মঙ্গলবার, ২২ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Ratings: Regis Philbin's farewell lifts "Live!" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Like the consummate professional and gentleman that he is, Regis Philbin left a significant present behind on his way out the door on "Live! With Regis and Kelly."

Philbin's last episode on "Live! With Regis and Kelly" enjoyed a massive bump in the ratings, according to preliminary household numbers. Friday's "Live!" -- which marked his final day of co-hosting since he signed on in 1988 -- drew an average 7.3 household rating in 56 metered markets.

To put that in perspective, that's about two-and-a-half times the 2.9 rating that the show received during last November's sweep, and nearly twice the numbers that the show has posted overall for this year's November sweep.

Philbin's farewell episode did particularly well in Atlanta, where it posted a 10.6 household rating; Louisville, where it received a 10.7, and Dayton, Ohio, where the episode posted a 17.1 percent.

Friday's episode was the culmination of a six-week growth spurt for the show, as audiences prepared to bid adieu to the veteran host. From an average 2.7 rating in the metered markets on the week of October 10-14, the show built, eventually rising to an average 4.6 rating for Philbin's final week.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/tv_nm/us_regisphilbin

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South Africa's FA says forgive Blatter

updated 6:23 p.m. ET Nov. 19, 2011

JOHANNESBURG - The South African Football Association says people should forgive FIFA President Sepp Blatter for his controversial comments downplaying racism in the sport.

SAFA said on Saturday that Blatter's remarks were unfortunate but hopes "the world will move on" after football's highest figure apologized for saying that racist slurs on the field could be sorted out with a handshake after the match.

SAFA said the matter was blown out of proportion but also noted in its statement that Blatter had "sent the wrong signal."

South Africa's football body paid tribute to Blatter's efforts in taking the World Cup to South Africa last year and said his recent comments were "unfortunate, regrettable and out of sync with what he (Blatter) stood for all his life."

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Donovan, Becks lead LA to title

Landon Donovan scored in the 72nd minute on passes from Robbie Keane and David Beckham as the Galaxy's three superstars won their first MLS Cup together with a 1-0 victory over Houston.

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Blatter?'sorry'

FIFA President Sepp Blatter apologizes, sort of, for offending people with his racism remarks but refuses to resign.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45370093/ns/sports-soccer/

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সোমবার, ২১ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

My Pillow Pets Moose Review | Estate Of ?

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Source: http://estateof.com/2011/11/20/my-pillow-pets-moose-review/

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রবিবার, ২০ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Adele leads nominees at rainy AMAs

Audrina Patridge arrives at the 39th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

Audrina Patridge arrives at the 39th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

Lance Bass arrives at the 39th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

Mario arrives at the 39th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

Phoebe Price arrives at the 39th Annual American Music Awards on Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011 in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

(AP) ? It's raining music artists ? and just raining ? outside the American Music Awards.

Taio Cruz, Joe Jonas, Jenny McCarthy and Smokey Robinson were among the celebrities who braved the tented red carpet outside the Nokia Theatre in unusually dreary Los Angeles for the 39th annual performance-packed show.

Alanis Morissette didn't let the drippy weather stop her from wearing a dreamy black chiffon dress and fishtail braid.

"It was planned way before," confessed the singer, who will introduce Mary J. Blige and her tribute to the late rapper Heavy D.

Adele is the leading nominee at this year's AMAs, but the British singer won't be attending Sunday's ceremony because she is recovering from recent throat surgery.

The 23-year-old singer is up for four awards: Female artist, adult contemporary artist, artist of the year and favorite album for "21," the country's best-selling album this year.

Other top nominees include Katy Perry, Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne, Rihanna, Taylor Swift and The Band Perry, who have three bids apiece. Fans chose the winners by voting online.

Nicki Minaj and David Guetta are set to open the show, which will air live on ABC.

___

Online:

http://abc.go.com/shows/american-music-awards

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-11-20-American%20Music%20Awards/id-eaca652fbed545a4827ba26ab9ff55b0

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শুক্রবার, ১৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Astronomers reveal galaxies' most elusive secrets

ScienceDaily (Nov. 17, 2011) ? New, high-precision equipment orbiting Earth aboard the Hubble Space Telescope is now sending such rich data back to astronomers, some feel they are crossing the final frontier toward understanding galaxy evolution, says Todd Tripp, leader of the team at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Galaxies are the birthplaces of stars, each with a dense, visible central core and a huge envelope, or halo, around it containing extremely low-density gases. Until now, most of the mass in the envelope, as much as 90 percent of all mass in a galaxy, was undetectable by any instrument on Earth.

But Hubble's sensitive new Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS), the only one of its kind, has dramatically improved the quality of information regarding the gaseous envelope of galaxies, Tripp says. This huge gain in precision is one of the enormous accomplishments of the COS mission. "Even 10 years ago, most of the mass of a galaxy was invisible to us and such detailed investigations were impossible," the UMass Amherst astronomer points out. "With COS, in a sense we now have the ability to see the rest of the iceberg, not just the tip. This is a very exciting time to be an astronomer."

Tripp, postdoctoral researcher Joe Meiring and theoretical astronomer Neil Katz are co-authors of several companion articles reporting advances in understanding galaxy evolution based on the new COS data in the Nov. 18 issue of Science. Other lead investigators are Nicolas Lehner of the University of Notre Dame and Jason Tumlinson of the Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore.

"With the new spectrograph we can see galaxy halos out to at least 150,000 parsecs," says Tripp. One kiloparsec is about 19 trillion miles. "Where once we saw only the framework we are now getting a more complete picture, including the composition and movement of gases in the envelope, varying temperatures in different locations and the chemical structure, all in incredible detail," Tripp adds.

In particular, data on the chemical composition and temperature in the gas clouds allow the astronomers to calculate a galaxy's halo mass and how the gaseous envelope regulates the galaxy's evolution.

Another overall mission focus is to explore how galaxies gather mass for making stars. The astronomers have found that heavy elements in the envelopes surrounding the most vigorous star-forming galaxies continuously recycle material, as supernovae explode and shoot hot gas for trillions of miles. Faster-moving material escapes the envelope, but slower-moving particles collapse back into the center and restart the cycle.

Tripp and his UMass Amherst team specialize in studying how the fast-moving gases and matter from exploding supernovae circulate in galaxies. It was a surprise to discover how much mass extends far outside each galaxy, he says. "Not only have we found that star-forming galaxies are pervasively surrounded by large halos of hot gas," says Tripp, "we have also observed that hot gas in transit. We have caught the stuff in the process of moving out of a galaxy and into intergalactic space."

Further, the speed at which gases are moving in different parts of a galaxy is critical. Slower speeds may mean cooling gases, ready to collapse back into the core. Hotter gases are likely expanding and might escape the envelope.

Because the light emitted by this hot plasma is so faint that it is effectively invisible, astronomers use a trick to illuminate it from behind, like studying a misty fog bank by looking through lighthouse beams. In this case the lighthouse is usually a quasar, a super bright object behind the galaxy of interest. Gathering several sightings through the fog, scientists can piece together a map of the gaseous envelope.

Certain wavelengths of light emitted by the quasar are absorbed by the ions in a galaxy's envelope. With COS, a whole new area of the electromagnetic spectrum has become visible. To learn more, Tripp and colleagues also calculate concentrations of the many elements such as hydrogen, oxygen, sulfur, carbon and neon in the envelope, plus up to five ions of each. One of the neon ions has turned out to be particularly important.

"In detecting the neon ions we find that there's a lot of gas at several hundred thousand degrees Kelvin, which we've never been able to see unambiguously before," says Tripp. "It means we can characterize the total mass distribution in the envelope, setting more precise constraints on the temperatures overall. We can now access more diverse ions, and we have new leverage on determining whether stuff is heating up or cooling off. We're gaining new insights."

The neon ion will also play a role in testing theoretical models of galaxy evolution. Theorists including Katz at UMass Amherst construct model galaxies on a computer, simulating its make-up and how it evolves over time. Tripp says, "Now we have hard data to plug into the model and test their ideas. They've got a lot of detailed predictions we can now compare to the real universe. It's a new day for all of us."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Massachusetts at Amherst, via Newswise.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Todd M. Tripp, Joseph D. Meiring, J. Xavier Prochaska, Christopher N. A. Willmer, J. Christopher Howk, Jessica K. Werk, Edward B. Jenkins, David V. Bowen, Nicolas Lehner, Kenneth R. Sembach, Christopher Thom, and Jason Tumlinson. The Hidden Mass and Large Spatial Extent of a Post-Starburst Galaxy Outflow. Science, 18 November 2011: 952-955 DOI: 10.1126/science.1209850

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111117144005.htm

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ১০ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Australia Senate backs carbon tax

Australia's Senate has approved a controversial law on pollution, after years of bitter political wrangling.

The Clean Energy Act will force the country's 500 worst-polluting companies to pay a tax on their carbon emissions from 1 July next year.

The Senate vote is a victory for Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who had given strong backing to the plan.

Environmentalists have broadly backed the scheme, but there have been large public protests against it.

Opposition parties have argued that the tax would cause job losses and raise the cost of living, and they have promised to repeal the legislation if they win the next election, due in 2013.

'Victory for optimists' Continue reading the main story

PROPOSED CARBON TAX

  • To start on 1 July 2012
  • 500 companies affected
  • Agriculture, forestry and land are exempt
  • Compensation for polluters
  • Market-based trading scheme kicks in from 2015
  • Target to cut 159m tonnes of CO2 by 2020

The bill passed a vote in the lower house last month by just 74 votes to 72.

The Senate vote was also tight - 36 votes in favour, 32 against - with the government relying on the support of the Greens to get the bill passed.

Ms Gillard told a news conference it was "a win for those who would seek their fortunes and make their way by having jobs in our clean energy sector".

"Today we have made history. After all those years of debate and division, our nation has got the job done," she said.

Continue reading the main story

Analysis

The vote in theory brings to an end a long-running and, in a global sense, highly symbolic issue.

Symbolic because Australia is one of the world's highest per-capita emitters and has an economy that is more reliant than most on energy-intensive industries such as mining, including coal.

Yet of all developed countries, Australia is set to feel impacts of climate change earlier than most, and arguably is seeing them already in the recent severe droughts.

It also has immense potential for renewable electricity, particularly in the area of solar; and some are hoping the carbon tax and subsequent trading mechanism will kick-start a renewables revolution.

Whether the carbon tax is high enough to do that, though, is unclear. And investors may be restrained by the opposition's vow to repeal the law if it gains office in 2013.

Emissions trading is scheduled for introduction in 2015. The European experience is that without tight caps on emissions, the carbon price remains far too low to stimulate change on the scale scientists calculate is necessary.

The government has set the initial price per tonne of carbon at A$23 ($23.80; ?14.80), much higher than other similar schemes such as in the EU where the price is between $8.70 and $12.60 a tonne.

The country's mining firms, airlines, steel makers and energy firms are among those expected to be hardest hit by the tax.

Domestic fuel bills are expected to rise as companies pass on the costs to consumers.

But the government hopes that the legislation will force innovation in renewable energy supplies, and free Australia from its reliance on fossil fuels.

The country accounts for 1.5% of the world's emissions, but it is the developed world's highest emitter per head of population thanks to its relatively small population.

The country's politicians have been debating pollution-limiting legislation for years.

Former Prime Minister Kevin Rudd swept to power in 2007 after making the carbon tax central to his election campaign.

But his plans were bogged down in political infighting and public support evaporated.

Analysts have blamed his inability to get the law passed for his eventual ousting by Ms Gillard.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-asia-15632160

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বুধবার, ৯ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

Sirleaf seen winning Liberia run-off vote (Reuters)

MONROVIA (Reuters) ? Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf is poised to win reelection in a run-off on Tuesday, though her rival has vowed to reject the results after pulling out of the race over allegations of fraud.

The vote was meant to gauge the West African state's progress since a devastating civil war ended in 2003 and pave the way for new investment, but fears are rising it could instead open the door to open-ended political turmoil.

"I will go pray tonight that there will be peace for Liberia," said Akisame Johnson, a 50-year-old resident of the crumbling seaside capital Monrovia.

"Ma Ellen's people come up and down here to say of course election will take place Tuesday, but Tubman's people come and say no. The children confused. We don't know what will happen," he said in the local pidgin dialect.

Johnson-Sirleaf took nearly 44 percent of the first round vote on October 11 and has since won the endorsement of the third-place finisher, former warlord Prince Johnson, all but sealing her victory in the second round run-off.

But her chief rival, former U.N. diplomat Winston Tubman - who took roughly 33 percent in the first round - announced last week he would withdraw from Tuesday's race and called on Liberians to boycott the poll due to evidence of fraud.

"Something was done to the figures, they were doctored, they were changed, they were altered. That is our belief," Tubman told Reuters in an interview Sunday.

He said he was seeking changes to Liberia's vote-counting procedures and a delay to the run-off of between two and four weeks, adding that his party would reject the results if the election goes ahead Tuesday as planned.

"I think that at the end of the day we will have to evaluate what is likely to be better for the country: delaying the elections or going forward with them in a way that doesn't carry the support of such a big party in the country," Tubman said.

"The impact on the region would be huge if we were to descend into chaos again." He said he had urged his supporters not to be violent on polling day.

Liberian riot police faced off with a couple hundred Tubman supporters outside his CDC party headquarters in Monrovia at around 1300 GMT Tuesday,

They shouted "No election!" and some wore handkerchiefs as tear gas was fired but there was no violence.

"If they want peace, they must give us justice," said Ciafa Clarke, a 29-year-old CDC supporter.

U.N. "DEEPLY CONCERNED"

International election observers called the October 11 vote mostly free and fair, and the United States, regional bloc ECOWAS and the African Union have all criticized Tubman's decision to boycott the second round.

The United Nations Security Council said Sunday it was "deeply concerned" by the boycott announcement, and added that it had received reports that members of Liberia's national electoral body had received threats. It gave no details.

Johnson-Sirleaf, who campaigned to cheering crowds in the capital Sunday, called the boycott unconstitutional.

Liberia is one of the world's least developed countries with over half of its people surviving on less than U.S. 50 cents a day. Fourteen years of on-and-off fighting that ended in 2003 killed nearly a quarter of a million people and left its infrastructure in ruins.

Johnson-Sirleaf became Africa's first freely elected female head of state in 2005, and has been internationally praised for reducing the country's debt and maintaining peace. But she faces criticism within for the slow pace of development.

Analysts had anticipated that a smooth election would trigger a surge in foreign investment in resources like iron ore and oil, which have already attracted major firms like ArcelorMittal, BHP Billiton and Anadarko Petroleum.

"A ... boycott would indeed undermine the credibility of the election in that the elections would not reflect the views of all voters," said Lydie Boka, head of risk consultancy StrategiCo. "It would also open the door to endless claims and accusations that the regime is not democratic."

Joint U.N. and Liberian national police convoys patrolled the streets of Monrovia at slow speeds as residents looked on.

"For me, all we want is peace," said Rachael Dennis, a mother of four who works at a market stall.

"Those who say they will not vote, it is their right to say so. For those who will go to vote too, it is their right. All that I am saying is there should be no hala-hala," she said, using the local term for violence.

(Editing by David Lewis)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111107/wl_nm/us_liberia_election_preview

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মঙ্গলবার, ৮ নভেম্বর, ২০১১

No link between selenium, lower lung cancer risk (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? Despite some evidence tying the mineral selenium to a reduced risk of lung cancer, a new long-term study sees no connection between the two.

In fact, researchers found that among heavy smokers, those with the highest selenium levels had a greater risk of dying from lung cancer than those with the lowest levels.

The reason for that finding is not known, and it may have nothing to do with selenium itself.

But the researchers say they cannot rule out the possibility that heavy smoking and high selenium somehow act together to promote lung cancer.

The bottom line for smokers is that the best way to curb your lung cancer risk is still to kick the habit.

"The best advice regarding smoking is: Stop," lead researcher Poul Suadicani, of Bispebjerg University Hospital in Copenhagen, told Reuters Health in an email.

The study, reported in the European Respiratory Journal, included more than 3,300 older Danish men followed for 16 years. At the start, all had their blood selenium levels measured.

Over the next 16 years, five percent of the men died of lung cancer. And there was no difference in that rate among men with low selenium levels versus those with high.

Looking only at men who were heavy smokers at the study's start -- measured by the amount of nicotine byproducts in their blood -- the researchers found different results, however. In those men, high selenium was linked to an increased risk of lung cancer death.

Of the roughly one-third of heavy smokers with the highest selenium, 11 percent died of lung cancer. That compared with six percent of those with the lowest selenium levels, and nine percent of those in the mid-range.

When the researchers weighed certain other factors -- like heavy smokers' alcohol, fat and salt intake -- high selenium was linked to a doubling in the odds of lung cancer death.

Selenium is a mineral needed in trace amounts for good health. Its main job is to aid in the body's antioxidant defenses, which help limit the cell damage that can lead to diseases like cancer.

Some studies have found that people with relatively high selenium levels have a lower risk of certain cancers, including lung cancer. But others have failed to find a link.

What's more, clinical trials that put selenium supplements to the test against cancer have so far come up short.

A large U.S./Canadian trial was stopped when selenium, taken with or without vitamin E, showed no effect on men's risk of developing prostate cancer over 5.5 years. Vitamin E alone actually produced a slightly increased risk of the disease.

The current study is not the end of the story for selenium, however, according to Suadicani. More studies into selenium and a range of health outcomes are still needed, he said.

Researchers still are not sure how much selenium is needed for optimal health. And some say it's still possible that selenium affects cancer risk over a very long time period.

For now, the U.S. recommendation for adults is to get 55 micrograms of selenium per day (and 60 and 70 micrograms per day during pregnancy and breastfeeding, respectively).

Selenium is found in soil, so grains like whole wheat bread and rice contain the mineral. Other sources include beef, chicken and certain fish, like tuna. Brazil nuts contain an unusually high amount of selenium -- often several hundred micrograms per ounce.

In the U.S., the "tolerable upper intake" limit for selenium is set at 400 micrograms per day for adults. Too much selenium can cause selenosis, with symptoms like gastrointestinal problems, hair loss, fatigue and mild nerve damage.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/tVzLsr European Respiratory Journal, online October 27, 2011.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/cancer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111108/hl_nm/us_selenium_cancer

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2012 race likely to be close, tough, maybe brutal (AP)

WASHINGTON ? One year to go until Election Day and the Republican presidential field is deeply unsettled, leaving President Barack Obama only to guess who his opponent will be. But the race's contours are starting to come into view.

It's virtually certain that the campaign will be a close, grinding affair, markedly different from the 2008 race. It will play out amid widespread economic anxiety and heightened public resentment of government and politicians.

Americans who were drawn to the drama of Obama's barrier-breaking battle with Hillary Rodham Clinton, and the up-and-down fortunes of John McCain and Sarah Palin, are likely to see a more partisan contest this time, with Ohio and Florida playing crucial roles as they did in 2000 and 2004.

Republicans have their script; they just need to pick the person to deliver it. It will portray Obama as a failed leader who backs away when challenged and who doesn't understand what it takes to create jobs and spur business investment.

Obama will highlight his opponent's ties to the tea party and its priorities. He will say Republicans are obsessed with protecting millionaires' tax cuts while the federal debt soars and working people struggle.

On several issues, voters will see a more distinct contrast between the nominees than in 2008. Even the most moderate Republican candidates have staked out more rigidly conservative views on immigration, taxes and spending than did Arizona Sen. McCain.

Democrats say Obama has little control over the two biggest impediments to his re-election: unemployment and congressional gridlock.

The jobless rate will stand at levels that have not led to a president's re-election since the Great Depression. Largely because of that, Obama will run a much more negative campaign, his aides acknowledge, even if it threatens to demoralize some supporters who were inspired by his 2008 message of hope.

The tea party, one of the modern era's most intriguing and effective political movements, will play its first role in a presidential race. After helping Republicans win huge victories in last year's congressional elections, activists may push the GOP presidential contenders so far right that the eventual nominee will struggle to appeal to independents.

"It's going to be extremely different, with much more hand-to-hand combat, from one foxhole to another, targeted to key states," said Chris Lehane, who helped run Democrat Al Gore's 2000 presidential campaign.

Republican consultant Terry Holt agreed. "You can expect a very negative campaign," he said. "In 2008, Barack Obama was peddling hope and change. Now he's peddling fear and poverty."

Obama and his aides reject that characterization, of course. They say the Republican candidates are under the tea party's spell, noting that all of them said they would reject a deficit-reduction plan even if it included $10 in spending cuts for every dollar in new taxes.

Both parties agree that jobs will be the main issue. The White House predicts unemployment will hover around 9 percent for at least a year, a frighteningly high level for a president seeking a second term.

GOP lawmakers, who control the House and have filibuster power in the Senate, have blocked Obama's job proposals, mainly because they would raise taxes on the wealthy. The candidates, echoing their Republican colleagues in Congress, say new jobs will follow cuts in taxes, regulation and federal spending.

With the economy struggling and Obama hemmed in legislatively, his advisers sometimes say the election will be a choice between the president and his challenger, rather than a referendum on the administration's performance.

"That's a very genteel way of saying `We're going to rip your face off,'" said Dan Schnur, a former aide to McCain and other Republicans, and now a politics professor at the University of Southern California. Obama has little choice but to try to portray the GOP alternative as worse than his own disappointing record, Schnur said.

Some Republican candidates would be tougher targets than others. Texas Gov. Rick Perry promotes his state's significant job growth, leaving Democrats to grouse that he was a lucky bystander rather than the cause.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney says his years in the private sector make him best suited to lead an economic expansion. But Obama's allies have gathered details of jobs that were eliminated when Bain Capital, a takeover firm that Romney headed, restructured several companies.

Obama can't fine-tune his strategy until Republicans pick their nominee, and that may take months. So he's spending part of this year traveling to some of the most contested states, telling disappointed liberals he still deserves their strong backing and trying to convince centrists that he can revive the economy.

Obama's overall job-approval rating was 46 percent in an Associated Press-GfK poll from October. Only 36 percent of adults approved of his handling of the economy, a worrisome number for any incumbent.

Yet 78 percent said he's a likeable person, which forces Republicans to be careful. It's possible Obama will run a more cut-throat campaign than will his challenger. For now, anyway, Romney calls Obama "is a nice guy" who doesn't know how to lead.

Republican insiders see Romney as their most plausible nominee. He has run the steadiest and best-financed campaign thus far, relying on lessons and friends picked up in his 2008 bid.

But the GOP race has been unpredictable, and Romney has struggled to exceed one-fourth of the support in Republican polls. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota emerged as his main challenger last summer, only to be supplanted by Perry. A few halting debate performances hurt Perry, and former pizza company executive Herman Cain replaced him at or near the top of the polls, along with Romney.

Last week, Cain tried to swat down allegations of sex harassment from the 1990s. Party activists are waiting for the impact. Some, however, think Cain's lack of political experience and his unorthodox style, which includes largely ignoring Iowa and New Hampshire, are more likely to bring him down.

Two schools of thought run through Republican circles. One holds that Romney is the logical nominee and will consolidate the party's somewhat grudging support after conservatives stop flirting with longshots such as Bachmann and Cain. Republicans have a history of nominating the runner-up from previous primaries, and Romney fits that bill.

The competing theory holds that Americans are angrier at government and the two parties than political pros realize, and the tea party is just the start of a potent, long-lasting movement. Under this scenario, Romney can never placate conservative voters because of his establishment ties and the more liberal positions he once held on abortion, gay rights and gun control.

If this view is right, the shifting support for Bachmann, Perry and Cain is more than a flirtation, and someone will emerge as the "non-Romney" who wins the nomination.

Veterans of past presidential campaigns tend to doubt this outcome. But even with Obama's economic woes, plenty of Republican insiders worry that Romney's inconsistency on important issues and voters' doubts about his authenticity could let the president slip away.

Romney should have put his GOP rivals "in the rear-view mirror" by now, said Mike McKenna, a Republican lobbyist who has tracked focus groups and polls in various states. "The problem is, a huge part of the party views him as a third Bush term."

McKenna said pundits don't realize that the tea party movement was as much a rejection of the high-spending, high-deficit practices of President George W. Bush and Republican lawmakers as it was a reaction against Obama's health care plan. With his ties to New England and the party establishment, Romney "looks like the lineal descendant of Bush," McKenna said.

He said he fears that a lot of conservatives will sit out the 2012 election if Romney is the nominee.

Plenty of strategists reject that view. They think conservatives' deep antipathy toward Obama will cause them to overcome their misgivings and fully back Romney.

David Axelrod, Obama's top political adviser, points to issues Obama can cite success on, from health care and undermining al-Qaida to reviving the auto industry and ending the Iraq war.

"We're going to have a very robust debate," he said. "The Republicans say if we just cut taxes and spending and regulations, we will grow. And I think the American people understand it's more complicated than that."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111105/ap_on_el_ge/us_election_one_year_out

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A year out, Obama campaign makes volunteer push (AP)

PHILADELPHIA ? Volunteers flocked to Barack Obama last time. This time, the president's campaign is in recruiting mode.

Without a primary challenger in the 2012 race, Obama is trying to rebuild a massive organization of supporters to help boost his efforts in the face of a struggling economy and weakened political standing.

Obama's campaign is holding more than 2,000 events around the nation through the end of the weekend. They include neighborhood gatherings, one-on-one meetings in coffeehouses, phone banks, voter registration drives, door-to-door voter canvassing and house parties.

The goal is to organize the legions of activists who formed the core of Obama's coalition in 2008 ? black and Latino voters, women and college students and voters entering the workforce ? long before the election a year from new.

Such activities could help determine whether Obama can mobilize enough support to overcome broad concerns among the public over joblessness and the direction of the country, as well as the disillusionment felt by some of his 2008 supporters.

Back then, Obama built a large base of volunteers in dozens of states that held primaries and caucuses and then quickly moved on to the general election.

Many volunteers were drawn to Obama because he was new to the national stage and sounded a message of hope and change.

Now that he's president, Obama has a record that doesn't sit well with some who worked to help him get elected.

His campaign is undeterred.

"Block by block, person by person, student by student, we are going to build the biggest grass-roots effort in American political history," campaign manager Jim Messina said at an event Wednesday at the University of Pennsylvania to kick off a mobilizing effort on college campuses.

Messina told about 250 college and high school students and others watching online that there were 8 million registered voters between the ages of 18 and 21 who weren't old enough to vote in 2008 but would be harnessed to support the president.

Yet, the young voters, many of whom were galvanized in 2008 by the promise of ending the Iraq war, are not an easy sell this time.

Obama won voters between the ages of 18-29 by a margin of about 2-to-1, but polling has shown some signs of softening support as many recent college graduates face high levels of unemployment.

The students heard from Messina, White House policy adviser Melody Barnes and others who trumpeted the administration's support for college aid and efforts to maintain health care coverage for young people.

Kyle Musto, a 17-year-old high school senior from West Philadelphia, said he was undecided as he considers his first vote in a presidential election. "I have friends who are very opposed to Obama. I have friends who are very pro-Obama. I'm very open to anything," he said.

Meetings like the one in Philadelphia are more common because Obama has avoided a Democratic challenger and his team can't point to contested primaries and caucuses as reasons for people to get involved now. So they are finding motivation elsewhere.

As Obama has tried to win passage of his jobs agenda in Congress, party loyalists regularly receive emailed updates from campaign officials urging them to pressure Republican lawmakers by phone, email or Twitter. At the Philadelphia event, students were encouraged to text their ZIP code and the phrase "Greater Together," the name of the young voter program, to the campaign so they could receive more information. Students were also asked to urge their Facebook friends to support the campaign.

The campaign is planning to use January's Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary as an organizing tool, too.

The approach resembles the extra attention President Bill Clinton paid on the two states in 1996 even though he didn't have a primary opponent. In the weeks before the early contests, Clinton and administration officials traveled to Iowa and New Hampshire to offer rebuttals of the Republican field while the campaign held events around the state.

Obama's campaign has opened eight offices across Iowa and told reporters this week it had held more than 700 training sessions and made more than 100,000 phone calls to Iowans since the campaign opened in April. In New Hampshire, the campaign is opening its second office this weekend and has logged more than 90,000 phone calls and 2,200 one-on-one meetings across the state, all aimed at boosting turnout and support in 2012.

"You've got to sell this as a building block for the general" election, said Charlie Baker, a veteran field organizer of Democratic presidential campaigns who ran President Bill Clinton's New Hampshire effort in 1996.

___

Follow Ken Thomas on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Ken_Thomas

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111105/ap_on_el_pr/us_obama_in_recruiting_mode

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Cain campaigns as harassment allegations build (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Republican presidential hopeful Herman Cain wants to spend the day stumping as usual. But looming over his campaign is the possibility of a statement from one of the women he allegedly harassed sexually back in the 1990s.

After spending a day in New York largely shielded from media attention, Cain will step back into public view in Washington for a speech Friday to a group aligned with the tea party movement.

The event was on Cain's schedule well before damaging sexual harassment accusations dating from his days as head of the National Restaurant Association became public.

Cain says his campaign will get back on message as it tries to move beyond the building sex scandal.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111104/ap_on_el_pr/us_cain

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TRW Automotive Lags Estimates

TRW Automotive Holdings Corp. (NYSE:TRW) reported more than a 6% fall in profit to $177 million or $1.37 per share (excluding debt retirement charges) in the third quarter of 2011 from $189 million or $1.47 per share (excluding debt retirement charges and favorable tax benefits) in the prior-year quarter. The earnings per share were lower than the Zacks Consensus Estimate of $1.40.

The decline in profit was attributable to increased raw material costs, higher legal fees and planned increases in costs to support the company?s future growth.

Revenues in the quarter grew 14% to $3.9 billion on higher vehicle production volumes, strong demand for the company?s active and passive safety products as well as a positive impact of currency movements.??

Operating income declined to $240 million compared with $269 million in the third quarter of 2010. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization and special items (adjusted EBITDA) were $354 million compared with $385 million in the prior-year quarter.?

TRW had cash and cash equivalents of $890 million as of September 30, 2011, down from $1.08 billion as of December 31, 2010. Total debt amounted to $1.53 billion as of September 30, 2011 compared with $1.85 billion as of December 31, 2010. This reflected a debt to capitalization ratio of 37% as of September 30, 2011 compared with 47% as of December 31, 2010.

In the first nine months of the year, net cash flow from operating activities was $512 million, a decrease from $690 million in the same period of 2010. The deterioration in cash flow was attributable to increases in accounts receivables (net) and inventories.

Meanwhile, capital expenditures were $304 million in the period under study compared with $168 million in the 2010-period. Consequently, free cash flow was $208 million in the first nine months of 2011 compared with $522 million in the comparable period last year.?

TRW anticipates production of 12.9 million units in North America and 19.9 million units in Europe for full year 2011. Based on this guidance and the company?s estimate of foreign currency exchange rates, sales are expected to be $16.2 billion (including fourth quarter sales of approximately $3.9 billion) for the full year, which is at the lower end of its previous guidance.

TRW Automotive is a leading manufacturer of advanced technology products and services for the automotive markets. Headquartered in Michigan, U.S., the company operates in 27 countries through its subsidiaries. These operations primarily involve the design, manufacture and sale of active and passive safety related products.

The company retains a Zacks #3 Rank (Hold) on its stock for the short term (1 to 3 months) and we have reiterated a Neutral? recommendation on the shares for the long term (more than 6 months).

Its competitor, Autoliv Inc. (NYSE:ALV) recorded a profit of $138.4 million or $1.48 per share in the third quarter of 2011, missing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by a penny. The profit declined from $140.1 million or $1.51 per share in the third quarter of 2010.

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AUTOLIV INC (ALV): Free Stock Analysis Report
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Source: http://www.dailymarkets.com/stock/2011/11/04/trw-automotive-lags-estimates/

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Convicted Maryland murderer gets prison, not death sentence (Reuters)

BEL AIR, Md (Reuters) ? The first defendant to test Maryland's new death penalty statute, a man convicted of killing a gas station owner in a murder-for-hire scheme, was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole on Wednesday

The jury in Harford County Circuit Court deliberated for six hours before rejecting the prosecution's effort to sentence Walter Bishop Jr., 29, to death under the state's law, adopted in 2009 and considered the most restrictive in the nation.

To be eligible for the death penalty, Maryland's law requires DNA or video evidence linking the defendant to a murder or video of a voluntary interrogation and confession. The jury ruled a video of Bishop confessing to police fulfilled the requirement.

But the jury also took into consideration factors that weighed against a death sentence, the foreman told the court.

The foreman said the panel could not unanimously agree that Bishop was solely responsible for the murder or that he would be a danger to others if he lived. He said the panel also considered Bishop's lack of family support and his substance dependency, and mercy.

During the trial, defense attorneys noted that Bishop was homeless and deep in child support debt for his five children.

The restrictiveness of the state's death penalty law had no effect on the trial outcome, said John Cox, a prosecutor with the Assistant State's Attorney's Office of Baltimore County. He said he respected the jury's decision.

Harun Shabazz, one of Bishop's public defenders, agreed the death penalty law did not affect the outcome.

But he questioned why the state sought the death penalty, noting Bishop had not served previous prison time and was not the only person involved in the killing.

"This was never a capital case," Shabazz said afterward. "The death penalty is reserved for the worst of the worst."

Bishop was convicted last month of fatally shooting William Porter in 2010, allegedly at the behest of Porter's wife Karla. She is accused of offering to pay Bishop $9,000 for the murder, is charged with first-degree murder and is awaiting trial.

Bishop showed no reaction when the jury announced his sentence of life in prison with the possibility of parole.

Afterward, William Porter's mother, Margaret, declined to say whether she had hoped for the death sentence. "You couldn't find a finer man," she said of her 47-year-old son.

On Tuesday, a teary-eyed Bishop apologized in court to the jury and the Porter family for putting them through the ordeal.

"Every morning when I wake up, I relive the events of March 1," Bishop said. "It haunts me while I'm asleep, it haunts me when I'm awake."

The case involved a judge and prosecutors from Baltimore County but moved to Harford County due to pretrial publicity.

In the sentencing phase, the jury must unanimously agree to a death sentence. If not, it must agree unanimously to a sentence of life in prison without parole. Failing that, the default sentence is life with the possibility of parole.

Bishop could be eligible for parole in about 50 years.

Karla Porter, who allegedly ordered the murder because her husband was abusive, faces trial in the spring.

Five people have been executed in Maryland since the death penalty was reinstated in the United States in 1976, according to the Washington-based Death Penalty Information Center. Five people are on death row there.

After Illinois abolished its similarly restrictive death penalty law this year, Maryland's became the most restrictive, said Richard Dieter, the center's executive director.

(Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Jerry Norton)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111102/us_nm/us_crime_deathpenalty_maryland

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NASA's Fermi finds youngest millisecond pulsar, 100 pulsars to-date

ScienceDaily (Nov. 3, 2011) ? An international team of scientists using NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has discovered a surprisingly powerful millisecond pulsar that challenges existing theories about how these objects form.

At the same time, another team has located nine new gamma-ray pulsars in Fermi data, using improved analytical techniques.

A pulsar is a type of neutron star that emits electromagnetic energy at periodic intervals. A neutron star is the closest thing to a black hole that astronomers can observe directly, crushing half a million times more mass than Earth into a sphere no larger than a city. This matter is so compressed that even a teaspoonful weighs as much as Mount Everest.

"With this new batch of pulsars, Fermi now has detected more than 100, which is an exciting milestone when you consider that, before Fermi's launch in 2008, only seven of them were known to emit gamma rays," said Pablo Saz Parkinson, an astrophysicist at the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics at the University of California Santa Cruz, and a co-author on two papers detailing the findings.

One group of pulsars combines incredible density with extreme rotation. The fastest of these so-called millisecond pulsars whirls at 43,000 revolutions per minute.

Millisecond pulsars are thought to achieve such speeds because they are gravitationally bound in binary systems with normal stars. During part of their stellar lives, gas flows from the normal star to the pulsar. Over time, the impact of this falling gas gradually spins up the pulsar's rotation.

The strong magnetic fields and rapid rotation of pulsars cause them to emit powerful beams of energy, from radio waves to gamma rays. Because the star is transferring rotational energy to the pulsar, the pulsar's spin eventually slows as the star loses matter.

Typically, millisecond pulsars are around a billion years old. However, in the Nov. 3 issue of Science, the Fermi team reveals a bright, energetic millisecond pulsar only 25 million years old.

The object, named PSR J1823?3021A, lies within NGC 6624, a spherical collection of ancient stars called a globular cluster, one of about 160 similar objects that orbit our galaxy. The cluster is about 10 billion years old and lies about 27,000 light-years away toward the constellation Sagittarius.

Fermi's Large Area Telescope (LAT) showed that eleven globular clusters emit gamma rays, the cumulative emission of dozens of millisecond pulsars too faint for even Fermi to detect individually. But that's not the case for NGC 6624.

"It's amazing that all of the gamma rays we see from this cluster are coming from a single object. It must have formed recently based on how rapidly it's emitting energy. It's a bit like finding a screaming baby in a quiet retirement home," said Paulo Freire, the study's lead author, at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany.

J1823?3021A was previously identified as a pulsar by its radio emission, yet of the nine new pulsars, none are millisecond pulsars, and only one was later found to emit radio waves.

Despite its sensitivity, Fermi's LAT may detect only one gamma ray for every 100,000 rotations of some of these faint pulsars. Yet new analysis techniques applied to the precise position and arrival time of photons collected by the LAT since 2008 were able to identify them.

"We adapted methods originally devised for studying gravitational waves to the problem of finding gamma-ray pulsars, and we were quickly rewarded," said Bruce Allen, director of the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics in Hannover, Germany. Allen co-authored a paper on the discoveries that was published online in The Astrophysical Journal.

Allen also directs the Einstein@Home project, a distributed computing effort that uses downtime on computers of volunteers to process astronomical data. In July, the project extended the search for gamma-ray pulsars to the general public by including Femi LAT data in the work processed by Einstein@Home users.

NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is an astrophysics and particle physics partnership. It is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. It was developed in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy, with important contributions from academic institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden and the United States.

For more information, images and animations, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/fermi

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/9cl53-Yqv-k/111103154626.htm

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Keys to donate instruments to her high school

FILE - In this Oct. 13, 2011 file photo, singer Alicia Keys attends the Broadway premiere of the play " The Mountaintop", in New York. The Grammy-winning singer will visit the Professional Performing Arts School in Manhattan on Tuesday and donate music instruments to its students. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano, FILE)

FILE - In this Oct. 13, 2011 file photo, singer Alicia Keys attends the Broadway premiere of the play " The Mountaintop", in New York. The Grammy-winning singer will visit the Professional Performing Arts School in Manhattan on Tuesday and donate music instruments to its students. (AP Photo/Louis Lanzano, FILE)

NEW YORK (AP) ? Alicia Keys is heading back to high school.

The Grammy-winning singer will visit the Professional Performing Arts School in Manhattan on Tuesday and donate music instruments to its students.

Keys says her alma mater is underfunded and oversubscribed, "and I hope to make this better for them."

She will also launch an online contest where people can share how they would use $1,000 "to make the world a better place." It is part of the global campaign, "World of Betters."

The contest begins Tuesday and ends Dec. 15.

"World of Betters" also features rapper K'Naan, who will host an event in Johannesburg, and Indian singer Sunidhi Chauhan, who will host an event in Mumbai, India.

___

Online:

http://www.worldofbetters.com

http://www.aliciakeys.com/us

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-11-01-People-Alicia%20Keys/id-b023e318b77e46579233e846f9177c3c

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BOJ supplies dollars in rare move, warns on markets (Reuters)

TOKYO (Reuters) ? The Bank of Japan supplied dollars in market operations on Wednesday for the first time in more than a year, a sign of the global market strains that board member Sayuri Shirai separately said could push the yen higher again.

Dollar funding has become increasingly tight in money markets globally as uncertainty over bank exposure to the euro zone debt crisis raises fears of a new credit crunch.

Japan had been immune to these concerns as the Bank of Japan's operations to supply unlimited amounts of dollars went untapped since July last year. Money markets in Japan have been largely stable.

But on Wednesday, the central bank supplied $2 million for a week in one operation and $100 million for three months in a second operation. Bankers speculated the currency was likely sought by a non-Japanese bank with operations in the country.

"This is probably a foreign bank trying to secure funds for the end of the year," said Tomohiko Katsu, deputy general manager of the asset liability division of Shinsei Bank.

"Europe's debt woes are behind a widening in money market rates. Some banks will have to rely on funding from central banks."

The BOJ's fixed-rate dollar operation, in which it offers unlimited amounts of dollars against collateral, rarely draws bids because it usually costs more than borrowing dollars in the open market.

However, dollar-funding costs have risen in Japan reflecting market jitters over Europe's debt crisis, making it cheaper for banks to raise dollars under the BOJ's operation.

A call by the Greek prime minister for a national referendum on the euro zone's latest measures to reduce Greece's debts provided the latest reason for markets to swoon.

Stocks have wiped out all the gains they made last week in a relief rally after EU leaders drew up the measures.

Global markets are likely to remain under intense strain because there is little chance that Europe's debt problems will be resolved soon, BOJ policymaker Shirai said.

She said Greece was in a negative spiral as taking additional steps to reform its public finances came at the cost of further weakness in its economy.

The euro zone debt crisis posed risks to Japan's economy because it could spur further gains in the yen, which authorities sold heavily this week after it rose to a fresh record high against the dollar.

"As domestic and overseas markets become increasingly interconnected, prices of equity and other risk assets may fall globally as investors seek safer assets," she said in a speech to business leaders.

"That may lead to falls in Japanese stocks or push up the yen -- regarded as a safe haven -- further against the dollar and emerging currencies.

"As a result, the economy could underperform our forecasts as business and household sentiment deteriorate."

The latest flare-up in Europe's debt crisis pushed Japan's Nikkei share average (.N225) down more than 2 percent on Wednesday after overseas shares skidded on Tuesday.

She maintained the BOJ's official view that the world's No. 3 economy is set to resume a moderate recovery, driven by efforts to rebuild from the March earthquake, even if risks were slightly tilted to the downside.

"We are in the process of stepping up monetary easing, and the effects will continue to emerge," Shirai said.

Having already cut rates close to zero, the central bank last week eased monetary policy by boosting its funds for asset purchases to 20 trillion yen ($255 billion).

The BOJ next meets to review rates on November 15-16.

"If the yen rose again or there was another credit crunch, then the BOJ couldn't afford to sit idly by," said Yasuo Yamamoto, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute.

ON EDGE

On Monday, Japan sold nearly $100 billion worth of yen -- a record amount for single-day intervention -- to tame its high-flying currency.

Shirai, speaking to reporters after her speech, declined to comment on the intervention but said the central bank was watching the impact on sentiment of a strong yen.

The BOJ will refrain from draining the funds that enter the market through the yen-selling intervention, a central bank source said.

The so-called "unsterilized" money will effectively expand monetary easing, at least in the short term. But analysts say its effect on curbing yen strength and supporting the economy will be limited because policy rates are so low.

Shirai, a former IMF economist, joined the BOJ board in April as its only female member. Previously a professor of economics and policy at Tokyo's Keio University, she is considered one of the board's more pessimistic members on the economy.

($1=78.28 yen)

(Reporting by Rie Ishiguro; Editing by Edmund Klamann)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111102/bs_nm/us_japan_economy_boj_operation

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'Mini' Stem Cell Transplant May Help Seniors With Blood Cancer (HealthDay)

TUESDAY, Nov. 1 (HealthDay News) -- Age in itself should not be a factor in deciding whether blood cancer patients are candidates for stem cell transplantation, according to a new study.

Blood cancers include leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma.

For the study, researchers analyzed long-term outcomes among 372 blood cancer patients aged 60 to 75 who underwent a "mini-transplant," which is a "kinder, gentler" form of allogeneic (cells from another person) stem cell transplantation developed at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

The five-year rates of overall survival and disease progression-free survival among the patients were 35 percent and 32 percent, respectively. Comparable survival rates were seen when the patients were divided into three age groups -- 60 to 64, 65 to 69, and 70 to 75 -- suggesting that age plays a limited role in the success of the mini-transplant.

While a survival rate of one-third may seem low, all of the patients would have died within months if they didn't have the transplant, Dr. Mohamed Sorror, an assistant member of the Hutchinson Center's Clinical Research Division, noted in a news release from the Center.

The investigators also found that greater cancer aggressiveness and having a larger number of medical problems not linked to cancer ("comorbidities") were two factors that affected survival, regardless of age.

For example, the five-year survival for patients with less aggressive cancer and fewer comorbidities was 69 percent, compared with 23 percent for patients with more aggressive cancer and a large number of comorbidities, according to the report in the Nov. 2 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Conventional stem cell transplants are generally not performed on blood cancer patients older than 60 because high doses of total-body radiation and potent chemotherapy are used to prepare patients for transplantation.

However, the mini-transplant relies on the donor's immune cells to kill the cancer, and low-dose radiation and chemotherapy is used to suppress the immune system rather than destroy it.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about blood cancers.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111101/hl_hsn/ministemcelltransplantmayhelpseniorswithbloodcancer

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Rumors of a larger, 15? MacBook Air continue to pile up (Yahoo! News)

Could Apple be ready to give its Pro notebooks an Air makeover?

Apple's super-thin MacBook Air notebooks have already spawned a number of copycats, but the company itself may be poised to add another skinny laptop to its ranks. Rumors of a 15" version of the Air have been piling up for months, and enough reliable sources have jumped on the bandwagon that it appears a larger version is indeed on the way.?The newest credible report comes from japanese Apple site Macotakara, where tipsters have pointed to the development of an ultra-thin 15" display as proof a new Air is in the works.

This news follows whispers earlier this year that Apple is prepping not one, but two new super-skinny notebooks. And not only that, they are said to carry MacBook Pro branding. Could a MacBook Air Pro be in the works? It's hard to tell, but with Apple killing off the base-model MacBooks in July of this year the company seems poised to shakeup its notebook offerings in short order.

Currently, the MacBook Air only comes in 11" and 13" (pictured above) flavors, keeping the svelte notebooks from being a hit among power users who require more screen real estate on the go. A 15" version could certainly change that, and if Apple does indeed intend on revamping its Pro models with the sleek lines ? and super-fast solid state storage ? of the Air, it could be a hit amongst those shopping a laptop for both work and play.

(Source)

This article originally appeared on Tecca

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111101/tc_yblog_technews/rumors-of-a-larger-15-macbook-air-continue-to-pile-up-2

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