Conejo – Recognition (With Lyrics On Screen)-Professional Medicine 2014 – Video


Conejo - Recognition (With Lyrics On Screen)-Professional Medicine 2014
Conejo #39;s "Recognition" Song With Lyrics On The Screen. This Song Is From His "Professional Medicine" Album. Buy @ https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/professional-medicine/id840304477 Websites:...

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Conejo - Recognition (With Lyrics On Screen)-Professional Medicine 2014 - Video

My speech in All India Radio – Nalamai Vazha: Unavum Marunthum (Living healthy: Food as medicine) – Video


My speech in All India Radio - Nalamai Vazha: Unavum Marunthum (Living healthy: Food as medicine)
This Speech was broadcasted on 25th April 2014. My speech in All India Radio(Both AM - Chennai #39;A #39;, 720 khz FM - 102.3 Mhz - FM Gold). Program name: Nalamai Vazha: Unavum Marunthum (Living...

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My speech in All India Radio - Nalamai Vazha: Unavum Marunthum (Living healthy: Food as medicine) - Video

Media Toolkit: Penn Medicine at the American Academy of Neurology Annual Meeting 2014

More than 90 Penn Medicine neurologists and researchers will present over 120 studies and abstracts at the American Academy of Neurologys 66th Annual Meeting in Philadelphia, April 26 to May 3, 2014.

Penn Medicine brain experts are available to speak with media about a wide range of neurological disease throughout the meeting, taking place at the Pennsylvania Convention Center in Philadelphia. Please contact Kim Menard at Kim.Menard@uphs.upenn.edu or 215-200-2312, and follow @PennMedNews.

Editor's note: All media attending the meeting must register with AAN.

News Releases

Penn Neurologists Report on Promise of Statins, Estrogen and Telemedicine as Potential Targets and Interventions for Parkinson's Disease

Announcements

Penn Medicine Neurologists to Receive Honors at American Academy of Neurology Annual Meeting

Events

On Saturday, dozens of Penn Medicine doctors, nurses and social workers will be interacting with thousands of patients, families, caregivers and members of the public attending the American Brain Foundation's 2014 Brain Health Fair. Faculty members from Penn Neurology and Neurosurgery will present educational sessions with research and treatment updates on topics ranging from multiple sclerosis to traumatic brain injury. Social workers from the Penn Memory Center and Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Center are leading support groups for patients and caregivers. And dozens of volunteers will be at Penn Medicine booths with resources on stroke prevention (including screenings), brain tumor clinical trials, Parkinsons, Alzheimers, and brain injury prevention. Saturday, April 26, 10:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. at the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Hall A

On Sunday evening, an all-star team of Penn Medicine neurologists will compete in a battle of the minds, during Neuro Bowl, a game show-like event where panelists are asked to diagnose perplexing neurological conditions, based on symptoms, video clips, X-rays, etc. The Penn Medicine team will go head-to-head with the reigning champions, an All-Star team of neurologists from across the country. Sunday, April 27 from 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m., Pennsylvania Convention Center, Terrace Ballroom IIV

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Media Toolkit: Penn Medicine at the American Academy of Neurology Annual Meeting 2014

Rand Paul confronts GOP divide in Maine

BANGOR, Maine (AP) Sen. Rand Paul faces a divided Republican Party as he arrives in Maine.

The Kentucky Republican is set to address the state Republican convention on Saturday, an annual event for GOP officials troubled by infighting since libertarian-minded activists loyal to Paul's father seized control of the state party. This year's theme is "unity," an optimistic note from party officials in Maine and Washington who suggest that things have improved in recent months.

But Paul's White House ambitions and Maine's Republican Gov. Paul LePage's re-election prospects may depend on whether the freshman U.S. senator can help mend divisions between his party's establishment and tea party wings as he eyes a presidential run in 2016.

No state showcases Paul's challenge more than Maine.

He hopes to promote further party unity ahead of the November re-election test for LePage, considered one of most endangered Republican governors in the nation. At the same time, Paul is pushing to strengthen his appeal beyond his father's passionate supporters to prove he can be a credible national candidate. He has yet to announce his 2016 intentions, but says he is seriously considering a run for president.

"The Republican Party will adapt, evolve or die," Paul declared in a speech at Harvard University's Institute of Politics on Friday as he worked to build new alliances with mainstream Republicans in Boston.

Before the speech, the freshman senator attended a private luncheon hosted by top lieutenants of former presidential nominee Mitt Romney. Romney's former national finance chairman Spencer Zwick arranged a private audience of just a dozen key members of Romney's inner circle.

"This was meant to be a real discussion with people that I view can be very helpful," Zwick told The Associated Press, adding that Paul "was very well received" during an hour-and-a-half discussion about policy and politics over salad and fresh fruit.

Paul's Maine audience will be larger and more rowdy.

After two tumultuous conventions that revealed cracks in the Maine GOP, party leaders are trying to build a strong, unified base that will shepherd in four more years for LePage, who rode tea party support to victory in 2010.

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Rand Paul confronts GOP divide in Maine

Senator says GOP needs to be bigger

(CNN) -

Sen. Rand Paul hopes to infuse the Republican Party with some of his libertarian views, but the Kentucky Republican said Friday he'd still support the GOP presidential nominee in 2016 even if he didn't entirely agree with that person.

"I think a libertarian twist or a libertarian influence in the Republican Party is good, but I've pretty much just stayed with the party and plan on doing so," he said at Harvard's Institute of Politics.

Paul, who's considering a White House bid, had been asked by a student whether he would support a libertarian candidate in the next presidential election if Paul doesn't become the nominee.

The first-term senator described himself as "libertarian-ish," but said he's never endorsed libertarian candidates.

He was corrected by the student, who pointed out that Paul supported his father, ex-Rep. Ron Paul, when he ran for president as a libertarian in 1988.

"You're right. I did. I stand corrected," Paul said, laughing.

"I did, and I hope I don't have to oppose him in anything," he joked. "Somebody asked me the other day 'What if your dad runs?' And I was like 'I'm not going there, alright?'"

Making the GOP slightly more libertarian is just part of Paul's recent mission to broaden the Republican Party. The senator reiterated his message that it also needs to look different in terms of race and age.

"You go to a Republican event and it's all white people -- not because we're excluding anybody, but because we just haven't done a good enough job encouraging people to come into our party," he said at the event, which was hosted by his 2010 GOP primary rival, Trey Grayson. He's now the institute's director.

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Senator says GOP needs to be bigger

Disputed islands part of alliance

The islands at the centre of a row between Tokyo and Beijing are covered by the US-Japan defence alliance, Barack Obama told a newspaper ahead of his arrival in Tokyo.

Obama, who begins a tour of Asia that will also take in South Korea, the Philippines and Malaysia, is the first sitting US president to explicitly affirm that hostile action against the island chain would spark an American reaction.

'The policy of the United States is clear - the Senkaku Islands are administered by Japan and therefore fall within the scope of Article 5 of the US-Japan Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security,' Obama said in a written interview with the Yomiuri Shimbun.

'And we oppose any unilateral attempts to undermine Japan's administration of these islands,' he said.

Several senior US figures, including former secretary of state Hillary Clinton and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel have made similar statements, which Tokyo covets as a way to warn China away from territories it claims as the Diaoyus.

Obama's week-long tour of Asia is being dubbed a 'rebalancing' eastward of US foreign policy by the White House.

Although China is not on his itinerary, its presence will be felt on every leg at a time of complex regional disputes and questions about US strategy.

The row over ownership of the Senkakus is not new, but has burst to the fore in the past two years, with paramilitary vessels from both sides jostling in nearby waters to assert control.

In November, China declared an air defence identification zone over the East China Sea, including the skies above the islands.

'I've also told (Chinese) President Xi (Jinping) that all our nations have an interest in dealing constructively with maritime issues, including in the East China Sea,' Obama told the Yomiuri.

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Disputed islands part of alliance

mice-science-AFPrelax-250414.jpg

April 25, 2014

Alzheimer's, caused by toxic proteins that destroy brain cells, is the most common form of dementia. AFP/Relaxnews pic, April 25, 2014.Spanish scientists have for the first time used gene therapy to reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer's, an advance that could lead to new drugs to treat the disease, they said Wednesday.

The Autonomous University of Barcelona team injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer's into the hippocampus a region of the brian essential to memory processing in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

"The protein that was reinstated by the gene therapy triggers the signals needed to activate the genes involved in long-term memory consolidation," the university said in a statement.

Gene therapy involves transplanting genes into a patient's cells to correct an otherwise incurable disease caused by a failure of one or another gene.

The finding was published in The Journal of Neuroscience and it follows four years of research.

"The hope is that this study could lead to the development of pharmaceutical drugs that can activate these genes in humans and allow for the recovery of memory," the head of the research team, Carlos Saura, told AFP.

Alzheimer's, caused by toxic proteins that destroy brain cells, is the most common form of dementia.

Worldwide, 35.6 million people suffer from the fatal degenerative disease, which is currently incurable, and there are 7.7 million new cases every year, according to a 2012 report from the World Health Organisation.

In 2010 the total global societal cost of dementia was estimated to be US$604 billion, according to Alzheimer's Disease International, a federation of Alzheimer associations around the world. AFP/Relaxnews, April 25, 2014.

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The Futurist Lady Jack-a-Line – Asteroid Impact (Sceptical C Remix) – Video


The Futurist Lady Jack-a-Line - Asteroid Impact (Sceptical C Remix)
Buy this track : http://www.imusiciandigital.com/track/58971/The-Futurist-Lady-Jack-a-Line/Asteroid-Impact-Sceptical-C-Remix/ Monetise your music : http://ww...

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The Futurist Lady Jack-a-Line - Asteroid Impact (Sceptical C Remix) - Video

The illusion of omniscience? Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Future Day 2014 (excerpt) – Video


The illusion of omniscience? Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Future Day 2014 (excerpt)
Thanks for stopping by! Gerd Leonhard Futurist, Author and Keynote Speaker Basel / Switzerland http://www.futuristgerd.com Please note: audio-only versions o...

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The illusion of omniscience? Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard at Future Day 2014 (excerpt) - Video