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Tuesday, February 27, 2007

PUC, Land and Values

Jerry,

I just finished reviewing the article/letter on the Save Rural Angwin
website and it has all the marks of being written by Duane Cronk. I
do not know if you know Duane, local retired gent who also has a
website that is opposed to PUC.

http://www.angwinreporter.com/index.html

Opinions are like earwax, everybody has some, even if they don't
admit it. I have lived here and worked here and seen financial
pressures and there are many reasons and excuses as to why PUC is
stagnant and all the California community colleges and UC campuses
are overflowing. One of the largest reasons, to me, is that Adventist
families are not sending their kids to SDA colleges, and academies
for that matter. Certainly not at the percentage level of years ago,
and that is a problem. It is a very difficult problem to address and
face head on from inside a school that needs higher enrollment.

The SDA church is a young church that continues to evolve and mature.
That process of change included paying for the intelligentsia of the
church to get terminal degrees at non-SDA universities starting back
in the 1960's. And we are proud to have these people as professors in
our schools and doctors in our hospitals and teachers in our
academies and pastors in our churches and then, surprise, surprise,
they do not line up to send their kids to SDA schools but instead
send them out to "better" schools.

It used to be that Adventist families desired their kids to be in
"the best SDA school", now we are seeing more and more, parents
placing kids in "the best college" and SDA is just one possible
criteria among many, and not the top criteria. Like I said an
evolving and developing church.

And (this is me wandering off on a tangent here) the North American
SDA church is dividing more and more into fundamentalist members and
pluralist members. The "old school" (my folks come to mind) will not
attend the SDA schools since we are so liberal and the more liberal
often think we are not open minded enough. What a balance to attempt
by Dick and the other administrators. And these topics and focusing
on minor topics keep some families away. As the church evolves and
matures it will continue (in my lifetime) to be interesting just what
"Adventist" looks like in 20 years.

And all the above is related to land, and land use and land sales and
vineyards and wine and values and perception and it is impossible to
please them all. But I give the leaders of PUC full credit for trying
to do the best in trying times to position the college for the future
both financially and socially to serve a changing church.

OK, enough for tonight. Craig

Monday, February 26, 2007

Mom and PUC update

I may not write much tonight but here is a recap.

Mom and Dad are fine in the new normal reality that Mom is essentially totally gone from reality. Her reality exist primarily with her friend in the bathroom mirror and that is just about it. Dad has had to change the door locks on the house to keyed locks on the inside so she does not let herself out of the house at night and wander off. I was up at the house Friday and the three of us went to the Lake County Social Services center to register and start the process of social worker visits, evaluation and eventual placement in some sort of assisted care center.

Dad called and said that Bill and Jan were intending to stop by on their way back to the Sacramento airport. I know last time Bill stopped by he was distressed to see the shape his sister was/is in. I have never known Bill very well but I suspect he is hurting on the inside in his quieter way and I feel for him. The changes in Mom can be a shock to the system if you only see her every few months or years. Her inability to relate to anything in "real" life is frustrating to me and sometimes I think to her since she can get very petty and crabby and cross and confused and accuses those that care for her of not doing even the littlest things to meet her needs. But of course you just did those things and she has no memory. Tough.

Here at PUC I can not speak for anyone but myself on the proposals that PUC has made regarding development. I have written several supportive letters to the paper and have been flamed and blasted in a couple responses on the Register website. But I still think two things, one PUC has the right to develop as long as it complies with county regulation and two, the same people complaining about PUC putting in some houses never complained as several hundred acres of forest have been cleared on Howell Mountain for vineyards. Clear cutting for vines is merely "agricultural conversion" while cutting one tree for housing is raping the land. This confuses me.

Regarding the names involved, I do not know all of them. I have met Adam Pease, he is a high level computer programer from New England who made some money in Silicon Valley and moved to Angwin. He and I have shared emails and perspectives regarding the PUC article on Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Union_College, his passion seems very focused and narrow and seems to reflect NIMBY and "I got mine, never mind about you."

The alumni letter that I got, I just read and tossed and considered a very poor attempt at PR by PUC. I do receive calls from Alumni at the Enrollment Office from time to time and they all tend to be negative but often turn neutral when they learn more about the project and acknowledge they had incomplete or faulty information. I have spoken with Kelli Anderson several times and she commented, "Craig, in another time I think you and I could have been friends." And I think she is right. Regarding the project proposals, I hate to see the open space in front of the college get filled with houses, rebuilding a new, better designed shopping plaza seems good and adding some apartments and small homes nearby seems good. Redeveloping the old Farm and dairy area seems reasonable and redeveloping Mobile Manor, where I live, seems like a splendid idea. Placing twelve homes on forty acre parcels behind the airport does not seem excessive either since all the hills and trails beyond that are preserved and there should not end up being a new Crestmont type development.

To me, change happens, and yes, as an employee I can see all the financial stresses inside the institution that need to be addressed, from improved dorms to adequate computer networks, it takes money to run this place and tuition is not enough to cover the needs.

I check the letters and responses on the Napa Register every day for the latest remarks from the community. Right now the formal letters seem balanced between save Angwin and supportive of PUC. And yes, most of the supportive letters are from people affiliated with the college in some way, past or present. But the interesting stuff is usually in the responses posted on the website, that is where the give and take and thrashing and trashing takes place. A response was made in there that was removed quickly by the editor after I was called out by name as a patsy of the college who could not balance my own check book.

Enough for now, I will stay in touch. Oh, one more thing, my fathers brother "Wilber" passed away in San Bernardino. He had several strokes and such and was already quite blind from diabetes. Dad is going down this coming Friday to Southern California for a memorial and I am staying with Mom for three days. It should be interesting.

Craig
On Feb 25, 2007, at 5:18 PM, GMCOPLE wrote:

Hi Craig,

I came very close to stopping by to see your parents yesterday and would have except the weather wasn't that great. My wife and I had gone up to Fort Bragg to see Bill and Jan. I knew that they had done quite a bit of work to the "old place" and I wanted to check it out. The weather on Friday was beautiful. We were going to stay a couple of days but something came up that we had to be back by this morning so we just stayed overnight.

I started out toward Lake County by going to Willits from Fort Bragg (not my normal method) but once I hit 101, I kept going south (the weather wasn't terrible but it wasn't good). And, I didn't even know if they were home (I was going to just continue to go on into Pope Valley and up over the hill...I always go through Napa Valley when going to/from Mendocino anyway). But I didn't go through Lake County.

So how are they? I am going to call this week. Bill may stop by tomorrow on their way back to Montana. And, yes, I think his stopping is a good thing.

Also, I am getting bombarded from every angle by the SaveRuralAngwin crowd...letters to the editor, I went up to a Foothills meeting and it seems like "everyone" is opposed that I know up there (other than people associated with PUC). Some of the people who write the letters...who are they? And who is this guy Steven Booska who wrote to all the alumnus? And who wrote the lead article on the SRA website (Adam Pease?)?

Anyway, keep me posted...I still have an open mind but the people I see sure don't! And give me a quick update on your Mom.

Jerry Cople

Fwd: PARENTS AND PUC

PARENTS AND PUC

 I may not write much tonight but here is a recap. 

Mom and Dad are fine in the new normal reality that Mom is essentially totally gone from reality. Her reality exist primarily with her friend in the bathroom mirror and that is just about it. Dad has had to change the door locks on the house to keyed locks on the inside so she does not let herself out of the house at night and wander off. I was up at the house Friday and the three of us went to the Lake County Social Services center to register and start the process of social worker visits, evaluation and eventual placement in some sort of assisted care center. 

Dad called and said that Bill and Jan were intending to stop by on their way back to the Sacramento airport. I know last time Bill stopped by he was distressed to see the shape his sister was/is in. I have never known Bill very well but I suspect he is hurting on the inside in his quieter way and I feel for him. The changes in Mom can be a shock to the system if you only see her every few months or years. Her inability to relate to anything in "real" life is frustrating to me and sometimes I think to her since she can get very petty and crabby and cross and confused and accuses those that care for her of not doing even the littlest things to meet her needs. But of course you just did those things and she has no memory. Tough. 

Here at PUC I can not speak for anyone but myself on the proposals that PUC has made regarding development. I have written several supportive letters to the paper and have been flamed and blasted in a couple responses on the Register website. But I still think two things, one PUC has the right to develop as long as it complies with county regulation and two, the same people complaining about PUC putting in some houses never complained as several hundred acres of forest have been cleared on Howell Mountain for vineyards. Clear cutting for vines is merely "agricultural conversion" while cutting one tree for housing is raping the land. This confuses me. 

Regarding the names involved, I do not know all of them. I have met Adam Pease, he is a high level computer programer from New England who made some money in Silicon Valley and moved to Angwin. He and I have shared emails and perspectives regarding the PUC article on Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Union_College, his passion seems very focused and narrow and seems to reflect NIMBY and "I got mine, never mind about you."

The alumni letter that I got, I just read and tossed and considered a very poor attempt at PR by PUC. I do receive calls from Alumni at the Enrollment Office from time to time and they all tend to be negative but often turn neutral when they learn more about the project and acknowledge they had incomplete or faulty information. I have spoken with Kelli Anderson several times and she commented, "Craig, in another time I think you and I could have been friends." And I think she is right. Regarding the project proposals, I hate to see the open space in front of the college get filled with houses, rebuilding a new, better designed shopping plaza seems good and adding some apartments and small homes nearby seems good. Redeveloping the old Farm and dairy area seems reasonable and redeveloping Mobile Manor, where I live, seems like a splendid idea. Placing twelve homes on forty acre parcels behind the airport does not seem excessive either since all the hills and trails beyond that are preserved and there should not end up being a new Crestmont type development. 

To me, change happens, and yes, as an employee I can see all the financial stresses inside the institution that need to be addressed, from improved dorms to adequate computer networks, it takes money to run this place and tuition is not enough to cover the needs. 

I check the letters and responses on the Napa Register every day for the latest remarks from the community. Right now the formal letters seem balanced between save Angwin and supportive of PUC. And yes, most of the supportive letters are from people affiliated with the college in some way, past or present. But the interesting stuff is usually in the responses posted on the website, that is where the give and take and thrashing and trashing takes place. A response was made in there that was removed quickly by the editor after I was called out by name as a patsy of the college who could not balance my own check book.

Enough for now, I will stay in touch. Oh, one more thing, my fathers brother "Wilber" passed away in San Bernardino. He had several strokes and such and was already quite blind from diabetes. Dad is going down this coming Friday to Southern California for a memorial and I am staying with Mom for three days. It should be interesting. 

Craig
On Feb 25, 2007, at 5:18 PM, GMCOPLE wrote:

Hi Craig,
 
I came very close to stopping by to see your parents yesterday and would have except the weather wasn't that great.  My wife and I had gone up to Fort Bragg to see Bill and Jan.  I knew that they had done quite a bit of work to the "old place" and I wanted to check it out.  The weather on Friday was beautiful.  We were going to stay a couple of days but something came up that we had to be back by this morning so we just stayed overnight.
 
I started out toward Lake County by going to Willits from Fort Bragg (not my normal method) but once I hit 101, I kept going south (the weather wasn't terrible but it wasn't good).  And, I didn't even know if they were home (I was going to just continue to go on into Pope Valley and up over the hill...I always go through Napa Valley when going to/from Mendocino anyway).  But I didn't go through Lake County.
 
So how are they?  I am going to call this week.  Bill may stop by tomorrow on their way back to Montana.  And, yes, I think his stopping is a good thing.
 
Also, I am getting bombarded from every angle by the SaveRuralAngwin crowd...letters to the editor, I went up to a Foothills meeting and it seems like "everyone" is opposed that I know up there (other than people associated with PUC).  Some of the people who write the letters...who are they?  And who is this guy Steven Booska who wrote to all the alumnus?  And who wrote the lead article on the SRA website (Adam Pease?)?
 
Anyway, keep me posted...I still have an open mind but the people I see sure don't!  And give me a quick update on your Mom.
 
Jerry



Sunday, February 25, 2007

PARENTS AND PUC

Jerry, 

 I may not write much tonight but here is a recap. 

Mom and Dad are fine in the new normal reality that Mom is essentially totally gone from reality. Her reality exist primarily with her friend in the bathroom mirror and that is just about it. Dad has had to change the door locks on the house to keyed locks on the inside so she does not let herself out of the house at night and wander off. I was up at the house Friday and the three of us went to the Lake County Social Services center to register and start the process of social worker visits, evaluation and eventual placement in some sort of assisted care center. 

Dad called and said that Bill and Jan were intending to stop by on their way back to the Sacramento airport. I know last time Bill stopped by he was distressed to see the shape his sister was/is in. I have never known Bill very well but I suspect he is hurting on the inside in his quieter way and I feel for him. The changes in Mom can be a shock to the system if you only see her every few months or years. Her inability to relate to anything in "real" life is frustrating to me and sometimes I think to her since she can get very petty and crabby and cross and confused and accuses those that care for her of not doing even the littlest things to meet her needs. But of course you just did those things and she has no memory. Tough. 

Here at PUC I can not speak for anyone but myself on the proposals that PUC has made regarding development. I have written several supportive letters to the paper and have been flamed and blasted in a couple responses on the Register website. But I still think two things, one PUC has the right to develop as long as it complies with county regulation and two, the same people complaining about PUC putting in some houses never complained as several hundred acres of forest have been cleared on Howell Mountain for vineyards. Clear cutting for vines is merely "agricultural conversion" while cutting one tree for housing is raping the land. This confuses me. 

Regarding the names involved, I do not know all of them. I have met Adam Pease, he is a high level computer programer from New England who made some money in Silicon Valley and moved to Angwin. He and I have shared emails and perspectives regarding the PUC article on Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Union_College, his passion seems very focused and narrow and seems to reflect NIMBY and "I got mine, never mind about you."

The alumni letter that I got, I just read and tossed and considered a very poor attempt at PR by PUC. I do receive calls from Alumni at the Enrollment Office from time to time and they all tend to be negative but often turn neutral when they learn more about the project and acknowledge they had incomplete or faulty information. I have spoken with Kelli Anderson several times and she commented, "Craig, in another time I think you and I could have been friends." And I think she is right. Regarding the project proposals, I hate to see the open space in front of the college get filled with houses, rebuilding a new, better designed shopping plaza seems good and adding some apartments and small homes nearby seems good. Redeveloping the old Farm and dairy area seems reasonable and redeveloping Mobile Manor, where I live, seems like a splendid idea. Placing twelve homes on forty acre parcels behind the airport does not seem excessive either since all the hills and trails beyond that are preserved and there should not end up being a new Crestmont type development. 

To me, change happens, and yes, as an employee I can see all the financial stresses inside the institution that need to be addressed, from improved dorms to adequate computer networks, it takes money to run this place and tuition is not enough to cover the needs. 

I check the letters and responses on the Napa Register every day for the latest remarks from the community. Right now the formal letters seem balanced between save Angwin and supportive of PUC. And yes, most of the supportive letters are from people affiliated with the college in some way, past or present. But the interesting stuff is usually in the responses posted on the website, that is where the give and take and thrashing and trashing takes place. A response was made in there that was removed quickly by the editor after I was called out by name as a patsy of the college who could not balance my own check book.

Enough for now, I will stay in touch. Oh, one more thing, my fathers brother "Wilber" passed away in San Bernardino. He had several strokes and such and was already quite blind from diabetes. Dad is going down this coming Friday to Southern California for a memorial and I am staying with Mom for three days. It should be interesting. 

Craig
On Feb 25, 2007, at 5:18 PM, GMCOPLE wrote:

Hi Craig,
 
I came very close to stopping by to see your parents yesterday and would have except the weather wasn't that great.  My wife and I had gone up to Fort Bragg to see Bill and Jan.  I knew that they had done quite a bit of work to the "old place" and I wanted to check it out.  The weather on Friday was beautiful.  We were going to stay a couple of days but something came up that we had to be back by this morning so we just stayed overnight.
 
I started out toward Lake County by going to Willits from Fort Bragg (not my normal method) but once I hit 101, I kept going south (the weather wasn't terrible but it wasn't good).  And, I didn't even know if they were home (I was going to just continue to go on into Pope Valley and up over the hill...I always go through Napa Valley when going to/from Mendocino anyway).  But I didn't go through Lake County.
 
So how are they?  I am going to call this week.  Bill may stop by tomorrow on their way back to Montana.  And, yes, I think his stopping is a good thing.
 
Also, I am getting bombarded from every angle by the SaveRuralAngwin crowd...letters to the editor, I went up to a Foothills meeting and it seems like "everyone" is opposed that I know up there (other than people associated with PUC).  Some of the people who write the letters...who are they?  And who is this guy Steven Booska who wrote to all the alumnus?  And who wrote the lead article on the SRA website (Adam Pease?)?
 
Anyway, keep me posted...I still have an open mind but the people I see sure don't!  And give me a quick update on your Mom.
 
Jerry


Tuesday, February 06, 2007

February 6, 2007

Life is not Just Alzheimer's, it just seems that way

I had the privilege of spending the day with Mom and Dad on a jaunt
to Santa Rosa for Dad to visit the VA clinic for checkup.

It was a charming day in so many ways. Dad and I had a couple hours
to just chat and catch up on news stories we are following, politics
and the war in Iraq, troubles with the mayor of San Francisco (many
should be happy he is merely a straight drunk), the missing rains of
winter, how is Mom really doing, that sort of thing.

I introduced them both to Baja Fresh for lunch and it was a great
introduction. Mother just absolutely wolfed down here taco salad
while she spoke of the joy of being able to eat what ever she wanted
and never get fat in this life. She was still eating after Dad and I
finished our grilled veggie burrito's and it was good to see her
smiling and happy. Eternally confused but happy.

While Dad was with the doctor Mom and I took the Pathfinder to a car
wash to rinse off the leftover muck from last weekend in the snow at
Shasta. After the crew vacuumed the car they sent it through the
washing machine without a driver and the whole concept was pretty
amazing to mother. There was our car all clean and dripping on the
other side and she thought we had a brand new car, oh that life were
that simple.

Later I wished I had a tape recorder to record her thinking as she
gathered her thoughts as we talked. The mostly painless confusion
that she goes through is interesting and not nearly as fear inducing
in me as it was a few months ago. As we visited I asked her to tell
me about the different places she had lived in her life. She jumped
in her memory all the way back to Lodi, which is the area she was in
as a child, and only as a child. As I mentioned each major home of
her life, Champion Lane, La Vida Mission, Castle Valley, Fort Bragg,
Cirby Creek, now Clearlake Oaks, she would have a brief memory
connected to the name of the local and then drift off into pointless
wandering words and many started and never finished sentences. It did
not seem to pain her to not have the memory, instead the memory would
flash across her mind, she would acknowledge it, and then it was
gone. It is so fascinating and it almost makes me want to go become
an neurologist to try to learn more about the mind and the electro/
chemical connections that are severed by Alzheimer's.

While it is clear from the research that the physical brain of the
patient is reducing in size, holes are appearing in the tissue,
plaques are forming in the tissue that seem to break the electrical
paths, what we see as humans and family is the loss of the "mind"
that non-physical portion of who we are. And that is the loss that
hurts. To lose the mind is to reduce the "being human" . To lose the
mind is to lose the largest thing that holds us up as the "higher
race". To lose the mind is to lose our sentient "sense of self" that
is missing in greater and lesser degrees in all other creations.

Linda asked me how the day went. I can honestly say, it was the
finest day with Mom and Dad that I have had in many months. The fact
that she walked the aisles of Costco in her bedroom slippers (it is
all she will wear without a fight), the fact that she had to slip
into our home bathroom to remind her friend in the mirror they were
leaving, the fact that she had to slip back to that mirror over and
over and we could not get her into the car easily since she was
missing someone, it did not take away from the joy of the day. (And,
smile if you want, I promised her, when she got to her house her
friend would be there waiting for her!)

It was a different kind of hurt today.

Pomegranate Juice in 2006

SDA World Church: 
Pomegranate Juice May Thwart Onset of Alzheimer's, Says Researcher

December 19, 2006 Loma Linda, California, United States .... [Elizabeth Lechleitner/LLU/ANN]




You may want to swap your morning swig of orange juice for a tall glass of pomegranate juice, new research from Loma Linda University suggests.

Before you gulp down that eggnog or spicy apple cider this holiday season, take a moment to consider what your drink can do for your brain. If you opt for a glass of pomegranate juice, you may be staving off Alzheimer's disease, says Dr. Richard Harman, lead researcher and author of a study released last month by Seventh-day Adventist-owned Loma Linda University in collaboration with Washington University researchers. 

The study reveals that pomegranates, when compared to other fruits and vegetables, pack notably high levels of polyphenols. Polyphenols, according to researchers, are one of many antioxidants known to neutralize the harmful effects of free radicals, which attack healthy human cells and cause them to mutate into cancer cells. Free radicals have also been linked to triggering arthritis, atherosclerosis, diabetes, premature aging, and Alzheimer's disease. 

For years, pomegranates have been linked to curbing certain types of cancer and clearing arteries. Hartman's study indicates they're as good for your brain as they are for your heart. 

At Loma Linda University, Hartman and other researchers used mice with genetic tendencies to develop Alzheimer's-like diseases. Researchers divided the mice into two groups. The first drank water with added pomegranate juice concentrate, while the remainder drank water with added sugar equal to the natural sweetness of the juice. 

Six months later, the study mice that consumed pomegranate juice learned more quickly and swam measurably faster during underwater maze tests of their learning and memory abilities than the mice that drank sugar water. They also had 50 percent less plaque in their brains. 

Hartman explains that brain plaques are "toxic clumps of protein" accumulated in the brain. These accumulations, he says, damage and disrupt communication between brain cells. Compromised brain cells trigger memory loss and cognitive decline--both characteristic signs of Alzheimer's disease. 

Each of the mice in the study drank an average of 5 milliliters of pomegranate juice a day. To reap similar benefits, researchers project, humans should aim for 1-2 glasses per day. 

"There's no evidence that it's an 'all or none' situation," says Hartman, so even a glass of pomegranate juice every now and then may prove beneficial. However, he encourages everyone to drink the recommended amount. 

Dr. Allan Handysides, director of health ministries at world church headquarters, adds that research involving laboratory animals does not always translate directly to humans. "I don't decry the study," he says. "It's very exciting, but it has to be taken, as do all studies in laboratories, as a preliminary opening to continued research, rather than conclusive proof in itself." 

While pomegranate juice is a bit pricy when compared to, say, orange or grape juice, Hartman believes it's well worth the price. "Medications for Alzheimer's disease, cancer and heart disease are significantly more expensive, and as they say, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." He adds that some groceries offer the juice in an affordable organic concentrate form. 

Look for the December 2006 journal of Neurobiology of Disease at your local library to read the full study, which is the first of its kind: "Pomegranate juice decreases amyloid load and improves behavior in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease."

Pomegranate juice? 2005

Who knew that the lowly pomegranate would emerge as a player in the research to reduce and prevent Alzheimer's.

Pomegranate Hottest Health Remedy: Fad or Fact?

What's all this hype about a little known and rarely seen fruit

By Tucker Sutherland, editor, Senior Journal.com



Sept. 29, 2005 – So what's with this surge of pomegranate hype. This fruit is being touted as a miracle drug for aging, Alzheimer's, cancer, heart disease, arthritis and even protecting unborn babies from brain injuries. It cures about anything that can ail an aging senior citizen. It has become a popular ingredient for mixed drinks, ice cream and even bottled water. It's now a popular decoration for table displays. President Bush even brought it up in his meeting in May with Afghanistan President Karzai, suggesting they grow these trees rather than poppies. The Centers for Disease Control honored it by naming it the fruit of the month.

Pomegranate is now a color, there's a band named Pomegranate and even a blog called Pomegranate afternoon.

"Is there anything that pomegranates don't do," asks writer Chloe Rhodes in the London Telegraph. "As well as being achingly fashionable - pomegranate martinis were served at the Oscars and Jo Malone's new fragrance is called Pomegranate Noir - the fruit has achieved "superfood" status."

Maybe this all got started in 2001, when the San Jose Museum of Art presented a monumental installation entitled Pomegranate Wall as the centerpiece and highlight of a photo exhibit by noted artist Catherine Wagner. The wall, an 8 x 40 foot curved arc dramatically displayed a series of interior images of a pomegranate.

No one really knows how this fad got started, but certainly it has been pushed along by Pom Wonderful and their marketing team.

"Pom Wonderful Pomegranate Juice is the closest thing to a miracle in a bottle we've found yet," wrote Reader's Digest in May of this year.

"The deep purple juice is loaded with antioxidants, and doctors at the Preventive Medicine Research Institute in Sausalito, California, have found even more to love about it," continues the magazine.

"Their study was presented at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology in March. Heart disease patients on cholesterol-lowering drugs were randomly assigned to drink eight ounces of Pom a day for three months or a placebo beverage. The Pom drinkers had improved blood flow to the heart; heart disease worsened for those who drank the placebo. Statins can help many, but the may not always be enough. There's no substitute for diet and exercise, says researcher Dr. Dean Ornish. And now it looks like pomegranate juice is a good start," concludes the digest. 

Pom Wonderful, which describes itself at "The Antioxidant Superpower," has squeezed the juice out of the pomegranate and squirted it into about everything.

VitaZest Vitamin and Fruit Enriched Water, has no sugar, no carbs, no calories, and no caffeine; and comes in eight refreshing fruit flavors including pomegranate.

But they have not gone as far as SheerBliss, an ultra super premium gourmet ice cream. They offer seven flavors: California Pomegranate, Vanilla with Pomegranate Swirl, Pomegranate with Dark Chocolate Chips, Freedom (Vanilla, Pomegranate and Blueberry), Mediterranean Coffee, Chocolate, and Vanilla; and a Pomegranate Bar (Pomegranate ice cream coated in rich, dark chocolate). They note an exclusive agreement with POM Wonderful for creating their pomegranate-based ice cream flavors.

There's a lot of hype here, but clearly a lot of substance, too.

Pom Wonderful says research has shown that just "about everyone may benefit from drinking an 8 oz. glass of POM Wonderful Pomegranate Juice daily."

With the highest levels of polyphenol antioxidants, "pomegranate juice is showing promising benefits for the heart: it's 60% better than other juices at preventing the formation of plaque-forming oxidized LDL in the arteries… and has been shown to reduce build-up of plaque by up to 30% in a pilot study of 19 elderly patients with atherosclerosis."

"In fact," the say, "research indicates that the high level of antioxidants found in pomegranate juice is effective in combating free radicals that may cause a number of afflictions, including heart disease, stroke, hypertension, premature aging, Alzheimer's disease…even cancer."

And, there is research to back up their claims, and then some.

"Pomegranates have beneficial effects on heart disease, haemorrhoids, fertility and blood pressure - among other things - and this week, scientists have discovered their usefulness in treating prostate cancer and osteoarthritis," notes Rhodes in the Telegraph.

"A single pomegranate," she reports "provides 40 per cent of an adult's recommended daily allowance of vitamin C, and is a rich source of folic acid and vitamins A and E. One pomegranate also contains three times the antioxidant properties of red wine or green tea."

She observes that there is evidence to support the healing and protective benefits in these diseases:

"Cancer: pomegranates contain high levels of flavenoids - a type of antioxidant - which are exceptionally effective at neutralising cancer-causing free radicals. Research published this year suggests that the fruit may be effective at fighting both breast and skin cancer, and this week American scientists found that pomegranate juice slowed the growth of prostate cancer cells in mice injected with the human form of the disease.

"Heart disease: new research has found that one glass of pomegranate juice a day could improve blood flow to the heart by more than a third. The fruit's antioxidant properties prevent bad cholesterol from forming, which keeps the arteries clear and reduces the likelihood of heart attacks and strokes. A separate study found that drinking pomegranate juice regularly can also dramatically reduce the size of atherosclerotic lesions, which narrow the arteries and cause heart failure.

"Osteoarthritis: the most recent revelation about the pomegranate's health benefits suggests that extracts of the fruit could prevent the onset of osteoarthritis. Scientists in America treated samples of human cartilage damaged by osteoarthritis with the extract and found that it inhibited the production of the enzyme responsible for causing the damage. Further research is needed to establish whether consuming the extract could protect cartilage as effectively."

But that is only a partial list. Pomegranate has been found to possess antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties that have potential therapeutic benefits in a variety of diseases.

And here may be a key - a bonus with the native Persian fruit is that its antioxidant constituents are rapidly absorbed by the body and are non-toxic, researchers say.

 

The American Heart Association, for example, says, "the scientific evidence supports a diet high in food sources of antioxidants and other heart-protecting nutrients, such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains and nuts instead of antioxidant supplements to reduce risk of CVD.

So, it sounds like things are going the way of the under-recognized pomegranate and we are sure to hear more - much more - in the years ahead.

Most of the pomegranates sold in the U.S. are produced in California. You have to wonder if there will soon be a "Tour of the Pomegranate Country" available there to compete with the highly successful wine country tours.

And, this time President Bush may be right - Afghanistan may find this an even more profitable crop than poppies.