Thursday, July 11, 2013

Volvo debuts new safety features for cars

Volvo says it aims to completely eliminate all deaths and serious injuries among Volvo drivers and passengers by 2020.

By Richard Read,?Guest blogger / July 10, 2013

Volvo Cars Vice President Thomas Andersson, left, and Volvo Auto India Managing Director Tomas Ernberg pose for photographs during the opening of the company?s first showroom in Ahmadabad, India, earlier this year. The struggling automobile maker is introducing three new safety features to its cars, saying it hopes by 2020, it will eliminate serious injuries and deaths in Volvo cars.

Ajit Solanki/AP/File

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No doubt about it: Volvo has had a rough couple of years. After being sold to Chinese automaker Geely in 2010, the brand has struggled to regain its footing.

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Whether that's due to the shift in administration, a slowdown in research and development, lackluster quality scores, or a general lack of enthusiasm for Volvo vehicles is debatable. What we do know is that Volvo is one of a tiny handful of brands that's faring worse in 2013 than it did in 2012. As of June 30, Volvo had only sold?32,578 vehicles in the U.S., putting it 5.9 percent below last year's stats.

But we're not counting Volvo out just yet. (Heck, if Mitsubishi is still kicking, anything's possible.) For decades, the Swedish brand has based its reputation on safety, so it's only appropriate that snazzy safety features sit at the core of Volvo's planned comeback.

The automaker recently debuted three new safety features that should begin appearing on Volvo models in late 2014. It's all part of Volvo's plan to completely eliminate deaths and serious injuries for occupants of its vehicles by the year 2020. The features are:

Pedestrian detection in darkness
?Volvo bills this as a "world first", though Audi, Mercedes-Benz, and Toyota have all unveiled similar technology, incorporated into self-dimming headlights. Still, it's a great feature, and one that fits well with Volvo's reputation of being highly pedestrian-friendly. (According to a press release, Volvo's long-awaited animal-detection system should roll out soon after this.)

Road edge and barrier detection with steer assist
?We've seen plenty of lane-assist features that alert drivers when they cross over the center line. This detection system focuses on the edge of the road, helping to steer the car back toward center -- even on roads without markings on the outer edges.?

Adaptive Cruise Control with steer assist
?Many brands have unveiled Adaptive Cruise Control systems, but given their importance as safety features, adding one more automaker to the list seems like a good thing.?

These three features should debut on the 2015?Volvo XC90 during the latter half of 2014. For more info, check out the video embedded above and the two below.

The Christian Science Monitor has assembled a diverse group of the best auto bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger,?click here.?To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link in the blog description box above.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/4-PKcY0EQNQ/Volvo-debuts-new-safety-features-for-cars

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Parting Schotts: Union women's hockey team announces 2013-14 recruiting class

Union women's hockey coach Claudia Barcomb announced her 2013-14 recruiting class Monday afternoon (I was with my son Steven and one of his friends at The Great Escape for the day and am just getting to this now).

The five players are Kathryn Davis, Alli Devens, Emily Erickson, Emma Pincott, and Eastyn Yuen.

Here is a breakdown on each player. The information is provided by Union hockey sports information director Jeff Weinstein.

Kathryn Davis
Height: 5-foot-7
Position: Defense
Hometown: Milton, Mass.
Previous Team: Lawrence Academy (Mass.)

Davis, an offensive defenseman out of Lawrence Academy, earned All-ISL honors last season, helping the Spartans finish the 2012-13 season at 9-9-5. She earned the team?s Defensive MVP award and also earned ISL Honorable Mention honors in 2012. Davis also played two seasons of junior hockey with the East Coast Wizards.

?Kathryn will greatly add to the depth of our defensive corps,? Barcomb said. ?She has the ability to be an offensive defenseman for us combining great skill with size. I think she?ll be very good for us.?

Alli Devins
Height: 5-foot-5
Position: Forward
Hometown: White River Junction, Vt.
Previous Team: The Westminster School (Conn.)

Devins served as team captain her senior year at The Westminster School, helping the Martlets to a 19-4-0 record in the Founders League. A four-year member of the varsity team, Devins finished her career with 17 goals and 27 assists, helping Westminster compile a combined record of 81-13-3 in four seasons. Devins was a three-sport athlete at Westminster, serving as captain of both the field hockey and softball teams.

?Alli is a power forward with great speed,? Barcomb said. ?I think she?ll end up being a solid penalty killer for us. She has a great work ethic and attitude.?

Emily Erickson
Height: 5-foot-4
Position: Forward
Hometown: Crosslake, Minn.
Previous Team: North American Hockey Academy

Erickson, a forward, played three years of junior hockey at the North American Hockey Academy, helping her team earn the 2013 JWHL League Championship with an overall record of 55-15-7. Her best offensive season came in 2010-11, when she recorded 40 points (13 goals, 27 assists) in 85 games played. She played two seasons of varsity hockey in eighth and ninth grade at Pequot Lakes High School, where she also served as team captain.

?Emily is a quick forward who can put the puck in the net,? Barcomb said. ?She?s strong on her skates and that will help her at this level.?

Emma Pincott
Height: 5-foot-3
Position: Goaltender
Hometown: Vernon, British Columbia
Previous Team: The Edge School for Athletes

Pincott, a goaltender, played three seasons at The Edge School for Athletes, finishing the 2012-13 season with a 2.10 goals-against average and .915 save percentage. She was a JWHL North Division All-Star in 2013 and earned Canadian Sport School Hockey League MVP honors in 2012. Pincott was also an invitee to Team Canada?s U18 Goalie Camp in 2012.

?Emma is a quick goalie who works really hard and has earned the attention of Hockey Canada,? Barcomb said. ?She will add to the depth of our goaltending.?

Eastyn Yuen
Height: 5-foot-3
Position: Forward
Hometown: Winnipeg, Manitoba
Previous Team: Shaftesbury Prep

Yuen, a forward, played two seasons of Midget AAA hockey with the Winnipeg Ice and played the 2012-13 season with the newly formed Shaftesbury Titans Prep School hockey team, where she recorded 34 points (16 goals, 18 assists) in 54 games. She was a Team Manitoba finalist in 2011 (top 25) and 2012, earning recognition as one of the top players in her league.

?Eastyn as an all-around solid player with good hands and good speed, combined with great vision and an understanding of the game,? Barcomb said.

Follow @slapschotts on Twitter. Follow @dgazettesports on Twitter.

Source: http://www.dailygazette.com/weblogs/schott/2013/jul/08/union-womens-hockey-team-announces-2013-14-recruit/

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Leaked Gitmo 'baseball cards' had little value: WikiLeaks trial witness

By Ian Simpson

FORT MEADE, Maryland (Reuters) - Secret files on Guantanamo Bay detainees dubbed "baseball cards" that a soldier leaked to WikiLeaks had little value for U.S. enemies since it was available publicly, the prison's former top prosecutor testified at a court-martial on Tuesday.

Testimony about the files came as the defense for Private First Class Bradley Manning, 25, sought to show that much of the information Manning is charged with leaking was publicly available. The leaked files include assessment briefs for more than 700 inmates at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba.

Retired Air Force Colonel Morris Davis, Guantanamo Bay's chief prosecutor from 2005 to 2007 at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, testified for the defense that five briefs he reviewed had nothing that was not available from public sources such as books, movies, or court or Pentagon records.

"Other than creating embarrassment to the country, I don't see that the enemy could gain any advantage to gaining access to the detainee assessment briefs," he said under questioning by defense lawyer David Coombs.

Davis said the briefs were known flippantly at Guantanamo Bay as "baseball cards" since they provided such information as biographical background, religious affiliation and extremist links. Of the five briefs reviewed, four of the detainees were released in 2004 or 2005. One is still being held, Davis said.

CROSS EXAMINATION

Under cross examination by prosecutor Captain Joe Morrow, Davis said the assessments were prepared for security officials, not prosecutors, and he had not dealt with them for several years. He also said he had never been a security official or an authority on classification of materials.

The United States set up the Guantanamo Bay prison to hold foreign suspects after U.S.-led forces invaded Afghanistan to pursue the al Qaeda network behind the September 11, 2001, attacks.

Rear Admiral David Woods, who commanded the prison in 2011 and 2012, testified for the prosecution last month that the release of the briefs was a serious threat to national security.

Manning, a native of Crescent, Oklahoma, is charged with leaking more than 700,000 classified files, combat videos and State Department cables while serving as an intelligence analyst in Iraq in 2009 and 2010. The charges include espionage, computer fraud and, most seriously, aiding the enemy.

Manning could face life in prison without parole if convicted of aiding the enemy.

Another defense witness, Cassius Hall, a security expert with the Army Intelligence and Security Command, testified that he had examined 102 war log reports leaked by Manning. Hall said he had found related information in news reports for 62 of them.

A second security witness, Charles Ganiel, a specialist with the Army's Test and Evaluation command, reviewed 125 leaked State Department cables. He testified that all but two of them had corresponding public information.

Under prosecution questioning, Hall said adversaries of the United States could use leaked information. Ganiel testified that the classified material remained government property.

The defense has sought to portray Manning as a naive but well-intentioned soldier who wanted to show Americans the reality of war in Iraq and Afghanistan. The prosecution rested last week after five weeks of testimony, some in closed session.

The trial is scheduled to end by August 23.

(Editing by Dina Kyriakidou and Andrew Hay)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/leaked-gitmo-baseball-cards-had-little-value-wikileaks-173211283.html

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antena3.com ?|? Francia ?|?Actualizado el 10/07/2013 a las 18:51 horas

El corredor alem?n Tony Martin, del Omega Pharma-Quick Step, se ha adjudicado la und?cima etapa del Tour de Francia del Centenario, una contrarreloj de 33 kil?metros entre Avranches y Mont Saint Michel, por delante del brit?nico Chris Froome (Sky) y del belga Thomas de Gendt (Vacansoleil).

Tony Martin, que se impuso con un tiempo de 36 minutos y 29 segundos, aventaj? en 12 segundos a Chris Froome y en 1:01, a De Gendt. Froome consolid? su jersey amarillo como l?der de la clasificaci?n general. Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) y Alberto Contador (Saxo-Tinkoff) fueron el 13 y 15, a 2:12 y 2:15 de Martin.

Source: http://www.antena3.com/noticias/deportes/toni-martin-gana-crono-mont-saint-michel_2013071000243.html

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Friday, March 22, 2013

Author Douglas Rushkoff on society?s real-time panic attack

By Rob Walker

Douglas Rushkoff has been thinking, writing, and speaking about technology since the 1990s, and he is still contributing fresh ideas and insights today. His latest book, Present Shock, was published Thursday, and The New York Times calls it ?one of those invaluable books that make sense of what we already half-know.?

In particular, I admire the way Present Shock focuses on the human side of the technology discussion, and avoids the demonize-or-celebrate extremes that make discussion so polarizing.

?It's about balance,? he told Yahoo News during this Q&A about Present Shock and related matters. ?Tweet your topical ideas, scan news articles on Yahoo, and read books about the bigger things that matter.?

Q: Probably half the writers I know originally joined Facebook to promote a new book. Now your latest book is coming out ??and?you announced in your CNN column that you've quit Facebook! Any regrets so far? Withdrawal symptoms?

A: In all honesty, the whole Facebook conundrum came up for me only because I am launching a new book. Like anyone, I'm annoyed at the fact that I have to pay to reach the people who have Liked my page and requested to see my updates. But I would be willing to do this on occasion in order to reach all 10,000 of them. Facebook has to make money, and even though they changed the terms under which I came in, I understand that reaching 10,000 of my readers is a service. And I'm also aware that they sell everyone's data. I think everyone is aware of that by now.

But when they started to use my page as a way of misrepresenting my readers to their friends, that's when I just couldn't keep a presence there. Not as an author and teacher who is espousing certain values. Facebook takes their pictures, and then shows them endorsing things that I may have clicked on. It's one thing to be advertised to; it's another to be made into an advertisement for something you don't even know about. It is an example of something that causes what I've been calling "digiphrenia" ?when an instance of you is doing something online you don't even know about.

I figured if I was going to leave Facebook, though, I may as well do it with purpose. So I did it with the article on CNN?both to have a bit of an impact and to make it OK for others to leave, too. It probably was a bad idea in terms of book marketing, but people can still talk about my book online or on Facebook without me actively soliciting Likes from people that make them vulnerable to being misrepresented online.

And so far it has been tremendously freeing. One less thing to worry about. Plus, there's so many great alternatives to living in the Facebook way, where people just broadcast everything they do. I didn't mind doing it as an author, with my books and ideas. But I'd never want to do that with my life and family.

Q: The book addresses what you're calling "present shock," referencing Alvin Toffler's idea of "future shock," and (if I can oversimplify) suggesting that we're now living in Toffler's future, and we're not coping all that well. How might we respond to "society without narrative context"?

A: Present Shock is the panicky reaction to this always-on, real-time society in which we have found ourselves. But there are definitely ways to adapt and thrive in a "presentist" world. So, take the collapse of narrative. We live in a world where it's really hard to tell a story. People don't have patience, they have interactive devices that encourage them to break up or leave a story in progress, and they don't really think about things as having beginnings, middles and ends. We are in the now, and not looking forward to long-term goals anymore. This is as true for kids playing endless adventure games like World of Warcraft as it is for derivatives traders hoping to make money not off long-term investments but on the trades themselves.

So on the one hand, we get the scary stuff: movements with long-term goals are increasingly unpopular. Political parties are hated. The notion of a career path or a commitment to (and from) an employer seems ludicrous. On the other hand, we begin to see some people attempting to live in a more "steady state." We don't have to fight and win wars so much as deal with our problems in a more ongoing way. Global warming is not something we fight against and "win," but a chronic problem we can only face with sustainable solutions. We don't need to yearn for endings?unless of course we really want to bring about the apocalypse. Instead, we must grow beyond the simple stories on which we were raised, and learn to live in a never-ending kind of story, in which we are the living players.

This is what Occupy was groping toward, in its own way. They don't have demands or goals so much as approaches. They are attempting to model a way of living. When asked how the movement is supposed to "end," they say, "Why should it end?"

Q: Referring in particular to open-ended video games that are less about winning than about infinite play, you say these may be "popular culture's first satisfactory answer to the collapse of narrative." You mention some therapeutic possibilities, but what are some other ways that model/template might be applied outside of popular culture?

A: Traditional stories are vicarious and linear. We watch a character go through an experience over time, watch his choices, and follow him into danger. We experience tension as we move from beginning to middle to end, complete with reversal and recognition. That's where marketers (if it's a commercial) exploit stories to plug in their agendas, and why stories are less trusted these days.

Games are digital culture's true alternative. Instead of following a character over time and watching him make his choices, the gamer makes the choices himself. It's a real-time experience of autonomy, rather than surrendering autonomy. Most great gaming doesn't have beginnings, middles and ends like traditional stories. They are ongoing. The object is not to "win" the game?because winning ends the play?but to keep the game going. Warcraft and other games are ongoing, collaborative enterprises. Stories without ends.

And this leads younger people to some very 21st-century approaches to entrenched narratives. Twentieth-century movements had charismatic leaders that took followers on a big journey towards a goal. Gaming, on the other hand, with its open-endedness and emphasis on keeping the play going, doesn't lead to the same sorts of culture and approaches. It's what leads not just to Occupy but also the newer environmental, sustainability, and local movements. No leader, no story, no endpoint.

Q: In the chapter that deconstructs changing notions of time and technology, you mention that some of the research you did actually caused you to change your own work flow and habits as you were writing this book.

A: Yeah. I was researching biological clocks when I found out that there's a 4-part, 28-day lunar cycle that we all go through. Our brain chemistry has different dominant neurotransmitters during each of the four weeks. And all of us are on the same calendar, so there's a week that's great for meeting people, a week that's great for working, one for partying, and one for doing more structural thinking. It's all in the book, with footnotes and everything. And it sounds weird, but you have to remember that they used think jet lag was superstition until the Major League Baseball managers started organizing pitching schedules around it.

So I started working with the four-phase structure in mind, and my productivity went up tremendously. I wasn't working uphill, so to speak, fighting what was going on inside me and others. I only did blind pitches for work or publicity in the acetylcholine week. I did my hardest work in serotonin week, and partied in dopamine week. And all of a sudden it was like the world?the social world and the chemical world?were supporting me rather than working against me. It's super easy, based on science, and already being employed by Olympic trainers. We just find it hard to do this kind of thing because most of us are not in charge of our own time.

Q: In the process of making your concluding argument, you observe,??I am much less concerned with whatever it is technology may be doing to people than what people are choosing to do to one another through technology.? Why do you figure that the discourse around technology has become so focused on what it is doing or will do?to us, whether making us superhuman or stupid?

A: That?s the symptom as well as the cause, isn't it? We do mean things to each other through technology because we think we're removed or anonymous. It's why we used guillotines or gas chambers and lethal injections instead of just shooting someone in the head. We demand stuff from one another through email, and get an inbox filled with demands in return. Or we market to other people's kids through Facebook, while putting our own kids in a Waldorf School and keeping them offline altogether.

Even the technology boosters?the types of people who praise technology and believe in the "singularity" when machines will overtake us?are falling into the trap of underestimating our own participation in this. People made technology. It's not alive, even if it replicates. It can't think or feel, even if it can calculate.

Believing that technology is overtaking us is really just another symptom of present shock. It's the kind of belief shared by people who need to understand all this in terms of a story. Where is this all going? How will it end? Fact of the matter is, it doesn't have to end. We don't have to apply some narrative to technology, as if it were a character in a movie.

Q: Finally, what do you wish someone would ask you about this book?

A: I guess I'd want someone to ask why they should take the six or eight hours required to read it, particularly in a world where no one has time for anything anymore. And I'd say to do it because you deserve to retake authority over that much time. You're allowed to reclaim your day. And if you don't read my book, for God's sake at least read someone else's.

Just because traditional narrative?and books themselves?are not the predominant form of entertainment and information today does not mean we shouldn't keep them in the mix. It's about balance. Tweet your topical ideas, scan news articles on Yahoo, and read books about the bigger things that matter.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/society%E2%80%99s-real-time-panic-attack-214447730.html

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Sunday, March 3, 2013

Kerry presses Egypt president, military on reform

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, waves while ending a statement to the media, next to Mohammed Kassem, of World Trading Company, during a meeting with business leaders in Cairo, Egypt on Saturday, March 2, 2013. Cairo is the sixth leg of Kerry's first official overseas trip and begins the Middle East portion of his nine-day journey. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, waves while ending a statement to the media, next to Mohammed Kassem, of World Trading Company, during a meeting with business leaders in Cairo, Egypt on Saturday, March 2, 2013. Cairo is the sixth leg of Kerry's first official overseas trip and begins the Middle East portion of his nine-day journey. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)

(AP) ? U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was wrapping up a visit to deeply divided Egypt on Sunday with an appeal for unity and reform to the country's president and military chief.

A day after warning the country's bickering politicians that they must overcome differences to get Egypt's faltering economy back on track and maintain its leadership role in the volatile Middle East, Kerry was bringing a similar message to President Mohammed Morsi and his defense minister and intelligence chief. The U.S. is deeply concerned that continued instability in Egypt will have broader consequences in a region already rocked by unrest.

U.S. officials said Kerry will raise Egypt's key regional role with Morsi and his top security aides, stress the importance of upholding its peace agreement with Israel, cracking down on weapons smuggling to extremists in the Gaza Strip and policing the increasingly lawless Sinai Peninsula while continuing to play a positive role in Syria's civil war. Yet, with parliamentary elections approaching, his call for harmonizing domestic Egyptian politics is just as important, they said.

Liberal and secular opponents of Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood say they will boycott upcoming elections, and violent clashes between protesters and security forces have created an environment of insecurity, complicating Egyptian efforts to secure vital international aid.

In meetings with Egypt's foreign minister and opposition politicians on Saturday, Kerry said reaching agreement on economic reforms to seal $4.8 billion in International Monetary Fund loans was particularly critical. Closing the IMF deal also will unlock significant U.S. assistance promised by President Barack Obama last year.

But the impact of his message of unity to the opposition was likely blunted as only six of the 11 guests invited by the U.S. Embassy turned up and three of those six said they still intended to boycott the April parliamentary election, according to participants.

Kerry said that the U.S. would not pick sides in Egypt, and he appealed to all sides to come together around human rights, freedom and speech and religious tolerance. Equally essential, he said, is uniting to undertake the reforms necessary to qualify for the IMF package. Those include increasing tax collections and curbing energy subsidies.

However, while expressing sympathy with the passion he heard from the opposition, Kerry suggested U.S. frustration with their tactics even as he maintained that "we're not here to interfere, but to listen."

"The best way to ensure human rights and strong political checks and balances ... is through the broadest possible political and economic participation," Kerry said after meeting Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamel Amr. "We believe that being active, engaging in peaceful participation is essential to building strong communities and healthy democracies."

In an apparent nod to the current stalemate in Washington over the U.S. federal budget, Kerry acknowledged that compromise is difficult yet imperative.

"I say with both humility and with a great deal of respect that getting there requires a genuine give-and-take among Egypt's political leaders and civil society groups just as we are continuing to struggle with that in our own country," he said. 'There must be a willingness on all sides to make meaningful compromises on the issues that matter most to all of the Egyptian people."

The opposition accuses Morsi and the Brotherhood of following in the footsteps of toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak, failing to carry out reforms and trying to install a more religiously conservative system.

Morsi's administration and the Brotherhood say their foes, who have trailed significantly behind Islamists in all elections since the uprising against Mubarak, are running away from the challenge of the ballot box and are trying to overturn democratic gains.

Egypt's polarization was underscored as Kerry arrived from Turkey on Saturday on the sixth of nine stops in his first official overseas visit as secretary of state. Activists in the Nile Delta city of Mansoura said a 35-year-old protester was killed when an armored police vehicle crushed him to death during anti-Morsi protests Saturday. And, in the restive Suez Canal city of Port Said, a police vehicle ran over five people after marching protesters refused to allow the car through.

Months of such turmoil have scared away tourists and foreign investors, eroding Egypt's foreign reserves by nearly two-thirds of what it was before the uprising. Those reserves, which stand at less than $14 billion, are needed to pay for subsidies that millions of poor Egyptians rely on for survival.

"It is paramount, essential, urgent that the Egyptian economy gets stronger, gets back on its feet and it's very clear that there is a circle of connections in how that can happen," Kerry told business leaders shortly after his arrival. "To attract capital, to bring money back here, to give business the confidence to move forward, there has to be sense of security, there has to be a sense of political and economic viability."

After concluding his meetings in Egypt on Sunday, Kerry will head to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, where his focus is expected to be the crisis in Syria that dominated his earlier stops in Britain, Germany, France and Turkey, along with concerns about Iran's nuclear program and growing Iranian assertiveness in the Persian Gulf. Kerry is set to return to Washington on Wednesday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-03-03-ML-Kerry/id-95034eb6151c4e5ea3a3fa37f34d83da

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Immunotech Laboratories (IMMB): Revolutionary Cancer Treatment ...

Monrovia CA ? Earlier today Immunotech Laboratories, publicly traded under stock ticker IMMB announced the relocation of its Research and Development facility and provided updates on its clinical trials under way in Bulgaria, as well as background on its revolutionary approach to fighting cancer.

IMMB treats HIV / AIDS, Cancer and Hepatitis C patients using Immunotherapy, a revolutionary and growing style of treatments that has been receiving praise worldwide from experts like Mehmet Cengiz Oz (also known as ?Dr. Oz?) and Dr. Otis Brawley from the American Cancer Society.

According to Wikipedia, Immunotherapy is:

? a medical term defined as the ?treatment of disease by inducing, enhancing, or suppressing an immune response?. Immunotherapies designed to elicit or amplify an immune response are classified as activation immunotherapies, while immunotherapies that reduce or suppress are classified as suppression immunotherapies.

In simple terms, Immunotherapy causes your own body?s immune system to fight cancer.

Here?s IMMB President and Chief Science Officer Harry Zhabilov, and Dr. Oz and Dr. Otis Brawley on Immunotherapy:

IMMB Called Undervalued

IMMB has several patents for its Immunotherapy treatments and was recently evaluated by an Market Advisors, Inc who observed that the company is undervalued. It?s report ?Fundamental Analysis for Today?s Investments,? issued February 19th, said that:

We have learned that pursuant to significantly positive results patient population targeting full blown AIDS patients, Immunotech has completed numerous clinical contracts with Mexican hospitals to initiate a complete effort of clinical trial protocol for its HIV/AIDS vaccine drug candidates. The successful outcome of these efforts will eventually provide the necessary regulatory means for its products registration approval in the Republic of Mexico and most likely open a venue to nearly all of Central and South America markets.

In our opinion, this company is hugely undervalued. The Company states it has assets over $10 million, while liabilities are less than $3 million. This equates to a $7 million net worth.

The full report can be read here: http://freepdfhosting.com/7bd113ff01.pdf

New R&D Facilities For Immunotech Laboratories

The new news from Immunotech Laboratories is that it?s relocating to new facilities. In a press release, the company said:

Immunotech Laboratories, Inc. (PINKSHEETS: IMMB) today announced the company has relocated to a new Research & Development Lab facility in Monrovia, California.

The new facility incorporates more laboratory use of the actual facility than the combined Administrative space at the previous Pasadena location. The new location also is geographically more conveniently located for the Immunotech team.

In light of the recent announcements stating the HIV-AIDS and Hepatitis C clinical trials using the company?s patented ?ITV-1? patented technology treatment by the Immunotech BG sister company, more clinical research and results testing is necessary. The new facility accommodates the additional lab space.

Utilizing a combination of the clinical tests and results being conducted in Bulgaria alongside the results analysis here in the USA at the new facility, Immunotech plans to submit all the results from the Bulgarian clinical trials for US Food & Drug Administration ?FDA? approval on a pre IND meeting. Immunotech Laboratories plans to start working with IND Directions, LLC (http://inddirections.com)

Immunotech?s ultimate goal is to provide a worldwide FDA approved treatment for combating the HIV-AIDS virus with the intent of terminating the virus and restoring the immune system. The goal of this treatment is to achieve reduction of resistance of existing therapies on the market.

The clinical trials in Bulgaria (Referred to as EU) are scheduled to begin in May 2013 and end in October 2013, which will give Immunotech, the rights to receive approval for applications of the ?IPF? Treatment. In this respect, Immunotech Laboratories BG has had a series of conversations with Mr. Vladimir Stoichev, the Deputy General Director from Sopharma Bulgaria, and the parties have had talks for the possible signing of a contract between Immunotech Laboratories BG and Sopharma, a leading pharmaceutical company in the European Union,
for joint production of IPF-ITV.

Stay tuned for more.

Disclosure: Zennie62.com and Zennie62Media, Inc. is not registered investment advisor and nothing contained in any materials should be construed as a recommendation to buy or sell securities. Investors should always conduct their own due diligence with any potential investment. This advertisement may contain several forward looking statements.

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Source: http://www.zennie62blog.com/2013/03/01/immunotech-laboratories-immb-revolutionary-cancer-treatment-new-rd-facilities-beatcancer-78405/

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