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Lovely Illustrations From The Story Of A Black Boy Who Dreams Of Going To Mars

Like lots of little kids, Jeremiah Nebula — the main character of a children's book called Large Fears — has big dreams. He wants to go to Mars.

But Jeremiah is also pretty different from the characters that Myles Johnson, the author of the Kickstarter-backed book, met in the stories he read when he was growing up. Jeremiah is black, and he really, really likes the color pink.

"He's queer, and he's a bit unconventional. He's essentially myself as a child," says Johnson, a 22-year-old freelance writer based in Atlanta.

Johnson says the idea for Jeremiah Nebula came to him while dancing around to some 80's music in his room one day. "I started thinking, what is Jeremiah like? What are his fears and dreams? What does he like to eat?" Johnson says.

So Johnson called up his friend, Kendrick Daye — a 26-year-old visual artist who runs a magazine called Art Nouveau in New York — and told him about his idea. They began collaborating on the book last year.

i

Courtesy of Myles Johnson and Kendrick Daye

Courtesy of Myles Johnson and Kendrick Daye

The book opens on Jeremiah daydreaming about jumping so high, he lands on Mars. On his way to Mars, he has to hop-scotch across a series of stars, which, it turns out, represent his fears and anxieties.

i

Courtesy of Myles Johnson and Kendrick Daye

Courtesy of Myles Johnson and Kendrick Daye

The storyline reflects Johnson and Daye's childhoods — they both say they grew up with large fears of their own. "When you're black and queer, you learn at a very early age that what you like or who you are isn't accepted everywhere," Johnson says. "You realize that you're not safe everywhere."

Dreaming up alternative universes was a form of escape. "When I was in school I got into a lot of trouble for daydreaming," Daye says. "If you grow up and you feel like you don't fit in, you just start to live in a fantasy world."

As Johnson and Daye were developing Jeremiah's story, they realized they wanted to create something for "any kids who feel like they don't quite fit in or blend in," Johnson says.

Courtesy of Myles Johnson and Kendrick Daye

Johnson spent his formative years watching far too much 'Twilight Zone' ("I loved the really scary ones!" he says), while Daye was engrossed in R.L. Stine's Goosebumps series. They loved those stories, but something was missing.

"Growing up, there were rarely any characters who were black, and never queer. Not being visible in the media really does something to your psychology," Johnson says. "It's easy to feel invisible, its easy to believe you're invisible."

The two met about four years ago, in Atlanta, where Daye was studying literature at Morehouse College and Johnson was a student at Georgia State. They hit it off almost immediately. "I seeing him around, and I really admired him. I was like, 'I want to work with him, and I want to be his friend!'"

So far, the pair has raised about a third of the $3000 in Kickstarter funds they need to publish and promote the book. They're planning to use a portion of the funds toward workshops helping young kids discuss their own fears about not belonging.

lgbtq

children's books

children

Mars

Malaysia Airlines Plans To Cut A Third Of Its Workforce

Malaysia Airlines, which last year had one of its planes disappear off the face of the earth and another shot down over Ukraine, is about to undergo an overhaul — one that means layoffs for as many as one-third of its 20,000 employees.

In an interview with Reuters, the company's new CEO, Christoph Mueller, said he plans to run the restructured airline like a "startup." The news service reports:

" 'I'm hired to run the new company entirely on commercial terms and there's very little margin for error,' Mueller told Reuters at the downtown Kuala Lumpur office of Malaysian state investor Khazanah, which took MAS private late last year as part of a 6 billion ringgit ($1.66 billion) restructuring.

" 'It's not a continuation of the old company in a new disguise, everything is new,' said Mueller, who helped turn around carriers such as Aer Lingus, Belgium's Sabena, and Germany's Lufthansa."

The airline has been losing money for several years, and its brand was irreparably damaged by the loss of flight MH370, which disappeared in March 2014 carrying 239 passengers and crew en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

Then, in July, flight MH17 was shot down in eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 people on board.

CNN reports the airline's financial woes predate those disasters:

"Even before the twin losses of MH370 and MH17, Malaysia Airlines was already in hot water — despite previous restructuring plans and billions of dollars in financial lifelines from the government. The company hadn't turned a profit since 2008, and in the three years to 2013, cumulative losses totaled $1.3 billion."

Mueller told Reuters the restructured airline also intends to sell some of its planes, including two giant Airbus A380s. In addition, the airline will be renamed and its fleet repainted.

Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17

Flight MH370

Malaysia Airlines

With Live Video Apps Like Periscope, Life Becomes Even Less Private

Cameras are ubiquitous — from the ones in our cellphones to the security cams in parking lots and shops. And just when you thought it couldn't get harder to hide, live-streaming video is raising new questions about privacy.

Streaming video cameras aren't new, but new apps have made it super easy to stream from a smartphone. Periscope is popular because it can be streamed on Twitter, which recently purchased the app.

"You could imagine that people will broadcast things that they wish they hadn't."

- Trevor Hughes, of the International Association of Privacy Professionals

I turned it on in a parking lot in a mall in San Francisco. Patrons like Chris Kelley is little surprised to learn he's being broadcast live on the Internet. Though Kelley simply smiles at the camera, laughs and waves, "Hi, Mom!"

Laughter aside, Kelley is a little bothered by this latest twist to social media and it does make him worry more about his privacy.

But Kelley and most everyone else I spoke with was not freaked out. There was a bit of a sigh and a shrug.

"Cameras are everywhere," Patrick Housefeld says. "People underestimate how much they're being watched already."

i

Kayvon Beykpour, co-founder and CEO of Periscope, speaks during the TechCrunch Disrupt conference May 5 in New York City. He says that with live video apps such as Periscope, "the world has accepted that these capabilities exist." Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch hide caption

itoggle caption Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Kayvon Beykpour, co-founder and CEO of Periscope, speaks during the TechCrunch Disrupt conference May 5 in New York City. He says that with live video apps such as Periscope, "the world has accepted that these capabilities exist."

Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Because people are already used to cameras being just about everywhere, Periscope CEO and co-founder Kayvon Beykpour didn't think his app was going to be controversial.

"We are the benefactors of kind of coming into the game many years later where there still are legitimate questions but for the most part, the world has accepted that these capabilities exist," he says.

But Periscope's live-streaming technology definitely ads a new twist. And privacy experts say we may not know yet what it means. The first time I tried Periscope I was lying in bed with my phone and I turned it on with the camera pointed at my bare feet. Suddenly, I realized that six people had tuned in to watch my naked toes live.

Trevor Hughes, the CEO and president of the International Association of Privacy Professionals, says live does add a new twist.

"It certainly will create situations where the editorial pause that currently exists — where you can think about what you're posting before you post it — goes away," he says. "You could imagine that people will broadcast things that they wish they hadn't."

And while that's uncomfortable for adults, Hughes says easy access to live streaming has the potential to be dangerous in the hands of teenagers.

"They explore their worlds, they explore social relationships, they explore sexuality, they explore many things — many of which have not only privacy issues but safety issues that arise," he says.

All Tech Considered

The App Of The Moment: Meerkat Tests Our Desire To Share Live Video

All Tech Considered

As Ferguson Unraveled, The World Found A New Way Of Watching

Law

Even Police Body Cameras Can Lose Sight Of The Truth

And teens can use Periscope — only minors below the age of 13 are prohibited from using the app. But, that doesn't mean that you can put anything up. CEO Beykpour notes that the company does have rules about content.

"If someone were to reach out to us and say, 'Hey! So and so broadcasted me naked without my permission,' and I was clearly visibly on camera saying, 'Stop!' we take that down. That's not OK."

And pornography is banned from Periscope. Even if it does get through, recordings of the stream only stay up for 24 hours and then they disappear.

Still, it's not hard to imagine a lot of unsavory stuff slipping through the cracks because it's live — it could be anything from porn to violence. And there isn't much the law can do about it for now.

Several people in that mall parking lot in San Francisco, like Charlene Smith, say they just hope that most people will be reasonable. "That we're a society that's mostly people of goodwill and good intention for the greater good," Smith says. "That they'll behave reasonably responsibly."

At an event recently, the comedian Chelsea Handler was shown how Periscope works. She sighed and said, "Oh, no. Does this mean I have to go out all the time now with my makeup on?"

Sadly, Chelsea Handler the answer may be yes.

periscope

live streaming

Internet Video

Multiple Sclerosis Patients Stressed Out By Soaring Drug Costs

American medicine is heading into new terrain, a place where a year's supply of drugs can come with a price tag that exceeds what an average family earns.

Pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts says last year more than half a million Americans racked up prescription drug bills exceeding $50,000.

Barbara Haedtke of Portland, Ore., knows this all too well. When she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2001 at the age of 35, she was prescribed Avonex, at a cost of around $10,000 a year. Her health insurance paid most of that, until she and her husband found themselves without jobs during an economic downturn. "We were in the hole, and so $10,000 was a lot of money," she says. "Under the best circumstances it's a lot of money, but then particularly it was really difficult."

i

Barbara Haedtke says she's grateful for a drug-company program that helps cover copays, but doesn't know how long she'll get that benefit. Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke

Barbara Haedtke says she's grateful for a drug-company program that helps cover copays, but doesn't know how long she'll get that benefit.

Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke

The drug company gave her the medication at no charge until she once again had a job with insurance, and for that, she says, she's really grateful. But the story doesn't end there. Haedtke used Avonex for about a decade and watched with disbelief as the price more than tripled. She's now taking a new drug, Tecfidera, that's priced even higher — $66,000 a year, according to her pharmacy receipt.

The drug is supposed to help reduce the number of episodes that characterize multiple sclerosis, a disease in which nerve fibers gradually degenerate, causing muscle weakness, numbness, loss of balance and even paralysis. Haedtke describes these episodes as "terrifying," saying sometimes it feels like there's a cinder block on her leg when she tries to move. And she's had vision problems, too. It's hoped the new medication will also slow down the progression to permanent physical disability caused by the disease.

Still, Haedtke worries not just about the disease, but about the financial threat it poses. All the prescription medications for MS are extremely expensive.

A recent study from Oregon State University and the Oregon Health and Science University finds that the cost for MS drugs averages $60,000 a year, compared to $8,000 to $11,000 a year in the 1990s. The price for some climbed by an average of 30 percent per year for two decades, according to the report in the journal Neurology.

Every time a new drug came onto the market, the price of all the drugs jumped, too, says Daniel Hartung, a pharmacist and associate professor who conducted the study along with Dr. Dennis Bourdette, Sharia Ahmed and Dr. Ruth Whitham.

"Despite more choices, prices just continue to rise, contrary to what you think would happen," Hartung says.

The standard economic principle that more choices will drive down prices doesn't always apply in the topsy-turvy world of drug economics, especially in the United States.

"We pay more, substantially more, than what is paid in Canada, Australia and the U.K., often two to three times more than what those countries are able to negotiate directly," Hartung says.

"We can get away with raising the price, because if a person has multiple schlerosis, what other choice do they have?"

- Stephen Schondelmeyer

Drug companies are acting much like a cartel such as OPEC, says Stephen Schondelmeyer, a pharmaceutical economist at the University of Minnesota. He says the companies must figure "if we all keep moving [our prices] up and nobody moves down, we can get away with raising the price, because if a person has multiple sclerosis, what other choice do they have?"

Last year, new drugs to treat hepatitis C at a cost of $80,000 or more also sparked an anxious discussion about high drug prices. At least those drugs cure the disease, and by so doing reduce future health-care costs. But that's not true for multiple sclerosis drugs.

"When the price of a drug doubles, does the patient get twice as much outcome?" Schondelmeyer asks. "No, it's the same drug."

Expensive new drugs are becoming increasingly common, not just for neurological diseases but for cancer as well. The federal government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services estimates that drug costs in the U.S. will rise from $272 billion in 2013 to $406 billion at the end of this decade, driven in part by higher priced "specialty" drugs like the MS medications.

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"Sometimes the drug companies talk about a death spiral down if they compete on prices," Schondelmeyer says. "I think we've entered the period of the death spiral upward."

Shots - Health News

Big Bills A Hidden Side Effect Of Cancer Treatment

The trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) disputes that. Lori Reilly, executive vice president for policy and research, says inflation for drugs has been about the same as medical inflation overall.

While new high-priced drugs are driving up expenses for some conditions, there are savings elsewhere, Reilly says, as consumers switch from brand-name drugs to generics.

Reilly also says the figures cited in the Neurology paper aren't a true reflection of the price of drugs because they are list prices. "When you're only looking at the list price and you're not looking at the significant rebates and discounts that go on," she says. "It's really not an apples-to-apples comparison."

Insurance companies cut deals with the drug companies, so it's hard to know what the manufacturers are actually charging. Reilly says the discounts can be 30 percent or more. Even then, they are still very expensive drugs.

"When you're only looking at the list price ... you're not looking at the significant rebates and discounts that go on."

- Lori Reilly, PhRMA

Patients themselves don't often pay the sticker price. In fact, for drugs with the extreme price tags, drug companies may also let them off the hook for copays that could easily run into the thousands of dollars.

Instead, the price of these high-cost drugs is typically shouldered by the other people who are in a patient's health-insurance plan. The premiums go up for everyone. And for patients getting these drugs through government-sponsored health care plans, taxpayers pick up a lot of the tab.

The drug industry remains one of the most profitable businesses on the planet, but Reilly argues that the high prices are justified.

"The revenue that a company derives year in and year out is also paying for future research," she says. "Obviously we know in the MS space that the medicines that exist on the market today don't cure the disease. A lot of the companies that are currently in the MS space ... are using that revenue to reinvest for future innovation. And that innovation is costly."

Barbara Haedtke has heard that argument before, and she understands it. But still, "To have to think about costs continually going up so I can help fund the research — on the one hand I'm grateful, but on the other hand I'm upset."

She's also grateful to be in a drug-company program that lets her avoid what could be thousands of dollars in copayments for her medication. But that's not guaranteed.

"It's always a stress, because every year I also need to renew the copay program, and I don't know if they're going to continue to cover me."

And she says that stress surely can't be helpful as she tries to keep her MS under control.

Drug prices'

pharmaceutical development

multiple sclerosis

With New Look And More Energy, Rick Perry Tries To Move Past 'Oops'

The Rick Perry that Iowans were promised in 2012 may have finally shown up — four years too late.

The former Texas governor's much-heralded first presidential run quickly cratered four years ago, beset by stumbles from a candidate who was still recovering from back surgery and never seemed to find his footing on a national stage.

But last week in campaign stops in Northwest Iowa, the likely GOP presidential hopeful was back to his gregarious, confident self on the first of three days he spent barnstorming a state that could make or break his 2016 comeback hopes.

Walking into a meet and greet at a bank in Rock Rapids, Perry bounded into the room, sure to shake every hand and greet every person by name (his staff had passed out nametags) with his long, Texas drawl before beginning his speech — right down to the last row, who he jokingly chided as "backbenchers."

Perry looks more at ease this time around — gone are the pressures of office, leaving the governor's mansion after 14 years this January. He now wears dark-rimmed glasses, which have become his trademark on campaign literature, and more comfortable dress shoes instead of cowboy boots.

He talks of optimism and a time of new birth in America in his stump speech – but that, too, is what he needs to save his own political hopes. He's currently mired in low single digits in state and national polling.

"I like this part of the country, and I like this time of the year. You're starting to see the corn; you're being able to row the corn, and it's an optimistic time of the year," he tells a crowd of about 40 people. "This is when we know we're going to make a good crop, and we're gonna get a good price for it. We are eternal optimists."

Perry talks often about his humble upbringings in tiny Paint Creek, Texas, where he says he was born into a family of eternal optimists — his parents were dry land cotton tenant farmers. To such an agriculture-dependent state, he aims to speak their language.

Trying to get past 'Oops'
This time around, he's hoping to tell his own personal story and about the economic success of the Lone Star State he didn't get to parlay in 2012. His failure four years ago was crystallized in a single word — "Oops."

When Perry announced in August 2011, he was leading Iowa polls, but that didn't last long. After already appearing sluggish and out of sorts at times on the trail, his political fate that year was sealed when, in a November nationally televised debate, he started to list the three agencies he would abolish as president — first Commerce, Education and then — a long, treacherous pause.

"I wasn't healthy. You all know the health stories — it was what it was."

- Rick Perry on his 2012 presidential run

After mumbling for a bit, he finally tried to laugh it off, telling the audience, "I can't, the third one. I can't. Sorry. Oops."

He would never recover, finishing fifth in the caucuses, sixth in the New Hampshire primary, and ending his campaign even before South Carolina.

Perry himself acknowledges he wasn't prepared, either physically or mentally, for the rigors of a national campaign back then.

"I wasn't healthy. You all know the health stories — it was what it was," he wistfully told reporters after speaking at a Pizza Ranch in Sioux Center later that day. "I hadn't spent the time in preparation that I should have."

State Sen. David Johnson, who represents this portion of Northwest Iowa, empathizes. He's had three back surgeries himself. The Republican supported the former Texas governor in 2012 and says he'll be with him this time, too. Perry is expected to announce his candidacy June 4 in Dallas.

"I see an absolutely different Rick Perry," Johnson said. "He has done his homework. He has studied very seriously the issues, both foreign and domestic, that this country faces."

'A governor who doesn't have to govern right now'
Johnson pointed out another advantage Perry has this time around over some of his fellow rivals.

"He's a governor who doesn't have to govern right now," he said. "He is free to get out there and campaign."

It's All Politics

As Governors Eye The White House, Home Takes A Back Seat

Other governors considering running, like Wisconsin's Scott Walker, New Jersey's Chris Christie and Louisiana's Bobby Jindal, are struggling to balance governing at home with the amount of time they spend on the campaign trail. But Perry doesn't have that dance this time around.

Perry holds the distinction as the longest-serving governor in Texas history. That executive experience is something he touts heavily on the trail, taking not-so-veiled shots at the trio of first-term senators — Florida's Marco Rubio, Kentucky's Rand Paul and fellow Texan Ted Cruz — who are also running.

"Executive experience is what's been missing out of the White House," he told a voter in Sioux Center. "After eight years of this young, inexperienced United State senator, I think America is going to be ready for somebody who's got a proven track record and results."

On foreign policy, Perry touts his own military experience — along with South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, he's one of just two veterans on the GOP side — and his record on immigration as governor of the state with the longest southern border.

A smaller margin for error this time around
He jokes, at the two campaign stops and at the Iowa Republican Party's Lincoln Day Dinner the Saturday before, that the U.S. "lived through Jimmy Carter — we'll make it through Barack Obama."

But he doesn't lose an optimistic tone throughout his speeches.

"I believe with all my heart, as soon as the sun's going to come up in the east tomorrow, that the best days of this country are in front of us," he tells voters. "We're just a few good decisions and a leadership change at the top from the best days this country has ever seen."

But to be a part of that leadership change, Perry first has to convince voters he's changed as well.

Lyon County GOP Chairman Josh Bakker, who hasn't endorsed anyone yet, warned that Perry has a smaller margin for error this time around than other candidates. In other words, there can't be any more "Oops's."

"He better say sharp, I'll just say that," Bakker said. "I mean, if he does that again a time or two that would probably hurt."

NPR's Don Gonyea contributed.

2016 Presidential Race

Rick Perry

Republicans

With Live Video Apps Like Periscope, Life Becomes Even Less Private

Cameras are ubiquitous — from the ones in our cellphones to the security cams in parking lots and shops. And just when you thought it couldn't get harder to hide, live-streaming video is raising new questions about privacy.

Streaming video cameras aren't new, but new apps have made it super easy to stream from a smartphone. Periscope is popular because it can be streamed on Twitter, which recently purchased the app.

"You could imagine that people will broadcast things that they wish they hadn't."

- Trevor Hughes, of the International Association of Privacy Professionals

I turned it on in a parking lot in a mall in San Francisco. Patrons like Chris Kelley is little surprised to learn he's being broadcast live on the Internet. Though Kelley simply smiles at the camera, laughs and waves, "Hi, Mom!"

Laughter aside, Kelley is a little bothered by this latest twist to social media and it does make him worry more about his privacy.

But Kelley and most everyone else I spoke with was not freaked out. There was a bit of a sigh and a shrug.

"Cameras are everywhere," Patrick Housefeld says. "People underestimate how much they're being watched already."

i

Kayvon Beykpour, co-founder and CEO of Periscope, speaks during the TechCrunch Disrupt conference May 5 in New York City. He says that with live video apps such as Periscope, "the world has accepted that these capabilities exist." Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch hide caption

itoggle caption Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Kayvon Beykpour, co-founder and CEO of Periscope, speaks during the TechCrunch Disrupt conference May 5 in New York City. He says that with live video apps such as Periscope, "the world has accepted that these capabilities exist."

Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Because people are already used to cameras being just about everywhere, Periscope CEO and co-founder Kayvon Beykpour didn't think his app was going to be controversial.

"We are the benefactors of kind of coming into the game many years later where there still are legitimate questions but for the most part, the world has accepted that these capabilities exist," he says.

But Periscope's live-streaming technology definitely ads a new twist. And privacy experts say we may not know yet what it means. The first time I tried Periscope I was lying in bed with my phone and I turned it on with the camera pointed at my bare feet. Suddenly, I realized that six people had tuned in to watch my naked toes live.

Trevor Hughes, the CEO and president of the International Association of Privacy Professionals, says live does add a new twist.

"It certainly will create situations where the editorial pause that currently exists — where you can think about what you're posting before you post it — goes away," he says. "You could imagine that people will broadcast things that they wish they hadn't."

And while that's uncomfortable for adults, Hughes says easy access to live streaming has the potential to be dangerous in the hands of teenagers.

"They explore their worlds, they explore social relationships, they explore sexuality, they explore many things — many of which have not only privacy issues but safety issues that arise," he says.

All Tech Considered

The App Of The Moment: Meerkat Tests Our Desire To Share Live Video

All Tech Considered

As Ferguson Unraveled, The World Found A New Way Of Watching

Law

Even Police Body Cameras Can Lose Sight Of The Truth

And teens can use Periscope — only minors below the age of 13 are prohibited from using the app. But, that doesn't mean that you can put anything up. CEO Beykpour notes that the company does have rules about content.

"If someone were to reach out to us and say, 'Hey! So and so broadcasted me naked without my permission,' and I was clearly visibly on camera saying, 'Stop!' we take that down. That's not OK."

And pornography is banned from Periscope. Even if it does get through, recordings of the stream only stay up for 24 hours and then they disappear.

Still, it's not hard to imagine a lot of unsavory stuff slipping through the cracks because it's live — it could be anything from porn to violence. And there isn't much the law can do about it for now.

Several people in that mall parking lot in San Francisco, like Charlene Smith, say they just hope that most people will be reasonable. "That we're a society that's mostly people of goodwill and good intention for the greater good," Smith says. "That they'll behave reasonably responsibly."

At an event recently, the comedian Chelsea Handler was shown how Periscope works. She sighed and said, "Oh, no. Does this mean I have to go out all the time now with my makeup on?"

Sadly, Chelsea Handler the answer may be yes.

periscope

live streaming

Internet Video

Do Touch The Artwork At Prado's Exhibit For The Blind

It's a warning sign at art museums around the world: "Don't touch the artwork."

But Spain's famous Prado Museum is changing that, with an exhibit where visitors are not only allowed to touch the paintings — they're encouraged to do so.

The Prado has made 3-D copies of some of the most renowned works in its collection — including those by Francisco Goya, Diego Velazquez and El Greco — to allow blind people to feel them.

It's a special exhibit for those who normally can't enjoy paintings.

"Since I went blind, I've been to museums maybe twice," says Guadelupe Iglesias, 53, who lost her vision to retinal disease in 2001. "I can listen to the audio guide, but I have to imagine — remember — what the paintings look like."

Now Iglesias is back at her beloved Prado, rubbing her hands all over copies of the masterpieces she used to view from a distance.

"I used to come to the Prado all the time," she says. "I love Velazquez. I used to bring my daughter and her friends here to see this very painting."

Iglesias stands in front of a 3-D copy of Velazquez' 17th century work, Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan. While a tour guide describes the painting's layout, Iglesias runs her fingers over a prickly crown of laurels on the god Apollo's head.

"Fantastic!" she exclaims, beaming.

i

A blind visitor touches a copy of Francisco Goya's 1777 masterpiece, 'The Parasol.' Ignacio Hernando Rodriguez/Courtesy of Prado Museum hide caption

itoggle caption Ignacio Hernando Rodriguez/Courtesy of Prado Museum

A blind visitor touches a copy of Francisco Goya's 1777 masterpiece, 'The Parasol.'

Ignacio Hernando Rodriguez/Courtesy of Prado Museum

A Different Way To Experience Art

Most visitors to the "Touching the Prado" exhibit are not actually vision-impaired. The museum provides opaque glasses for them — like blindfolds.

"It's kind of weird. I sort of kept checking over the top of the glasses to see what I was touching, because you kinda can't tell," says Isabel O'Donnell, 20, a college student visiting Madrid from Buffalo, New York.

"I think it's a really cool way to experience art even if you're not vision-impaired. I like art, and I've always kind of wondered what art feels like," O'Donnell says. "Touching paintings seems like a really cool idea. It's more like what the figures feel like, if they were real."

The Prado consulted Spain's national organization for the blind, ONCE, on which paintings could best be adapted for touch. Curators began by taking a high-resolution photo of each masterpiece, and then used special pigments to paint on top of it.

"It's a special type of paint designed to react to ultraviolet light and rise like yeast when you're baking," says the curator of the exhibit, Fernando Prez Suescun, who normally works on the Prado's education team. "It creates volume and texture."

The pigments were developed by a printing company in northern Spain, and have been used in previous exhibits at Bilbao's fine arts museum.

Color And Texture

"Touching the Prado" is not the world's first 3-D art exhibit for the blind, but it is one of the only ones to incorporate both color and texture, Prez Suescun says. Previous projects at museums in New York, London, Florence and Mexico City have allowed blind visitors to touch duplicates of famous sculptures, crafted with 3-D printers, or paintings reduced to black-and-white with texture.

"For people with partial vision, this exhibit is perfect, because what you can't see, you feel," says Ana Rosa Argente, whose vision is deteriorating, but who is not yet classified as blind. "I can see light and some colors, but the rest, I use the texture to complete the picture in my mind."

The small exhibit is comprised of six duplicated paintings from the Prado's collection, including a copy of the Mona Lisa painted by an apprentice to Leonardo da Vinci. Some have been reduced in scale, to allow visitors to touch them easily without having to move around. All are accompanied by Braille text.

On his way out of the exhibit on a recent visit, the curator, Suescun, says he still can't shake the feeling that he's encouraging museum-goers to break the rules.

"I'm actually telling people to put their fingerprints all over the paintings!" he says, laughing.

This is the only exhibit where the Prado has installed dispensers for hand sanitizer — and water dishes for seeing eye dogs.

"Touching the Prado" runs through June 28.

Spain

понедельник

Multiple Sclerosis Patients Stressed Out By Soaring Drug Costs

American medicine is heading into new terrain, a place where a year's supply of drugs can come with a price tag that exceeds what an average family earns.

Pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts says last year more than half a million Americans racked up prescription drug bills exceeding $50,000.

Barbara Haedtke of Portland, Ore., knows this all too well. When she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2001 at the age of 35, she was prescribed Avonex, at a cost of around $10,000 a year. Her health insurance paid most of that until she and her husband found themselves without jobs during an economic downturn. "We were in the hole, and so $10,000 was a lot of money," she says. "Under the best circumstances it's a lot of money, but then particularly it was really difficult."

i

Barbara Haedtke says she's grateful for a drug-company program that helps cover copays, but doesn't know how long she'll get that benefit. Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke hide caption

itoggle caption Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke

Barbara Haedtke says she's grateful for a drug-company program that helps cover copays, but doesn't know how long she'll get that benefit.

Courtesy of Barbara Haedtke

The drug company gave her the medication at no charge until she once again had a job with insurance, and for that, she says, she's really grateful. But the story doesn't end there. Haedtke used Avonex for about a decade and watched with disbelief as the price more than tripled. She's now taking a new drug, Tecfidera, that's priced even higher — $66,000 a year, according to her pharmacy receipt.

The drug is supposed to help reduce the number of episodes that characterize multiple sclerosis, a disease in which nerve fibers gradually degenerate, causing muscle weakness, numbness, loss of balance and even paralysis. Haedtke describes these episodes as "terrifying," saying sometimes it feels like there's a cinder block on her leg when she tries to move. And she's had vision problems, too. It's hoped the new medication will also slow down the progression of permanent physical disability caused by the disease.

Still, Haedtke worries not just about the disease, but about the financial threat it poses. All the prescription medications for MS are extremely expensive.

A recent study from Oregon State University and the Oregon Health and Sciences University finds that the cost for MS drugs averages $60,000 a year, compared to $8,000 to $11,000 a year in the 1990s. The price for some climbed by an average of 30 percent per year for two decades, according to the report in the journal Neurology.

Every time a new drug came onto the market, the price of all the drugs jumped, too, says Daniel Hartung, a pharmacist and associate professor who conducted the study along with Dr. Dennis Bourdette, Sharia Ahmed and Dr. Ruth Whitham.

"Despite more choices, prices just continue to rise, contrary to what you think would happen," Hartung says.

The standard economic principle that more choices will drive down prices doesn't always apply in the topsy-turvy world of drug economics, especially in the United States.

"We pay more, substantially more, than what is paid in Canada, Australia and the U.K., often two to three times more than what those countries are able to negotiate directly," Hartung says.

"We can get away with raising the price, because if a person has multiple schlerosis, what other choice do they have?"

- Stephen Schondelmeyer

Drug companies are acting much like a cartel such as OPEC, says Stephen Schondelmeyer, a pharmaceutical economist at the University of Minnesota. He says the companies must figure "if we all keep moving [our prices] up and nobody moves down, we can get away with raising the price, because if a person has multiple sclerosis, what other choice do they have?"

Last year, new drugs to treat hepatitis C at a cost of $80,000 or more also sparked an anxious discussion about high drug prices. At least those drugs cure the disease, and by so doing reduce future health-care costs. But that's not true for multiple sclerosis drugs.

"When the price of a drug doubles, does the patient get twice as much outcome?" Schondelmeyer asks. "No, it's the same drug."

Expensive new drugs are becoming increasingly common, not just for neurological diseases but for cancer as well. The federal government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services estimates that drug costs in the U.S. will rise from $272 billion in 2013 to $406 billion at the end of this decade, driven in part by higher priced "specialty" drugs like the MS medications.

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"Sometimes the drug companies talk about a death spiral down if they compete on prices," Schondelmeyer says. "I think we've entered the period of the death spiral upward."

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The trade group Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) disputes that. Lori Reilly, executive vice president for policy and research, says inflation for drugs has been about the same as medical inflation overall.

While new high-priced drugs are driving up expenses for some conditions, there are savings elsewhere, Reilly says, as consumers switch from brand-name drugs to generics.

Reilly also says the figures cited in the Neurology paper aren't a true reflection of the price of drugs because they are list prices. "When you're only looking at the list price and you're not looking at the significant rebates and discounts that go on," she says. "It's really not an apples-to-apples comparison."

Insurance companies cut deals with the drug companies, so it's hard to know what the manufacturers are actually charging. Reilly says the discounts can be 30 percent or more. Even then, they are still very expensive drugs.

"When you're only looking at the list price ... you're not looking at the significant rebates and discounts that go on."

- Lori Reilly, PhRMA

Patients themselves don't often pay the sticker price. In fact, for drugs with the extreme price tags, drug companies may also let them off the hook for copays that could easily run into the thousands of dollars.

Instead, the price of these high-cost drugs is typically shouldered by the other people who are in a patient's health-insurance plan. The premiums go up for everyone. And for patients getting these drugs through government-sponsored health care plans, taxpayers pick up a lot of the tab.

The drug industry remains one of the most profitable businesses on the planet, but Reilly argues that the high prices are justified.

"The revenue that a company derives year in and year out is also paying for future research," she says. "Obviously we know in the MS space that the medicines that exist on the market today don't cure the disease. A lot of the companies that are currently in the MS space ... are using that revenue to reinvest for future innovation. And that innovation is costly."

Barbara Haedtke has heard that argument before, and she understands it. But still, "To have to think about costs continually going up so I can help fund the research — on the one hand I'm grateful, but on the other hand I'm upset."

She's also grateful to be in a drug-company program that lets her avoid what could be thousands of dollars in copayments for her medication. But that's not guaranteed.

"It's always a stress, because every year I also need to renew the copay program, and I don't know if they're going to continue to cover me."

And she says that stress surely can't be helpful as she tries to keep her MS under control.

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Long-Time Actress And Comedian Anne Meara Dies

Actress and comedian Anne Meara, whose comic work with husband Jerry Stiller helped launch a 60-year career in film and TV, has died. She was 85.

Jerry Stiller and son Ben Stiller say Meara died Saturday. No other details were provided.

The Stiller family released a statement to The Associated Press on Sunday describing Jerry Stiller as Meara's "husband and partner in life."

"The two were married for 61 years and worked together almost as long," the statement said.

The couple performed as Stiller & Meara on The Ed Sullivan Show and other programs in the 1960s and won awards for the radio and TV commercials they made together. Meara also appeared in dozens of films and TV shows, including a longtime role on All My Children and recurring appearances on Rhoda, Alf, Sex and the City and The King of Queens. She shared the screen with her son in 2006's Night at the Museum.

Meara was twice nominated for an Emmy Award for her supporting role on Archie Bunker's Place, along with three other Emmy nods, most recently in 1997 for her guest-starring role on Homicide. She won a Writers Guild Award for co-writing the 1983 TV movie The Other Woman.

Besides her husband and son, Meara is survived by her daughter, Amy, and several grandchildren.

The family statement said: "Anne's memory lives on in the hearts of daughter Amy, son Ben, her grandchildren, her extended family and friends, and the millions she entertained as an actress, writer and comedienne."

Archie Bunker

Ben Stiller

With Syria's Army Losing Ground, A Boost From Hezbollah

The dirt roads on the border between Syria and Lebanon wind across a mountain range dotted with little wild flowers.

It's windswept and deserted except for a few hilltop outposts with clumps of gray tents, machine-gun nests and flags that fly the green and gold colors of Lebanon's Hezbollah movement.

These posts are new. In a three-week offensive, Hezbollah has worked with Syrian government forces and other allies to push rebel fighters out of a chunk of territory that the rebels held along this border for two years.

Hezbollah says it's still firing at rebels who are less than a mile away

The group organized a press trip weaving into Syrian territory from Lebanon and made a commanding officer available for interviews in the field – though he was only identified by his nickname, Hajj Nader.

He says is that Hezbollah has faced a tough fight. The rebels were well-armed – their shell casings still litter the ground — and their morale was high.

"They fought like they had nothing to lose," says the stocky man, with dark glasses and a short, dark beard.

Across Syria, rebel fighters have been taking territory recently from President Bashar Assad's forces. Many of these opposition fighters belong to either the self-declared Islamic State or to al-Qaida. In the past week, Syrian regime forces lost the city of Palmyra and a border crossing with Iraq.

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A Crucial Partner For Assad

Hezbollah is considered Assad's most competent ally, and its victory here is the best news for Assad in weeks, which is perhaps why the usually insular group is now inviting groups of journalists to the front line.

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Hezbollah analyst and author Nick Blanford thinks thinks both Assad and Hezbollah needed to highlight a win. Hezbollah needed to show its grassroots supporters that "this is not our Vietnam, we are winning this war, we are defending the borders of Lebanon," says Blanford. "And more broadly, of course, for the Assad regime it gives the message of a victory that – not all is lost."

But for all the triumphalism, this is just a small part of Syria. Blanford says there are not enough Hezbollah fighters to solve Assad's rebel problem

"Hezbollah are good fighters but it's a question of numbers," he says. The group has strong backing from Iran, as does Assad's army, but Blanford says the group only has about 5,000 active duty Hezbollah fighters and they can't prop up Assad's forces alone.

"If you are looking at the forces loyal to the Assad regime, chiefly the Syrian army,[they're] utterly exhausted after four years of fighting," Blanford says.

Hezbollah's leader Hassan Nasrallah has vowed to protect Assad. That would satisfy the group's obligations to Syria and Iran.

Up in the mountain, the men say their priority is to protect their homeland, as they look down on Lebanese villages. And even here on the border they're spread thin - a formidable force maybe but seemingly not one that can save Assad by itself.

Hezbollah

Syria

No Resume? Criminal Background? No Problem At This Yonkers Bakery

The open-hiring policy at Greyston Bakery in Yonkers, N.Y., invites local residents to apply for jobs — regardless of their immigration status, whether they have criminal or drug records, or even prior work experience.

It's all part of the company's social-justice business model, based on the philosophy of Bernie Glassman, an aeronautical engineer-turned-Buddhist monk who founded the industrial food facility in 1982.

"He was a visionary — he thought business success and social justice were two sides of the same coin," Mike Brady, CEO and president of Greyston, says of Glassman in a Ted Talk.

The model has proven successful for Greyston, which provides brownies for Ben & Jerry's ice cream, and also sells them at Whole Foods.

So how does this for-profit company, which also has a non-profit arm, manage to make money and do good in the community? Brady discussed his company's mission with Robin Young, co-host of the show Here & Now from NPR and WBUR.

Interview Highlights

How "open hiring" works

We actually have a waiting list. ... When we have an opening available, people come through. We have a brief orientation program when we inform people what the job will be about, and then a lengthy 10-month apprentice program, where we provide people with a set of skills before they actually become formal members of Greyston, and then join our union.

It's part of our heritage, which was to give everyone a chance. We're not concerned about people's pasts. We don't want to judge what they've done in the past, but only think about what they can do in the future.

Whether he's concerned about having felons as employees

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We don't think about it that way. We think about it in a way that, whoever it is that's going to be coming through those doors deserves the same opportunity as someone else. And to place judgement on that person because they might have been a felon would skew our opportunity to perhaps find a very good employee. So rather than trying to judge and say, "Oh, this person has done this or that," we have a process that once people are on board, if they can demonstrate they're going to be a good employee and they can join and be effective with the other 99 team members, then we're happy to have them.

How he would sell this to CEOs, who only care about the bottom line

We should all care about the bottom line. This business practice does not have a negative approach on the bottom line. The costs that go into onboarding people through interviews and background checks is replaced by what we're trying to do in a different model. You had mentioned in your lead-in that we're working with Ben & Jerry's. And it's an amazing relationship, and one that we're able to market and sell, basically, because we have a really engaging social-justice program.

This story comes to us via Here & Now, where it ran as part of the show's View From the Top series.

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