UMass stem cell lab to close

The laboratory grew and stored human stem cells, which are capable of becoming any cell in the body, and made them available to scientists nationwide for use in experiments to study diseases such as diabetes and spinal cord injuries. When it is dismantled, several thousand vials of stem cellswill be sent back to the research centers where they originated, and the equipment will be given to other UMass labs.

Susan Windham-Bannister, president of the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, a quasi-public agency that oversees the $1 billion life sciences initiative, defended the decision to initially fund the stem cell bank. She said there are many examples of technology that in hindsight are unnecessary, but at the time it was conceived, when the investment was made, it was absolutely state of the art. The center, she said, was one of them.

Originally, the bank was seen as a repository for embryonic stem cell lines that were being created but were not eligible for federal funding under Bush-era restrictions. The field has evolved significantly since then, with President Obamas loosening of restrictions on federal funding and the development of new technologies for making stem cells.

Still, stem cell banks are seen as useful by some. The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, for example, is preparing to invest $10 million in its own stem cell banking initiative, and another $20 million to underwrite the creation of stem cells from patients with specific diseases.

Massachusetts Senate minority leader Bruce Tarr, Republican of Gloucester, said he was concerned that lawmakers had not been told the bank would close.

Given the fact that this is a resource that was created by an act of the Legislature, I would hope anyone seeking to change its status would consult with the Legislature, he said. The notion has always been we have been working hard to make Massachusetts a leader in stem cell research, and I dont know how ceasing the operations of the stem cell bank advances that goal.

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Medistem Receives Notice of Patent Allowance Covering Fat Stem Cell Therapy of Autoimmune Diseases

SAN DIEGO CA--(Marketwire -06/29/12)- Medistem Inc. (MEDS) announced today notice of allowance from the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) for a patent covering the use of fat stem cells, and cells associated with fat stem cells for treatment of diseases related to a dysfunctional immune system. Such diseases include multiple sclerosis, Type 1 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and lupus. The allowed patent, entitled "Stem Cell Mediated Treg Activation/Expansion for Therapeutic Immune Modulation" has the earliest priority date of December 2006.

"We have previously published that giving multiple sclerosis patients cells extracted from their own fat tissue, which contains stem cells, appears to confer clinical benefit in a pilot study," said Thomas Ichim, CEO of Medistem. "The current patent that has been allowed, in the broadest interpretation of the claims, gives us exclusive rights to the use of specific types of fat stem cell therapy for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis."

Subsequent to the filing of the patent application, Medistem together with collaborators at the Lawson Health Sciences Research Institute, Canada, reported data that fat tissue contains high numbers of T regulatory cells, a type of immune cell that is capable of controlling autoimmunity.

This finding was independently confirmed by Dr. Diane Mathis' laboratory at Harvard University, who published a paper in the prestigious journal, Nature Medicine, in which detailed experimental evidence was provided supporting the initial finding that adipose tissue contains high numbers of T regulatory cells. A video describing the paper can be accessed at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rEJfGu29Rg8.

The current patent discloses the use of T regulatory cells from fat, combinations with stem cells, and use of fat-derived mononuclear cells. Given that there are currently several groups utilizing this technology in the USA in treating patients, Medistem believes revenue can be generated through enforcement of patent rights.

"Our corporate philosophy has been to remain highly focused on our ongoing clinical stage programs using Medistem's universal donor stem cell, the Endometrial Regenerative Cell (ERC), in the treatment of critical limb ischemia and congestive heart failure," said Dr. Vladimir Bogin, Chairman and President of Medistem. "However, due to the ease of implementation of our fat stem cell technology, combined with the major burden that autoimmune diseases have on our health care system, we are highly incentivized to explore partnering, co-development and licensing opportunities."

Autoimmune conditions occur as a result of the body's immune system "turning on itself" and attacking its own organs or cells. Current treatments for autoimmune conditions are based on "globally" suppressing the immune system by administration of immunosuppressive drugs. This is associated with an increased predisposition to infections and significant side effects. The utilization of stem cells and T regulatory cells offers the potential to selectively suppress pathological immunity while preserving the ability of the body to fight bacteria and viruses. According to the NIH there are approximately 23 million victims of autoimmune conditions.

Links to Documents:

Link to peer-reviewed publication: http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/pdf/1479-5876-7-29.pdf

Link: http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/medistem-files-patent-application-on-therapeutic-cell-population-found-in-fat-tissue-frankfurt-s2u-812298.htm

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Medistem Receives Notice of Patent Allowance Covering Fat Stem Cell Therapy of Autoimmune Diseases

American Physiological Society and The Physiological Society Collaborate to Publish New Open Access Journal

Physiological Reports to provide peer reviewed research on basic, translational and clinical physiology; international call for Editor-in-Chief to be issued

Newswise BETHESDA, MD and LONDON, UK (June 29, 2012) The American Physiological Society (APS) and The Physiological Society announce their partnership to publish a new open-access peer-reviewed journal Physiological Reports. Nominations will be sought immediately from leading academics in the field for the position of Editor-in-Chief prior to the Journal launch in early 2013.

Physiological Reports will offer peer-reviewed research across all areas of basic, translational and clinical physiology and allied disciplines for physiologists, neuroscientists, biophysicists and clinicians. Papers will be accepted solely on the basis of scientific rigor, adherence to technical and ethical standards, and evidence that the data support the conclusions.

APS President, Susan M. Barman, said: The primary purpose of the journal is to give authors a quick decision about acceptance of their research and offer minimal delay for publication. For well over 100 years, the APS and The Physiological Society have published internationally-acclaimed journals. We are in a unique position to serve the international physiology community with a further outlet for research.

The Physiological Society President, Mike Spyer, said: This is the latest and most significant collaboration between the societies, combining our efforts to promote research in physiology and promoting conversations about new findings. Being jointly produced by APS and The Physiological Society puts this new journal in a really strong position from the first issue. In Europe, North America, and beyond, this will be a credible place to get research published and widely disseminated quickly.

Physiological Reports will consider manuscripts as the result of direct submissions or as referrals from one of the APS or Physiological Society journals, with author approval.

Notes to Editor

1. The inaugural issue will be published in early 2013. The first 100 papers published in Physiological Reports will be published free of charge.

2. Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create health or disease. The American Physiological Society, with more than 11,000 members, has been an integral part of this discovery process since it was established in 1887. http://www.the-aps.org

3. The Physiological Society, founded in 1876, represents the largest body of physiologists in Europe, with over 3000 Members from over 60 countries. The Society engages in activities to support the advancement of physiological research, plays an important role in supporting the teaching of physiology at schools and universities, and works to raise the profile of physiology within government and amongst the general public. http://www.physoc.org

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On Nutrition: Learning moderation

It was dinner time on the flight home from visiting family for two weeks. The stewardess offered the usual beverages ... juice, sodas, coffee.

Anything to eat? I inquired.

Chips ... M&Ms ... Chex Mix, she offered.

Note to self: Next time remember to bring nuts and dried fruit for in-flight hunger pangs.

So as we bounced over the Rocky Mountains toward home, I was reminded that changes in routine often require flexibility...especially with food. Maybe orange juice and Chex Mix isnt the best dinner Ive ever had. But in the wise words of sixteenth century bishop St. Francis de Sales: A habitual moderation in eating and drinking is much better than certain rigorous abstinences made from time to time.

Moderation in eating and drinking. What an interesting concept.

My mind went back to the previous weeks Doggie Dash. Its an annual event hosted by my daughters in-laws in their small midwestern town. Dogs of every size and breed walk with their owners through town while the local radio station plays songs like You aint nothin but a Hound Dog and How much is that Doggie in the Window? When they arrive at the sponsoring veterinary clinic, the dogs are greeted with bandanas and bowls of fresh water and the owners receive t-shirts and hot dogs.

Isnt this a conflict of interest for you? one of the veterinarians asked me as she eyed the lunch fare.

Not really. According to the position of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, the most important focus of a healthful eating style is our overall pattern of eating. All foods can fit within this pattern, says the Academy, if consumed in moderation with appropriate portion size and combined with regular physical activity.

In other words, eating a hot dog once a year at the Doggie Dash is a different overall pattern of eating than eating say, a package of hot dogs every week.

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On Nutrition: Learning moderation

DNA evidence links suspect to 1979 rapes

CHARLOTTE, N.C., June 28 (UPI) -- Police in North Carolina say DNA evidence has led to the arrest of a 62-year-old man for rape cases dating back to 1979.

The Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department said Jerry Lee Brooks was arrested Tuesday in Surfside Beach, S.C., south of Myrtle Beach, The Charlotte Observer reported.

The department's Sexual Assault Cold Case Unit began in December investigating a series of rapes that happened in Charlotte in 1979, which investigators at the time called the "ski mask rapist cases."

Police found DNA evidence was available in several of the rape cases and analysis of the evidence showed they were linked. Police said a match from a DNA database led investigators to Brooks.

A Mecklenburg County grand jury indicated Brooks on three counts of rape, two counts of a crime against nature, two counts of breaking and entering, two counts of attempted armed robbery and a count each of burglary and armed robbery. He was being held in a jail in Horry County, S.C., awaiting extradition to Charlotte.

Charlotte-Mecklenburg police spokesman Robert Fey said investigators will review rape cases from the late 1970s and early 1980s to determine whether Brooks could be held responsible in other sexual assaults.

Brooks had been convicted in the 1980s and 1990s on charges including breaking and entering, safe-cracking, common law robbery and embezzlement, North Carolina court records indicate.

He was released from federal custody in February 2005 after serving time for armed bank robbery, the Observer said.

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DNA evidence links suspect to 1979 rapes

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3-V Biosciences Appoints Douglas I. Buckley, PhD, as Vice President of Biology

MENLO PARK, Calif., June 29, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --3-V Biosciences, Inc., announced today the appointment of Douglas Buckley, PhD, as Vice President of Biology. Dr. Buckley brings more than 25 years of experience in the biopharmaceutical industry, and his discoveries and research leadership have resulted in several marketed products and many more in clinical development.

"With our lead antiviral program entering the clinic in the next year, we are committed to building a strong pipeline. Doug's extensive experience in target identification and prosecution and his track record of successful early-stage drug development will be instrumental to our continued growth," said George Kemble, PhD, 3-V's Chief Scientific Officer.

"I look forward to building upon the early successes of 3-V and developing the next generation of antiviral compounds with this team," said Dr. Buckley. "3-V has taken a novel approach to antiviral therapies that are less likely to allow viral resistance to develop. In addition, this approach opens up the possibility of developing high-value therapeutics in other therapeutic areas, making 3-V a compelling story."

Dr. Buckley joins 3-V from Exelixis, Inc., where he served most recently as Vice President of Biochemistry. In that role, he led research and discovery teams responsible for delivering over thirty IND-ready compounds to Exelixis' internal pipeline and to external partnerships. Also during his tenure at Exelixis, Dr. Buckley contributed to the New Drug Application filing for cabozantinib (XL 184). Prior to Exelixis, Dr. Buckley was the Department Head of Protein Chemistry and Process Development at Scios, Inc., where he was responsible for process and assay development for two marketed biotherapeutic products (Fiblast (trafermin) and NATRECOR (nesiritide)). Doug received his AB in Chemistry and Economics from Bowdoin College, his PhD in Endocrinology from the Hormone Research Laboratory at the University of California, San Francisco, and his post-doctoral training in the Molecular Biology Department at Massachusetts General Hospital and the Department of Genetics at Harvard Medical School. Doug serves on the Astia Life Sciences Board as an advisor to women entrepreneurs starting life sciences companies and as a scientific advisor to Woodside Capital Partners.

About 3-V Biosciences

3-V Biosciences, Inc. is a privately held biopharmaceutical company that discovers and develops antiviral therapeutics designed to have broad-spectrum activity, a high barrier to resistance and efficacy against emergent viral strains. The 3-V team applies an integrated approach with internal expertise in virology, biology, drug discovery and development to drive programs forward. The company is located in Menlo Park, California.

For additional information on 3-V Biosciences, please visit http://www.3vbio.com.

Contact information

Stephen R. Brady Chief Business Officer 650-561-8600

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3-V Biosciences Appoints Douglas I. Buckley, PhD, as Vice President of Biology

Research and Markets: Muscle. Fundamental Biology and Mechanisms of Disease

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/68w4bw/muscle_fundamenta) has announced the addition of Elsevier Science and Technology's new report "Muscle. Fundamental Biology and Mechanisms of Disease" to their offering.

Muscle: Fundamental Biology and Mechanisms of Disease will be the first reference covering cardiac, skeletal, and smooth muscle in fundamental, basic science, translational biology, disease mechanism, and therapeutics. Currently there are no publications covering the science behind the medicine, as the majority of books are 90% clinical and 10% science. Muscle: Fundamental Biology and Mechanisms of Disease will discuss myocyte biology, also known as muscle cell biology, providing information about the science behind clinical work and therapeutics with a 90% science and 10% clinical focus. A needed resource for researchers, clinical professionals, postdocs, and graduate students, this publication will further discuss basic biology development and physiology, how processes go awry in disease states, and how the defective pathways are targeted for therapy.

As stated by a reviewer of the proposal, "An integration of topics ranging from basic physiology to newly discovered molecular mechanisms of muscle diseases is highly desirable. I am not aware of a comprehensive book that covers and integrates these topics."- Maik Huttemann, Wayne State University, MI.

Per the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Disease, an institute at the National Institutes of Health, "clinical investigators are sorely needed to translate an ever increasing number of basic research findings into medical applications". This book will assist both the new and experienced clinician's and researcher's need for science translation of background research into clinical applications, bridging the gap between research and clinical knowledge.

Key Topics Covered:

Opening: . including information regarding atherosclerosis/angiogenesis/hypertension as important topics, but not covered in this resource with suggested references for study

Foreword

1. Introduction

2. Cardiac Muscle

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Research and Markets: Muscle. Fundamental Biology and Mechanisms of Disease

Biology's Master Programmers

Photographs by Mark Ostow

George Church is an imposing figureover six feet tall, with a large, rectangular face bordered by a brown and silver nest of beard and topped by a thick mop of hair. Since the mid-1980s Church has played a pioneering role in the development of DNA sequencing, helpingamong his other achievementsto organize the Human Genome Project. To reach his office at Harvard Medical School, one enters a laboratory humming with many of the more than 50 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows over whom Church rules as director of the school's Center for Computational Genetics. Passing through an anteroom of assistants, I find Church at his desk, his back to me, hunched over a notebook computer that makes him look even larger than he is.

Church looms especially large these days because of his role as one of the most influential figures in synthetic biology, an ambitious and radical approach to genetic engineering that attempts to create novel biological entitieseverything from enzymes to cells and microbesby combining the expertise of biology and engineering. He and his lab are credited with many of the advances in harnessing and synthesizing DNA that now help other researchers modify microrganisms to create new fuels and medical treatments. When I ask Church to describe what tangible impact synthetic biology will have on everyday life, he leans back in his chair, clasps his hands behind his head, and says, "It will change everything. People are going to live healthier a lot longer because of synthetic biology. You can count on it."

Such grandiosity is not uncommon among the practitioners of synthetic biology. Ever since Church and a few other researchers began to combine biology and engineering a dozen years ago, they have promised it would "change everything." And no wonder. The very idea of synthetic biology is to purposefully engineer the DNA of living things so that they can accomplish tasks they don't carry out in nature. Although genetic engineering has been going on since the 1970s, a rapid drop in the cost of decoding and synthesizing DNA, combined with a vast increase in computer power and an influx into biology labs of engineers and computer scientists, has led to a fundamental change in how thoroughly and swiftly an organism's genetics can be modified. Church says the technology will eventually lead to all manner of breakthroughs: we will be able to replace diseased tissues and organs by reprogramming cells to make new ones, create novel microbes that efficiently secrete fuels and other chemicals, and fashion DNA switches that turn on the right genes inside a patient's cells to prevent arteries from getting clogged.

Even though some of these applications are years from reality, Church has a way of tossing off such predictions matter-of-factly. And it's easy to see why he's optimistic. The cost of both decoding DNA and synthesizing new DNA strands, he has calculated, is falling about five times as fast as computing power is increasing under Moore's Law, which has accurately predicted that chip performance will double roughly every two years. Those involved in synthetic biology, who often favor computer analogies, might say it's becoming exponentially easier to read from, and write into, the source code of life. These underlying technology trends, says Church, are leading to an explosion in experimentation of a sort that would have been inconceivable only a few years ago.

Up to now, it's proved stubbornly difficult to turn synthetic biology into a practical technology that can create products like cheap biofuels. Scientists have found that the "code of life" is far more complex and difficult to crack than anyone might have imagined a decade ago. What's more, while rewriting the code is easier than ever, getting it right isn't. Researchers and entrepreneurs have found ways to coax bacteria or yeast to make many useful compounds, but it has been difficult to optimize such processes so that the microbes produce significant quantities efficiently enough to compete with existing commercial products.

Church is characteristically undeterred. At 57, he has survived cancer and a heart attack, and he suffers from both dyslexia and narcolepsy; before I visited him, one of his colleagues warned that I shouldn't be surprised if he fell asleep on me. But he has founded or taken an advisory role in more than 50 startup companiesand he stayed awake throughout our time together, apparently excited to describe how his lab has found ways to take advantage of ultrafast sequencing and other tools to greatly speed up synthetic biology. Among its many projects, Church's lab has invented a technique for rapidly synthesizing multiple novel strings of DNA and introducing them simultaneously into a bacterial genome. In one experiment, researchers created four billion variants of E. coli in a single day. After three days, they found variants of the bacteria in which production of a desired chemical was increased fivefold.

The idea, Church explains, is to sort through the variations to find "an occasional hopeful monster, just as evolution has done for millions of years." By mimicking in lab experiments what takes eons in nature, he says, he is radically improving the odds of finding ways to make microbes not just do new things but do them efficiently.

A DNA Turn-On

In some ways, the difficulties researchers have faced making new, more useful life forms shouldn't come as a surprise. Indeed, a lesson of genome research over the last few decades is that no matter how elegantly compact the DNA code is, the biology it gives rise to is consistently more complex than anyone anticipated. When I began reporting the early days of gene discovery 30 years ago, biologists, as they often do, thought reductively. When they found a gene involved in disease, the discovery made headlines. Scientists said they believed that potent new medicines could soon deactivate malfunctioning versions of genes, or that gene therapy could be used to replace them with healthy versions in the body.

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Foreign Policy: EuroFail

Enlarge Georges Gobet/AFP/Getty Images

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso delivers a press conference after a second day of the European Union leaders summit in Brussels on June 29. Leaders from the 17 countries sharing the euro sealed a dramatic deal Friday to direct emergency measures at crisis-hit Italy and Spain and boost the embattled economy, sending markets sharply upwards.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso delivers a press conference after a second day of the European Union leaders summit in Brussels on June 29. Leaders from the 17 countries sharing the euro sealed a dramatic deal Friday to direct emergency measures at crisis-hit Italy and Spain and boost the embattled economy, sending markets sharply upwards.

Uri Friedman is an associate editor and Hillary Hurd is an editorial researcher at Foreign Policy.

"As a general rule, meetings make individuals perform below their capacity and skill levels," Reid Hastie, a professor of behavioral science at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business, once wrote. "[P]lease, don't just call a meeting and hope the magic happens. Take charge and take personal responsibility for meeting its objectives, whatever they are."

It's advice that European Union leaders would have done well to consider as they kicked off a closely watched two-day summit in Brussels on Thursday, while Italy and Spain watch their cost of borrowing soar. With France and Germany at odds about whether to address the European debt crisis by pooling eurozone debt or better integrating the region financially and politically, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has already tried to tamp down expectations for this week's summit, which is expected to produce a stimulus package and plans for a banking union.

"There is no quick solution and no simple solution," she warned in Berlin on Wednesday. "There is no one magic formula... with which the government debt crisis can be overcome in one go."

The thing is, when it comes to major EU summits in Brussels, the region's heads of state haven't had one go they've had roughly 20 since 2010 (albeit with a changing cast of characters, as 14 of the 27 EU countries have switched leaders since the debt crisis began). And if the previous crisis-management meetings are any guide, we should expect this week's summit to be long on talk of turning points and short on game-changing results. Here's a look at what European leaders have accomplished in their previous gatherings and how they've chosen to frame those achievements.

Action: European leaders discuss troubling developments in Greece, which recently announced that its debt had reached the highest level in the country's modern history and unveiled austerity measures to slash the soaring budget deficit.

Assurances: In a joint statement, the assembled heads of state pledge to "take determined and coordinated action, if needed, to safeguard financial stability in the euro area as a whole." They call on Greece to cut spending and add that "the Greek government has not requested any financial support."

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Foreign Policy: EuroFail

freedom soars Regional events

Its the most advanced flying machine in the air. It sometimes makes its pilots dizzy. Sen. John McCain hates it.

On July 4, the F-22 Raptor will fly along the Ruston Way waterfront as part of Tacoma Freedom Fairs air show. The planes appearance is a rare event, said Doug Miller, president of the Tacoma Events Commission, which puts on the fair.

Its a real feather in our cap, Miller said.

The highly maneuverable Air Force stealth fighter has its fans and detractors. It was called the most expensive, corroding hangar queen ever by McCain. Sticker price: $150 million.

The main entertainment stage is the America Be Strong stage at Camp Patriot, the farthest west location of the Freedom Fair on Ruston Way, right next to the Lobster Shop. The headlining show starts at 3:30 p.m. with Chuck Stevens (Beach Boys, Monkees, Eddie Money) and Tony La Stella & the Goombas.

Though Miller, his staff and volunteers are dedicated to putting on an entertaining event, money is forefront on his mind. Public Independence Day events have been canceled all over the country in recent years (most recently in Orting) and Freedom Fair is feeling the pressure, Miller said. Besides buying tickets to associated events like tonights Rainiers game and Sundays car and airplane show, the best way to support Freedom Fair is to make a donation, Miller said.

Its whats going to make or break the event, frankly, he said. Volunteers will be manning donation stations at the three entrances and Miller said they are hoping for $5 a head.

We could be delivered a knockout punch if the public doesnt vote with their dollars. The show must go on.

Heres a rundown of Independence Day events, which kick off today:

TODAY

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freedom soars Regional events

U.S. Aerospace & Defense Execs Expect Significant M&A, Industry Consolidation Amid Sequestration Budget Cuts: KPMG …

NEW YORK, June 28, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Armed with significant cash on their balance sheets, and faced with hundreds of billions of dollars in federal defense budgets, U.S. aerospace and defense (A&D) executives cite strategic acquisitions as the highest-priority investment area to spur company growth, according to a recent survey by KPMG LLP, the audit, tax, and advisory firm.

In the 2012 KPMG A&D Industry Outlook survey, nearly three-quarters (71 percent) of A&D executives say their companies will be involved in a merger or acquisition in the next two years. In addition, 64 percent of A&D executives indicate that their companies have significant cash on their balance sheets, and more than half (53 percent) say they will increase capital spending this year.

Many executives say the highest-priority use for that capital will be strategic acquisitions for their companies (49 percent) up significantly from 41 percent in KPMG's 2011 survey. Forty-two percent say they will also aggressively invest in new products and services.

"The way we see it, there's a day of reckoning coming, and many A&D executives are telling us that this may spur an industry response similar to what drove major industry consolidation in the 1980s and 1990s, or perhaps an even more dramatic response," said Martin Phillips, U.S. and global leader of KPMG's aerospace and defense practice. "They are rethinking their strategies and becoming much more aggressive to drive growth and compete."

Phillips adds that U.S. government contracts are dwindling, companies are becoming more global, and foreign investors are looking to move into the "non-government" A&D sector as well. "All of these factors set the stage for much more aggressive M&A, product strategies and international growth initiatives."

In fact, when asked about the biggest drivers of revenue growth over the next three years, A&D executives most frequently cited acquisitions and joint ventures (50 percent) and new product development (50 percent). In addition to continued focus on cost reduction and operational improvement, executives say that the top management initiative for their companies in terms of energy, time and resources will be investigating opportunities for mergers and acquisitions.

"Companies must find a way to break through to new customers and markets, which in many cases will only be possible through partnerships, joint ventures or pure acquisitions," said Doug Gates, partner in KPMG's aerospace and defense practice. "In this era of continued belt tightening, we also must not ignore just how attractive some of our domestic assets look to foreign investors, especially as A&D companies look to divest from underperforming assets."

International Expansion Remains a FocusWith a continually challenged domestic defense sector, A&D executives remain focused on international growth. In fact, the four main strategies to fuel that growth are partnerships/joint ventures (41 percent), foreign military sales (38 percent), international expansion (36 percent) and acquisitions (24 percent). According to the A&D executives surveyed by KPMG, the highest priority foreign markets are Asia (other than China), Europe and the Middle East.

Phillips notes "last year 54 percent of executives identified foreign military sales as the key strategy, but the drop in the results this year appears to indicate a realization that the foreign opportunities these companies are pursuing take several years to materialize. We continue hear about India and Brazil, but look at it realistically and you see that foreign military orders have been minimal to date."

Despite foreign sales challenges, looking ahead three years, nearly half (43 percent) of executives surveyed by KPMG say that non-U.S. operations or customers will account for more than a quarter of their companies' revenues, compared with just 35 percent who currently derive more than a quarter of their revenue from foreign operations.

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U.S. Aerospace & Defense Execs Expect Significant M&A, Industry Consolidation Amid Sequestration Budget Cuts: KPMG ...

European aerospace firm expands in Quebec to build jet fuselage for Bombardier

By Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press

MONTREAL - A unit of the European aerospace giant that owns Airbus plans to create more than 150 jobs in Quebec in a project that will see it build the centre fuselage for new business jets being made by Bombardier Inc. (TSX:BBD-B.TO - News).

Aerolia, a subsidiary of EADS, says the jobs will be created at two sites as it supplies a key component of the Bombardier Global 7000 and 8000 jets.

The provincial government is providing $15 million, including a $5-million grant, towards the $82.4-million project in the Montreal area.

Aerolia will begin its development efforts by mid-2013. Production of the first sub-assemblies will take place in Aerolia's sites in France and Tunisia.

The work will later be transferred to Quebec.

Bombardier is the world's largest manufacturer of business jets and the third-largest maker of passenger gets overall, after Airbus and Boeing.

The EADS Group, which includes Aerolia and Airbus and numerous other companies in the defence and aerospace industry, employs 133,000 people worldwide. Aerolia has 2,900 employees around the world and $1.18 billion of sales.

Aerolia Canada was established a year ago and its design office in Montreal employs 100 engineers to design the centre fuselage.

"The announcement of the construction of an assembly plant in Quebec formalizes a major, ambitious and exciting step forward, thereby giving concrete form to the industrial chapter of our contract with Bombardier," stated Christian Cornille, CEO of Aerolia.

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European aerospace firm expands in Quebec to build jet fuselage for Bombardier

Financial Planners Offer Buffer Against Stress-Related Health Issues, First Command Reports

FORT WORTH, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Working with a financial planner offers a meaningful buffer against many health issues linked to financial stress, according to a recent survey of military professionals and their families.

The First Command Financial Behaviors Index reveals that the majority of middle-class military families (senior NCOs and commissioned officers in pay grades E-6 and above with household incomes of at least $50,000) say that someone in their household has experienced a mental or physical health problem during the continuing economic turmoil of the past year. But those who work with a financial planner are less likely to report experiencing a variety of these physical and psychological challenges. Noteworthy differences between those with and without a planner are found for such stress-related health issues as:

Furthermore, working with a financial planner seems to circumvent feelings of financial vulnerability when stress-related health issues are present. Among military families experiencing health issues, survey respondents who use a financial planner feel more comfortable about their finances than those without a planner. They are more likely to feel extremely or very:

Economic uncertainty remains a critical issue for many servicemembers and their families, said Scott Spiker, CEO of First Command Financial Services, Inc. While everyone is impacted differently by financial concerns, we know that money worries can have a negative effect on our physical well-being. These findings reveal that working with a financial planner can help to lessen some of the health issues commonly associated with financial stress. Servicemembers who put their trust in a financial coach feel the benefits in both their physical and fiscal health.

About the First Command Financial Behaviors Index

Compiled by Sentient Decision Science, Inc., the First Command Financial Behaviors Index assesses trends among the American publics financial behaviors, attitudes and intentions through a monthly survey of approximately 530 U.S. consumers aged 25 to 70 with annual household incomes of at least $50,000. Results are reported quarterly. The margin of error is +/- 4.3 percent with a 95 percent level of confidence. http://www.firstcommand.com/research

About Sentient Decision Science, Inc.

Sentient Decision Science was commissioned by First Command to compile the Financial Behaviors Index. SDS is a behavioral science and consumer psychology consulting firm with special vertical expertise within the financial services industry. SDS specializes in advanced research methods and statistical analysis of behavioral and attitudinal data.

About First Command

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Financial Planners Offer Buffer Against Stress-Related Health Issues, First Command Reports

Behavioral science students gain association scholarships in Morris County

Kelly McGee, a student at West Morris Central High School, and Samantha Service, a student at West Morris Mendham High School, have won scholarships from the Morris County Psychological Association.

The annual scholarships are open to all high school students in Morris County who are taking classes related to the behavioral sciences. Classes include psychology, human and/or animal behavior, child development, and sociology. The purpose of the scholarship is to stimulate and encourage the study of the behavioral sciences among high school students, said a statement.

Students submitted papers previously written as part of their regular course work.

A total of 33 students from 10 Morris County schools submitted entries, which were then judged by 23 psychologists.

The winners, including McGee and Service, who won the top awards, were honored at a reception on June 6 at the Hamilton Park Conference Center in Florham Park. Each winner received a $150 award.

McGees teacher was Erin Feltmann and her entry was To what extent may Freuds theories on the origins of homosexuality be considered valid when analyzed through biological and developmental prisms?

Services teacher was Jennifer Brown and her entry was An experiment to investigate the effect of word superiority on the correct identification of letters within the word.

The honorable mentions were: Trevor Brown, Halina Malinowski and Jillian Fahy from West Morris Central High School, Erin Feltmann, teacher; Emma Pallarino from Morristown High School, Erin Colfax, teacher; Caroline Duvall and Caroline Hall from West Morris Mendham High School, Jennifer Brown and Kristina Piirimae, teachers; Harim Jung from Madison High School, Paul Mueller, teacher; and Natasha Kazkevich from Morris Knolls High School, John Hrynyk, teacher.

Judges were Rhonda Allen, Lauren Becker, Randy Bressler, Richard Dauber, Mark Gironda, Hayley Hirschmann, Tommy Kot, Jack Lagos, Geraldine Lucignano, Brendan McLoughlin, Morgan Murray, Nicole Rafanello, Debi Roelke, Francine Rosenberg, Nancy Sidhu, Jeffrey Singer, Beverly Tignor, Aaron Welt, Miriam Wolosh, Paul Yampolsky, Joshua Zavin, Michael Zito, and Jeannine Zoppi. The scholarship program was chaired by Susan Neigher.

For additional information, visit http://www.mcpanj,com.

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Behavioral science students gain association scholarships in Morris County

Medical pioneers

Pinoy Kasi By: Michael L. Tan Philippine Daily Inquirer

The commencement exercises were held last June 2, somewhat atypical in the Philippines, where these rituals are usually held in April. The togas and capes were different, too: as befitting the medical graduates, they had the color green, but this was combined with gray, associated with a business degree.

The graduating class was from the Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health (ASMPH), the first of a unique program that allows these new doctors to add MD as well as MBA (master of business administration) after their names.

The brain behind the medical school was Dr. Alfredo Bengzon, who wanted a new medical curriculum that would produce not just excellent clinicians but also public health experts and administrators. It was a 21st-century vision that began in the 20th when Bengzon was building up Medical City from a small hospital to the large medical complex that it is today. Other ideas came in when he was health secretary, the first after the 1986 Edsa revolt, when he had to fight many battles around inefficiency and corruption.

Our panganay (eldest), said Dr. Ma. Eufemia Yap, one of the associate deans, with pride and a bit of relief. It wasnt just taking care of the students through the five years of medical school, but also the many years of planning that went into the medical school.

The Ateneo Board of Trustees approved the creation of the school in 1997, after much discussion. But it was to take another 10 years before the school opened its doors to this first batch. There were numerous meetings and workshops all through those years, literally from one millennium into the next, to discuss how this medical school would be different, and what dual degrees could be offered. An MPH (master of public health) was considered, as well as an MM (master of management). In the end, the choice of the MBA was partly out of convenience: Ateneo already had years of experience with its MBA programs offered in its Makati campuses, including degrees specific for health professionals with strong exposure to public health and management.

I was roped (or, I felt at times, lassoed) in to help think of the inputs for the social sciences and to train teachers and mentors to lecture, with the aim of developing cultural competence, which isnt just sensitivity to peoples cultures but also the ability to harness peoples own knowledge, and practices, to keep healthy and fight disease.

MBA oath

I was initially uncomfortable with the MBA degree, in part because of public perceptions that an MBA produces business people, and that doctors are already too good at making money. But interactions with the Ateneo MBA staff have convinced me that we need more of these MBA programs for other professionals as well, to run government as well as private companies. The trajectory of todays MBA is well summarized in an MBA oath first crafted by the 2009 graduates of Harvard Business School and which has since been signed by thousands of other MBA graduates around the world, including, I hope, the new ASMPH graduates.

The oath begins with a recognition of MBA graduates role in society: first, to lead people and manage resources to create value that no single individual can create alone, and second, that their decisions affect the well-being of individuals inside and outside [their] enterprise, today and tomorrow. The oath has several promises concerning ethical conduct and the protection of human rights and dignity in the pursuit of value creation. How appropriate, I thought, for todays physicians, who create value by keeping people healthy.

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Medical pioneers

Western Michigan University medical school building to be named after W.E. Upjohn

KALAMAZOO, MI Leaders of the Western Michigan University medical school announced Thursday the future downtown Kalamazoo campus will be named the W.E. Upjohn Campus for the founder of The Upjohn Co.

Last December, MPI Research announced it would donate a building near the northwest corner of Portage and Lovell streets to WMU for the medical school.

The more than 300,000-square-foot building was part of the downtown campuses of pharmaceutical companies Upjohn, Pharmacia and then Pfizer, and has been known as Building 267. It is slated to undergo renovations and a small expansion starting later this summer, and is scheduled to be ready for use by August 2014 for the opening of the medical school.

W.E. Upjohn founded what became The Upjohn Co. in 1886 and was its president for 43 years.

"This property represents the beginning of the greatly expanded Upjohn campus, which included this building throughout the life of the company," William U. Parfet, the great-grandson of W.E. Upjohn who is now chairman and CEO of MPI Research, said in a statement released from WMU. "It only makes sense to our family that this would be the headquarters for the WMU School of Medicine."

The medical school, being developed by WMU in partnership with Borgess Health and Bronson Healthcare, is awaiting accreditation. The Liaison Committee on Medical Education recently granted the school "candidate medical school" status. According to a statement from WMU, the committee is planning a preliminary accreditation visit to the campus.

WMU last year announced it had received a $100 million gift for the school from anonymous donors.

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Western Michigan University medical school building to be named after W.E. Upjohn

Arizona's Newest Medical School Opens

PHOENIX, June 28, 2012 /PRNewswire/ --Creighton University 's School of Medicine Regional Campus at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Arizona opens its doors today as 42 future physicians attend their first classes.

The new regional campus of the medical school is a partnership between Arizona's oldest teaching hospital and the nationally recognized Omaha-based university. Prior to this launch, the two organizations had enjoyed a more informal relationship for many years. Now, the two have expanded their commitment and established a fully operational regional campus of Creighton's School of Medicine.

Students, who began their medical school studies in Omaha, will complete the last two years of their medical education In Phoenix. The new regional campus becomes the second allopathic medical school in Arizona offering a Doctor of Medicine, M.D., degree.

"This is a game changer for the medical industry in Arizona," said Patty White, president and CEO of St. Joseph. "For St. Joseph's, the new regional medical school campus underlines our commitment to academic excellence and patient care. Together with Creighton, we are creating the medical professionals of the future."

"This affiliation is transformational and strengthens both institutions. It expands student educational opportunities, allows for the vital recruitment of more students as our country struggles with physician shortages, creates collaborative research opportunities and leverages the faculty and administrative expertise from both organizations," said Creighton President Timothy R. Lannon, S. J.

Creighton School of Medicine was established in 1892 as part of the Catholic, Jesuit institution. Creighton graduates practice medicine in all 50 states. Last year the school had more than 6,206 applications for 126 openings. In 2012, Creighton matched 97 percent of its graduating students with their specialties of choice.

2-2-2 Arizona's Newest Medical School Opens 2-2-2

The new Arizona regional medical school campus is the latest chapter in St. Joseph's long history as a teaching hospital. Academic affairs at St. Joseph's began in 1936 with the hospital's first intern class of eight trainees. Today St. Joseph's sponsors 10 graduate medical residency programs with more than 200 graduate medical residents and 12 specialty fellowship programs. More than 150 residents and 240 medical students from Arizona and around the U.S. come to St. Joseph's annually for training from their home programs.

"We will be offering an environment that allows these students to excel in the practice of compassionate medicine while learning from some of the best doctors in the nation," says James Balducci, M.D., and associate dean of the campus.

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer said that the partnership between Creighton and St. Joseph's is "fantastic news not only for Arizona's medical students, but for the State as a whole. With the new Phoenix campus, Arizona is one step closer to becoming a national and international destination for medical care and research innovation."

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Arizona's Newest Medical School Opens

New Smoking Vaccine Using Gene Therapy Being Developed

Featured Article Academic Journal Main Category: Smoking / Quit Smoking Also Included In: Immune System / Vaccines Article Date: 28 Jun 2012 - 2:00 PDT

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In a study reported in the journal Science Translational Medicine this week, Researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City show how a single dose of the vaccine protected mice, over their lifetime, against nicotine addiction.

The addictive properties of the nicotine in tobacco smoke is a huge barrier to success with current smoking cessation approaches, say the authors in their paper.

Previous work using gene therapy vaccination in mice to treat certain eye disorders and tumors, gave them the idea a similar approach might work against nicotine.

The new anti-nicotine vaccine is based on an adeno-associated virus (AAV) engineered to be harmless. The virus carries two pieces of genetic information: one that causes anti-nicotine monoclonal antibodies to be created, and the other that targets its insertion into the nucleus of specific cells in the liver, the hepatocytes.

The result is the animal's liver becomes a factory continuously producing antibodies that gobble up the nicotine as soon as it enters the bloodstream, denying it the opportunity to enter the brain.

The researchers write:

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New Smoking Vaccine Using Gene Therapy Being Developed

UC Santa Barbara chemistry professor wins award for new, highly useful reagents in catalysis

Public release date: 28-Jun-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Sonia Fernandez sonia.fernandez@ia.ucsb.edu 805-893-4765 University of California - Santa Barbara

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) UC Santa Barbara chemistry professor Bruce Lipshutz has been awarded the 2012 Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis (EROS) Best Reagent Award. The annual award is sponsored by Sigma-Aldrich and John Wiley.

"It's a terrific acknowledgement of the students who did the work; this is really their award," said Lipshutz. With his lab team, Lipshutz developed copper hydride-based reagents that can be used in very small amounts, and are capable of several types of reactions potentially useful for the synthesis of various materials from drugs to polymers, to naturally occurring molecules.

Aside from being very reactive, said Lipshutz, the catalysts called (R)-()-DTBM-SEGPHOS copper hydride; and (S)-(+)-DTBM-SEGPHOS-copper hydride are versatile, inexpensive, and produce high yields of the desired products.

"We want to push the envelope as to how low a level of these reagents can be utilized yet still be effective with this kind of chemistry, especially when being done in water rather than in organic solvents," said Lipshutz, who will be giving the award lecture at Wayne State University in the fall.

Lipshutz and his lab are part of an emerging movement called "Green Chemistry," a field that emphasizes environmentally benign processes. These involve reduced energy requirements, the use of less hazardous and more environmentally friendly chemicals, and the reduction of waste. In 2011, Lipshutz won the Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award, given to a single academic in this case, for the development of an enabling technology that allows these types of metal-catalyzed reactions to be conducted in water, and at room temperature. The more traditional approach typically involves using organic solvents and energy in the form of applied heat. Lipshutz's technology also has the added benefit of being "benign by design;" based on innocuous vitamin E, it results in virtually no pollution. In water it forms nanoparticles that serve as nanoreactors wherein the catalytic reactions take place.

Specially-engineered surfactants make synthetic chemistry processes efficient by eliminating side-product formation that typically results from heating, Lipshutz said. They also reduce the need for both purification and the disposal of potentially hazardous waste, and usually result in a reduction in costs associated with those processes. Catalysts substances that facilitate or generate reactions without themselves being consumed or changed by the process are particularly favored because they are used in small amounts and can oftentimes be recycled.

"In addition to the upfront costs, re-purification and/or disposal of organic solvents can be expensive," said Lipshutz, who estimates that pharmaceutical companies produce roughly 50-200 kilograms of waste for every kilogram of drug. "Why not get the best of all worlds why not benefit from their spectacular products that are so essential for maintenance of human health, and yet, not create such enormous organic waste, over 70 percent of which is organic solvent," he said. "Organic chemists are paying serious attention to this issue, which is a natural outgrowth of the industry. We as a community worldwide have certainly contributed to these environmental problems, but we can surely help to solve them as well; and that is exactly what we at UCSB plan to do."

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UC Santa Barbara chemistry professor wins award for new, highly useful reagents in catalysis

Children: Are food produced through biotechnology safe for children and pregnant women? – Video

27-06-2012 17:38 Technologies, such as food biotechnology, have become an important part of agriculture. However, many myths and misperceptions about food biotechnology have led to questions about its safety and benefits for the public. The video segments below were developed to help clarify the facts on food produced through biotechnology and to address some of your most common questions. In the videos, physicians who are leaders in their field discuss the following topics as they relate to food biotechnology: Safety; Allergies; Children; Benefits; and Labeling. These physicians have relevant background in these areas, as well as knowledge of the safety and health research around food biotechnology. For more information and more videos from this series, visit: Copyright 2012 International Food Information Council (IFIC) Foundation -- For informational and educational purposes only; not for advertising or other commercial use without written permission from the IFIC Foundation. For more information, please visit: http://www.foodinsight.org.

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Children: Are food produced through biotechnology safe for children and pregnant women? - Video