Jack Kevorkian's attorney is asking Michigan's governor and parole board for a third time to pardon the 77-year-old assisted-suicide advocate or commute his sentence. Kevorkian is eligible for parole in 2007, but attorney Mayer Morganroth says he might not live that long. Kevorkian suffers from a number of ailments, including high blood pressure, arthritis, cataracts, osteoporosis and Hepatitis C, he said. "The man is in dire shape," Morganroth said in a statement Saturday. "Prison has deteriorated him almost to the point of no return." Gov. Jennifer Granholm has said in the past that she won't consider pardoning Kevorkian. Two previous...