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Al's Morning Meeting

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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.
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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. "She's like a moose going after a cabbage." A fun piece watching the Palin speech with locals in Alaska.

2. Track Hannah with these storm tools I created on Ning.

3. Stay on top of Hannah with this site that includes radar, satellite, tracking maps, warnings and more.

4. The coolest storm tracking site I have seen in a while.

5. The site watches TV and Web mentions of candidates. It also monitors Tweets and more.

6. Instead of scheduling meetings by e-mail, everybody can work out a time and date online.

7. Here are tons of GREAT tools that will help you find anything on flickr.

8. Vloggerheads fights back against YouTube chaos.

9. YouTomb is where videos go after they're booted off YouTube.

10. The evolution of voting in America is shown by interactive mapping.

11. I have never seen anything like this amazing "Swan Lake" performance. [Flash]

12. This is my current home page.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Monday Edition: Young Women More Willing to Sell Eggs
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How much is a human egg worth? Should the government limit how much a donor can be paid? It used to be difficult to find women willing to donate eggs, but now clinics have so many donors they can be selective. Still, college newspapers and Internet sites solicit young women to sell eggs for up to $10,000.

A year ago, USA Today reported:

Classified-ad Web site Craigslist publishes 150 ads on a typical day. A Web search for "egg donor" at Google produces dozens of links to advertisers.

You can go online and shop for an ideal donor -- look at this list from a Chicago clinic as an example.

Here is a California-based site that offers 1,000 egg donors.

The Associated Press reports:

In 1996, women in federally monitored programs donated eggs just over 3,800 times. That number has risen steadily, to more than 10,000 in 2004, the most recent year for which the Centers for Disease Control has compiled data.

A decade ago, Dr. Joel Brasch, a fertility specialist in the Chicago area, had to work hard to recruit five or 10 young women for his own practice's donor pool -- but not anymore.

The money is seen as compensation for time and trouble. Among other things, donors learn to inject themselves with hormones and, eventually, have a needle inserted through their vaginal wall so eggs can be harvested.

The story adds:

The American Society of Reproductive Medicine, or ASRM, has set a compensation guideline of $5,000, with a limit of $10,000 for special cases -- if, for instance, a recipient wants eggs of rare ancestry.

The president of the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology, an affiliate of ASRM, argues that if women were just motivated by money, they wouldn't get past the psychological screening to become a donor. And, he says, researchers who've surveyed donors have found another strong motive.

"They're very altruistic and very willing to help a couple who's trying to conceive," says Dr. David Grainger, who's also a reproductive endocrinologist at University of Kansas medical school in Wichita.

Still, some egg brokers -- particularly those in the East and West -- are ignoring suggestions for a cap on compensation, and paying women more.

"Egg Donors Wanted" ads are common on the Internet, in college newspapers and on city trains. And with no federal laws limiting donor fees -- and fertility doctors conceding the difficulties of policing their own industry -- one ethicist says that eggs have quickly become "commoditized."

There are some who believe that egg donors should not be compensated at all. Does the word "donor" properly describe someone who is paid thousands? The argument in favor of compensation is that the donor is being paid for the surgery, not the eggs.

The New York Department of Health produced a useful FAQ page describing what is involved in donation, how to watch out for scams and what the medical implications may be.

An AP story earlier this reported that a worldwide economy has sprung up for donor eggs:

Belgian, Spanish and Greek clinics court women on the Internet, flashing images of pregnant bellies, nursing mothers, and frolicking families. They boast large donor pools and competitive rates.

Online forums buzz with women discussing the reputations of foreign clinics and offering advice and support. Associations have sprung up across France that, for a small annual fee, help women connect with clinics abroad and provide discounts to certain centers.

American women use seasoned French organizations to hook them up with clinics in Greece or Spain. Even with air fares and hotels, the costs can be just 10 percent of treatments in the United States.

Couples looking for black donors, a rarity in any country, fly to African clinics in Cameroon or Burkina Faso.

Frozen sperm and eggs can be bought online, ordered from U.S. storage banks by phone and shipped to clinics.

Experts caution that buyers need to be careful about the sources of eggs.


Troubles Inside Veterans' Hospitals

The Washington Post sends up a warning about the condition of the nation's leading veterans' hospital -- Walter Reed. Five years of receiving war wounded from Iraq and Afghanistan is finally overwhelming that facility and presumably the one near you, too. If any story deserves your attention, this one does. It is not an indictment of the care veterans' hospitals provide, but of the patient crush they are struggling to handle.


Daylight-Saving Time Fears

On March 11, three weeks from now, most of America will switch to Daylight Saving Time. The switch, though, is coming three weeks earlier than usual. Lots of computers require a patch to get the time right this year.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune explains:

Bank deposits, stock trades, cell-phone bills, online auctions: All could be affected by the earlier time change, according to a report by the Gartner Group, a technology consulting firm. Meanwhile, the airline industry is raising the prospect of mass disruption in flight schedules, especially with connecting flights to international routes. The disruption posed by [the] daylight-saving switch, however, is still small-scale compared with the Y2K scenario.

The Arizona Republic explains what to do:

Microsoft planned to send its daylight-saving patch to Windows PCs with the "automatic update" feature last week. Users with automatic updates turned off should download the patch from Microsoft. (New machines running Windows Vista are immune because Vista was finalized after the 2005 law passed.)

However, computers running anything older than the most recent version of Windows XP, known as Service Pack 2, no longer get this level of tech support. Owners of those PCs should go into the control panel and unclick the setting that tells the machine to automatically change the clock for daylight-saving time.

If you store [your] appointments in Microsoft Outlook or other desktop-based calendar programs -- rather than dynamic, Web-based programs such as Google Calendar -- the situation gets trickier. Patches for calendar programs are available, but appointments entered before a patch was applied may still be registered in standard time rather than daylight time -- off by an hour.


Packing Heat

The Birmingham (Ala.) News says an astonishing 1 in ten adults in the paper's metro area may be carrying a concealed gun.


Al's Morning Multimedia

The Ventura County (Calif.) Star did a nice job yesterday on a report about new frontiers in cancer treatment. The paper says there are nearly 650 new drugs being developed that give cancer patients diverse options beyond chemo.


We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.

Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
Posted by Al Tompkins 11:56 PM February 18, 2007
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