Malta opposing EU financing for stem cell research on embryos

Stem cell therapy may one day be used to cure disorders such as Fragile-X syndrome, or Cystic fibrosis and other genetic maladies.

Matthew Vella

The Maltese government wants the European Commission to abandon plans to provide funds for research activities on stem cells that involve "the destruction of human embryos".

In a declaration on the ethical principles for the Horizon 2020 programme, which is an 80 billion fund for the EU's programme for research and innovation to create new jobs, the Maltese government said it wanted more detailed guidelines on the bioethical principles that will guide research programmes.

Horizon 2020 will allow the financing of research on human stem cells - both adult and embryonic - as long as it is permitted by the national laws of member states.

The fund however will not finance human cloning, genetic modification, or the creation of human embryos intended for the purpose of research or stem cell procurement.

The European Commission does not explicitly solicit the use of human embryonic stem cells, but Horizon 2020 allows the use of human stem cells according to the objectives of the research, and only if it has the necessary approvals from the member states.

The Maltese declaration echoes previous statements by the Commission of Catholic Bishops of the EC (Comece), which said Horizon 2020 did not include greater protection of human embryos from stem cell research.

Malta says it does not want any such embryos to be used for stem cell research. The statement by the Maltese government said the Horizon 2020 programme "does not take sufficiently into account the therapeutic potential of human adult stem cells."

Malta wants Europe to commit to a reinforcement of research on human adult stem cells, and that Europe should abstain from financing matters of fundamental ethical principles, which differ among member states.

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Malta opposing EU financing for stem cell research on embryos

Ministry seeks to strengthen spirituality among youth

Two hundred and 12 degrees is the boiling point of water but it is also a place where young people can worship God on Wednesday nights.

Trinity Assembly of God lead pastor Kelly Fulfer, top right, delivers a sermon Wednesday to members of the 212 youth ministry at the Trinity Assembly of God.

The youth ministry 212 meets at the Trinity Assembly of God to help youngsters 12 to 18 years old learn about Jesus Christ through fellowship, worship and Bible teaching.

"We don't tell people where to go to church," said 212 worship pastor Casey Steen, "We just create an environment for people to experience God."

Steen said his job as worship pastor is to create a culture of worshippers of God to help change the community forever. The youth ministry 212 started in August 2010 with a group of college students who wanted to spread God's word through the satellite ministry of Copper Pointe Church in Albuquerque. It started with about 16 individuals and now has a consistent attendance of 65 students. According to Steen, many children have another home church in Portales but attend 212 meetings regularly.

Haleigh Bird said her work as a 212 worship team member gives her much responsibility and allows her to help Portales youngsters strengthen their connection with God.

"I never thought I would have so many kids come up to me and ask me for advice with their love of God," Bird said.

"It's really fulfilling to have kids want to know your opinion about things."

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Ministry seeks to strengthen spirituality among youth

World-Renowned Spiritual Healer Dr. and Master Zhi Gang Sha Proclaims June 2, 2012 Divine Healing Hands Day

New York, NY (PRWEB) June 01, 2012

New York Times bestselling author, spiritual leader and a grandmaster of many ancient Chinese disciplines. Dr. and Master Zhi Gang Sha declares June 2 as Divine Healing Hands Day, offering free healings in hundreds of locations around the world in one day.

Dr. and Master Sha, who is a direct channel from the Divine, focuses on Soul Power to deliver enlightenment by helping individuals to lift their soul to a higher spiritual level in heaven. On Saturday, June 2, Dr. and Master Sha will deliver Divine blessings (remote healing) to thousands of people around the world via webcast from Frankfurt, while Divine Healing Hands Soul Healers offer healings in individual cities. These blessings from the Divine are free to everyone who registers on http://www.DrSha.com.

During the free global webcast, Dr. Sha will unveil the principles of the Divine Healing Hands Mission that explains how to open our spiritual selves to help ourselves and others. During this webcast, Dr. Sha will discuss:

This year, Dr. and Master Sha brings the Divine Healing Hands mission to humanity by offering Soul, Mind and Body Transplants to 35,200 individuals who open their spiritual selves to receive them and become Divine Healing Hands Soul Healers. To spread the Divine Healing Hands mission to humanity, Dr. & Master Sha offers free, daily Divine Healing Hands Blessings via teleconference. Now, he will also hold a global Divine Healing Hands event every month. Everyone can participate in person by joining a Divine Healing Hands Soul Healer near them or via webcast on the first Saturday of every month in 2012.

Dr. Sha is not only a teacher, but he is a servant to God. His lifes work includes serving humanity by helping them to achieve balance in their lives, cleanse their karma, be of service to others, and lift their soul to a higher standing in heaven. By finding a path to harmony with the universe, everything else in our lives will follow. Divine Healing Hands carries a frequency and vibration from God that can transform the frequency and vibration of the health, relationships, finances, intelligence and every aspect of life. This is the first time that God has ever been willing to give the opportunity and honor to humanity to receive his permanent healing hands to serve humanity, mother earth, heaven an all universes. The Divine Healing Hands carries:

For a Soul Transplant, Dr. Sha extends the Divines golden light for the soul. For a Mind Transplant, Dr. Sha offers the Divines golden light for the consciousness. For Body Transplant, Dr. Sha gives the Divines golden light for energy and matter. These three treasures joined together as one are called Divine Healing Hands. From here, individuals who receive these treasures are encouraged to share the Divines gifts with others by healing their soul and helping to make a better world. To Register for the Saturday, June 2, 2012 free Divine Healing Hands Webcast please go to http://www.DrSha.com.

Dr. Sha has more than 60,000 Facebook fans (Facebook.com/ZhiGangSha) who share heart-touching stories about Divine Healing Hands every day. On Dr. Sha's YouTube channel (YouTube.com/ZhiGangSha), you can witness the power of Divine Healing Hands in more than 900 videos.

Why Does The Divine Offer Healing Hands to Humanity?

Master Sha teaches a universal Tao principle that reincarnation happens to everything. Not only do human beings reincarnate, but Mother Earth does too. Mother Earths reincarnation goes through a cycle of eras, each lasting fifteen thousand years. Since 2003, the earth has entered into the Soul Light Era which is the era in which soul over matter will be prominent.

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World-Renowned Spiritual Healer Dr. and Master Zhi Gang Sha Proclaims June 2, 2012 Divine Healing Hands Day

SpaceX Dragon leaves space station for flight home, aims for splashdown off Mexico

By Marcia Dunn THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. The privately funded SpaceX Dragon capsule left the International Space Station on Thursday and aimed for a Pacific splashdown to end its historic flight. Astronauts set the worlds first commercial supply ship loose after a five-day visit, releasing the vessel with the space stations robot arm. The Dragon slowly backed away from the 250-mile-high (400-kilometre-high) outpost, on track for a midday return to Earth, six hours later.

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SpaceX Dragon leaves space station for flight home, aims for splashdown off Mexico

New Private Space Plane Passes 1st Flight Test

The private Dream Chaser space plane took to the skies Tuesday (May 29), kicking off a flight-test program that will vet the vehicle's ability to carry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit.

The Dream Chaser, which is built by aerospace firm Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC), did not fly under its own power during the test. Instead it performed a so-called captive carry test and was held aloft the entire time by an Erickson Air-Crane heavy-lift helicopter, which hauled the space plane through the skies near Denver to verify its aerodynamic flight performance.

Still, the so-called captive-carry test marks an important step forward in the Dream Chaser's progress, company officials said.

"The successful captive-carry flight test of the Dream Chaser full-scale flight vehicle marks the beginning of SNC's flight test program, a program that could culminate in crewed missions to the International Space Station for NASA," said former astronaut Steve Lindsey, head of the space plane's flight operations at Sierra Nevada, in a statement. [Photos: Dream Chaser, a Private Space Plane]

Sierra Nevada is one of four companies to receive funding from NASA's Commercial Crew Development (CCDev) program, which is encouraging private American vehicles to fill the astronaut-carrying void left by the retirement of the space shuttle fleet last year.

Sierra Nevada got more than $100 million in two rounds of CCDev funding over the past two years, which it's using to develop the Dream Chaser. Tuesday's captive-carry test allows the company to check off another milestone stipulated in the second round, known as CCDev-2.

"This is a very positive success for the Dream Chaser team and their innovative approach," said Ed Mango, NASA's Commercial Crew Program manager. "I applaud and encourage the designers and engineers to continue their efforts in meeting the objectives of the rest of their CCDev-2 milestones."

Data from the captive-carry test will be used to evaluate and prove hardware, facilities and ground operations in preparation for approach and landing tests, during which the Dream Chaser will be carried into the skies and then dropped. The first of those test flights is planned for later this year, officials said.

The Dream Chaser team conducted several other tests before taking off on Tuesday. For example, engineers performed a ground-based landing gear test and a flight readiness review, and they also demonstrated the release mechanism between the space plane and the helicopter.

The other three CCDev-funded companies are Blue Origin, Boeing and SpaceX, which on Thursday (May 31) wrapped up a historic demonstration flight of its Dragon capsule to the space station.

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New Private Space Plane Passes 1st Flight Test

COLLEGE BASEBALL: Richardson helps St. John’s win Big East championship

Kyle Richardson drove in the go-ahead run for St. Johns University in the Big East Conference championship game Sunday and the former Mohawk Valley DiamondDawg heads south to North Carolina with his Red Storm teammates next as the third seed at the Chapel Hill Regional to begin the NCAA Tournament.

St. Johns (37-21) won its conference-record seventh Big East championship with a 7-3 victory over the University of South Florida in Clearwater, Fla., Saturday. The Red Storm trailed entering the sixth inning but tied the game when a batter was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded then took a 4-3 lead on Richardsons sacrifice fly.

The center fielder and leadoff hitter from Rome has played 43 games this spring, starting 29. Richardson carries a .299 batting average with 11 runs batted in, 22 runs scored and seven stolen bases in eight attempts.

Richardson, who had played at Mohawk Valley Community College prior to his summer in Little Falls and transferring to St. Johns, was the runner-up to DiamondDawgs teammate Jason Simone in the 2010 New York Collegiate Baseball League batting race.

The Red Storm begins its 34th NCAA Tournament with a game Friday against East Carolina, the No. 2 seed. Host North Carolina is the regions No. 1 seed and opens regional play against Cornell University at Boshamer Stadium.

Two more former DiamondDawgs are tournament bound, Tyler Dunaway at the University of Kentucky and Michael Gunn at the University of Arkansas. Both schools are No. 2 seeds, Kentucky in Gary, Ind., and , Arkansas in Houston.

Dunaway has pitched two innings in two appearances out of the bullpen for Kentucky (43-16) which heads to the tournament for the seventh time. Dunaway struck out three batters and allowed two earned runs. Catcher Luke Maile, a Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League all-star while playing for the Amsterdam Mohawks last summer, was a second-team all-Southeastern Conference honoree after batting .313 with 12 home runs and 49 runs batted in.

The Wildcats open play against Kent State at a regional that also includes Purdue and Valparaiso. Oriskanys Mike Gaglianese, a 2011 graduate of Notre Dame High School in Utica, has made three mound appearances, including one start, for Purdue, allowing five runs on five hits in five innings.

Because Purdue does not have a home field which meets NCAA standards for a host site, regional games will be played at U.S. Steel Yard, home of the independent Gary Southshore RailCats of the American Association.

Arkansas takes on Sam Houston State Friday at the regional hosted by Rice which meets Prairie View A&M in its first-round game. Gunn, a freshman first baseman, outfielder and pitcher, has appeared in 14 games this spring, delivering six hits and five runs batted in at the plate in 24 at-bats while striking out 19 batters in 14 innings as a hard-throwing left-handed reliever. Gunn won his only decision on the mound and limited opponents to a .125 batting average while walking 10 batters.

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COLLEGE BASEBALL: Richardson helps St. John’s win Big East championship

Gold heads for weekly loss on euro zone woes

By Rujun Shen

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Gold slipped on Friday, on course for a second straight week of losses, as a weaker euro sapped appetite for bullion amid the debt crisis in Europe while investors awaited a key U.S. employment report later in the day for further trading cues.

Gold briefly moved in tandem with the dollar in the previous session as safe-haven appetite overflowed from the greenback and U.S. Treasuries, but that quickly came to an end as Asian investors started the day fretting over the euro zone situation.

"It's an extension of the fear trade," said Nick Trevethan, senior metals strategist at ANZ in Singapore.

"With big euro zone risk bubbling just below the surface and occasionally rising to a popping force, people are just uncomfortable holding risk, even gold. All and all, bears are back in the woods again."

Spot gold slipped 0.3 percent to $1,558.25 an ounce by 0641 GMT, recovering from an intra-day low at $1,548.50. Gold fell 6.3 percent in May, the steepest monthly fall since December. It was headed for an almost 1-percent weekly loss.

Gold had fallen nearly 20 percent from its peak of $1,920.30 hit last September, flirting near the edge of a technical bear market. The most-active U.S. gold futures contract for August delivery dropped 0.2 percent to $1,559.90.

Bullion was pressured by a weaker euro, which dropped to its lowest level against the dollar in nearly two years, dogged by worries that Spain may need external aid to shore up its struggling banking sector and fix its public finances.

Prices are likely to remain volatile as investors follow the twists and turns in euro zone's struggle with the debt crisis and assess the possibility of more monetary stimulus, with the focus on June 17 Greek elections that may decide if the country will break away from the single currency bloc.

"It's not hard to come up with a rationale for a decent rebound if you are tied to the belief that Europe will end up in a central-bank led rescue of some kind, but the bar for such action is high," said a Singapore-based trader.

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Gold heads for weekly loss on euro zone woes

Ryan Sweeney turns heads in right field for Red Sox

BOSTON The Red Sox' revolving door in right field turned to Ryan Sweeney last night and he responded with one of the best defensive plays any Boston outfielder in any position has made this season.

The Tigers had runners at second and third with one out in the second inning when Jhonny Peralta hit a fly ball down the line, headed for that strange section of low fence that leads to Pesky's Pole.

Sweeney raced over, made the catch just a few feet from the fence, then delivered a perfect throw to catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia. He made the tag on Delmon Young to complete an inning-ending double play.

He made the adjustment on the run was how manager Bobby Valentine saw the play, and was able to throw a strike to the plate. It was a really good defensive play.

Infield help coming Dustin Pedroia was still on the active roster as of yesterday, but Valentine said, I suspect that before the weekend is over, there will be another infielder.

The swelling in Pedroia's right thumb has gone down some, the manager said. The second baseman is still listed as day to day.

Keeping relievers busy Valentine has made 153 pitching changes and the Boston bullpen has worked 164-1/3 innings compared to 298-2/3 by the starters. The manager was asked if he were concerned with overusing his relievers and burning out the bullpen.

I wondered that myself, he said, and he had the information at his fingertips.

The Sox entered yesterday fourth in the league in relief appearances and innings pitched so, Valentine added, We're basically on par.

Compared to last year and Terry Francona, Valentine had made 152 pitching changes to 132 for Francona and used his bullpen for 162-1/3 innings compared to 150-2/3 for Francona.

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Ryan Sweeney turns heads in right field for Red Sox

NASA'S Commercial Crew Partner Sierra Nevada Corporation Completes Dream Chaser Flight Test Milestone

LOUISVILLE, Colo. -- Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) Space Systems successfully completed a "captive carry test" of its full-scale Dream Chaser orbital crew vehicle Tuesday, marking a new milestone in the company's effort to develop transportation for astronauts to low Earth orbit and the International Space Station.

During the test, the Dream Chaser flight vehicle was carried under an Erickson Air-Crane helicopter to assess the vehicle's aerodynamic flight performance, which will allow additional flight tests in the future. The helicopter flew for approximately an hour near the Rocky Mountain Metropolitan Airport in Jefferson County, Colo. . SNC is one of several companies working to develop commercial crew transportation capabilities under the Commercial Crew Development Round 2 (CCDev2) agreement with NASA's Commercial Crew Program (CCP), which is helping spur innovation and development of new spacecraft and launch vehicles from the commercial industry.

"This is a very positive success for the Dream Chaser team and their innovative approach," NASA CCP Program Manager Ed Mango said. "I applaud and encourage the designers and engineers to continue their efforts in meeting the objectives of the rest of their CCDev2 milestones."

The Dream Chaser is designed to carry as many as seven astronauts to space. It is the only spacecraft under CCDev2 that is winged and designed to land on a conventional runway. Data from the test will provide SNC an early opportunity to evaluate and prove hardware, facilities and ground operations in preparation for approach and landing tests scheduled for later this year.

"The successful captive carry flight test of the Dream Chaser full scale flight vehicle marks the beginning of SNC's flight test program, a program that could culminate in crewed missions to the International Space Station for NASA," said Steve Lindsey, former NASA astronaut and head of Dream Chaser's flight operations for SNC.

Additional milestones leading up to the test included evaluating the performance of the main landing gear selected for use on the Dream Chaser flight vehicle, an interface test to demonstrate the release mechanism between the spacecraft prototype and the heavy-lift helicopter, and a thorough flight test readiness review with engineers, technical experts and representatives from SNC and NASA. Another milestone evaluated the separation system compatibility of Dream Chaser with its initial launch vehicle, the United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, which would be used to release the spacecraft from the rocket's second stage after it has placed the spacecraft into low Earth orbit.

All of NASA's industry partners, including SNC, continue to meet their established milestones in developing commercial crew transportation capabilities.

For more video and images of the test flight, and more information about NASA's Commercial Crew Program, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/commercialcrew

For more information on Sierra Nevada Space Systems, visit: http://www.SNCspace.com

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NASA'S Commercial Crew Partner Sierra Nevada Corporation Completes Dream Chaser Flight Test Milestone

New Collaborative Research Centre in Molecular Biology

01.06.2012 - (idw) Ruprecht-Karls-Universitt Heidelberg

How do cells respond to damage and how are disturbances in cellular equilibrium avoided or compensated? These issues are at the heart of a new Collaborative Research Centre funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and ready to be launched at Heidelberg University on 1 July 2012. The CRC 1036 Cellular Quality Control and Damage Response is coordinated by Prof. Dr. Bernd Bukau, director of the Center for Molecular Biology of Heidelberg University (ZMBH). In the course of the next four years, this new research venture will receive funding to the tune of over ten million Euros. Press Release Heidelberg, 1 June 2012

New Collaborative Research Centre in Molecular Biology DFG provides over ten million Euros to fund CRC Cellular Quality Control and Damage Response

How do cells respond to damage and how are disturbances in cellular equilibrium avoided or compensated? These issues are at the heart of a new Collaborative Research Centre funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and ready to be launched at Heidelberg University on 1 July 2012. The CRC 1036 Cellular Quality Control and Damage Response is coordinated by Prof. Dr. Bernd Bukau, director of the Center for Molecular Biology of Heidelberg University (ZMBH). In the course of the next four years, this new research venture will receive funding to the tune of over ten million Euros.

The 17 research projects constituting CRC 1036 focus on the molecular mechanisms of cellular quality control. Despite their complexity, biological processes normally function with incredible precision, says Prof. Bukau. Nevertheless, the underlying processes are subject to occasional errors aggravated by external chemical or physical stress factors. In response to these mishaps, the cells of all organisms have developed efficient networks of surveillance systems operating at the levels of macromolecules, cellular compartments, cells and organs. These networks minimise and reverse damage caused by process deficiencies and defective molecules, Prof. Bukau adds.

At present, Heidelberg University receives funding for eight Collaborative Research Centres. In addition, there are five CRC/Transregio with key Heidelberg participation, four of them with coordinators from the university. Alongside CRC 1036, the German Research Foundation has also approved the establishment of CRC/TRR 125 Cognition-Guided Surgery starting up on 1 July 2012. Coordinator is the Heidelberg medical scientist Prof. Dr. Markus W. Bchler.

Contact Prof. Dr. Bernd Bukau Center for Molecular Biology of Heidelberg University (ZMBH) Phone: +49 6221 54-6850 direktor@zmbh.uni-heidelberg.de

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Vacationing abroad this summer? Keep iPhone charges in check

Planning a big international trip this summer and wondering how to make sure you don't get surprised with a shockingly high phone bill when you come home? Ask Maggie offers some advice.

Summer is here. And for lots of people that means it's time for a vacation abroad. So what should you do about your smartphone to ensure you don't get surprised with a massive phone bill upon your return?

If you're planning to leave the U.S., you might want to consider taking a few precautions before you leave to make sure you don't end up spending more on your phone bill than you spent on your plane ticket.

You could rent or borrow a phone for your trip with local service in the country or countries where you'll be traveling. Or you can pop in a local SIM card if you have an unlocked GSM phone for similar savings. This will save you money by allowing you to use local prepaid services while traveling. But it's not always the most convenient solution, especially if you're visiting multiple countries or you want the added convenience of using your own phone with your own phone number.

In this edition of Ask Maggie I offer some advice to iPhone subscribers who are planning international trips and want to avoid surprises on their monthly bills.

Want to save a buck on your travels? Disable data roaming and cellular data.

Dear Maggie, I am traveling to China later this month for two weeks with a tour group. I don't think that I will need my iPhone while I am traveling, but I don't want to leave it at home. I'd still like to listen to music on the flight and maybe even email friends while I am away. And in an emergency it would be nice to have a phone that I can use to call home if I absolutely need to do so. But for the most part I don't anticiapte needing it, since I'll be with a tour guide and tour group most of the time.

I know that you have to be careful with iPhones while traveling overseas. I've seen stories about people who come home to huge phone bills. What's the best way to make sure this doesn't happen to me?

Thanks, Margie

Dear Margie, You are absolutely right about people getting surprised by hefty iPhone bills after they return home from a trip abroad. Most smartphone customers are on a fixed monthly service plan for voice and data. You're given a certain amount of voice minutes and a certain amount of data to consume each month. If you exceed these limits you're charged overages.

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Vacationing abroad this summer? Keep iPhone charges in check

American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine Breaks Ground on $30 Million Expansion of St. Maarten Campus

CUPACOY, St. Maarten--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine (AUC) has graduated more than 4,500 physicians since its founding in 1978. The school marked a new chapter in its history on May 26, as members of the St. Maarten government, AUC leadership, and officials from DeVry Inc. gathered for a groundbreaking ceremony to commemorate the start of the initial phase of an extensive expansion of the St. Maarten campus.

The first phase of the campus project, budgeted at around $30 million, will include construction of two new academic buildings housing an anatomy lab, clinical skills training lab, and simulation center, as well as additional study and learning spaces for students. It is the single largest building project in the history of DeVry, which acquired AUC last summer and immediately committed to significant investments in the campus infrastructure.

This is a momentous occasion for both the AUC School of Medicine and the St. Maarten community, said Andrew Jeon, MD, MBA, president of AUC. By joining together to break ground on the campus, we are recommitting ourselves to our mission of educating compassionate and capable healthcare professionals to serve society. These new buildings will be the heart and soul of the AUC campus.

Jeon was joined in the ceremonial first dig by Bill Hughson, president of DeVrys Healthcare Group; AUC leadership; and members of the St. Maarten government, including Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams and Deputy Prime Minister William Marlin.

Prime Minister Wescot-Williams said she was pleased to see DeVry moving forward with the project just a short nine months since acquiring the school. DeVry is good for AUC and will be a good partner for St. Maarten, she said, adding that her government would continue to explore economic-zone legislation to benefit AUC and other similar institutions.

Deputy Prime Minister Marlin noted that the campus project will help expand the economy of St. Maarten.

Ron Testa, PhD, AUCs medical sciences dean, said the campus development will have a significant impact on the AUC student experience. This allows AUC to follow through and even strengthen our commitment to high academic standards by providing our students with an environment that will support their efforts for success, he said.

The two new academic buildings are slated for completion by August 2013, in time for AUCs fall semester.

About American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine

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American University of the Caribbean School of Medicine Breaks Ground on $30 Million Expansion of St. Maarten Campus

University Hospitals Case Medical Center Experts Present at ASCO Annual Meeting

CLEVELAND, June 1, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --In a Phase 2 study presented at the 48th Annual Meeting of the American Society for Clinical Oncology (ASCO), clinical researchers from University Hospitals Case Medical Center's Seidman Cancer Center developed a more effective way to treat gynecologic cancers, shortening radiation treatment time from five weeks to three days.The new method, stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), has been used on other types of cancer, but University Hospitals Case Medical Center is the first treatment facility to apply it to gynecologic cancers.

"Unlike traditional radiation therapy, SBRT uses focused radiation beams and targets well-defined tumors," says Charles Kunos, MD, study co-author and Director of Gynecologic Radiation Oncology at University Hospitals Case Medical Center and Associate Professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. "The highly specific nature of the procedure not only shortens treatment time, it limits the effect of the radiation on healthy tissues."

Dr. Kunos will present the study's findings during a general poster session on gynecologic cancer at ASCO on Sunday, June 3 from 8:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m.

Researchers from University Hospitals Case Medical Center's Seidman Cancer Center and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine will present new research findings in 29 presentationsat ASCO, taking place June 1-5 in Chicago.

"The breadth and depth of this innovative cancer research presented at ASCO is truly outstanding," says Stan Gerson, MD, Director of the Seidman Cancer Center at UH Case Medical Center and the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center at Case Western Reserve University. "Our faculty members are making tremendous advances in hematology and oncology which is reflected in their being chosen for oral and poster presentations."

Other presentations of note include:

Sunday, June 3

General Poster Session: Gynecologic Cancer

Association of smoking with pulmonary recurrences among women with intermediate- to high-risk early-stage endometrial adenocarcinoma.

Abstract #5089: 8:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m.

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University Hospitals Case Medical Center Experts Present at ASCO Annual Meeting

Liberty takeover of Sirius could cost Karmazin CEO job

It could be curtains for Karmazin.

John Malones Liberty Media told regulators yesterday it wants to take control of Sirius XM Radio which could put Liberty CEO Greg Maffei in perfect position to run the satellite broadcaster.

That means that Mel Karmazin, the current CEO of Sirius, who famously chafes at being a No. 2, could be headed out the door after more than seven years atop the New York-based company.

Karmazin was the second banana at Viacom but made it clear he didnt like working under chairman Sumner Redstone.

Karmazin, 68, could be tempted to walk after his contract expires Dec. 31 if Liberty is successful in its appeal to the Federal Communications Commission.

Christopher Peterson/BuzzFoto.co

John Malone of Liberty Media is pulling out all the stops in his latest bid to take over Sirius XM, which is run by Mel Karmazin (above), the longtime Gotham-based media boss.

Greg is sick of being a portfolio manager, said a source close to the Liberty Media boss, who oversees a host of companies including Starz, Live Nation, Barnes & Noble and Sirius XM Radio.

Liberty has praised Karmazins management ability and are not seen as aching to push him out but the question is: Will Mel want to stay?

Liberty did not return a call for comment. Sirius declined comment.

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Liberty takeover of Sirius could cost Karmazin CEO job

Liberty Media Steps Up Efforts To Take Control Of Sirius XM Radio

5/31/2012 10:57 PM ET (RTTNews) - Liberty Media Corp. (LMCA: News , LMCB) said Thursday that it intends to assert control of satellite radio company Sirius XM Radio Inc. (SIRI: News ), upon receiving approval from the Federal Communications Commission or FCC.

In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Englewood, Colorado-based Liberty Media said it has asked the FCC to reconsider the agency's previous dismissal of its application for permission take control of Sirius. In early May, the FCC rejected Liberty Media's application for approval to take de facto control of Sirius, saying that the application was "defective". The rejection represented a major setback to Liberty Media and its chairman John Malone.

John Malone's Liberty Media, Sirius's largest shareholder, made its application in March to take over the company's operating licenses. Earlier in May, Liberty Media boosted its stake in Sirius to 46.2 percent from 40 percent.

Liberty Media said in the SEC filing that it plans to convert almost one-half of the preferred stock it owns in Sirius, giving it a stake of 32 percent of the total outstanding shares of common stock.

Liberty Media also said that "as soon as practicable", it intends to nominate for elections persons to serve on Sirius' board, such that persons nominated by the company will constitute a majority of the board of directors.

Liberty Media added that it will vote all of its shares of common stock in favor of such nominees. The company already holds 5 of the 13 board seats in Sirius.

In response, New York-based Sirius said in a SEC filing on Thursday that it has been in talks with Liberty to explore possible transaction with respect to Liberty's stake in Sirius.

However, Sirius added that it has not reached an agreement with respect to a specific transaction that would be mutually beneficial to its common and preferred stockholders. There is no assurance that these discussions will result in any specific action or transaction, Sirius noted.

Sirius, led by CEO Mel Karmazin, said it has not been informed of any actions by Liberty Media to take control of its board. The company noted that new directors could not be added to its board without a special meeting that can only be called by two members of the current board of directors or the company's chief executive.

Sirius also said in its filing that any action to remove and replace its entire board of directors would require the consent of a majority of its outstanding common stock.

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Liberty Media Steps Up Efforts To Take Control Of Sirius XM Radio

Sirius XM Can't Shake Free of Liberty

By Rick Aristotle Munarriz | More Articles May 31, 2012 |

Liberty Media (Nasdaq: LMCA) has sunk its fangs into Sirius XM Radio (Nasdaq: SIRI) , and it's really just a matter of time before the digestion process begins.

As expected, Liberty Media is once again trying to take de facto control of the satellite radio operator. A fresh 13D SEC filing petitions regulators to once again consider the proposal.

What has changed since being rebuffed on May 4 for Liberty Media? Well, through a few transactions the company has beefed up its stake from a simply 40% preferred share position to an effective 46.2% stake. Liberty Media now has effective control of nearly 3 billion of Sirius XM's 6.5 billion shares outstanding. Is the FCC really going to make it jump through the final few hoops? There's a big difference between simply having the 40% preferred share stake that is has held for more than three years and making active moves to own more shares.

The filing details that Sirius XM plans to convert nearly half of its preferred stake into common stock and move to take a majority of the company's board seats.

It's at that point where investors and analysts alike can speculate on what Liberty Media will do with FCC-sanctioned control of the satellite radio giant, though a popular suggestion is that it will follow in the 2009 footsteps of what it did with DIRECTV (Nasdaq: DTV) . Through a Reverse Morris Trust transaction, Liberty Media would be able to spin out the business in a tax-advantaged manner.

This is obviously not the kind of news that Sirius XM investors were hoping to hear when they thought that Liberty Media would have to pay a juicy premium to take control of Sirius XM. However, there are no indications that Liberty Media wants to replace the company's leadership or disrupt the media heavyweight's trajectory. As Sirius XM's largest investor -- by far -- its best interests are aligned with shareholders.

Sirius XM was never about scoring a near-term pop, no matter what you hear on Channel 2 (the pop music-driven Sirius XM Hits 1 channel).

Running of the bullsI remain bullish on Sirius XM's future. It should come as no surprise that I'm promoting the CAPScall initiative for accountability by reiterating my bullish call on Sirius XM for Motley Fool CAPS.

XM Satellite Radio was a Rule Breakers recommendation before the Sirius XM merger. It's now gone from the scorecard, but if you want to discover the newsletter service's next rule-breaking multibagger, a free report reveals all.

Originally posted here:

Sirius XM Can't Shake Free of Liberty

Liberty Media chief John Malone launches bid to take over Sirius XM

John Malone is no stranger to battles with media giants.

Liberty Media's John Malone and Sirius XM Radio's Mel Karmazin are using the regulatory system to go to war over control of the satellite-radio company.

Liberty, which already holds five of 13 Sirius XM board seats, said in a regulatory filing Thursday morning that it wants to take over a majority of Sirius' board a disclosure Malone made without informing Karmazin.

Sirius XM shot back in its own regulatory filing Thursday afternoon that it has been in discussions with Liberty about transactions related to Liberty's stake in the company but had not reached an agreement or been informed of Liberty's plans to shake up the board.

Sirius XM's filing further noted that new directors could not be added to its board without a special meeting that can only be called by two current directors or the chief executive. A proposal can also be made at the annual meeting, but that is at least a year away. Meanwhile, replacing the entire board would "require the consent of a majority of our outstanding common stock," Sirius XM said.

Both companies did not respond to requests for comment Thursday.

Liberty's new plan is "very likely to succeed," Lazard Capital Markets analyst Barton Crockett said in a research note. With control of the board, "Liberty may retain its stake long enough to transition to a new CEO," Crockett said.

Malone, a cable-industry pioneer whom Al Gore famously derided as "Darth Vader," is no stranger to battles with media titans. The reclusive billionaire has faced off with News Corp.'s Rupert Murdoch numerous times and, in 2008, nearly brought a two-decade-long friendship with Barry Diller to an end with an unsuccessful bid to gain control of Diller's IAC.

Douglas County-based Liberty in its filing Thursday also asked the Federal Communications Commission to reconsider a May 4 refusal of Liberty's previous application to take control of Sirius. Liberty said it plans to convert half of its preferred shares to common stock and hold about 32 percent of outstanding shares.

Earlier this month, Liberty raised its stake in Sirius to 46.2 percent from 40 percent as it bought another 60.35 million shares but did not announce its plan to convert to common stock until Thursday.

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Liberty Media chief John Malone launches bid to take over Sirius XM

Cola Wars: The Big Loopholes Dooming Bloomberg's Soda Ban

In another effort to attack obesity (and libertarianism) in New York City, three-term Mayor Michael Bloomberg is attempting to institute a ban on sodas in the city. Under Bloomberg's plan, it would be illegal for "food-service establishments" like mall food courts, delis, sports arenas, and food carts to sell sodas and other sugar-laden drinks in cups or bottles larger than 16 ounces. The ban could take effect as early as March of next year, at which point New Yorkers can say goodbye to giant glasses of Coke in restaurants. Say goodbye to 20-ounce sodas from the bodega on those sweltering summer afternoons.

Naturally, Bloomberg is facing blowback from many Americans who feel like he's restricting freedom. "[I]t is patently absurd for Bloomberg to claim he is not limiting freedom when he uses force to stop people from doing something that violates no one's rights, whether it's selling donuts fried in trans fat, lighting up in a bar whose owner has chosen to allow smoking on his own property, or ordering a 20-ounce soda in a deli," Jacob Sullum wrote in Reason, referencing Bloomberg's past bans on smoking and trans fats.

Sullum is right that Bloomberg has limited freedoms time and again during his years in office, a violation most foul in the eyes of Reason's ultra-libertarian editorial board. But there's no arguing with the fact that his attacks on freedom have had the desired effects. According to a report by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the trans fat ban cut the amount of saturated fat and trans fat in French fries sold by New York City's restaurant chains by more than half. And the smoking ban saw New York City's smoking rate fall to 14 percent. In fact, Bloomberg's inveighs against consumer choice have been so successful that numerous politicians in places far away from New York have started to follow his lead, introducing public-health bans of their own. The soda ban, however, may be Bloomberg's first big, embarrassing defeat.

The first and most important problem with Bloomberg's soda ban is that, unlike with his trans fat ban, it won't be illegal for places to carry soda. Everyone can continue selling sugary drinksremember, even pure orange juice has a lot of sugar in itand some places, like grocery stores, can even continue selling sodas larger than 16 ounces. Also exempt will be the convenience store 7-Eleven, which will be able to sell its 40-ounce Big Gulp because the store is classified as a "grocery establishment," not a food-service establishment. That means that if you live in New York and want to drink 32 ounces of Mountain Dew in one sitting, you can do that; you'll just have to order two 16-ounce glasses, or go to 7-Eleven.

Essentially, this so-called "soda ban" isn't a ban on soda at all; it's a ban on being able to have soda conveniently. Destroying the convenience of smoking by outlawing it in bars and parks was part of Bloomberg's war against cigarettes. But he also bolstered those salvos with a heavy tax on tobacco that made smoking an expensive pastime. Without that financial incentive, it's unlikely the smoking ban would have been as effective. The soda ban has no such incentive.

Besides the fact that people will still be able to get soda everywhere they could before, and in whatever quantities they'd like, the ban curiously exempts "dairy drinks." That means that while someone going into a bodega for big bottle of Pepsi will be turned away, that same person can go into a Starbucks and get a venti Frappuccino (200 calories and 34 grams of sugar in every 12 ounces) at their leisure. The fancy milkshakes at all of the upscale restaurants now specializing in "comfort food" will also remain legal. These dairy drinks are loaded with sugar just like any sodaplus a healthy dose of fatand yet they made the cut while the sodas didn't. Why? Consider the difference in clientele: Black people get more of their calories from soda than any other ethnic group, while Starbucks is a place that caters to people willing to pay $3 or more for a cup of coffee (read: wealthier white people). To many outsiders, Bloomberg's latest gripe appears to be powered by classism; he doesn't like cheap soda and the poor people who consume it in large quantities.

Only time will tell if the soda ban even goes into effect, let alone if it works at helping curb obesity in New York City. In the meantime, perhaps Bloomberg can fix the legislation's gaping loopholes in time to get more people on his side. It's unlikely that he will, of course, which is to be expected from a man who sometimes appears to like the hatred he receives. He likes it so much, in fact, that he wants you to live a long life so you can hate him more.

Photo via (cc) Flickr user Boss Tweed.

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Cola Wars: The Big Loopholes Dooming Bloomberg's Soda Ban