporation paid $1,087,191 to a seventy-year-old former smoker in Jacksonville, Florida, who lost a lung to cancer.
March 6, 2001Sir Richard Doll, the British epidemiologist who discovered the link between smoking and lung cancer, has concluded that it is true: children (and possibly adults) who live near electrical power lines are more likely to get leukemia.
January 9, 2001Europeans were concerned about Balkan Syndrome, a mysterious set of illnesses that plague veterans of United Nations peacekeeping duty in the former Yugoslavia; over a dozen have died of leukemia; many suffer chronic fatigue, hair loss, and various forms of cancer.
December 19, 2000Another death-row inmate was cleared by DNA tests; a death-row inmate who died of cancer last year was also cleared.
November 14, 2000Herpes virus 8, which causes Kaposi's sarcoma, a skin cancer that commonly afflicts AIDS patients, may be spread by kissing, according to a new study.
October 10, 2000A British woman was awarded £345,222 for being wrongfully diagnosed with cancer, which resulted in fourteen operations, including a double mastectomy and a full hysterectomy.
September 19, 2000 New York mayor Rudolph Giuliani was treated for cancer; doctors implanted radioactive seeds in his prostate.
August 29, 2000 New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani threatened to sue People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals for using his likeness on billboards which say “Got Prostate Cancer? Drinking Milk Contributes to Prostate Cancer.”
August 15, 2000 New York Police Commissioner Howard Safir, who suffers from prostate cancer, said that he would resign to take a job with a private security firm.

      OCTOBER 2008

      BLEAK HOUSES
      Digging Through the Ruins of the Mortgage Crisis
      By Paul Reyes

      NEWS FROM NOWHERE
      Iceland's Polite Dystopia
      By Rebecca Solnit

      MICROSTORIES
      Fiction by John Edgar Wideman

      Also: Bernard Avishai on Obama's Jews