Friday, May 14, 2004



Hancock County officials upset by porn peddling






By Bill McCleery

bill.mccleery@indystar.com

May 14, 2004





MOUNT COMFORT, Ind. -- Hancock County officials are trying to stop a man from selling pornographic movies to truckers at the Mount Comfort Road exit off I-70.



Joe Byrer, 40, advertises his wares over his CB radio, telling other motorists on Channel 19 that he's offering X-rated flicks at the price of three for $20.



He then parks his red Chevy pickup along a dead-end road adjacent to the Pilot Travel Center and waits for customers.



"That is not a permitted use for that property," said Mike Dale, Hancock County's chief zoning enforcement officer.



Byrer's preferred spot for selling his merchandise is less than a mile from Mount Comfort Elementary School and Mount Comfort United Methodist Church.



Efforts to force Byrer out of the area have proved difficult, however, partly because of questions over what laws, if any, he is violating. The County Commissioners may consider the matter Monday.



Dale thinks a strict reading of the county's zoning laws prohibits Byrer's business. But Hancock County Sheriff Nick Gulling said he does not know of any laws being violated.



"It's not a major issue with us at this point," Gulling said. "But we'll continue to follow it and see what we're going to do."



The Sheriff's Department ran a background check on Byrer and found no problems, said Deputy Joe Hunt. Byrer sought the Sheriff's Department's guidance on making sure he had any needed permits, Hunt said.



"We don't have a peddlers ordinance or law in this county that we know of," Hunt said.



The first complaint about Byrer came in this month.



But he refuses to leave unless officials can show him he is breaking the law.



"I went through all the channels to do this legal," said Byrer, who lives in Indianapolis.



He sells only to adults he reaches through the CB, he said. He does not advertise with signs, and no pornographic images are visible to bystanders, Byrer said. In his mind, he's providing a public service.



"When truckers drive 11 hours, they have to rest for 10 hours (by federal regulation)," he said. "Let's give them something to do to kill time."



They could do worse things than watch pornography, Byrer said.



But others fail to see any benefit to Byrer's entrepreneurial activities.



"I'm actually quite shocked that a person is allowed to do that," said Nick McCallaham, manager of the nearby Pilot Travel Center.



McCallaham has tried unsuccessfully to get Byrer to take his business elsewhere.



Some Pilot customers have the misperception that Byrer is peddling his videos at the truck stop, the manager said.



The public property where Byrer parks is a short segment of road that was made into a dead-end street by the construction of I-70 and the ramp system at Mount Comfort Road.



Byrer wonders whether he's being targeted because of the controversial nature of pornography. He considers his stance patriotic.



"If a consenting adult wants to partake in it, I think because we live in the United States and we have freedoms, people ought to be able to enjoy it," he said.



The Indiana Civil Liberties Union also supports individuals' rights to make such choices, which it considers protected by the First Amendment, said Fran Quigley, the organization's executive director.



But that does not necessarily mean the ICLU would side with Byrer in this case, he said.



"Our concern and the Constitution's concern is that restrictions be based on the manner of sale and not the content of what he's selling," Quigley said.



Dale said officials would be just as persistent in dealing with a vendor selling flowers or any other merchandise.



On Monday, Byrer plans to take his case to the Hancock County Commissioners, he said.



"If someone can show me where it's illegal, away I'll go."





Send all complaints to: specialshawn@bellsouth.net

Wednesday, May 5, 2004

Select few redefine human abilities






(CNN) -- To the average person, swimming a mile in the frigid waters off Antarctica, diving more than 500 feet on a single breath, or climbing the world's highest mountains without the help of extra oxygen would be deadly.



But a select few in the world decide to test their bodies and their wills, and challenge medicine to redefine what is humanly possible.



"It's hard to explain how they can do that because if you take the numbers that we know from medical school, it just shouldn't happen," said Dr. Kenneth Kamler, author of "Surviving the Extremes," a chronicle of his medical adventures in treacherous locales such as the Amazon and Mount Everest. "But it does happen. It happens in every kind of human activity. People exceed what you would calculate as their limits."



Taking a deep breath

Tanya Streeter's remarkable lungs and willpower have helped her break world records in free diving, a sport in which competitors dive deep beneath the water's surface on one breath. In 2002, she completed a dive of 525 feet -- a length equivalent to a 50-story building -- on a single breath of air, setting a new record.



Streeter, a native of the Cayman Islands, also has amazed the world with her breath-holding talents. Her time of six minutes and 16 seconds is just five seconds short of the women's record.



Studying how Streeter can function so well without oxygen, University of Texas professor Ed Coyle learned that she has a lung volume almost twice what women her size usually have.



Coyle also focused on the oxygen levels in Streeter's blood when she's holding her breath. Streeter is regularly able to push below 50 percent. By comparison, in an operating room, surgeons consider blood oxygen saturation of less than 70 percent the point at which the brain and heart can be damaged by lack of oxygen.



Streeter said she hopes her abilities can offer researchers insights into conditions such as asthma, sleep apnea or sudden infant death syndrome, and pass on a lesson to others about redefining their own limits.



"You have to accept that somewhere in you, you have a personal limit, but chances are, it's nowhere [near] where you think it is," Streeter said. "Chances are it's going to be much farther, deeper, longer than you thought."



Swimming to Antarctica

Lynne Cox has been pushing past limits for more than 30 years. At 14, she completed a 27-mile swim across California's Catalina Channel. A year later, she logged the then-fastest English Channel crossing time for a woman or man.



Over the years, Cox specialized in long-distance swims in icy water that would kill the average person in minutes. Her training culminated in 2002 with a swim of more than a mile through 32-degree waters, recounted in her memoir "Swimming to Antarctica."



But how can Cox -- with only a swimsuit for protection -- achieve feats that would leave most people permanently damaged or dead?



To find out, doctors from the University of California-Santa Barbara once had her swallow a tiny thermometer with a radio transmitter. Cox said that unlike most people, her body got warmer as she swam in cold water.



"I swam for four hours in 50-degree temperatures, and my body temperature went from 97.6, a little bit lower than normal, to a 100.2," Cox said.



As an Olympic-level endurance athlete, Cox can work her muscles so hard and so long that she generates more heat than she loses, doctors said. And that heat is kept inside by what Cox calls her "internal wet suit," a little layer of extra fat, spread evenly around her body.



"The [Antarctic] swim itself was extremely beautiful and harsh," Cox said. "The harshness of knowing that if you stay in the water a moment too long you can go into cardiac arrest. There's a knowledge that you really are on edge here, and that you can push yourself too far."



Pulling their weight

Svend Karlsen and Jon Andersen throw the logical limits of human strength out the window. They are two among a handful of professional strongmen in the world, with bodies tipping the scales at more than 300 pounds.



An eight-year veteran of the sport, Karlsen has broken 30 Norwegian power-lifting records, and in 2001 captured the title of world's strongest man.



"I can do these things that I know hardly anybody ... can do this on this planet," Karlsen said. "I have a God-given talent for lifting big things. That's in my genes."



University of Pennsylvania researchers are studying just how much a strongman's success is due to genetics. When they injected a gene called IGF-I into muscle, it not only increased mass, but also sustained it even when weight training stopped.



Those findings may help stem the loss of muscle mass in older people or those with degenerative disorders like muscular dystrophy. But it raises questions about potential abuses by athletes.



The International Federation of Strength Athletes says strongmen are tested twice a year for 30 banned substances, but IGF-I is not among them.



Andersen, ranked fourth-strongest in the United States, said he has seen steroid abuse in his field but that he prefers to push his limits naturally, training 12 hours a week and putting away 25 pounds of beef and 14 supplement shakes every seven days.



"I tell people if you take five years of your life and truly commit yourself to any one thing, at the end of the time, you're going to have some major results," Andersen said.



Climbing every mountain

Ed Viesturs has been called the No. 1 adventure athlete in the world and the "Chevy truck of mountaineering."



Without the use of supplemental oxygen, he has climbed Mount Everest five times and reached 13 of the 14 world's highest peaks, all towering more than 26,000 feet high. This spring, he attempts to top Annapurna in the Himalayas, the last of his 14 peaks.



"I like things that are difficult, physically and mentally," Viesturs said. "Things that are really challenging, things that really maybe take a long time but really push me to my limits."



At least 1,200 people have climbed Mt. Everest, most with bottled oxygen to help them breathe. Because of the thin air, climbers take in about one-third the oxygen they would get at sea level.



Viesturs said his body is able to adapt to high altitudes more efficiently than most. Also, doctors said Viesturs has a 7-liter lung capacity, compared with the 5-liter capacity of an average person of his height.



There is a point in climbing where there's not enough oxygen to sustain life, the so-called "death zone." But Viesturs said he believes that even that zone can be surpassed.



"Because Everest is 29,000 feet and we've gone that far, if there's a peak that's 29,500 feet, I'm sure humans could climb it," he said. "I don't think we've reached our limits."



Kamler, the doctor-explorer, agreed, saying he is awed at the human body's capabilities.



"I'm willing to consider almost anything as possible now with the human body," Kamler said. "And the more I study the human body the more amazed I become by what it's capable of doing."





Send all complaints to: specialshawn@bellsouth.net>