i >. , OPEC set to slash exports by William Drozdiak The Washington Post January 15, 2001 BRUSSELS - Nearly three years ago, as Asia's economies began slipping into crisis, OPEC oil ministers made a grave miscalculation: In a bid to maximize their income, they decided to boost output. But with the so called Asian contagion came a col lapse in demand for oil, and prices plummeted to less than $lO a barrel, provoking tremors of political and economic instability among oil ex porting countries from Venezuela to Saudi Arabia. This time, the cartel's leaders say they have learned their lesson. With the American economy showing signs of slouching toward recession ahead of a crucial meeting of OPEC - the Or ganization of Petroleum Exporting Countries - in Vienna on Wednesday, the ministers say they are determined to head off any slump in demand by slashing production in the hope of keeping prices safely above present levels of about $25 a barrel. This weekend, Energy Secretary Bill Richardson made a whirlwind tour through the oil-rich nations of the Persian Gulf region, hoping to head off any precipitous moves by OPEC. Richardson, who stopped in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, said Monday in a telephone interview that he sought to convince oil ministers of the need for restraint at the Vienna meeting. By his own account of his trip, however, the prospects for a suc cessful outcome look dicey. "We made some progress in urg ing them to keep consumer views in mind and make only modest cuts," Richardson said. "But my concern is that some of these countries are get ting too happy with oil at $3O a bar rel. Oil at that price is not good for the world economy. It can lead to in- Not just Los Angeles Times January 16, 2001 The following editorial appeared in Tuesday's Los Angeles "Times: Until last October few airline pas sengers worried about blood clots forming during flights. Then a 28- year-old Englishwoman stepped off a plane at London's Heathrow Air port after a 12,000-mile journey from Australia and collapsed and died. An autopsy attributed her death to a pul monary embolism resulting from deep vein thrombosis - in other words, a blood clot that had lodged in a lung. The likely cause of the clot was the passenger's restricted move ment in a cramped seating space dur ing the long trip. Since then what quickly came to Oldest piece of Earth found The Washington Post January 15, 2001 Scientists have found what they believe is the oldest piece of Earth ever identified - a crystal dating back about 4.4 billion years. Moreover, chemical analysis of the tiny rock, which contains the mineral zircon, suggests that liquid water might ha v e existed on the planet much earlier than previously thought. Two teams of research ers analyzed the crystal, uncovered inside a muc h younger rock found in western Australia, and deter mined it dated back 4.3 billion to 4.4 billion years, making it the old est terrestrial material ever found. Chemical analyses of the crystal, which is about the diameter of two human hairs, indicate it was formed in the presence of liquid water, which contrasts with the prevailing Elation and a deeper slowdown that will ultimately be just as harmful" to the oil producers. Many analysts are sounding simi lar warnings. If OPEC production cuts cause panic and drive oil prices close to $4O a barrel or even higher, they say, a new energy crisis could trigger a deep global recession that, in turn, would provoke a steep fall in demand for oil that could ulti mately drive prices back down be low $lO a barrel. Such extreme mar ket volatility for the world's most crucial commodity would prove di sastrous for producers and consum- ers alike. Richardson said he was encour aged to hear that the kind of precipi tous production cuts being proposed by such price hawks as Iran and Ven ezuela - as high as 2 million or 3 mil lion barrels a day - will not be sup ported by Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter and the most powerful voice in the cartel. Last week, Saudi Arabia's national oil company, Aramco, told its cus tomers to expect reduced deliveries in February amounting to 500,000 barrels a day, about 5 percent of to tal Saudi production. This figure would be in line with Saudi Arabia's anticipated share of a production cut if the cartel as a whole agreed to trim 1.5 million barrels a day. But Richardson said it is clear that even Saudi Arabia and its gulf neigh bors - which remain solicitous about sustaining close ties with their U.S. ally 10 years after American forces helped drive Iraqi invaders out of Kuwait - are fearful about the dam age another oil glut could inflict on their own economies. "These countries are just obsessed about what happened to them after they decided to raise production at the Jakarta conference in 1998," Richardson said. "But they have to realize that the only way we achieve economy-class syndrome be called economy-class syndrome has drawn a lot of attention. Last week a hospital near Heathrow re ported that at least 30 people had died over the last three years after debarking at the airport following long flights. That's at just one hos pital near one airport. Since symp toms of a clot, which can include swelling and cramping, vary and are often mistaken for something else, precise numbers are unavailable. It's not a problem just for air pas sengers. The syndrome is the fourth most common cause of death in the United States, according to Dr. Rob ert Mcßane, a thrombosis expert at the Mayo Clinic. It occurs as well in people who sit at desks or in theater seats too long and in patients irnmo bilized during surgery. Mcßane and view that at that time the nascent Earth was a swirling ball of molten metal and rock. That suggests that conditions necessary for life to emerge might have existed earlier in the planet's history. "Although it is unclear how gen eral a picture a few tiny zircon grains can provide, the results rep resent a significant advance in re constructing Earth's Dark Ages," wrote Alex N. Halliday of the Swiss Fed eral Institute of Technology in Zurich in a commentary accompanying the report in the Jan. 11 issue of Nature covery also casts doubt on the theory that Earth's moon formed when the young planet was struck by a large object, casting off a piece of debris that became the moon. If that had happened, the planet would have been too hot for liquid water to have been present. \i\ioi?Lp & \\f '\7l l lol\\f r- stability in the global oil markets is by having a cooperative dialogue be tween producers and consumers. We need to find a healthy range for all concerned, because $lO a barrel is too low and $3O a barrel is too high." Richardson said he was received with warmth and hospitality during his tour. When he arrived in Kuwait late Sunday, Saud Nasir Sabah, the sheikdom's oil minister, delayed their discussions so the two of them could watch the NFL playoff games on tele vision before pondering the fate of the world's economy. But while his charm offensive was greeted cordially, Richardson's ap peal for small or no cuts in oil pro duction was rebuffed with lectures about the need to consider mutual in terests. "We agree there should be consultations between us to avoid any negative impact on the econo mies of the United States and Eu rope," Richardson quoted the Ku waiti minister as saying. "But when we look at the interests of our friends and allies, we expect them to also look at our interests and how our economies are so dependent on oil." After the debacle in Jakarta, sev eral OPEC members - including Al geria, Venezuela, Iran, Indonesia and Nigeria - suffered a near collapse of their oil-dependent economies that contributed to political instability. Even Saudi Arabia suffered a serious budget shortfall that prompted the af fluent desert kingdom to seek emer gency loans for the first time in its history. But since last year, OPEC coun tries - which account for about 40 percent of the world's oil output - have reaped a windfall in profits as demand for oil picked up in virtually every corner of the world. After suf fering through several years of reces sion caused by weak revenue, the cartel's 11 members saw their oil in come jump by 75 percent last year to others, according to news reports, also believe it is related to a genetic propensity to clot more quickly that is present in up to 5 percent of people. Although business-class and first- class airline passengers too can be afflicted, the misery of long-distance flights in cramped economy class made a vivid link for many people. The idea that more legroom would help prevent a dangerous medical problem caught on quickly. More room, of course, would make it easier to stretch out one's legs, which doc tors recommend as a preventive. For reasons of comfort and competition, some airlines are already removing a row or two of seats to add legroom. Doctors also recommend sitting on the aisle or near a bulkhead to allow for more bodily movement, drinking SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Fuzzy math on Pulsars? The Washington Post by a Japanese satellite, but its con- January 15, 2001 nection with the ancient explosion remained murky. The question is important because a pulsar prc In the spring of A.D. 386, Chi nese astronomers witnr the explosion of a may sive star in the constel lation now known as Sagittarius. A remnant of that blast is telling modern astronomers that one of their as- sumptions about these powerful events may be wrong Scientists have used the Chandra X-ray ob servatory in space to identify the husk left from that stellar death • a collapsed objec known as a pulsa , about the diameter o the District of Columbi and spinning 14 times p second. If confirmed, this would be only the second pulsar to be clearly associated with a histori cal event. The pulsar was detected in 1997 The dis- $285 billion, according to OPEC sta- In response to a surge in prices last year that sent the cost of crude oil soar ing to the highest levels in a decade, OPEC raised production on four suc cessive occasions by a total of 3.75 million barrels a day. By this spring, however, after the heavy consumption of heating oil ends in the Northern Hemisphere and before the summer driving season picks up, OPEC fears there will be a sharp decline in con sumption that could drive prices down. For that reason, many OPEC lead ers insist that radical measures are re quired to soak up excess oil supplies before a glut develops. "We realize that world economic growth is going to be slower this year than last and that will impact oil demand," said Ali Rodriguez, Venezuela's oil minister before becorAing OPEC general sec retary two weeks ago. "But we figure that after cutting production, if prices rise too much we can always correct that, because it's always more easy to correct an increase in price than a fall." But others say there is a zero-sum game at work and that, contrary to pleas for cooperation, there is an in herent struggle between producers and consumers that bears hostile overtones of class warfare between the rich oil consumers of the West and poor pro ducing nations of the Third World that are desperately dependent on oil ex ports as their only source of income. "It's clear that Europe and the United States only want very low prices," OPEC's acting president, Al gerian Oil Minister Chakib Khalil, told reporters. "Do they want to see the same prices as 1988? And do they care what will happen to us? If we don't do any cuts, we're going to see those prices as early as the second quarter of this year." plenty of water and avoiding alcohol on flights to stave oft dehydration in a plane's dry air. Walking around once an hour, or at least doing foot and leg stretches, may help as well. Of course, there are a limited number of the roomier aisle and bulkhead seats, and strolling around crowded airplanes whose narrow aisles are often clogged with food and beverage carts is not so much an option as a challenge. Among those who survived throm bosis during or after flights. lawsuits are being threatened. Some airlines now provide written warnings to pas sengers or show videos that encour age stretching. And even if it's no magic bullet for preventing thrombo sis, that extra inch or two of leg space is still a goal devoutly wished in economy class. dow" on the death throes of its exploded par ent star. And it is in such explo sions that heavy elements manu factured in stars are distributed Reagarc recuperating after surgery by Rene Sanchez The Washington Post January 13, 2001 SANTA MONICA, Calif. - Former president Ronald Reagan was recu perating in a hospital here Saturday after undergoing surgery to repair his broken right hip, an injury he suffered in a minor fall at his home. Joanne Drake, a Reagan family spokeswoman, said the operation was successful and without conapli cation. Reagan, who turns 90 next month, "is resting comfortably back in his room," she said, with his wife, Nancy, at his side. Authorities at St. John's Health Center, volierißeagaii. Was rilifio to by ambulance Friday, sal the sur gery this morning lasted just over an hour. Doctors inserted metal pins and screws into Reagan's hip, a common medical procedure that for elderly patients presents a lengthy and often difficult recovery, Kevin Ehrhart, the orthopedic sur geon who led the operation, said Reagan is doing well but will remain in the hospital for at least another week. Ehrhart also said the two-term former president may have a "long uphill struggle" to a full recovery, in part because he is afflicted with Alzheimer's disease. "I'm sure it wilt complicate it somewhat more," Ehrhart said. About 350,000 people, many of them elderly and frail, fracture their hips every year in the United States, mostly from falls, according to the American Academy of Orthopedic through the universe, setting the stage for the evolution of planets and life. Chandra's observations reveal clearly for the first time that the pulsar is at the precise center of the spreading cloud of gas and par ticles from the explosion. This makes the linkage "essentially in escapable," according to Victoria Kaspi of McGill University in Montreal. She presented her team's results last week at a meet ing of the American Astronomical Society in San Diego. Astronomers using the standard method of calculating pulsar ages, based on rate of spin, had previ ously estimated the pulsar to be 24,000 years old. The new evi dence indicates their figure was more than 22,000 years high and "suggests that other standard pul sar age estimates may be wrong as well," Kaspi said. David Helfand of Columbia University, not on the Kaspi team, said pulsar specialists will have to reassess their assumptions about "original spin." FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 2001 Surgeons. Only 25 percent olthose patients make a full recovery; 40 per cent require nursing home care; 50 percent need a cane or walker; and 20 percent die from complications in 12 months, the academy said. Iteagtui's doctors said that although they were encouraged by the health of his bones and tissue, his rehabili tation could'take months and poses particular'risks for a person his age because it wears on the heart and lungs. During his presidency, Reagan sure . vsved a 1981 assass ination attempt, a 1985 colon cancer operation and 1987 prostate and sldn-cancer surgery. Since 1994, when Reagan an a6u:liCP4llAa a handwritten letter Ictthe IS tuerjca'li. ,liatTle that he had Aliheimer's and had begun a journey "into the sunset °f my lifels , &, former president has withdrawn from: public life. He and his wife live in the exclu sive Bel , Air community of Los An geles, In the past two years, as his mental health has'steadily declimo, Reagan has stopped going to his 'office in nearby Century City and has not made any public appearances, excePtlor occasional walks with Secret Service agents in a park near his home. Scime friends and family members say he no longer recognizes them. Ehrhart said that when Reagan ar rived at the hospital Friday aftemoort, he was in considerable pain, as is comet tto for 'patients with broken hips. He said the break causal by the fall was not'mare= but still a "sig.. nificant injury," Sleep-cycle gene is identified The Washington Post January 15, 2001 Researchers have identified the first gene involved in regulating the human sleep cycle, an advance that could lead to new ways to treat such sleeping problems as jet lag. Kong L. Toh of the University of Utah and colleagues made the discov ery by studying a Utah family with the unusual disorder known as familial ad vanced sleep-phase syndrome, or FASPS. The disorder causes people to fall asleep unusually early, about 7:30 p.m., and awake unusually early, about 4:30 a.m. The family members had a defect in a gene known as hPer2, according to a report that will be published in the journal Science. Experiments with fruit flies have shown that the gene plays a crucial role in regulating the body's circadian rhythm - the body clock that controls a variety of basic bodily functions, such as sleep. "Such discoveries will likely pro vide novel insights into human sleep and may improve our ability to treat ~. other sleep-phase disorders such as ... jet lag and (problems associated with) shift work," the researchers wrote.