Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Blasting cancer from the inside out

Blasting cancer from the inside out [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-Dec-2011
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Contact: George Hunka
ghunka@aftau.org
212-742-9070
American Friends of Tel Aviv University

Tel Aviv University develops tumor destruction method that also creates immunity

Even when surgical tumor removal is combined with a heavy dose of chemotherapy or radiation, there's no guarantee that the cancer will not return. Now researchers at Tel Aviv University are strengthening the odds in favor of permanent tumor destruction and an immunity to the cancer's return with a new method of tumor removal.

Based on "tumor ablation" a process through which the tumor is destroyed inside the body, Prof. Yona Keisari of TAU's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Prof. Itzhak Kelson of TAU's Department of Physics and Astronomy have developed a radioactive wire, less than an inch long and about the width of a pin. When inserted into a solid tumor, the wire releases lethal radioactive atoms that irradiate the tumor from the inside out.

As it breaks down, the tumor releases antigens which trigger an immune response against the cancerous cells, Prof. Keisari explains. Not only are cancerous cells more reliably destroyed, but in the majority of cases the body develops immunity against the return of the tumor, a rare happening when the tumor is removed surgically.

The research has been published in a number of academic journals, most recently Translational Research.

A cancer-fighting cluster bomb

Currently, cancer patients receive gamma radiation when they undergo radiation therapy. Although alpha particles are much more effective, their range is so short that they're unable to penetrate the skin, and therefore ineffective in traditional radiation treatments. As developed in Prof. Kelson's lab, the radioactive wire circumvents the drawbacks of alpha radiation by implanting radioactive ions directly into the tumor.

"The wire is coated in atoms that emit not just alpha particles, but also daughter atoms which are themselves alpha emitters. These particles diffuse inside the tumor, spreading further and further before disintegrating," Prof. Kelson explains. "It's like a cluster bomb instead of detonating at one point, the atoms continuously disperse and emit alpha particles at increasing distances." The process takes approximately ten days, leaving only non-radioactive and non-toxic amounts of lead. The wire itself, which is initially inserted into the tumor by hypodermic needle, decays harmlessly in the body.

In pre-clinical trials on mouse models, this method has shown a distinct advantage over surgical tumor removal. One group of the mice was treated with surgical tumor removal, while another group underwent ablation treatment using the radioactive wire. When cells from the tumor were re-injected into the subject, 100 percent of those treated surgically redeveloped their tumor, compared to only 50 percent of those treated with the radioactive wire. The researchers have had excellent results with many types of cancer models, including lung, pancreatic, colon, breast, and brain tumors.

Ultimately, this shows that tumor removal by ablation increases immunity against the return of the cancerous tumor cells. "Surgery can eliminate 80 to 90 percent of a tumor, chemotherapy another 5-15 percent," says Prof. Keisari. "There are often a small number of metastatic cells left in the body, and they kill about 85% of the patients." Ablation methods, through the stimulation of specific anti-tumor immunity, have a better record for killing off the cancer cells that escape other types of treatment. It's also less invasive, more efficient, and more cost-effective.

Technology heads to trial

The treatment, called DARTTM (Diffusing Alpha-emitters Radiation Therapy), has now been commercialized by Althera Medical Ltd., co-located in Tel Aviv and New York City, and will soon undergo clinical trials at Beilinson Hospital in Israel.

According to Prof. Keisari, this is just the beginning of an emerging field of cancer treatment. He hopes to see researchers from all over the world come together to create a comprehensive view of the advances in tumor ablation and the stimulation of anti-tumor immunity.

In collaboration with Prof. Rafi Korenstein, also of the Sackler Facutly of Medicine, Prof. Keisari has developed a second ablation technique, called pulsed electric current ablation, in which electrodes are inserted into tumors and emit electrical currents to create a chemical reaction that destroys the tumor.

###

American Friends of Tel Aviv University (http://www.aftau.org) supports Israel's leading, most comprehensive and most sought-after center of higher learning. Independently ranked 94th among the world's top universities for the impact of its research, TAU's innovations and discoveries are cited more often by the global scientific community than all but 10 other universities.

Internationally recognized for the scope and groundbreaking nature of its research and scholarship, Tel Aviv University consistently produces work with profound implications for the future.



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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Blasting cancer from the inside out [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 6-Dec-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: George Hunka
ghunka@aftau.org
212-742-9070
American Friends of Tel Aviv University

Tel Aviv University develops tumor destruction method that also creates immunity

Even when surgical tumor removal is combined with a heavy dose of chemotherapy or radiation, there's no guarantee that the cancer will not return. Now researchers at Tel Aviv University are strengthening the odds in favor of permanent tumor destruction and an immunity to the cancer's return with a new method of tumor removal.

Based on "tumor ablation" a process through which the tumor is destroyed inside the body, Prof. Yona Keisari of TAU's Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Prof. Itzhak Kelson of TAU's Department of Physics and Astronomy have developed a radioactive wire, less than an inch long and about the width of a pin. When inserted into a solid tumor, the wire releases lethal radioactive atoms that irradiate the tumor from the inside out.

As it breaks down, the tumor releases antigens which trigger an immune response against the cancerous cells, Prof. Keisari explains. Not only are cancerous cells more reliably destroyed, but in the majority of cases the body develops immunity against the return of the tumor, a rare happening when the tumor is removed surgically.

The research has been published in a number of academic journals, most recently Translational Research.

A cancer-fighting cluster bomb

Currently, cancer patients receive gamma radiation when they undergo radiation therapy. Although alpha particles are much more effective, their range is so short that they're unable to penetrate the skin, and therefore ineffective in traditional radiation treatments. As developed in Prof. Kelson's lab, the radioactive wire circumvents the drawbacks of alpha radiation by implanting radioactive ions directly into the tumor.

"The wire is coated in atoms that emit not just alpha particles, but also daughter atoms which are themselves alpha emitters. These particles diffuse inside the tumor, spreading further and further before disintegrating," Prof. Kelson explains. "It's like a cluster bomb instead of detonating at one point, the atoms continuously disperse and emit alpha particles at increasing distances." The process takes approximately ten days, leaving only non-radioactive and non-toxic amounts of lead. The wire itself, which is initially inserted into the tumor by hypodermic needle, decays harmlessly in the body.

In pre-clinical trials on mouse models, this method has shown a distinct advantage over surgical tumor removal. One group of the mice was treated with surgical tumor removal, while another group underwent ablation treatment using the radioactive wire. When cells from the tumor were re-injected into the subject, 100 percent of those treated surgically redeveloped their tumor, compared to only 50 percent of those treated with the radioactive wire. The researchers have had excellent results with many types of cancer models, including lung, pancreatic, colon, breast, and brain tumors.

Ultimately, this shows that tumor removal by ablation increases immunity against the return of the cancerous tumor cells. "Surgery can eliminate 80 to 90 percent of a tumor, chemotherapy another 5-15 percent," says Prof. Keisari. "There are often a small number of metastatic cells left in the body, and they kill about 85% of the patients." Ablation methods, through the stimulation of specific anti-tumor immunity, have a better record for killing off the cancer cells that escape other types of treatment. It's also less invasive, more efficient, and more cost-effective.

Technology heads to trial

The treatment, called DARTTM (Diffusing Alpha-emitters Radiation Therapy), has now been commercialized by Althera Medical Ltd., co-located in Tel Aviv and New York City, and will soon undergo clinical trials at Beilinson Hospital in Israel.

According to Prof. Keisari, this is just the beginning of an emerging field of cancer treatment. He hopes to see researchers from all over the world come together to create a comprehensive view of the advances in tumor ablation and the stimulation of anti-tumor immunity.

In collaboration with Prof. Rafi Korenstein, also of the Sackler Facutly of Medicine, Prof. Keisari has developed a second ablation technique, called pulsed electric current ablation, in which electrodes are inserted into tumors and emit electrical currents to create a chemical reaction that destroys the tumor.

###

American Friends of Tel Aviv University (http://www.aftau.org) supports Israel's leading, most comprehensive and most sought-after center of higher learning. Independently ranked 94th among the world's top universities for the impact of its research, TAU's innovations and discoveries are cited more often by the global scientific community than all but 10 other universities.

Internationally recognized for the scope and groundbreaking nature of its research and scholarship, Tel Aviv University consistently produces work with profound implications for the future.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/afot-bcf120611.php

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WikiLeaks' Assange can continue extradition fight

(AP) ? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was granted permission by judges Monday to continue his legal battle to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex crimes allegations ? but was warned that his chances of success are slim.

At a hearing at London's High Court, senior judges John Thomas and Duncan Ouseley said Assange would be allowed to apply to Britain's Supreme Court to argue that Europe's process of carrying out extradition was flawed.

The WikiLeaks' chief now has 14 days to submit a written request for a hearing at the country's highest court, Gareth Peirce, a lawyer for Assange, said outside court.

The decision means Assange won't face immediate deportation, and is likely to spend a second Christmas living under curfew at a supporter's country estate in eastern England.

Assange's legal team argue that police and prosecutors ? like the Swedish prosecutor seeking to bring Assange back to the country for questioning ? are not a proper judicial authority, and shouldn't have the right to order extraditions.

Judges said Assange's lawyers had raised a legal question of "general public importance," which is necessary to win an audience at the Supreme Court. But Thomas added that the appeal's "chances of success may be extraordinarily slim."

Assange, who listened attentively and scribbled notes throughout the hearing, was cheered by a small group of supporters ? including several demonstrators from the nearby Occupy London encampment ? as he left the court.

"The High Court has decided that an issue that arises from my own case is of general public importance and may be of assistance in other cases and should be heard at the Supreme Court," Assange said on the steps of the courthouse.

"I think this is the right decision and I am thankful. The long struggle for justice for me and for others continues," he said.

Assange, 40, leads the foundering WikiLeaks anti-secrecy movement, which has been hit with a series of legal and financial setbacks. He was accused of rape, coercion and molestation following encounters with two Swedish women in August 2010. Swedish authorities issued a European Arrest Warrant on rape and molestation accusations, and Assange was arrested in London in December 2010.

Assange was released on bail on the condition that he lives under curfew and wears an electronic tag.

In February, Judge Howard Riddle ruled that Assange can be extradited to Sweden to face questions about the allegations, rejecting his claims that he would not receive a fair trial there.

Assange appealed against the decision. He also insists that the sexual encounters were entirely consensual, and legal in the context of English law.

Judges said Monday that they believed Assange would have faced charges if the incidents had taken place in Britain.

Per E. Samuelsson, Assange's Swedish lawyer, hailed the court's decision to allow him to continue his legal fight.

"This is positive news for Julian Assange and means he will remain in the U.K. while the court assesses his appeal," Samuelsson said. "It is something we have fought for."

Claes Borgstrom, the lawyer representing the two women bringing sex crime charges against Assange, called the decision regrettable.

"My clients have waited for over a year for a legal conclusion of this and now they will have to wait even longer," Borgstrom said. "Then it will still end with Assange being transferred to Sweden. The rules are very clear about this."

"I regret he himself doesn't choose to hand himself over," Borgstrom added.

He said the two women had hoped that the case would have been settled at Monday's hearing. "Now they have to wait for another few months. We are hardened by now, but of course this is still stressful," he said.

Peirce said a panel of three Supreme Court judges will review Assange's appeal for a hearing at the court. If accepted, it could be several more months before his fate is decided conclusively. However, if the judges reject the plea for a hearing, Assange could be sent to Sweden within 10 days, she said.

The High Court judges appealed to their colleagues at the Supreme Court to resolve the case as speedily as possible.

"We would, for obvious reasons, ask that the point is decided as quickly as possible," Thomas told the hearing.

Outside the court, masked members of the hacker group Anonymous and supporters of the Occupy protest ? some of whom wore the cartoon-style masks that have become synonymous with the demonstration, mingled with WikiLeaks activists.

One banner draped over railings outside the court read "Free Assange. Free Manning," referring to U.S. Army analyst Bradley Manning who is in custody at Fort Leavenworth prison in Kansas, suspected of disclosing secret intelligence to WikiLeaks.

_____

Associated Press writer Malin Rising in Stockholm contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-12-05-WikiLeaks/id-0c79e4a846f44599aab34efc67c65f9a

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds: Sharing Ice Cream, Saliva


Sorry, Scarlett Johansson. But it's becoming increasingly clear that you have a legitimate reason to be jealous of Blake Lively.

Multiple pieces of evidence over the last few days confirm the rumor that this Gossip Girl beauty is dating Ryan Reynolds.

Gorgeous Blake LivelySexy Ryan Reynolds

Ryan likes what he sees. So does every other warm-blooded male.

FIRST, witnesses tell People the pair was spotted in Ridgefield, Connecticut on Friday, holding hands, admiring the holiday decorations and sampling dessert together at Deborah Ann's Sweet Shoppe.

"They picked their own flavors, English Toffee and Chocolate Fudge Brownie, but put them in the same cup and shared it," an insider says. "They seemed very happy together. They were very excited about the ice cream."

Well, sure. But calories are not the only thing these two shared: TMZ has uncovered a video that depicts Blake and Ryan totally making out during a trip to a bed and breakfast in Utah. Watch it now and then come up with a nickname for these two...

Blyan? Rake? Hottest Couple of All-Time?

[Photos: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/12/blake-lively-and-ryan-reynolds-sharing-ice-cream-saliva/

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Ex-Panamanian dictator to be extradited in weeks

(AP) ? Former Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega will be extradited to his homeland in the next few weeks, the French Justice Ministry said Thursday.

France and Panama have been working out the details of the extradition, Justice Ministry spokesman Bruno Badre told The Associated Press by telephone. A French court ruled on Nov. 23 that Noriega can be handed over to serve time for past crimes, more than 20 years after being ousted and arrested in a U.S. invasion.

Badre said "the judicial conditions have now been filled" for extradition and "this will occur in the next few weeks."

The elderly former strongman has been behind bars in Florida, on drug charges, and in France, for money laundering. Panama wants Noriega returned to serve prison terms handed down after he was convicted in absentia for embezzlement, corruption and murder.

The court decision came after months of legal procedures. Friends and foes alike feared that Noriega might die in a French prison ? notably Panamanians who fought against human rights abuses during his 1983-1989 regime.

Noriega, a one-time CIA asset, turned into an embarrassment for the U.S. after he sidled up to Colombia's Medellin drug cartel and turned to crime.

In Panama, he is accused of murdering opponents including Moises Giroldi, a military commander who led a failed rebellion two months before the U.S. invasion, and Hugo Spadafora, whose decapitated body was found on the border with Costa Rica in 1985.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2011-12-01-EU-France-Noriega/id-f086abc111b7438ca88320680d65d4a2

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Independent Russian election watchdog faces probe (AP)

MOSCOW ? Russian prosecutors on Thursday opened a probe against the country's main independent election watchdog on suspicion of election law violations ? just three days before the national parliamentary vote.

Golos is a respected watchdog that provides training for election observers and runs a website collecting complaints of voting violations. It has recorded more than 4,500 complaints related to Sunday's election, most involving the dominant United Russia party.

The Moscow Prosecutor's Office said in a statement that it opened the probe after discovering "serious violations of election law."

Golos official Andrei Buzin told The Associated Press that the group has been accused of publishing opinion polls after the legal deadline. Russian law prohibits disseminating poll results for five days prior to an election.

Buzin described the authorities' move as the "usual trick to get us distracted from our work at the most inconvenient time."

"They might as well have accused us of murder and suspended our activities while they're investigating," Buzin said.

Also Thursday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is running to take back the presidency next year, alleged that unspecified Western countries aimed to influence the election.

"We know that ... representatives of some countries meet with those whom they pay money, the so-called grant recipients, give them instructions and guidance for what 'work' they need to do to influence the election campaign in our country," Putin said. "That's a wasted effort, like throwing money to the winds."

Prosecutors' documents sent to Golos and seen by The Associated Press claim that prosecutors also found "indications" that Golos is "abusing freedom of the press by falsifying publicly important data, spreading rumors under the disguise of reliable facts in an attempt to blacken the party and some of its members." The documents does not specify the party's name.

The prosecutors also issued a warning to the group's director Lilya Shibanova to refrain from "continuing to conduct illegal activities."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/russia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111201/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_election

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PFT: Cutler unsure if he'll play this season

Super Bowl FootballAP

As Super Bowl XLVI approaches, an embarrassing situation for the NFL regarding Super Bowl XLV still lingers.

And it possibly will linger for many more months.

On Wednesday, Judge Barbara M.G. Lynn denied an effort by the league and the Cowboys to dismiss a class action lawsuit filed by fans who showed up at Cowboys Stadium to find there weren?t chairs to go along with their tickets, due to an inability to complete the installation of temporary seating.? Specifically, Judge Lynn has allowed the breach of contract claim to proceed.

Per the Associated Press, the 10-page order concludes that the plaintiffs could be eligible for compensation far beyond that which the NFL offered in the wake of the debacle.

In response, NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy tells PFT that the league?s offers to the fans exceeded what the law allows.

?For months, the NFL has attempted legal maneuver after legal maneuver to deny the fans what they are entitled to,? said Michael Avenatti of Eagan Avenatti, LLP, lead counsel for the displaced fans, in a statement released to PFT.? ?But in litigation, much like in football, you have to play four quarters.? Now that the Court has ruled, we look forward to learning from the executives of the NFL what they knew before the game and what they did about it, if anything.?

Avenatti is referring to the discovery process, which will entail a series of depositions of high-level officials from the league office.

Other ancillary claims made by the plaintiffs were dismissed.? Avenatti said that Judge Lynn has allowed two of the other claims to be re-filed in a manner that complies with applicable requirements.? The NFL undoubtedly will file a new motion to dismiss those claims, once they are re-filed.

And so the process will continue to drag out, with the only question being whether this case will be resolved before the next Super Bowl that is played in Cowboys Stadium.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/11/30/cutler-not-sure-if-hell-play-this-season/related/

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Balloonists lose battle to recover legal fees from farm | 89.3 KPCC

A group of Coachella Valley hot air balloon operators lost their legal fight to recover legal fees racked up battling a lawsuit over flight restrictions. A Valley olive ranch had tried to ban flights above its property.

The balloonists were sued two years ago for allegedly flying too close to a ranch owned by a farming family from San Diego County. Several other balloon operators were also threatened with legal action, and the flurry of litigation froze nearly all balloon flights above the Coachella Valley.

Riverside County Superior Court Justice Randall White ruled JCM Farming does not have to reimburse two balloon operators more than $330,000 in legal fees because the case is "not in the public interest."

Attorneys for JCM Farming (owned by the couple John and Carol Marelli) had initially claimed the low flying balloons invade the privacy of residents and pose a safety risk to workers. The balloonists countered that they never fly below FAA requirements.

JCM Farming dropped the lawsuit earlier this year after a massive media firestorm ? just as it seemed the case would go to trial.

Back in January, the Desert Sun published an "investigation" on the subject, revealing JCM's history of suing a crop-duster, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the FAA ? all over low-flying planes, and all while trying to get their own permit for a helipad.

The family shot back a response, saying that "we have been awakened as early as 6:30 a.m. to the sound of balloon burners as they drop down as low as window level of our top floor."

They

"Such extra-judicial comments were made by media seeking, reckless individuals," said JCM Farming. "Our family seeks only what law-abiding citizens of our precious country are guaranteed - due process under the law."

Meanwhile, Robert Guilliland, a defense lawyer for the balloonists, has claimed that he took the case "pro bono" ? "because the legal system has thus far let these poor folks down in a big way."

An economic analysis commissioned on behalf of the balloonists calculated losses of nearly $10 million dollars to Coachella Valley tourism for each year balloons were grounded.

Additional reporting contributed by Paige Osburn

Source: http://www.scpr.org/news/2011/11/29/30107/balloonists-lose-battle-recover-legal-fees-farm/

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Orcs Must Die!


In Orcs Must Die! ($14.99 for PC and Xbox Live) you kill orcs. Shocking, huh? Okay, you also distribute a fair amount of vengeance to other monsters like kobolds and ogres. But it's the good-ol' traditional orc?bad teeth, complexion, odor, and all?that falls victim to most of the violence in this fascinating and fast-paced entry from Robot Entertainment (makers of Age of Empires Online, among other titles). It combines the first-person shooter and tower defense genres into a cohesive and frequently exciting medieval fantasy that tests both your strategic prowess and your hand-eye coordination. With tons of ways to maim the foul-smelling minions of the dark, Orcs Must Die! keeps you interested and keeps you guessing throughout.

A Thousand Ways (for Orcs) to Die
You are one of the last of the War Mages, an apprentice conscripted (after your master's untimely death) into defending the magical rifts in various locations from the onslaughts of orcs that are trying to enter them and conquer your world. You do this in each new castle or keep by buying various tools and traps to attack the orcs as they march. Some work from below, such as pressure-sensitive spikes, tar pits that slow orcs down, or catapults that send them flying in the direction you specify. Others shoot arrows and blades from the walls, or drop swinging maces and giant pounders straight from the ceiling. If that's not enough for you, you can also hire "guardians" that will shoot the orcs from afar or cleave them at close range with broadswords, or choose special weapons enchanted with powers that give you control over fire, ice, and wind.

Every time you finish a level you're awarded skulls based on your performance that let you purchase permanent upgrades to the traps that make them even more powerful. Over the course of the game you'll also gain access to weavers, who make your blade or bow deadlier, by increasing the impact or decreasing the reset times of certain traps. Because their benefits are paid for from the same pool of funds you'll use to buy traps in the first place, you'll need to plan wisely so you can survive all the way through to the end of some surprisingly long and tense levels.

Regardless, the pattern for each level is the same. Time begins "frozen" while you decide which traps you want to buy and where you want to initially deploy them, and what weaver you want to engage (you can choose only one at a time). But once you start the orcs coming, you'll have to play through a few waves of them before you'll get another full-scale breather (though you have a few seconds between waves to make minor adjustments). You can, of course, place more traps and guardians during a wave, but that becomes increasingly difficult as things get more hectic and you're forced to plow down a green-skinned battalion yourself if they overwhelm a trap or succeed in destroying one of your barricades.

Both direct and indirect methods of dispatching with the baddies are enjoyable, though you get bigger bonuses (and unlock more impressive achievements) if you kill large numbers of them simultaneously. Some levels give you additional tools that make this easy to accomplish without spending a ton of money. You may find mammoth logs attached to walls that you can set rolling down a staircase, acid pots that you can overturn when a squadron dashes beneath an overpass, or outsized chandeliers you can shoot down on top of an unsuspecting army if you run out of money (or are too cheap) to buy a ceiling trap.

Boredom and Bugs
That kind of "environmental" game play is where Orcs Must Die! excels, but there's not enough of it. It doesn't take long for a suffocating sameness to creep into the level design, with only an acid bath here or a lava pit there distinguishing one stage from the next. A larger selection of tiles for walls and floors would go a long way toward making each new castle feel like a unique place. And though you're granted a new weapon, trap, guardian, or weaver on each level, most of the time there's little incentive to not stick with combinations you already know work?this also torpedoes variety after a while.

I ran into some bugs, too, that made levels more frustrating just when they should be easing up. Because no stage can end until all the monsters are either killed or escape into the rift, if one gets trapped in a place you can't access, you might not be able to win. A catapult trap aimed a lava pit launched a couple of ogres into a place where they couldn't be melted, but also couldn't escape or be touched by our weapons, forcing us to abandon and restart the level we were positive we had completed.

Worth the Impulse Buy
Luckily, these were only occasional occurrences, and most of the time Orcs Must Die! delivered exactly what its title promises: lots and lots of dead orcs. If the game's writing leaves something to be desired?the "plot" is hokey, and a lot of Duke Nukem?style one-liners from the brutish main character get tiresome quickly?and there's no multiplayer mode for sharing the fun with a friend, the overall effect is one of an addictive, visceral thrill ride that gives you just the action you crave with almost no excess. Combined with an excellent price, Orcs Must Die! is an impulse purchase you can feel good about. Tens of thousands of orcs, on the other hand, are likely to feel a lot less happy than you almost certainly will.

More Console and Computer Game Reviews:
??? Orcs Must Die!
??? Batman: Arkham City
??? Nintendo Wii (Fall 2008)
??? Xbox 360 (250GB)
??? The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/_0BZs5vGBqQ/0,2817,2397024,00.asp

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Cancer Information ? Web Attitude Articles

A prognosis of most cancers can be very horrifying, and the best way is conquer fear is through higher information of the topic. To seek out reputable health related sources online together with cancer data like early detection, prevention, therapy, new research advances and extra visit the American Most cancers Society at www.cancer.org, devoted to ?eliminating most cancers as a significant well being drawback by preventing most cancers, saving lives, and diminishing suffering.? This site is academic and straightforward to navigate; there may be loads of complete data on specific most cancers topics discussing common sorts of most cancers including bladder most cancers, breast most cancers, colon and rectal cancer, endometrial cancer, kidney most cancers, leukemia, lung most cancers, melanoma, Non-Hodgkin?s lymphoma, pancreatic most cancers, prostate cancer, pores and skin cancer (non-melanoma), and thyroid most cancers, along with causes, remedies, coping, drug data, and medical trials.

The Nationwide Cancer Institute of the United States Nationwide Institutes of Well being positioned online at www.cancer.gov features accurate, up-to-date, complete cancer info from the United State government?s principal company for most cancers research. Discover widespread forms of most cancers listed by sorts in A-Z format, by physique location and system, childhood cancers, women?s cancers, medical trial outcomes, educational supplies, and different cancer matters including treatment, prevention, genetics, causes, screening and testing, coping with cancer, smoking and most cancers, most cancers well being disparities, reality sheets, and more. This web site discusses varieties of cancer treatment, and cancer drugs including particular medicine permitted to deal with cancer or circumstances associated to cancer, and updates on new drug improvement and approval. Complementary and various medication, like healing philosophies, approaches, and therapies are standard choices, and can be used along with or as an alternative of conventional most cancers treatment as well.

Find out about most cancers remedy trials which can be of potential benefit to you or a loved one and use this info to help resolve whether or to not participate. Additionally find good options for choosing a physician and most cancers remedy facility, nationwide Cancer Institute supported most cancers facilities, after care remedy like follow-up medical care, bodily and emotional adjustments, adjustments in social relationships, and office issues. You may also access breast cancer info, lung most cancers data, and more general data on cancer online at www.cancer-info.com, an in depth cancer website providing unbiased support and data relating to all kinds of cancer and chemotherapy choices, cancer research advances, persevering with medical schooling and more. Take this new found information and use it to beat cancer; get a new perspective and a brand new outlook on life.

If you would like supplementary info about actos and bladder cancer, swing by Lois Alladien?s Site without delay.

Source: http://articles.webdesignattitude.com/22406/disease-illness/diseases/cancer-information.html

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Heathrow predicts massive gridlock in UK strike (AP)

LONDON ? A nationwide public-sector strike next Wednesday in Britain threatens to paralyze operations at Heathrow, Europe's busiest airport.

BAA, the airport's operator, said Friday 12-hour delays for arriving passengers are likely because the Nov. 30 strike will hit the U.K. Border Agency's ability to support normal operations.

An estimated 2 million workers are expected to protest changes in public-sector pensions with a 24-hour walkout ? billed as potentially the biggest union action since 1979.

The lines at Heathrow's immigration counters are expected to be so long that passengers will need to be held on planes, BAA warned.

"This in turn would quickly create gridlock at the airport, with no available aircraft parking stands, mass cancellations of departing aircraft and diversions outside the U.K. for arriving aircraft," Normand Boivin, the chief operating officer for Heathrow, warned in a letter to airlines.

The letter, written Thursday and shared with The Associated Press, urged airlines to reduce the number of passengers they bring in on Nov. 30 because BAA had "reluctantly concluded that the U.K. Border Agency wouldn't be able to come up with a contingency plan to ensure business-as-usual."

Boivin said the border agency expects to be functioning at less than 50 percent of normal productivity.

British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways both agreed to waive fees for rebooking flights on Nov. 30 and expressed concern over the strike's impact on business.

The U.K. Border Agency acknowledged travelers could see longer waiting times at airports but said it has considered "all options" to make sure it's prepared for the strike and aims to minimize any disruptions.

It said the security of Britain's borders is the agency's top priority, though unions have criticized moves to draft in civil servants and contractors to cover for striking immigration officials.

"Our members take two to three months to train - the idea that people can cover after a few days' training is absurd," said Mark Serwotka, leader of the Public and Commercial Services union.

The Home Office said it has undertaken "significant work" to plan for the strike, which includes training managers, staff and contractors to the high standards it requires to carry out border checks and asking staff around the world to provide additional cover on Nov. 30.

Government ministers have warned the nationwide could cost the economy half a billion pounds and lead to job losses.

Heathrow Airport handles 180,000 passengers on a typical day, according to BAA.

Gatwick Airport also warned passengers to be prepared for "significant disruption" at immigration and said it asked carriers to give passengers the chance to change their flights.

Gatwick's chief operating officer, Scott Stanley said the airport is working with the border agency and airlines to put contingency measures in place and ensure disruptions are kept to a minimum.

"Unfortunately, airport staff cannot man the desks at the border zone but we will provide all necessary assistance to the Border Agency and we are determined to make sure that the needs and welfare of all our passengers will be met on the day," Stanley said.

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Cassandra Vinograd can be reached at http://twitter.com/CassVinograd

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111125/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_strike_heathrow_airport

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