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UConn Loses $100 Million Grant Because Ohio has Clifford Harding- Ha-Haaaa

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Kathleen

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Dec 30, 2010, 9:16:42 AM12/30/10
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Subject: UConn Loses $100 Million Grant Because Ohio has Clifford
Harding- Ha-Haaaa

Date: Dec 30, 2010 9:12 AM

ARTICLE BELOW
====================================================

Well, good for Ohio. They have a real
scientist over there who may have
discovered the mechanism by which a
small portion of Lyme victims have
"only bad knees" (according
to Ray Dattwyler, "there may be
40, total, and Allen Steere keeps
seeing these same patients"):
http://www.actionlyme.org/101016.htm
This new publication ^^ from Clifford
Harding, you'll have to work to
find. I won't point it out to you.

The mechanism of shed vesicles in
combination with near-toxin-like binding
in the HLA groove hasn't been confirmed.
The mechanism by which the likes of shed
Osps hyperbind to only certain HLA
types has not been explored. And
by the way, Dave Dorward at the NIH
already told us about this:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16348232

1990.

Otherwise, it is a very good thing that
UConn will not be getting their new
hospital because they're the most
ignorant, vicious and abominable
excuses for humans, much less
physicians,in all of America. Second
only to Yale staff.

It would be *DANGEROUS* to humanity for
these tards to have any more funding at
all, to destroy some more.

We *know* they're not going to jail because
they're the world's biggest pussies.
Second only to the Corrupticut USDOJ:
http://www.actionlyme.org/USDOJ_COMPLAINT_RICO.htm


They apparently all have large amygdalas.
That's the polite way of saying they
suffer a deficit in maleness.


KMDickson
http://www.actionlyme.org

====================================================
http://www.courant.com/news/local/statewire/hc-ap-ct-uconnhealthcenterdec29,0,3480753,print.story

HARTFORD, Conn.
Advertisement
Click here to find out more!

The University of Connecticut Health Center won't be receiving a much-
anticipated $100 million federal grant state officials were counting
on to help pay for a massive renovation and improvement project at the
Farmington complex.

The federal Health Resources and Services Administration announced
Wednesday that Ohio State University would instead receive the funds
for its health care facility.

The news came as a surprise to state leaders because U.S. Sen. Chris
Dodd, Connecticut's retiring senior senator, last year added the $100
million competitive grant to the Senate version of the health care
reform bill. The item was criticized at the time for being an example
of earmarks, changes legislators make to bills to help their
districts.

"I am terribly disappointed in this decision by the Obama
Administration. While this was a competitive grant that attracted
numerous applicants, Connecticut made a very strong case that I am
surprised did not match or exceed the applications by other states,"
Dodd said in a statement.

The federal grant was considered a financial lynchpin for a massive,
$352 million plan to overhaul the UConn Health Center complex,
including the 35-year-old John Dempsey Hospital, and help put the
center on firm financial footing, boost the reputation of the UConn
medical and dental schools and create thousands of jobs.

Earlier this year, the General Assembly authorized $237 million in
borrowing for the project, including about $25 million that will be
shifted from bonds originally earmarked for other UConn projects.

Both Gov. M. Jodi Rell and Gov.-elect Dan Malloy expressed
disappointment in the federal government's decision, but said it
doesn't necessarily mean the project is dead. Malloy said he is "not
at all willing to say it's the end of the road" for the health center
overhaul.

"A renovated, expanded UConn Health Center is something I think is
critical to the economic revival of central Connecticut and it would
clearly benefit the state from a public health standpoint and from an
education standpoint," Malloy said. "It's the type of investment we
need to fight for."

Malloy, who takes office on Jan. 5, said he has asked his staff to
come up with "innovative and alternative ways" to move the project
forward.

"This is a disappointment and a setback, but we cannot allow it to be
an insurmountable obstacle to our state's future success and
competitiveness," he added.

U.S. Reps. John Larson and Rosa DeLauro issued statements saying they
will continue working with state and federal officials on the project.
DeLauro specifically said she will look for other potential funding
sources.

AP-WF-12-29-10 2210GMT

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

KMDickson

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