http /Avww.thecharlottepost com Section U.S. AIDS plan blurs prevention message THE ASSOCIATED PRESS KAMPALA, Uganda — Beatrice Were thou^t she did everything ri^t. She was faithful to her husband and avoided sex until they mar- ried. What she didn’t realize was that he was not so faithful. Soon after their first child was bom, he was infected with HIV and unwittingly passed the AIDS-causing virus to her. Activists and government officials say a massive U.S. AIDS relief program has shifted the emphasis fiom condoms toward abstinence and fidelity, especially among the young — an approach they consider imrealistic in a country where a million peo ple have already died and an estimated 900,000 are infect ed. “By assumption, you are saying that when you are married, marriage is a safety net—which is not true,” said Were, who now campaigns to protect others with the inter national anti-poverty group ActionAid. U.S. officials say they recog nize condoms are a key weapon in the fig^t against AIDS and have spent mil lions on them. But they say prevention information is more effective when targeted at the appropriate audience. Uganda, once one of Afiica’s most infected countries, is the author of a groundbreaking strategy credited with cutting ^ HIV pievaience by more than half since 1992 to about 7 per cent. The multi-pronged fqjproach calls for abstinence until marriage, being faithful to one’s partner and consis tent and correct condom use. Dr. Sam Okwaie, architect of the so-called A. B, C plan, accuses the U.S. President’s Emeigency Plan for AIDS Relief of skewing the mes sage when it was first laimched in 2003. Tlie plan, known as PEP- FAR, “really shifted the emj^iasis to A and B just because of the amounts of money being put into these programs,” said Okware, a senior Health Ministry offi cial. He said the government has used funds fiom other sources to promote condoms. But an official with the gov ernment-appointed Uganda AIDS Commission said absti nence and fidelity programs still dcMiiinate. He spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of repercussions. The $15 billion plan taou^t unprecedented fund ing for prevention, care and treatment efforts in Uganda and 14 other countries. Dr Marie Dybul, the U.S. deputy ^obal AIDS coordina tor in Washington DTC., said last year, the U.S. govern ment spent US$9.7 million (euro7.7 million) on promot ing abstinence and fidelity in Uganda, ccaupared to US$6.5 million euro5.2 million) on ctHidfMii*-^ and related acti\'i- ties The number of condoms supplied surged fiom 7 mil lion to 47 million in the last five years ‘Tbugh to argue we’re push ing away fium condoms in Uganda with numbers like that,” D>’bul said, but added; “There is so much misinfor mation about what our poli cies aird approach are that 1 wouldn't be surprised it’s having an impact cai people in the field” President Yoweri Museveni, once a condom champion. Please see AIDS/3B tCIie Cliarlotte $)oSt LIFE THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 2006 BELLERAYMUSICORQ The late Ray Charleshas a new exhibit in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Ray does country Exhibit explores R&B genius' down-home side WE ASSOCIATED PRESS NASHVILLE. Tbnn.-If country music was good enou^ for Ray Charies, then it was good enough for other musicians. The R&B genius record ed “Modem Sounds in Coimtry and Western Music” in 1962, a mile stone that broadened the audience for country music and biou^t new respSTto the genre. A new exhibit at the Country Music Hail of Fame and Museum helps explain why ‘T Can’t Stop Loving You; Ray Charles and Country Music” opens March 10 and focuses on his unexpected passion for the music. It shows how he listened to the Grand Ole Opry radio show as a child, and performed Charlie Rich’s “Behind Closed Doors" for a Coimtry Music Tblevision sjg^al a year before his deatii. But “Modem Sounds” is a cornerstone of tiie exhib it. Tlie album was a phe nomenal success for Charles, staying at No. 1 on the Billboard- Pop Album chart for 14 wedss Many say it brought credibility to a musical form that was thought inferior and derided as “hillbilly music.” Michael Gray associate museum editor and cq- curator of the exhibit, which runs through Dec. 31, 2007, said singers fiom other genres began look ing to Nashville for mater ial after Charles released his masterpiece. The display includes audio from the album, song manuscripts, sheet music and photos, as well as quotes about the record fiom Loretta Lynn, Willie Nelson and Billy Joel. “Country music has been here forever, but for years a lot of people who listened to country music were ashamed to admit it,” Lynn said “What I really think started it booming was Ray Charles and his See RAY/2B Skin Deep looks for safety in beauty aids WE ASSOCIA TED PRESS Just because something is derived fiom a plant, doesn’t mean it’s entire ly safe for humans to use —especial ly on your skin. Have you ever heard of poison ivy? The Environmental Working Group created an interactive guide rating the product safety of persOTial- care products on its Web site. “Skin Deep” is a searchable database fea turing information on more than 14,000 shampoos, lotions, deodor ants, sunscreens and other products. “The cosmetics industry is essen tially a self-regulating industry,” says Jane Houlihan, the EWG’s vice president for science. “Companies are making vastly different deci sions, and the safety of products vary widely Some contain products that are safe to eat, others have carcino gens that are linked to birth defects,” Indeed, cosmetics do not need FDA approval before hitting the market, though the FDA can seek enforce ment action. The FDA does have laws overseeing the labeling of beau ty products but not the safety stud ies. That’s left to the companies. Houlihan says consumers often base thdr decisions on what you’d think would be common sense— petroleum chemicals would be more dangerous than something that grows in the garden, for example— but that’s not always true. However, Houlihan recommends organically grown products as gener ally the safest choice because those products were grown without pesti cides. “Eliminating pesticide residues and eliminating pesticide in the environment always helps, but you stiU can’t ensure it’s perfectly safe for skin or lips.” The EWG is a nonprofit research organization specializing in environ mental investigations. Muslim files lawsuit against retailer o WE ASSOCIAIID PRESS IOWA CITY, Iowa—A Muslim woman who claims she was denied employment after she refused to remove a head scarf worn for reli gious reasons is accusing a Des Moines convenience store chain of violating her religious rights. In the lawsuit, Aaliyah Withers- Johnson claims officials at Git-N-Go Convenience Stores Inc. told her she could not woric for the company if she insisted on wearing the head scarf, known as a h^ib, worn as part of her Islamic faith. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Des Moines, accuses the company of racial and religious dis crimination. Withers-Johnson, who is black, claims she wore the scarf to her ini tial job interview for a position as a st»e clerk on March 11, 2005, was offered a position and told to report six days later few training. But at the training session, Withers-Johnson claims she was immediately pulled aside by a com pany official and told she would not be able to start “ because the thing you are wearing (xi your head," the lawsuit said Officials say company pcJicy pro- THE STOCK MARKET Traditional Muslim women cover their head and face with a hijib. hiHts employees fium wearing caps, scarves w anything on their head Withers-Johnson told the official the scarf was required as part of her faith then asked if she was not being hired because of it, the lawsuit said. The officials responded by saying: “If I let you wear it then everyone Rease see MUSLIM WOMAN/3B Exercise may aid Parkinson's disease WE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON-Heather MacTavish leaped around the cir cle of drums, singing and waving her arms to urge the drunmiers louder, faster Only a slight tremor in one hand revealed her Parkinson’s disease. That and the name-tags on her drunmiers—a mix of Parkinson’s patients and brain researchers, watching MacTavish kick up h^ orange- socked heels in the name of sci ence. Growing evidence suggests that exercise—whether it’s sweating on a treadmill or on a dance floor—can help Parldnson’s patients move better and may even slow the inevitable march of this degenerative brain disease. “Even if we can’t reverse things, I think we still hope that we can slow down or even stop the pro gression,” says Michael Zigmond, a neurobiologist at the University of Pittsburgh who, with col leagues in Tfexas, has come up with some of the most tantalizing research. If nothing else, “we have to keep our bodies in shape for the next therapy’’ to be discovered, adds Dr. David Heydrick, a Marjdand neurologist who also has Parkinson’s disease and puts in an hour on the treadmill every day The notion is gaining such ground that when the National Institutes of Health organized an international meeting of Parkinson’s researchers last month, patients, dance instruc tors and personal trainers were invited to tell—and demop- strate—the benefits they believe come fiom physical activity of all kinds. MacTavish will sometimes dance for hours at a stretch, activity she credits with allowing her to cut in half the daily med ication she had needed when she was first diagnosed a decade ago. It isn’t always easy: Her leg sometimes freezes, until she stops trying consciously to move it. “If I had music, I didn’t have to teU my left leg to move, my entire body starts moving,” explains MacTavish, 57, of Tlburon, Calif “As the small motor movements get more difficult, the larger, mor^ expansive movements of dance take over.” Parkinson’s disease gradually destroys brain ceUs called neu rons that produce dopamine, a chemical crucial for the cellular signaling that controls muscle movement. As dopamine levels drop, symptoms increase; tremors in the arms, legs and face; periodically stiff or fiozen limbs; slow movement; impaired balance and coordination. Thda/s treatments can control tremors, fer at least a while, but can’t slow the disease’s worsen ing Exercise sounds too simple a remedy But consider that Parkinson’s puts people into a downward spiral; The harder it becomes to move normally, the less patients try to move. Quickly their muscles become weak, mak ing it harder for the remaining neurons to force them to move. More intriguing is evidence that exercise actually may exert a brain-protective effect: University of Texas, Austin, researchers found that forcing rats to exercise limbs with Parkinson-like damage pre served their ability to move those legs. • Building on that work, See EXERCISE/2B