Did you know? India Nearly Polio Free!

This week, India has reached a benchmark 3 years without a reported case of wild polio putting them well on the way to an official polio-free status from the WHO (expected in March). The last case of wild polio virus was reported on January 13, 2011, in an 18-month old girl. India’s large and diverse population made spreading the vaccine through the entire country a challenge. This achievement is due to a well-planned program of immunization teams spread throughout the nation.

By focusing on those hardest to reach, mobile teams from the Rotary Club, the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were able to appeal to community leaders and get vaccinations to those in need.  According to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, the infrastructure used to deliver the polio vaccines can now be used to deliver other vaccinations and hopefully eradicate other diseases prevalent in India. While efforts to eradicate polio world-wide continue, this milestone in India provides hope for other areas still battling the disease.

World’s Most Expensive Books

Last week, a new record was set with the sale of the Bay Psalm Book at 14.2 million dollars. The Bay Psalm Book is a rare translation of biblical Psalms from 1640, and the first English language book ever printed in North America. The recent sale is one of eleven surviving copies, and was (one of two) owned by the Old South Church in Boston before being auctioned at Sotheby’s.

Some other highly valued sales:

The Birds of America (1827-1838) by John James Audubon
$11.5 million in December 2010

The Canterbury Tales (1478) by Geoffrey Chaucer
$7.5 million in 1998

First Folio (1623) by William Shakespeare
$6.1 million in 2001

The Gutenberg Bible (1459-1455)
$4.9 million in 1987

Traité des Arbres Fruitiers (1768) by Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau
$4.5 million in 2006

How much would you pay for a piece of printed history?

Do You Know? Extraordinary Women in Science & Medicine at The Grolier Club

Now through November 23, take advantage of the rare opportunity to see over 150 original artifacts exploring the contributions of remarkable women in the sciences over four centuries (right here on the east side, and free of charge)!

Extraordinary Women in Science & Medicine: Four Centuries of Achievement

The Grolier Club 47 East 60th Street, New York, NY 10022

From the press release:

The Grolier Club is pleased to present a landmark exhibition exploring the legacy of thirty-two remarkable women whose extraordinary scientific accomplishments in physics, chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, computing, and medicine changed science. […]

Artifacts including books, manuscripts, serials, Ph.D. theses, and laboratory apparatus (such as that used by Marie Curie during her earliest work on radioactivity) will be on view, providing a remarkable overview of the scientific contributions of this eminent group. […]

The exhibition is designed to pose questions about women’s recognition—or lack thereof—in the sciences. Topics treated include educational opportunities, role models, the use of social capital, individual styles of doing science, and gender issues associated with society norms of the periods. […]

Monday – Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.