Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Minivan Jumps Curb Onto Sidewalk Tragically Killing A 16 Year Old ...

A tragic and fatal car accident?yesterday morning took the life of a 16 year old high school student and left five other pedestrians injured. The accident took place in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens near LaGuardia Community College. Witnesses report that the driver of a maroon Dodge Caravan lost control of the van, careened across two lanes of oncoming traffic and jumped up onto a sidewalk island located in the center of Thomson Avenue. The van finally came to rest after colliding into a tree. The teen who was killed, Tenzin Drudak, was reportedly on the sidewalk and was on his way to class at the High School of Applied Communication. This is a absolutely senseless loss of life, highlighting the serious conseques of motor vehicle accidents. The driver of the minivan, reported to be a man in his thirties, was removed from the scene to Elmhurst Hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

This is a horrible tragedy, and our thoughts and deepest condolences go out to all who knew and loved this young man. Exercising good judgment, the teen's high school is assembling a crisis team to lend support to his grieving classmates. The reason this minivan operator lost control of his vehicle has yet to emerge, and more facts will likely develop as time goes on. Timely investigation of the facts surrounding an accident is just one of many reasons why it is critical to obtain proper legal representation shortly following a serious injury or death caused by another's negligence.

Block O'Toole & Murphy, LLP is a personal injury trial law firm that is dedicated to pursuing justice for those injured or killed in motor vehicle, as well as other types of accidents, and knows how to protect victim's rights. For years, the firm has used its knowledge, skill and compassion to recover maximum financial compensation for car accident victims, and has sought to obtain some measure of justice by holding those responsible parties accountable for their actions.

If you or someone you know has been injured in a motor vehicle accident, as a driver or as a pedestrian, please call Block O'Toole & Murphy, LLP at (212) 736-5300. It is never too early to start protecting your rights.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/12/nyregion/van-jumps-queens-sidewalk-killing-pedestrian.html?partner=socialflow&smid=tw-nytmetro&_r=1&

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/16-year-old-killed-queens-minivan-jumps-curb-article-1.1285332

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/16-year-old-killed-queens-minivan-jumps-curb-article-1.1285332

http://gothamist.com/2013/03/11/teen_killed_4_other_pedestrians_inj.php

http://www.newsday.com/news/teen-killed-as-car-jumps-the-curb-in-queens-officials-say-1.4792419?qr=1

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/queens/pedestrian_clinging_five_life_after_Yeg6eH3cb6tKqZeoAJIVwN

http://us.topnewstoday.org/new+york/article/4963164/

http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2013/03/11/at-least-3-injured-after-car-jumps-curb-in-queens/

Source: http://www.newyorknypersonalinjuryblog.com/2013/03/minivan-jumps-curb-onto-sidewalk-tragically-killing-a-16-year-old-student-in-queens-car-accident.shtml

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Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Watch action-hero films and legal dramas, Chongqing mayor ...

China?s judges?should watch more foreign films that involve heroes and court-rooms because?they?show?that justice always prevails over evil - well?most of the time anyway.

This is?the?advice of Huang Qifan, the mayor of Chongqing, to China's top court judges.

Huang made the suggestion?during a panel discussion of the city's delegation as part of the National People's Congress (NPC) meeting in Beijing on Monday.

According to news portal China.com.cn, Huang urged Chinese judges to watch these foreign films because?they would?improve their ability to make decisions on important legal cases. However, he said it would be best to do?the activity?on Sundays -?their day off.

During a session for the Chongqing delegation, Huang said there were two types of films judges should watch: action-hero films and courtroom dramas.

Watching action-hero films, Huang said, would?improve judges? abilities to balance emotion with rational thinking when making decisions.

Huang also encouraged judges to?study western court-room dramas,?particularly,?films about American jury trials in which defendants and plaintiffs try to influence the jury?s final decision.

Huang, however,?did not name any films he thought the judges should watch.

But with China's strict censorship, even judges?may have to watch films with scenes?cut from them.?Censorship there is still very strict and?sexually-explicit scenes, sensitive political issues, and other?topics deemed inappropriate by?censors?are often ruthlessly?deleted.

Such a statement would have been unthinkable a year ago when disgraced former Chongqing party boss Bo Xilai was still in power.

Huang, 60, is one of the few senior Chongqing officials who managed to?survive politically after the fall of Bo last year.

Bo was well known for his attempts to revive Maoist ideals in Chongqing, which he claimed would improve public morale.

Huang had served as the municipality's vice-mayor from 2001 to 2009 and the two was seen as close allies until?Bo was ousted as party chief last March.

Huang?claimed?he?had openly challenged Bo on a number of issues, including?Bo's?decision to?sack Wang Lijun, the former Chongqing police chief. Wang fled to the US consulate in Chengdu to seek asylum.

Source: http://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/1189136/watch-action-hero-films-and-legal-dramas-chongqing-mayor-advises-judges

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New hope for reversing the effects of spinal cord injury

Mar. 12, 2013 ? Walking is the obvious goal for individuals who have a chronic spinal cord injury, but it is not the only one. Regaining sensation and continence control also are important goals that can positively impact an individual's quality of life. New hope for reversing the effects of spinal cord injury may be found in a combination of stem cell therapy and physical therapy as reported in Cell Transplantation by scientists at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.

"Our phase one/two clinical trial had one goal: to give patients who have no other treatment options some hope," said Hatem E. Sabaawy, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of medicine in the molecular and regenerative medicine program at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. "Early findings have concluded that we have met our goal and can improve the quality of life for individuals with spinal cord injuries by providing a safe treatment that restores some neurological function."

Dr. Sabaawy led a clinical trial that included 70 patients who had cervical or thoracic spinal cord injuries and were previously treated for at least six months without response. The patients were randomized into two groups, both of which were given physical therapy treatment. One of the groups also received stem cells derived from their own bone marrow injected near the injury site. Using the American Spinal Injury Association Impairment (AIS) Scale, patients received neurological and physical evaluations monthly for 18 months to determine if sensory and motor functions improved.

"Of primary importance, there was a notable absence of side effects in patients treated with stem cells during the course of our investigation," added Dr. Sabaawy, who also is a resident member of The Cancer Institute of New Jersey at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.

None of the patients in the control group who received only physical therapy showed any improvement in sensory or motor function during the same time frame. Although the scale of injuries differed, all patients who were treated with a combination of bone-marrow derived stem cells and physical therapy responded to tactile and sensory stimuli as early as 4 weeks into the study. After 12 weeks, they experienced improvements in sensation and muscle strength, which was associated with enhanced potency and improved bladder and bowel control that eventually allowed patients to live catheter-free. Patients who showed improvement based on the AIS scale also were able to sit up and turn in their beds.

"Since the emergence of stem cells as a potential therapy for spinal cord injury, scientists have diligently sought the best application for using their regenerating properties to improve a patient's mobility," said Joseph R. Bertino, MD, University Professor of medicine and pharmacology, interim director, Stem Cell Institute of New Jersey and chief scientific officer at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey. "Dr. Sabaawy's discovery that treatment is more successful when stem cell therapy is combined with physical therapy could provide a remarkable, and hopefully sustainable, improvement in the overall quality of life for patients with spinal cord injury."

At the end of 18 months, 23 of the 50 patients who received both physical therapy and stem cell therapy showed a significant improvement of at least 10 points on the AIS scale. Several were able to walk with assistance. In addition, more gains were made in motor skill control by patients with thoracic spinal cord injuries, suggesting that patients with thoracic spinal cord injuries may respond better to the combined treatment.

Dr. Sabaawy however cautioned that more studies are needed with a larger number of patients to test different cell dose levels and intervals at which stem cell therapy should be delivered.

"Although a cure for spinal cord injury does not yet exist, it is clear that the regenerative and secretory properties of bone-marrow derived stem cells can improve symptoms of paralysis in some patients when coupled with the current standard of care that physical therapy provides," said Dr. Sabaawy. "We will continue monitoring our patients for long-term safety effects of stem cell therapy and work to expand our research through a phase two clinical trial that can be conducted at multiple centers nationwide and internationally."

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Wael Abo El-kheir, Hala Gabr, Mohamed Reda Awad, Osama Ghannam, Yousef Barakat, Haithem A. Farghali, Zeinab M. El Maadawi, Ibrahim Ewes, Hatem E. Sabaawy. Autologous bone marrow-derived cell therapy combined with physical therapy induces functional improvement in chronic spinal cord injury patients. Cell Transplantation, 2013; DOI: 10.3727/096368913X664540

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/boY8BaZrx_Y/130312151947.htm

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10 Hot New Convertibles for Summer 2013 and Beyond

If there's one upcoming droptop built to cannonball across the country, it's the new Corvette Convertible. The only problem? We might have to wait until next summer, as the Vette won't see showrooms until the latter part of 2013. No matter. When it does hit the streets, expect a flurry of high fives at every stoplight. The new Vette's shape is a little cleaner and less fussy without the Coupe's roof and shoulder-mounted cooling ducts, so it might end up as the prettiest of all Stingrays.

Under that scooped hood is the same 6.2-liter LT1 V-8, packing 450 hp and 450 lb-ft of torque. Lest anyone think the convertible Corvette is just some boulevard cruiser, the engineers have promised an experience just as rewarding as the hard top. The suspension settings were not relaxed for the convertible. For anyone who wants to take the ragtop on a road course, a Z51 package brings dry sump oiling for the powerplant along with coolers for the transmission and differential.

The roof remains fabric but is crafted with more sound insulation, and will lower in 21 seconds with the touch of just one button (or your key fob). And it can all happen at speeds up to 30 mph. We can't wait for our first turn behind the wheel.

Source: http://www.popularmechanics.com/cars/10-hot-new-convertibles-for-summer-2013-and-beyond?src=rss

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Dartmouth contemplates hitting a new low (Powerlineblog)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/290471552?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Edward Corcoran: Capital Gain, Social Loss

Investments provide two major types of returns: dividends or bond interest based on company profits, and capital gains based on increasing valuation of the asset. Dividends and interest paid from real earnings help power the economy. Capital gains also help power the economy; but in addition they serve as a powerful system transferring wealth to favored individuals -- basically those with money to start with. Favorable tax treatment of capital gains exacerbates this effect. The favored individuals who receive capital gains become relatively better off; everyone else becomes relatively worse off.

Increased valuation of an asset may come from increased capital investment, as when a homeowner modernizes a kitchen or a company modernizes its facilities. Such increases are generally not treated as capital gains, but simply as capital increases. For companies, increasing profits naturally raise valuation as the return on investment increases, rewarding those who set up companies or manage their real growth. As valuations rise, much of the gains, however temporary they prove to be, may be siphoned off by owners and managers. Valuation is often based partly or even exclusively on expected profits, which may be purposefully hyped or even illusory. The dot-com bubble certainly illustrated that situation. An extreme example was Global Crossing; it's market valuation reached an astounding $38 billion the year before it collapsed in bankruptcy.

Obviously people who buy early and sell when the valuation is high reap significant capital gains, while those who buy at the high point experience significant capital losses. Neither of them have made any real contribution to the economy. Overall, the capital gains made by the winning group will offset the capital losses of the losing group. But the two groups are not equal. The winners are more often those with the assets to continually assess the market and adjust their positions, perhaps using insider information or at least information not generally recognized. The losers are often the smaller investors. It has not been unusual for brokerages to tout stocks to small investors at the same time that they have been selling off the same stocks themselves. Shrewd speculators can reap fortunes without making any positive contribution to the economy. An extreme example of that is the recently developed systems for instant trading. Buying and selling stocks with microsecond efficiency can systematically skim capital gains from the market, clearly at the cost of those unable to compete at that level and certainly without any positive contribution to the overall economy.

Major amounts of capital gains are also made by the general appreciation of the market as a whole. An upward climb of the Dow Jones Index or the overall level of real estate valuations will result in major capital gains for investors and speculators. The actual rise in the real asset values will almost always be much less. This rising tide raises all boats; but those without boats -- everyday people with no significant market presence -- lose out. The share of societal wealth held by those with assets increases; those with more assets get more increases.

For successful speculators and many homeowners, the rise in valuation is simply a windfall. People holding these assets not only receive an unearned income, but they also receive a very favorable tax break on the capital gains. The basic justification for the favorable tax treatment is that such capital gains provide investor resources that fuel market growth. So the gains result not only in a significant increase in individual wealth of investors, but are an essential mechanism for funding further economic growth. But how much of these capital gains are actually re-invested in economic development is not clear. Certainly much of this new wealth does not go into investment and some portion goes into further speculation. Indeed, speculators can get rich without making any contribution to society as a whole, while their gains are given favorable tax treatment.

Recent years have seen a steady increase in the share of wealth held by the very wealthy. As a result, wealth inequality in the United States is in the same league with the Ivory Coast and Cameroon. Within the overall U.S. financial system which methodically shifts wealth into the hands of the upper class, the favorable tax treatment of capital gains is one of the major facilitators of this trend. It is of course easy to understand why people who benefit from this system support it -- the same financial elite that bankrolls elections and supports an extensive lobbying effort in Washington. It is harder to understand why people who are continually short-changed would support a system that systematically increases the gap between the wealthy and everyday citizens.

The bottom line is that capital gains in general and their favorable tax treatment in particular are major mechanisms facilitating the continuing flow of wealth to the wealthy. To the extent that this favorable tax treatment facilitates economic expansion, the overall economy is mis-structured. Moving more assets to the wealthy should certainly not be a prerequisite for job development and economic progress.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/edward-corcoran/capital-gain-social-loss_b_2846478.html

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Nerve damage may underlie widespread, unexplained chronic pain in children

Mar. 11, 2013 ? Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have described what may be a newly identified disease that appears to explain some cases of widespread chronic pain and other symptoms in children and young adults. Their report that will appear in the April issue of the journal Pediatrics, and has received early online release, finds that most of a group of young patients seen at the MGH for chronic, unexplained pain had test results indicating small-fiber polyneuropathy, a condition not previously reported in children. The MGH investigators call this new syndrome juvenile-onset small-fiber polyneuropathy or JOSeFINE.

"We've found the beginnings of a way to better evaluate young patients with otherwise unexplained widespread body pain," says Anne Louise Oaklander, MD, PhD, director of the Nerve Injury Unit in the MGH Department of Neurology and corresponding author of the Pediatrics paper. "By identifying the tests that are useful for diagnosing this condition, we hope to reduce the use of unnecessary, expensive, sometimes painful and potentially harmful testing that many of these children have undergone."

Small-fiber polyneuropathy (SFPN) involves widespread damage to the type of nerve fibers that carry pain signals from the skin and also control autonomic functions such as heart rate, blood pressure and sweating. Most commonly associated with diabetes, SFPN can be caused by other disorders in older adults or by exposure to toxic substances. Typical symptoms include chronic pain in several parts of the body, often beginning in the feet or lower legs, along with symptoms of autonomic dysfunction such as gastrointestinal problems, dizziness or fainting when standing, rapid heart rate, and changes in the appearance of skin. Specific diagnostic criteria have been established for SFPN, and accurate diagnosis can guide appropriate treatment choice.

Although polyneuropathy has been considered rare in children, occasional cases have been described. To get a better sense of the possible contribution of SFPN to chronic pain in children, Oaklander and her co-author Max Klein, PhD, a research fellow in Neurology at MGH, reviewed the records of 41 patients treated by Oaklander between 2007 and 2011 for persistent widespread pain in several parts of the body that began before age 21. In a search for the cause of their symptoms, all of the patients had undergone a range of diagnostic tests at the MGH and other leading institutions.

Recommended diagnostic tests for SFPN include a type of skin biopsy that characterizes the number and condition of nerve fibers in the lower leg and autonomic function testing, including monitoring the heart rate and blood pressure when an individual breaths deeply, blows out when the airway is blocked or is placed on a tilt table. A control group of 38 age- and gender-matched volunteer children underwent the same autonomic function tests that the patients had received, and control values for neurodiagnostic skin biopsies were based on samples from healthy age- and gender-matched volunteers collected at MGH.

The analysis revealed that 24 of the 41 patients met criteria for a diagnosis of SFPN, meaning that results of at least one test clearly indicated the presence of the disease. Of the remaining 17 patients, 16 were determined to possibly or probably have SFPN, based on less seriously abnormal test results. Among the autonomic function tests, sweat production -- a sensitive diagnostic test for SFPN -- was reduced in 82 percent of patients, compared with 34 percent of controls. In contrast, results of other tests that the patients had undergone -- including magnetic resonance imaging, spinal taps and gastrointestinal endoscopy -- provided no useful diagnostic information.

Many of the patients participating in the study had reported that their symptoms began after an earlier illness or injury. A third had some history of autoimmune illnesses, and around half had family histories of autoimmunity. Tests of blood and other body fluids revealed hints of disordered immunity -- particularly low levels of complement, a protein involved in the innate immune system. Oaklander notes that these observations are preliminary and require further investigation.

"The importance that families placed on finding an accurate diagnosis and effective treatment for their sick children is illustrated by how many of them traveled thousands of miles, including some from other countries, in a desperate search for answers," Oaklander says. "Because everyone wanted to help these children, they had undergone myriad tests, two thirds had been hospitalized, and some had tried many medications, usually without benefit.

"Based on our findings we now take a two-part approach to evaluating such patients: first, evaluation by a neurologist for the possibility of small-fiber neuropathy, and if that is confirmed, specific blood tests to pinpoint the cause. It's important to consider this diagnosis, since there are treatments for many symptoms of neuropathy -- including medications that increase blood pressure and improve gastrointestinal function -- and for some of the underlying causes." Oaklander is an associate professor, and Klein is an instructor in Neurology at Harvard Medical School. The study was supported by U.S. Public Health Service grant K24NS059892, Department of Defense grant GW093049 and the Bradley and Curvey Family Foundations.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts General Hospital.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. Anne Louise Oaklander and Max M. Klein. Evidence of Small-Fiber Polyneuropathy in Unexplained, Juvenile-Onset, Widespread Pain Syndromes. Pediatrics, March 11, 2013 DOI: 10.1542/peds.2012-2597

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

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/OisL6KZjJzc/130311101748.htm

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