So where's the article about the results of the test? The subject of your email 
says a scientist is in the process of testing or has already completed a test, 
but your article only says he wants to perform a test.
 
"Love will swallow you, eat you up completely, until there is no `you,' only 
love." 
 
- Amma  

--- On Sat, 4/18/09, I am the eternal <[email protected]> wrote:


From: I am the eternal <[email protected]>
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Scientist Tests Lincoln DNA for Cancer
To: [email protected]
Date: Saturday, April 18, 2009, 4:15 PM


http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,1892291,00.html

http://tinyurl.com/ckgwn6

Time
By AP / RON TODT Friday, Apr. 17, 2009

(PHILADELPHIA) — John Sotos has a theory about why Abraham Lincoln was
so tall, why he appeared to have lumps on his lips and even why he had
gastrointestinal problems.
The 16th president, he contends, had a rare genetic disorder — one
that would likely have left him dead of cancer within a year had he
not been assassinated. And his bid to prove his theory has posed an
ethical and scientific dilemma for a small Philadelphia museum in the
year that marks the 200th anniversary of Lincoln's birth.

Framed behind glass in the Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Museum
and Library in northeast Philadelphia is a small piece of bloodstained
pillowcase on which the head of the dying president rested after he
was shot at Ford's Theater in Washington 144 years ago.

Sotos, a cardiologist and author, is hoping a DNA test of the strip
will reveal whether Lincoln was afflicted with multiple endocrine
neoplasia, type 2B. The disorder, which occurs in one in every 600,000
people, would explain Lincoln's unusual height, his relatively small
and asymmetric head and bumps on his lips seen in photos, he said.

The disorder leads to thyroid or adrenal cancer, and Sotos cites
Lincoln's weight loss in office and an appearance of ill health during
his final months. He said a finding that Lincoln had the genetic
disorder and probably cancer could shed light on his presidency. "I'm
not interested in how Lincoln might have died. I'm interested in how
he might have lived," Sotos said.

Several months ago, Sotos petitioned the museum for permission to test
the pillowcase. Gary Grove, a Civil War enthusiast who advised the
museum's board of directors, said the issue has been contentious in
several meetings. "There are strong voices both ways," Grove said. "It
has taken up a good portion of those board meetings."

Eric Schmincke, president of the museum and its board, said members
may decide at a meeting May 5. They must consider not only possible
damage to the artifact but also moral issues, he said. "You have to
look at it as questioning someone that more or less can't defend
themselves," Schmincke said.

Sotos, while declining to discuss the proposed DNA testing, pointed
out that Lincoln has no living direct descendants who would be
affected. "Every letter he every wrote has been published, every
letter his wife wrote that we can find has been published," he said.

Schmincke said genetic material goes far beyond writings. "That's him
— that's his blood, his brain matter that's on there," he said.
Schmincke also questioned what a positive result would mean.

"If they find it's cancer ... it's 140-plus years later," he said.
"Would it have been different? We can only guess or surmise."

If Lincoln was seriously ill and knew it, Sotos said, that might
explain stories of his premonitions about death. "I don't think it was
mysticism, I think that was him knowing what his body was telling
him," Sotos said. "Then if you're a historian, I think you have to say
... how does that affect how you run the war, your clemency toward
soldiers who may have deserted their post, the way you reconcile with
the South?"

One problem with his theory, which he acknowledges: People with MEN-2B
normally die young, and Lincoln was 56 when he was shot. And the
malady is only one of several ascribed to Lincoln; researchers in the
1960s suggested another genetic disorder, Marfan syndrome, to explain
his height, and others say his clumsy gait could have been due to
spinocerebellar ataxia.

Tests have been done on the remains of presidents to settle
controversies, most famously for evidence on whether Thomas Jefferson
fathered children of his slave, Sally Hemings, and to rule out arsenic
poisoning in the death of Zachary Taylor.

Other museums, however, have declined to do DNA tests on Lincoln artifacts.

Grove points out that while such material could shed light on history
or answer claims of descent, it could also lead to commercialization,
perhaps through sales of jewelry or other items embedded with famous
DNA.

And while it may be hard to say what Lincoln would have wanted, the
opinion of his surviving son seems clear. After repeated moves of
Lincoln's remains, as well as an 1876 plot to rob Lincoln's grave,
Robert Lincoln had his father's remains interred underground in 1901
in a steel cage encased in concrete in Springfield, Ill., where they
remain. "There," Grove said, "we probably have the closest thing of
someone saying, from the family point of view, 'Hey, let's not do
this.'"


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