U.S._Anti - HOUSE COMMITTEE HEARS TESTIMONY ON ILLEGAL DRUG USE IN SPORTS

HOUSE COMMITTEE HEARS TESTIMONY ON ILLEGAL DRUG USE IN SPORTS

Frank Shorter, former chairman of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, appears before a House Committee on Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing on illegal substances in sports on May 18, 2005, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (UPI Photo/Roger L. Wollenberg)


UPI Related News
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, July 29 (UPI) -- The International Olympic Committee says it will keep drug-test samples from athletes in its files for eight years, starting with the Beijing Games.
WARSAW, Poland, July 3 (UPI) -- Polish and U.S. negotiators have struck a tentative agreement on a U.S. anti-missile base located in Poland, a Polish government official said Thursday.
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, June 30 (UPI) -- The Court of Arbitration for Sport Monday dismissed cyclist Floyd Landis' appeal of doping sanctions, which cost him the 2006 Tour de France title.
WASHINGTON, June 5 (UPI) -- As the United States remains fixated on two Fourth Generation wars half a world away, in Iraq and Afghanistan, a Fourth Generation War is knocking at our back door. The death spiral of the Mexican state appears to be accelerating.
COLORADO SPRINGS, June 3 (UPI) -- Antonio Pettigrew Tuesday returned the Olympic gold medal he won at the 2000 Games in the 1,600-meter relay after admitting to a doping violation.
UPI Almanac for Friday, May 23, 2008.
WASHINGTON, May 1 (UPI) -- President Bush racked up not one but four major foreign policy triumphs in his drive to deploy effective ABM bases in Central Europe.
WASHINGTON, April 28 (UPI) -- Anyone who has watched any World War II movies or History Channel documentaries knows what a wolf pack was: It was the massed attack carried out by Nazi submarines against British and American convoys of merchant ships in the Battle of the Atlantic during World War II. China is looking at a modern, 21st century of wolf pack tactics for any future war it might have to fight against the United States. But the wolf packs and their tactics would be very different.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., April 18 (UPI) -- A Yale student's abortion project, which has outraged U.S. anti-abortion activists, was an "an art piece, a creative fiction," a University spokeswoman said.
WASHINGTON, April 16 (UPI) -- Despite aggressive use of U.S. anti-terror laws, federal prosecutors have a poor success rate when it comes to prosecuting charities for supporting terrorism.
1 of 19 Prev | Next
Other Related News
sfgate.com at 18 Jun 2009 06:34 pm
Knowing the federal government does little to regulate the multibillion-dollar supplement industry, some of which is tainted by steroids, the leader of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency is...
sfgate.com at 17 Jun 2009 03:00 am
Olympic champion Tyler Hamilton received an eight-year ban from cycling Tuesday, all but ending his drug-tainted career after he admitted to taking a steroid. The penalty handed down by...
Spanish farmers march on capital
COL FB: Utah 38, San Diego State 7
Westwood wins in Dubai
COL FB: Northwestern 33, Wisconsin 31
COL FB: California 34, Stanford 28
COL FB: Nebraska 17, Kansas State 3
COL FB: Texas 51, Kansas 20
fark
Iran to conduct another photoshop exercise
Photoshop these desktop dispensers
Earth's weather like you have never seen it before... with a little help from NASA's GEOS-5 atmospheric...
Running errands for his job, man is kidnapped by 3 women, locked in a church, forced to have sex,...
The Statue of Liberty. Mount Rushmore. The Washington Monument. And now, Billy Carter's gas station....
Britain's new internet law is as bad as everyone's been saying, and worse. Much, much worse