This is a printer friendly version of an article from
www.goupstate.com
To print this article open the file menu and choose
Print.
Back
Article published Jul 4, 2003
Lieberman campaigns for medical
research
JENNIFER HOLLAND
Associated
Press
GREENVILLE -- Nian Chen was quick to grab her book of
research notes, turn from her vials and beakers and ask for Sen. Joe Lieberman's
autograph Thursday.
Chen welcomed the Democratic presidential hopeful to a
lab at Greenville Hospital System's Cancer Center.
"I really appreciate his
interest in research," said Chen, an assistant biology professor at Converse
College in Spartanburg. "We're not getting enough financial
support."
Lieberman, D-Conn., praised Chen for her work and said the cancer
center is an example of his proposed $150 billion American Center for
Cures.
The 10-year plan would speed development of cures for chronic diseases
by funding research and encouraging faster drug development, he said.
"I
believe political campaigns ought
to be about new ideas, ought to be about
the future," said Lieberman, one of nine Democrats vying for
president.
Lieberman wants to distinguish his health care priorities from
that of his rivals by focusing on cures for ailments such as cancer, heart
disease and multiple sclerosis.
"What we're not doing is investing enough
money in focusing the effort to take the breakthroughs in the laboratory and
bring them to the medicine cabinet or to the bedside to not just treat diseases
but actually cure diseases," he said.
"If we could do this, we could not only
extend people's lives and have people be free of the fear of chronic disease,
but we could actually cut our health care cost."
Lieberman walked hallways
lined with research articles and illustrations at the cancer center in
Greenville, which opened in 1998, asking doctors and administrators questions
during an hour-long tour.
The center takes research in molecular biology and
medicine and applies it to treatment beyond chemotherapy and radiation
therapy.
"I saw some thrilling work going on here," he said. "This couldn't
be a better place for me to visit."
Lieberman's campaign stop in the Upstate
also included a meeting with black ministers at Springfield Baptist
Church.
The Democratic Party's 2000 vice presidential nominee said South
Carolina's first-in-the-South Democratic primary on Feb. 3 is crucial.
"I
think it's going to be important to the Democratic Party because it's going to
bring into the nominating process for the Democratic candidate for president
next year a broader group of people who haven't been involved at this early
stage before where they could really have an affect on who the nominee," is, he
said.
Like other Democratic candidates, Lieberman took a shot at the Bush
administration on the economy.
"The last time I looked, 44,000 South
Carolinians had lost their jobs since George Bush became president," he said.
"That's not a good record."