Saturday, December 24, 2011

Palace says Prince Philip given heart stent (AP)

LONDON ? Queen Elizabeth II's husband has undergone treatment for a blocked coronary artery, British royal officials said Friday.

Buckingham Palace said Prince Philip, 90, was taken from Sandringham, the queen's sprawling estate in rural Norfolk, to the cardiac unit at Papworth Hospital in Cambridge earlier Friday for "precautionary tests" after suffering chest pains.

The palace refused to confirm if Philip had suffered a heart attack, saying only that tests at the hospital showed a blocked coronary artery was causing Philip's discomfort.

"This was treated successfully by the minimally invasive procedure of coronary stenting," the palace said in a statement. "Prince Philip will remain in hospital under observation for a short period."

Doctors said Philip could have suffered a heart attack, but without more information it was impossible to know for sure.

Coronary stenting is standard procedure both to fend off a heart attack or save a patient already in the midst of one, said Dr. Allan Schwartz, chief of cardiology at New York-Presbyterian, Columbia University Medical Center.

"It is a big spectrum, there's no way of knowing what applies to him," Schwartz said. "Saying you're taken to the hospital with chest pain is like saying you're taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound. It could be a grazing shot that's not significant or it could be something that's serious. Either way with the right treatment, you're O.K."

Schwartz said Philip's trim figure and athleticism bode well for his recovery.

Dr. Jonathan Tobis, director of interventional cardiology at UCLA, said coronary stenting is much less invasive than surgery because it is typically done through a catheter method, inserting a balloon down a blocked artery, blowing it up to open the blockage, then putting in a stent to keep the artery wall open.

Tobis said that any procedure carries risks, but advances in coronary medicine over the past 30 years means the procedure can be done "remarkably safely ? even in people in their 90s."

"Nowadays, patients typically go home the next day," Tobis said.

A spokeswoman for the palace would not say if other members of the royal family were Philip, who is also known as the Duke of Edinburgh. She spoke on customary condition of anonymity. A hospital spokeswoman referred all calls to the palace.

Papworth Hospital's website says it is the U.K.'s largest specialist cardiothoracic hospital and the country's main heart and lung transplant center, offering services such as cardiology, respiratory medicine and cardiothoracic surgery and transplantation.

Philip had been at Sandringham since Monday for the royal family's Christmas festivities, Buckingham Palace said.

It was unclear how Philip's hospitalization would alter the royal family's plans for the weekend, which typically include a public appearance before church services and then a private family lunch.

Philip has been known to enjoy good health throughout his life and rarely misses royal engagements. Upon his 90th birthday in June, he announced plans to cut back his official duties.

He came down with a cold in October and canceled an overnight visit to Italy to recover. That illness came shortly after Philip accompanied the queen on a busy 11-day official royal tour of Australia.

Philip also spent three days in the hospital in 2008 for treatment of a chest infection after suffering a bad cold.

The colorful and often outspoken husband of Elizabeth has been a familiar figure at his wife's side for decades. He has championed numerous charities over the years, but is advising the ones he heads to start planning an orderly transition as he plots the end of his working life.

The royal family's traditional Christmas celebration will be followed by a year's worth of festivities to mark the queen's 60th year on the throne.

Elizabeth and Philip have been planning to mark the event with a series of tours throughout England to culminate with a celebration in London in early June that will include an unprecedented pageant on the River Thames with up to 1,000 boats taking part.

Most of the senior royals, including Prince William and his wife, now formally known as the Duchess of Cambridge, will be dispatched across the globe to help the aging monarch celebrate her Diamond Jubilee.

A member of the Greek royal family, Philip is descended from Danish and German royalty. He joined the Royal Navy in 1939 and saw active service throughout World War II.

Philip married Elizabeth in 1947, when she was still a princess. He gave up his naval career when she became queen.

Philip is a great-great-grandchild of Queen Victoria.

___

Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/britain/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111224/ap_on_re_eu/eu_britain_prince_philip

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Video: Santelli's Bond Market Update

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/45776441/

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Piers Morgan editorship: Phone hacking rife at British tabloid, says columnist

Piers Morgan must have known about phone hacking at the Daily Mirror, says a former columnist in testimony Wednesday in London. Piers Morgan testified Tuesday that he never took part in the illegal phone hacking.

Phone-hacking was widespread at Piers Morgan's Daily Mirror, a former columnist at the tabloid said on Wednesday, as an official inquiry unearthed further evidence of the illegal practice in the British press.

Skip to next paragraph

James Hipwell, fired from the Mirror in 2000 and later jailed for illegal share dealing linked to his financial column, said he witnessed hacking going on daily in 1999 by Mirror showbusiness reporters working a few feet from his own desk.

Hipwell said he believed the practice was sanctioned by senior editors, although he had not seen it taking place in the presence of Morgan, who edited the newspaper from 1995 until 2004, or discussed in front of him.

RECOMMENDED: How to prevent your Gmail from being hacked

"It seemed to me that what they were doing was entirely accepted by the senior editors on the newspaper," he told the Leveson Inquiry into press standards. "I think it was seen as a slightly underhand thing to do but not illegal."

Morgan, now a CNN talk-show host in the United States, edited the Rupert Murdoch tabloid at the heart of the phone-hacking scandal, the News of the World, from 1994 to 1995 before going on to edit the Daily Mirror from 1995 to 2004.

Murdoch's News Corp has admitted people working for the News of the World hacked into the phones of celebrities, politicians and others. It paid 2 million pounds ($3 million) to the parents of a murdered shoolgirl whose phone was hacked.

The scandal has damaged the reputations of politicians and senior police officers close to Murdoch's media group.

The inquiry led by senior judge Brian Leveson has already heard evidence that phone-hacking was not confined to the News of the World, which Murdoch shut down in July.

"BOG-STANDARD"

Hipwell told the inquiry he had the impression hacking had been a "bog-standard journalistic tool" for gathering information at the Mirror when edited by Morgan.

"It seemed to be a genuinely accepted method to get a story," he said. "I would go as far as to say it happened every day (in 1999). It became apparent that a great number of the Mirror's show business stories would come from that source."

Hipwell described Morgan, who gave evidence to the inquiry on Tuesday, as an extremely hands-on editor with a particular interest in the show business desk, which he typically visited every day.

"I cannot prove who knew what at what time but, looking at his style of editorship, I can say it was very unlikely he didn't know what was going on," he said.

Hipwell, who made about 40,000 pounds ($63,000) from selling shares he had recommended in his column as values soared, said one of his colleagues had hacked Morgan's own phone to try to help Hipwell during disciplinary proceedings against him.

"One of the show-business journalists who felt I was being treated unfairly by management offered to hack into Mr Morgan's voicemail on my behalf to try to find out any information that would help my case," he said. "I clearly remember him doing it."

Morgan was cleared of wrongdoing over the share-dealing scandal in 2004 after a four-year investigation.

He was, however, criticised by the Press Complaints Commission, the voluntary body that oversees the British press, for selling shares shortly after they were tipped in the column and also for failing to impose guidelines on his staff.

Trinity Mirror - which as well as the Mirror also owns the People, another tabloid accused of hacking - has said its journalists work within the criminal law and the Press Complaints Commission code of conduct.

News Group Newspapers, a News Corp unit, on Wednesday lost a case against private investigator Glenn Mulcaire, who hacked phones for the the News of the World.

Mulcaire had fought to force the company to resume paying his legal fees in civil cases he faces from hacking victims.

RECOMMENDED: How to prevent your Gmail from being hacked

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/qpHFF7F4vW8/Piers-Morgan-editorship-Phone-hacking-rife-at-British-tabloid-says-columnist

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Googlers Get Galaxy Nexus Gift

Google has always been a great place to work, but occasionally stories leak out that make you want to immediately apply for a job. This is one of those stories ??happy Google employees are reporting that each of them are receiving a very special gift for Christmas ??their very own Samsung Galaxy Nexus. The Ice Cream Sandwich reference phone retails for roughly ?500 sim free, so that?s quite a Christmas bonus!

The Galaxy Nexus are a bit different than they normally look as well ??they?ve got a unique back cover that shows off Google?s iconography and gives a rather unique look to the phone, as you can see.

It?s not known if the phones are different in any other way. The changes could only be cosmetic, but knowing Google, I wouldn?t be surprised to learn if they ship with some custom firmware or perhaps an integrated Tazer or something.

Merry Christmas Googlers, and enjoy your new phones.

This article was written by William Judd. William writes for Mobile Fun (and not Google, sadly), although he is in possession of a Galaxy Nexus. Mobile Fun is known for being the largest online retailer of Amazon Kindle Covers, including the Leather Kindle Cover and a New Kindle Cover range.

Source: http://www.theurbanshogun.com/2011/12/googlers-get-galaxy-nexus-gift.html

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Sony details Xperia's Ice Cream Sandwich progress, remains on track for late March kick-off

Yes, Sony Ericsson has already gone about communicating its intention to deliver Android 4.0 to its Xperia smartphone collection, but the company is now sharing further details about the pending arrival. So, we thought you'd like to be in on the know. For starters, the first devices to receive the upgrade will be the Arc S, Neo V and Ray, each of which are on-track for a late March / early April rollout. Then, beginning in late April / early May, Sony intends to deliver Ice Cream Sandwich to the Active, Arc, Mini, Mini Pro, Neo, Play and Xperia Pro handsets. Even the Live with Walkman is set to receive a new lease on life during the time frame. In each case, the latest version of Android will be rolled out in phases, over the course of a few weeks. Now, let's just hope that Sony Ericsson is able to keep to its schedule.

Sony details Xperia's Ice Cream Sandwich progress, remains on track for late March kick-off originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 22 Dec 2011 01:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/22/sony-details-xperias-ice-cream-sandwich-progress-remains-on-tr/

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17 dead in Sunday's Russian oil rig accident (AP)

MOSCOW ? The deathtoll from Sunday's oil rig accident off Russia's east coast has risen to 17 people.

A spokeswoman for the Emergencies Ministry said rescue teams on Thursday recovered six bodies from the Sea of Okhotsk where the floating oil rig capsized and sank Sunday.

Of the 67 men aboard, 14 were rescued from the icy water; 36 men are still missing and chances of finding them alive are negligible.

The Kolskaya floating platform was being towed back to a Sakhalin Island port in a fierce storm when a strong wave broke some of its equipment and portholes, and it capsized in the choppy water.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/energy/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111222/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_oil_platform

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

FOR KIDS: Distant ?Goldilocks? world

Planet-hunters find a just-right world outside the solar system

Web edition : 10:44 am

On December 5, astronomers introduced a newly discovered planet that seemed habitable for extraterrestrial life. The faraway world is an exoplanet, or planet outside our solar system, called Kepler-22b. It looks E.T.-friendly because its temperature is neither too hot nor too cold for liquid water, which is essential to life as we know it. The planet orbits its star at just the right distance, sometimes called the ?Goldilocks? zone.

Visit the new?Science News for Kids?website?and read the full story:?Distant ?Goldilocks? world


Found in: Science News For Kids

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/337058/title/FOR_KIDS_Distant_%E2%80%98Goldilocks%E2%80%99_world

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Oil prices retreat on Europe's debt problems (AP)

Europe's financial woes pushed oil prices lower Friday for a third straight day.

The eurozone region continues to wrestle with a mountain of debt, and the only cure at hand appears to be a wave of severe spending cuts and pleas for more international aid. European Union leaders have hammered out a new plan for more central financial control and requirements for balanced budgets, but experts say those measures will do little to reduce current debts.

"That plan was a real bust," independent oil analyst and trader Stephen Schork said. "There's talk of real weakness now."

Spending cuts typically lead to declines in energy consumption. It also means fewer imports of manufactured goods from other countries like China and the U.S. Many experts think that the eurozone is already headed for a recession. Investors remain concerned that widespread bank failures could follow, and it may become increasingly difficult for businesses to raise money as more investors lose confidence in the eurozone economy.

Fitch ratings agency revised its outlook on France to "negative" from "stable" because of the country's hefty debt load. It also is considering a credit downgrade for six other nations that use the euro ? Italy, Spain, Ireland, Belgium, Slovenia and Cyprus.

Benchmark crude fell 34 cents to end at $93.53 per barrel in New York. Prices fell as low as $92.52 earlier in the day.

Brent crude, which is used to price foreign oil that's imported by many U.S. refineries, fell 25 cents to finish at $103.35 a barrel in London.

The Labor Department reported Friday that consumer prices stayed flat in November, evidence that inflation is under control. Lower energy costs helped keep prices down overall.

Retail gasoline prices fell by a penny on Friday to a national average of $3.25 per gallon, according to AAA, Wright Express and Oil Price Information Service. A gallon of regular has dropped nearly 75 cents from its peak in May, but it's still almost 27 cents higher than the same time last year.

In other energy trading, heating oil fell 2.2 cents to end at $2.8005 per gallon, and gasoline futures were virtually unchanged at $2.4870 per gallon. Natural gas finished unchanged at $3.127 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_bi_ge/oil_prices

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Video: Scottish zoo presents Chinese pandas

Two giant pandas went on public display for the first time at Edinburgh Zoo today. ITN's Debi Edward was at the zoo along with hundreds of other eagerly waiting visitors to catch a glimpse of the pair.

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45699741/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Injured Model Lauren Scruggs Loses Her Left Eye

The last we heard of model Lauren Scruggs, who was seriously injured in a plane propeller accident on Dec. 3, was that she had regained her ability to walk. Unfortunately, the latest update from her family is not as uplifting.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/lauren-scruggs-loses-left-eye/1-a-411310?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Alauren-scruggs-loses-left-eye-411310

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Crochet Artist Olek Is in Legal Trouble in London - New York News ...

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    Source: http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2011/12/crochet_artist.php

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    Friday, December 16, 2011

    Will airborne launch pads replace the Space Shuttle program?

    Stratolaunch Systems, founded by?Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, is planning to build a huge carrier aircraft that will launch unmanned rockets into space. ?

    Microsoft Corp co-founder Paul Allen is planning to build a spaceship that could replace the Space Shuttle this decade.

    Skip to next paragraph

    Allen is hoping his new company ? called Stratolaunch Systems ? will launch unmanned rockets from a flying carrier plane to ferry government and commercial payloads into space and back, and eventually evolve to human space missions.

    The initiative comes only months after the United States retired the Space Shuttle program after 30 years, opening the door to private enterprise to supply space vehicles.

    Allen's rocket will be launched from a massive carrier aircraft powered by six jumbo jet engines, to be constructed by Scaled Composites, a unit of defense contractor Northrop Grumman Corp. The rocket itself will be made by private space company SpaceX, founded by Elon Musk, the billionaire co-founder of PayPal.

    The first test flight is targeted within five years.

    "I have long dreamed about taking the next big step in private space flight," said Allen in a statement. "To offer a flexible, orbital space delivery system."

    Allen - listed by Forbes magazine as the world's 57th richest person, with a fortune of $13.2 billion - is the latest in a line of tech billionaires with interests in the privatization of space travel.

    His space ambitions put him alongside Musk and Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, whose Blue Origin aims to put people into space at an affordable price, rather than the millions of dollars it has cost up to now. Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic is also looking to transport passengers into sub-orbital space.

    Allen, who made up the name Microsoft, co-founded what became the world's biggest software company with Bill Gates in 1975.

    Lacking Gates' single-minded drive for business success, he left Microsoft in 1983, as he dealt with a first battle with cancer. He recently survived a second course of treatment for a different type of cancer, but says he is healthy now.

    Allen's interests and investments range far and wide, but are focused on his native Seattle and the Pacific Northwest.

    He owns the Seattle Seahawks professional football team, the

    Trail Blazers basketball team in Portland, and his investment firm developed much of the South Lake Union neighborhood which is central to Seattle's re-emergence as a technology center.

    He is a generous donor to the University of Washington and is funding new research into the brain.

    For leisure pursuits, he owns one of the world's largest yachts and built the Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum in Seattle. Allen's memoir, titled "Idea Man", was published earlier this year.

    (Editing by Gunna Dickson)

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/qW6uERNlVOc/Will-airborne-launch-pads-replace-the-Space-Shuttle-program

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    Romney campaign hits back at Obama fundraising challenge (Washington Post)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

    Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175012207?client_source=feed&format=rss

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    Wednesday, December 7, 2011

    3-D TV Doesn't Raise Seizure Risk for Kids With Epilepsy: Study (HealthDay)

    SUNDAY, Dec. 4 (HealthDay News) -- Children with epilepsy do not appear to face an increased risk for seizures while watching 3-D TV, a new German-Austrian study suggests.

    However, the results did reveal that about one in five of these children is vulnerable to other unpleasant reactions when viewing 3-D television, including nausea, headaches and dizziness.

    "Normal people have a very low risk to get a seizure while watching 3-D," explained study author Dr. Herbert Plischke, executive director of the University of Munich's Generation Research Program. In contrast, he noted that people with epilepsy --particularly children -- could be expected to have a "higher vulnerability" in terms of overall seizure risk in such a setting.

    However, among a group of young people with epilepsy, "we could not see any provoked seizure which was caused by 3-D," Plischke said.

    He and his colleagues from the University of Salzburg in Austria are scheduled to present their findings Sunday at the American Epilepsy Society annual meeting in Baltimore.

    As a concept, 3-D technology is hardly a cutting-edge idea, harkening back more than half a century to the 1950s Vincent Price classic film "House of Wax." But the experience of donning special glasses to view an "extra-dimensional" effect has undergone a cinematic renaissance in recent years, led by the box-office success of the movie "Avatar."

    Jumping on the bandwagon, TV manufacturers have sought to bring the experience right into the living room, with TV sets that are hard-wired to provide 3-D viewing of properly formatted shows.

    The move has raised concerns over how the technology may impact various audiences. Recently, some researchers cautioned that nearly one-third of all viewers may be prone to experiencing headaches and/or eye fatigue when viewing a 3-D movie because of poor eye coordination. The resulting strain, they said, could prompt an unpleasant experience equivalent to that of seasickness.

    People with epilepsy are a more specific worry, given their sensitivity to the flashing lights and red and blue light alterations contained in certain TV programming and video games. As a result, some TV manufacturers (such as Samsung) have published public warnings, alerting viewers to the potential risk for epileptic seizures or stroke when viewing 3-D technology.

    Against that backdrop, the current investigation set out to assess the impact of 3-D on children with epilepsy viewing the technology on TV.

    The team focused on 100 children (average age 12) who had epilepsy or were deemed to be at risk for epilepsy.

    All the kids underwent a standard test for photosensitivity. Each was then asked to wear 3-D glasses and sit about six-and-a-half feet away from a 50-inch plasma 3-D TV.

    During 15 minutes of viewing, only one child experienced a seizure, and that particular child was noted as being prone to routinely experiencing three to four seizures per day.

    Symptoms of nausea, headache and dizziness went up during both photosensitivity testing and 3-D TV-watching (in 15 percent and 20 percent of cases, respectively). But the near total absence of seizures, combined with the benign results of EEG readings taken during sensitivity testing and 3-D viewing, led the team to conclude that 3-D TV viewing posed little risk to children with epilepsy.

    The team suggested that seizure risk is probably more a function of differences in TV content rather than TV technology, with certain patterns, colors and flickering images raising the threat of seizure more than 3-D images.

    Dr. Orrin Devinsky, director of NYU Langone Medical Center's Epilepsy Center, agreed.

    "It sounds perfectly in line with what I might expect," he said. "If there was to be a problem, it would be with the content, namely flashing imagery. And that would be a present concern in 2-D or 3-D."

    "So I wouldn't expect 3-D TV to be a specific issue," said Devinsky, who is also a professor of neurology, neurosurgery and psychiatry at NYU School of Medicine. "I wouldn't say that no child in ten thousand would have a problem. But I would expect it to be very rare, if it occurs at all."

    Research presented at meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

    More information

    For more on epileptic seizures, visit the Epilepsy Foundation.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111204/hl_hsn/3dtvdoesntraiseseizureriskforkidswithepilepsystudy

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    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    Obama sees 'make or break' time for middle class (AP)

    OSAWATOMIE, Kan. ? President Barack Obama delivered a sweeping indictment of economic inequality in the U.S. on Tuesday as he summoned the memory of President Theodore Roosevelt and pledged to fight for fairness at a "make or break moment for the middle class."

    Only a month before Republican voters begin choosing a presidential nominee, Obama traveled to small-town Osawatomie, Kan., where Roosevelt delivered his "New Nationalism" address in 1910, to embrace the progressive reformer's calls for a "square deal" for regular Americans.

    Obama warned of the unraveling of the American dream, and called for giving hurting middle-class workers a fair shake and restoring financial security ? themes he's certain to return to throughout the 2012 campaign.

    "This isn't just another political debate. This is the defining issue of our time. This is a make-or-break moment for the middle class, and all those who are fighting to get into the middle class," Obama told a crowd in the Osawatomie High School gym, where red, white and blue bunting lined the bleachers.

    "Because at stake is whether this will be a country where working people can earn enough to raise a family, build a modest savings, own a home, and secure their retirement," he said.

    Taking aim at Republicans, Obama said: "Their philosophy is simple: we are better off when everyone is left to fend for themselves and play by their own rules. Well, I'm here to say they are wrong."

    Obama's speech sounded the theme of inequality of income and opportunity, which the White House sees as a major force in current politics, but it was short on new ideas or specifics for pulling the country out of its economic doldrums.

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_go_pr_wh/us_obama

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    Insight: Stem cell therapy poised to come in from the cold

    Sun Dec 4, 2011 11:08am EST

    (Reuters) - A rogue surgeon injects stem cells from a fetus into a sick man's brain. The cells morph and form body parts. When the man dies, the pathologist finds cartilage, skin and bone clumped in his brain.

    The scene is not from a horror movie; it happened to Max Truex, a former Olympic runner who suffered from Parkinson's disease. The case sent a chill through the scientific community when it came to light 15 years ago and typifies some of the hurdles researchers have faced while trying to bring stem cell therapies to the market.

    Now, it appears, their efforts are closer than ever to paying off.

    Dozens of adult stem cell treatments are moving through clinical trials and showing early success, raising hopes that some could reach the market within five years.

    "It will only take a few successes to really change the field," said Gil Van Bokkelen, chief executive of Athersys Inc and chairman of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine. "As you see things getting closer and closer to that tipping point, you're going to see a frenzy of activity take place."

    Many of the trials focus on heart disease and inflammatory conditions, some of the biggest markets in medicine. The cells used are derived from adult tissue such as fat, or bone marrow, thereby circumventing the ethical concerns raised by the use of cells derived from embryos.

    Data for the most part remains early, but as more results emerge, pharmaceutical companies are beginning to take note.

    "A lot of big companies are looking to place bets on some Phase II products once that data has been confirmed," said Paul Schmitt, managing partner at venture capital firm Novitas Capital. "Even now they're attending all the medical meetings and talking to all the stem cell companies."

    Venture funds like Novitas are taking different approaches to playing the emerging field. Novitas invested $4 million in Amorcyte Inc, a company recently acquired by NeoStem Inc that is developing a treatment for heart disease. It is sticking to that investment for now.

    By contrast, Aspire Capital Partners LLC is investing more broadly in the hope that one success will offset the inevitable failures.

    "My philosophy in the stem cell space is that it's very difficult at this point to pick the winners and losers," said Steven Martin, managing member at Aspire. "We believe that over time there will be some very significant clinical progress, and valuations will improve, but we're still a long way from an approved therapy."

    In the meantime, he said, "we are willing to be patient because we think the upside is tremendous."

    GROWING INTEREST

    Aastrom Biosciences Inc recently presented promising results from a mid-stage trial of its treatment for patients with critical limb ischemia, a disease in which blood flow to the extremities is restricted, at the American Heart Association's annual meeting. A mid-stage trial from Australia's Mesoblast Ltd showed its stem cell product reduced the rate of heart attacks and the need for artery clearing procedures by 78 percent.

    "We're actually developing products now," said Timothy Mayleben, chief executive of Aastrom, which is using cells derived from a patient's own bone marrow to develop treatments for cardiovascular disease. "For the first time you are starting to see data being presented at major medical meetings."

    Mesoblast has attracted more interest from investors than most. In late 2010, Cephalon Inc took a 20 percent stake in the company, which now has a market value of $2 billion -- far greater than any other pure play company in the space. Cephalon was bought this year by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd..

    "Mesoblast gets this out-sized valuation by being a standard bearer in a risky field that everyone feels has a lot of promise," said Raghuram Selvaraju, an analyst at Morgan Joseph TriArtisan.

    Shire Plc said in May it planned to establish a new regenerative medicine business, and kick-started it with the $750 million purchase of Advanced BioHealing Inc, which makes a skin substitute for treating diabetic foot ulcers.

    Pfizer Inc, Johnson & Johnson and Roche Holding AG are members of the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine, a nonprofit group that promotes awareness of the field. Pfizer has a regenerative medicine unit and a partnership with Athersys. But their projects are small.

    "Big pharma companies will be more interested in investing once they see data in hundreds of patients," said Schmitt.

    Once that happens, there will be a land rush, he said, just as there was with monoclonal antibodies, genetically engineered molecules such as Roche's breast cancer drug Herceptin and Abbott Laboratories' rheumatoid arthritis drug Humira.

    "Monoclonal antibodies were a missionary effort for many years, all through the eighties and nineties," Schmitt said. "They were called silver bullets, and eventually those bullets turned to gold."

    According to GBI Research, the market for monoclonal antibodies was worth $15.6 billion in 2010 and is expected to reach $31.7 billion by 2017.

    Stem cell therapy, which once promised to deliver cures for everything from Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's to spinal cord injury, has followed a similar path of enthusiasm followed by disappointment.

    "There was a lot of hype around the industry early on and the industry failed to live up to that hype," said Aastrom's Mayleben.

    Now stem cell therapy is gaining credibility again as real clinical data begins to emerge.

    "From an investor standpoint, the time lines are long, but the opportunity to transform medicine and science is unlike anything else out there," said Aspire's Martin.

    MASTER CELLS

    The promise of stem cells, which have been used for 40 years in bone marrow transplants, lies in their ability to repair tissue, reduce inflammation, regulate the immune system, and respond to calls for help from multiple places inside the body. Stem cells are the body's master cells - blank slates that renew themselves and mature into specific cell types in the heart, muscle and other organs.

    Embryonic stem cells are uniquely capable of differentiating into every type of mature cell in the body, and were long viewed as the most promising for regenerating tissue.

    But harvesting stem cells from embryos requires the destruction of the embryo itself, a process opposed by conservative Christian groups. Moreover, their endless capacity to divide can lead to the formation of teratomas, or stem cell cancers.

    Recently, Geron Corp, the world's leading embryonic stem cell company, said it could no longer fund its stem cell work and would focus on developing cancer drugs. It closed its trial for spinal cord injury.

    Unlike embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells have a more limited capacity to differentiate, but appear able to reduce inflammation and promote blood vessel formation. Furthermore, they can respond to damage in the body in a flexible and dynamic way, offering advantages over traditional drugs.

    "They seem to be preprogrammed to act some way in tissue repair, not to form an organ or a tissue," said Douglas Losordo, head of stem cell research at Baxter International Inc, which is developing cell therapies for heart disease. "The cells that we use are very effective at stimulating the formation of new blood vessels, but if I wanted to make a brain cell out of those cells they would not be very good at it."

    These are the type of stem cell treatments, delivered by infusion, injection or catheter, that are being developed today.

    Some companies, such as Celgene Corp, Pluristem Therapeutics Inc, Athersys and Mesoblast are developing so-called allogeneic products designed to be sold with the ease and scale of a traditional pharmaceutical. Cells are taken from a single donor, expanded, frozen and shipped for use in thousands of people.

    "We wanted to create a product that everyone could receive and not have to match every donor to every recipient," said Robert Hariri, chief executive of Celgene's Cellular Therapeutics unit.

    Aastrom, Baxter, NeoStem and Cytori Therapeutics Inc use cells taken from a patient's own body in what is known as an autologous transfer. This personalized approach eliminates the risk that the cells will be rejected.

    "There are going to be dividing lines in the industry between autologous and allogeneic and there are some indications where one will be better than the other," said Jason Kolbert, head of business development at NeoStem.

    "It may be that immediately following a heart attack you would want to use an allogeneic therapy to limit the damage in those first few hours, and then follow up after day five with an autologous product like ours."

    Different types of stem cell are being used for different diseases. Cytori is developing a heart disease product derived from fat cells, for example, while Celgene is using placental cells for Crohn's disease and rheumatoid arthritis therapies.

    Fetal cells are also being explored. Neuralstem Inc, for example, is developing treatments for neurological disorders from an aborted fetus and is in the early stages of testing a treatment for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, known also as Lou Gehrig's disease.

    "I think Neuralstem is one to watch," said Aspire's Martin.

    CHALLENGES AHEAD

    As cell therapies move further through clinical trials, companies will need more money, and funding is scarce. Aastrom's shares have fallen 37 percent since reaching a year high of $3.47 in June as investors brace for another dilutive capital-raising effort.

    Companies with credible partners will likely have an advantage. Athersys has a partnership with Pfizer; Cytori has a partnership with General Electric Co; Pluristem has a partnership with United Therapeutics Corp. Celgene, which makes cancer drug Revlimid, has resources of its own.

    Yet even if companies remain afloat long enough to bring a product through late-stage clinical trials, it is unclear what regulators like the Food and Drug Administration will require in order to approve them.

    Some believe the regulatory hurdles for treatments derived from a patient's own cells will be lower than those where the cells come from donors, since there is less risk of cell rejection. However, no clear pathway has yet been established.

    "We need a clear, consistent and rigorous regulatory framework," said Athersys's Van Bokkelen "The FDA is actually willing to provide lots of guidance and assistance to sponsors, if you just ask them."

    (Reporting by Toni Clarke in Boston and Deena Beasley in Los Angeles; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Edward Tobin and Tim Dobbyn)

    Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/A1vDANDduCI/us-insight-stem-cell-therapy-idUSTRE7B30FH20111204

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    Sunday, December 4, 2011

    Video: What Cain?s exit means



    >>> and joining us now is david gregory , moderator of "meet the press". david what was the landscape that cain had to look at, the reality of the situation in coming to this decision?

    >> his family situation as he talked about today was really what pushed him out of the race. i was told that cain told people in the last couple of days that the toll was simply too high because of the allegations. look, let's take this out of the political realm and put it inside a person's marriage. he had a relationship with someone for 13 years, whether it was a friendship or something more, in which he was trying to help her financially, talking about ginger white, and his wife didn't know. cain said this publicly. and as i was told in the last couple of days and we first report last night, he has a lot of work it do at home. that's what he cited publicly here. the other important piece of the landscape, politically in iowa his support had plummeted. 22% in the polls. the latest des moines register poll had him at 8%. he had simply lost support, lost the about to raise money.

    >> he plans to endorse, and while we wouldn't suggest any other candidate would take some joy in his personal problems, one of them is likely to benefit. who might that be?

    >> i think newt gingrich thus far has been inheriting that support. you see it in his own poll numbers in new hampshire -- excuse me in iowa, in other early states as well. and he's been working, gingrich has, quietly to get more of that support. so i think that's an early potential for him in terms of endorsements.

    >> david gregory here in new

    Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/nightly-news/45536711/

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    For Herman Cain, the campaign all but over

    Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain leaves the Manchester Union Leader newspaper after meeting with the editorial board, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain leaves the Manchester Union Leader newspaper after meeting with the editorial board, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    Republican presidential candidate, businessman Herman Cain leaves the Manchester Union Leader newspaper after meeting with the editorial board, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain arrives for a meeting with the editorial board of the Manchester Union Leader newspaper, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    Republican presidential candidate, Herman Cain arrives for a meeting with the editorial board of the Manchester Union Leader newspaper, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011, in Manchester, N.H. (AP Photo/Jim Cole)

    (AP) ? Herman Cain is still campaigning for president. But by most measures, his White House bid is all but over.

    His standing in polls is cratering. Supporters are wavering if not fleeing. Fundraising is suffering.

    And, these days, the former pizza company executive is less a serious candidate than the butt of late-night comedy jokes after a string of accusations of sexually inappropriate behavior and, now, an allegation of a 13-yearlong extramarital affair.

    "His chance at winning the presidency are effectively zero," said Dave Welch, a Republican strategist who worked on both of John McCain's presidential bids.

    And Republican strategist Kellyanne Conway said: "It's the daily dose of the wince-and-cringe factor that leaves people wondering what could be coming next,"

    As it has since Ginger White stepped forward Monday, the allegation of an affair overshadowed Cain's campaign for another day Thursday, when he told the New Hampshire Union Leader that his wife, Gloria, did not know he was providing the 46-year-old Atlanta-area businesswoman with money for "month-to-month bills and expenses."

    And, Cain said, his wife also didn't know of what he called a friendship with White until she said publicly that she had a casual 13-year affair with Cain that ended about eight months ago.

    It is the latest chapter in a saga that has played out in recent weeks as his campaign has been rocked first with allegations of sexual harassment and, now, White's affair claim.

    Even before all that surfaced, Cain faced steep hurdles to the nomination. He didn't have much of a campaign organization. He was spending more time on a book tour than in early primary and caucus states. And he was facing doubts about whether he was ready for the presidency, given a series of fumbles on policy questions.

    Over the past month, Cain has watched his standing in polls sink. He acknowledged his fundraising took a hit after White came forward, and political experts predict that his ability to take in campaign cash will evaporate now that he is re-evaluating whether to remain in the race. If he decides to continue running, Cain would face another big hurdle: the loss of grassroots support, which has provided the core of his base for his anti-establishment campaign.

    Atlanta Tea Party Patriots co-founder Debbie Dooley typifies the falloff of support. She had been vigorously defending Cain as the sexual harassment allegations trickled out. But White's accusation proved too much.

    "I don't know what to believe," Dooley said. "I just think he needs to get out now and focus on his family."

    Charlie Gruchow, one of Cain's earliest and most devout supporters in Iowa, has said he has moved his support to former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, because he doesn't think Cain can survive politically.

    "I still don't believe all the allegations," he said. "But it's really damaged him."

    Even Cain's supporters acknowledge his odds have grown even steeper with a cloud planted over his campaign and just weeks before voting gets under way in Iowa.

    "I'm still backing him, but I definitely think it's a bigger and bigger mountain to climb," Florida state Rep. Carlos Trujillo said Tuesday, the day after White emerged. "It's going to be difficult to make up that ground in so short an amount of time."

    Cain has said he is reassessing and re-evaluating whether to remain in the race and will only make that decision after speaking face-to-face with his wife of 42 years.

    The candidate is expected back in his home state of Georgia after campaign stop in South Carolina Friday afternoon and will presumably talk with his wife then. His campaign wouldn't provide details.

    He has canceled a Friday night event at the Atlanta Athletic Club.

    "We've postponed it while he revaluates," organizer Gil Bell said.

    But Georgia state Sen. Josh McKoon, a supporter, said the planned opening of a campaign headquarters in Atlanta was still on.

    "Without a doubt," McKoon said.

    Cain was keeping up a busy campaign schedule.

    After visiting New Hampshire, he was set to deliver a business-focused speech at Middle Tennessee State University. He was also set to headline an event Friday afternoon in Rock Hill, S.C.

    In Iowa, his campaign shot out an email to supporters saying that Cain "is in it to win it." Campaign manager Mark Block met with staffers there saying the campaign was "full steam ahead," the email said.

    ____

    Associated Press writers Ray Henry in Atlanta and Tom Beaumont in Iowa contributed to this report.

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-01-US-Cain/id-c17106a5b5fa44038aab6386c8dc0e4d

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    Saturday, December 3, 2011

    How NASA could get its groove back

    NASA's better days can appear long past to the public. The U.S. space agency that once landed a man on the moon now wrestles with questions of existential crisis after retiring its space shuttle fleet this year. But it may still have enough leftover mojo to boldly set new goals to go where no man has gone before ? if it can shake off its instinct to always look for guidance from the president and Congress.

    A chance exists for NASA to declare a new vision for space exploration, said Jeff Leitner, founder and dean of Insight Labs. His nonprofit group wants to help the space agency control its destiny based on the authority of its "smartest, badass scientists" and spaceflight achievements, rather than acting as a political football for lawmakers while waiting for someone to decide its next mission.

    "If they were in Silicon Valley, we'd be worshiping them," said Jeff Leitner, founder and dean of Insight Labs. "But they're NASA, so we're cutting their budget."

    Removing the blinders
    Part of the uncertainty problem surrounding space exploration is that "the public narrative around NASA seems broken," Leitner explained. Even as news reports glowed over fantastical visions of possible new technologies from the secretive Google X lab in November, NASA was carefully preparing to launch its nuclear-powered Curiosity rover ? the size of a Mini Cooper ? to explore the possibility of life on Mars.

    The other part of the problem may come from NASA's blindness to its own "cool" factor. That realization came to Leitner during a 3-hour Friday-morning talk among NASA representatives and big thinkers from all walks of life at NASA Langley Research Center in Virginia on Nov. 18.

    "We got there by having people in (the) room who are experts in science and technology say (to the NASA representatives), 'You know we're looking to you for that guidance on space exploration,' and watch NASA be surprised by their own credibility," Leitner told InnovationNewsDaily.

    NASA's blindness to its brand's coolness became more evident as the discussion wore on. Leitner and his Insight Lab colleagues posed a hypothetical to the NASA representatives: If they summoned Larry Page, Google cofounder, and Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder, to a meeting, would the Silicon Valley VIPs attend?

    The NASA representatives said they didn't know. "Of course (they'd come), you're NASA!" Leitner and his colleagues responded.

    Taking control
    NASA's chance to take a new leadership role arises in a time when new countries and private spaceflight companies alike have begun crowding into an area once dominated by the United States and the former Soviet Union. That "fragmented environment" gives a chance for NASA to possibly become both architect and chief builder for space exploration.

    "Somebody has to be the architect; NASA has earned that role," Leitner said. "We were in the building where Orville Wright had his office. If you're that guy, you get to declare the nation's priorities for flight."

    By setting its own grand strategy, NASA could better hold a steady course despite new presidential administrations or changing budgets. That would buck the trend of allowing congressionally-approved budgets to decide spaceflight missions and goals.

    "NASA has an opportunity that they didn't know they had," Leitner explained." They currently judge their value in the world based on budgetary guidelines; that doesn't quite resonate with public perception or narrative."

    One small step
    Insight Labs organized its " Reclaiming Public Fascination " meeting with the goal of sparking a conversation among outside thinkers about changing NASA's public narrative and message. Such a target seemed more achievable in a three-hour meeting than changing the mission of NASA or figuring out a new direction for technological breakthroughs.

    1. More space news from msnbc.com

      1. Holiday calendar: An ornament in outer space

        Science editor Alan Boyle's Weblog: This year's Space Advent Calendar kicks off with a picture of the moon hanging above Earth like a Christmas tree ornament.

      2. NASA comes clean on Mars rover slip-up
      3. A month of amazing skywatching sights
      4. How NASA could get its groove back

    But Insight Labs also aims to do much more than simply provide standard consulting advice to organizations for free. It aims to help tackle the big problems that keep the heads of government agencies and nonprofits up at night.

    "A lot of people say, 'Here's how you can reorganize yourself to be more efficient,' but a lot of big-name organizations are solving the wrong problem," Leitner said. "We go way up the headwaters of the problem."

    The Insight Labs founders have already begun more in-depth interviews with some of the thinkers who attended the meeting, and continue to talk with NASA about making slight changes to past assumptions to make the path forward easier. In one email, Leitner told a NASA contact that the space agency was still "planning for gravity in a zero-gee environment." Why not float free?

    You can follow InnovationNewsDaily senior writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @ ScienceHsu. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @ News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

    ? 2011 InnovationNewsDaily.com. All rights reserved. More from InnovationNewsDaily.com.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45515176/ns/technology_and_science-innovation/

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    Daihatsu FC ShowCase concept: who doesn't want a 60-inch TV in a van?

    Here's a funny one from the Tokyo Motor Show. Daihatsu's squarish concept EV van, dubbed the FC ShowCase, is basically a spacious four-seater packing plenty of goodies: a giant wing door, some blue lights on the wheels, an LED panel on the left skirt, side-view cameras instead of mirrors, a funky touch panel steering wheel, a small heads-up display and a 60-inch TV. And no, this isn't a mod from Pimp My Ride. According to one of the designers, the idea here is that the FC ShowCase acts as a mobile theater, which can keep travellers entertained while camping or fishing. With the seats folded down (except for the driver's seat, of course) on top of the 35kW solid polymer fuel cell stack, this vehicle also makes a great delivery van apparently, but don't expect FedEx to turn up at your door with Daihatsu's dream ride any time soon. Or ever. Video after the break.

    Continue reading Daihatsu FC ShowCase concept: who doesn't want a 60-inch TV in a van?

    Daihatsu FC ShowCase concept: who doesn't want a 60-inch TV in a van? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Dec 2011 18:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/01/daihatsu-fc-showcase-concept-who-doesnt-want-a-60-inch-tv-in-a/

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