Thursday, April 11, 2013

White House celebrates the sounds of Memphis soul

WASHINGTON (AP) ? President Barack Obama said he'd been looking forward to a White House celebration of Memphis soul music for one reason.

"Let's face it, who does not love this music?" he asked Tuesday, opening the night's concert in an East Room bathed in amber light and transformed by the addition of a stage and backup musicians.

"These songs get us on the dance floor," Obama said. "They get stuck in our heads. We go back over them again and again. And they've played an important part in our history."

Memphis, Tenn., was segregated in the 1960s, but blacks and whites came together despite the institutional racism to create a soulful blend of gospel and rhythmic blues music that sought to "bridge those divides, to create a little harmony with harmony," Obama said.

He noted that two of the night's guests, Booker T. Jones and Steve Cropper, helped form one of the city's first integrated bands.

"They weren't allowed to go to school together. They weren't always allowed to travel or eat together," the president said. "But no one could stop them from playing music together."

"And that was the spirit of their music ? the sound of Soulsville, U.S.A., a music that, at its core, is about the pain of being alone, the power of human connection, and the importance of treating each other right," Obama said. "After all, this is the music that asked us to try a little tenderness. It's the music that put Mr. Big Stuff in his place. And it's the music that challenged us to accept new ways of thinking with four timeless words: 'Can you dig it?'"

And with that, Obama took his seat and the show opened with Sam Moore, half of the duo Sam & Dave, and "American Idol" finalist and gospel singer Joshua Ledet belting out Moore's "Soul Man," followed minutes later by Justin Timberlake and Cropper's rendition of Otis Redding's (Sittin' on) "The Dock of the Bay."

Obama, first lady Michelle Obama and their daughters, Malia and Sasha, sat in the front row. The president and first lady at times clapped their hands and bobbed and weaved their heads to the pulsating rhythms.

The concert was the 10th in the "In Performance at the White House" series since Obama took office. Other performers included Alabama Shakes, Ben Harper, Cyndi Lauper, Charlie Musselwhite, Mavis Staples , Queen Latifah and William Bell. Latifah also was the host and Jones led the band.

Earlier in the day, Bell said the concert reaffirmed years of hard work that began in the 1960s when Stax Records was created in Memphis, and the label cranked out one soul and R&B hit after another for more than a decade.

Redding, Isaac Hayes, The Staple Singers, Bell and Sam & Dave were among the company's artists.

"As kids coming up, we didn't think it would last this long," the 73-year-old Bell said during a rehearsal break. He later performed his hit, "You Don't Miss Your Water."

Al Green had been scheduled to perform but, about an hour before the show, the White House released a statement from the singer's spokesman who said Green had suffered a back injury and would be unable to attend.

Hours before the show, Michelle Obama kicked off a workshop featuring Moore, Staples, Timberlake, Musselwhite and Harper for students from 16 schools and organizations in Virginia, California, Memphis, New York City, Maryland, Florida and Washington, D.C., who got to question the artists.

She noted Memphis' history as the birthplace of Elvis Presley's rock and roll and B.B. King's blues.

"And while you can hear both of those influences in Memphis soul, this music has a style and a story uniquely its own," Mrs. Obama said, before launching into the story of Stax Records.

She noted that the label also represented "somebody my husband thinks he sounds like" ? Green. "Let's just tell him he does, OK? Since he is the president, we like to boost him up a little bit."

It was a reference to Obama singing a few bars of Green's "Let's Stay Together" during a Democratic fundraiser at New York's Apollo Theater in February 2012.

Obama also joked about his singing during his brief remarks opening the concert.

"Tonight, I am speaking not just as a president, but as one of America's best-known Al Green impersonators," he said to laughter.

At the workshop, Mrs. Obama also tried to encourage the students, including some aspiring musicians, by noting that it took years of perfecting their talent for the artists perched on stools in front of them to get where they are.

She recalled playing the piano as a young girl and said she regretted not sticking with it. But she said the skills one learns by studying music are useful in other areas of life.

"The discipline, the patience, the diligence I learned through the study of music, those are all skills that I apply every single day in my life," Mrs. Obama said. "I applied them as a student, as a lawyer, as a first lady, and definitely as a mother."

Since February 2009, "In Performance at the White House" has highlighted the music of Stevie Wonder, Paul McCartney, Burt Bacharach and Hal David, plus Hispanic music, music from the civil-rights era, Motown and the blues, Broadway and country music. The series itself dates to 1978.

The Memphis soul concert is set to air next Tuesday on PBS stations. It will also be broadcast at a later date over the American Forces Network for service members and civilians at Defense Department locations worldwide.

___

Follow Darlene Superville on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dsupervilleap

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/white-house-celebrates-sounds-memphis-soul-164730499.html

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Cano leads Yankees' 14-1 romp over?Indians

By TOM WITHERS

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 10:14 p.m. ET April 9, 2013

CLEVELAND (AP) - As long as Robinson Cano is healthy, the Bronx Bombers can still blast away.

Cano hit one of New York's five homers and drove in five runs, Andy Pettitte pitched seven solid innings and the Yankees romped to a 14-1 win Tuesday night over the Cleveland Indians, who had starter Carlos Carrasco ejected from his first appearance since 2011.

With power hitters Alex Rodriguez, Curtis Granderson and Mark Teixeira on the disabled list, New York wasn't expected to hit as many homers - at least not until those guys get back. But after hitting eight in their first six games, the Yankees have doubled their total since coming to Cleveland.

Cano, who had four hits, arrived for the four-game series batting .130 and without an extra-base hit. In the past two games, he is 7 for 10 with three homers, three doubles and seven RBIs.

"When he hits the ball hard, it's usually for extra bases and drives people in," New York manager Joe Girardi said. "It does take some pressure off. I've seen him hit some balls in the last two days, I don't know how you can hit them any harder."

The win was the Yankees' largest in Cleveland since 1931, when they beat the Indians 18-1.

Cleveland manager Terry Francona was worried about Cano getting hot while in Cleveland. In 24 hours, the All-Star second baseman has gone from warm to scorching.

"He's one of the best hitters in the league," Francona said. "It seems like you make a good pitch and he hits a single. You make a mistake and it's over the fence."

The 40-year-old Pettitte (2-0) allowed one run and five hits in his second strong start.

Cano hit a two-run double in the second off Carrasco (0-1) and connected for his third homer in two days in the fourth. Following Cano's two-run shot, Carrasco, who just served a five-game suspension for throwing at a hitter in 2011, drilled Kevin Youkilis in the shoulder with a pitch and got tossed.

Youkilis and Brennan Boesch hit two-run homers and Ichiro Suzuki and Lyle Overbay had solo shots for the Yankees.

Brett Gardner went 4 for 5 with two RBIs and scored three runs. New York had 18 hits - 11 for extra bases.

The seemingly ageless Pettitte carried a shutout into the sixth, when Asdrubal Cabrera hit a leadoff homer. Other than that, the left-hander was in complete control of the Indians, who have been outscored 25-7 in losing their first two home games after a 3-3 start on the road.

Pettitte, the majors' winningest active pitcher, allowed five hits and walked three to earn victory No. 247, tying him with Jack Quinn for 35th on the career list.

Carrasco was making his first start in two seasons. He made it a memorable one, and possibly his last for a while.

The right-hander hadn't pitched in the majors since Aug. 3, 2011. He was placed on the disabled list following that outing in Boston, underwent Tommy John surgery the next month and missed last season while recovering. Carrasco recently served his penalty for throwing at Kansas City's Billy Butler two seasons ago.

Before the game, Francona was excited about seeing Carrasco.

"The kid has gone through a lot to get back here," Francona said.

He may have to go through some more.

Carrasco gave up five runs in three innings - all with two outs. He retired the first two in the fourth and walked Gardner. Cano then hit a deep shot to left field to make it 7-0. Carrasco then came in high and tight on Youkilis, who had no chance of ducking from the fastball.

As Youkilis headed to first, plate umpire Jordan Baker casually strolled to the mound and tossed the ball back to Carrasco before signaling for him to leave. Carrasco didn't seem aware that he had been ejected and stood on the infield grass with his teammates. Francona came out to argue with Baker as Girardi watched intently from the top step of New York's dugout.

After the game, Carrasco apologized to Francona and said he slipped on the pitch to Youkilis.

"I really want to say I'm sorry," Carrasco said. "I don't want to hit anybody. I'm coming from a six-game suspension, I don't want to do anything real bad and I'm just telling the truth. That's what happened."

Francona understood why Carrasco was tossed and why the Yankees were unhappy.

"It didn't look good," Francona said. "I understand the umpire's viewpoint. I think if you look at the video, he slipped. If you're on the other side, I understand it. But that's what happened."

Girardi wasn't surprised Carrasco was thrown out.

"That was right in the middle of his back after a home run," he said. "No one ever knows if a guy truly does it on purpose. But he just came back from a suspension. If it was on purpose, it's not a good idea. If it wasn't, it looks like it was. Either way, it doesn't look good."

Carrasco's ejection led Francona to bring in Brett Myers, who was scheduled to start Wednesday's game. The Indians have not yet announced Myers' replacement.

The Yankees showed no mercy, scoring two in the sixth, four in the eighth and one in the ninth off Myers, who was charged with seven runs and three homers.

NOTES: Yankees DH Travis Hafner hit his 100th career homer at Progressive Field on Monday. Only Jim Thome (190) and Manny Ramirez (132) have hit more in the ballpark's history. Hafner played 10 seasons in Cleveland. ... Indians CF and leadoff man Michael Bourn was given the night off by Francona, who said the move had been planned for several days. ... Francona is 81-80 in his career managing against the Yankees. He went 6-6 in four seasons with Philadelphia and 75-72 in eight seasons with Boston. ... Myers has allowed seven homers in 10 1-3 innings.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Is baseball's diversity really in decline?

HBT: There are undoubtedly fewer black players in Major League Baseball today than 30 years ago. But is the idea that baseball has become less diverse a misrepresentation?

Getty Images
Cano leads Yankees' 14-1 romp over?Indians

Robinson Cano hit one of New York's five homers and drove in five runs and the Yankees romped to a 14-1 win Tuesday night over the Cleveland Indians, who had starter Carlos Carrasco ejected from his first appearance since 2011.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/51487192/ns/sports-baseball/

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Is baseball's diversity really in decline?

Today is the day that the annual report from?Richard Lapchick?s Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sports at the University of Central?Florida comes out. ?He?s been doing this for years, and it always gets highlighted in the media, with headlines about how the number of U.S.-born black players in baseball is declining. ?Which, yes, it is. ?But Lapchick?s report is also normally treated wholly uncritically, with his?conclusions?being?parroted?instead of reported, and it really grinds my gears.

It bugs me on a broad level, in that ? as I?ve mentioned in this space several times ? it looks at the trees but not the forest, noting that while, yes, there are fewer U.S.-born black players in baseball now than there used to, the overall diversity of baseball is up as the game becomes increasingly internationalized.

But it bugs me in a much sharper sense in that I believe the numbers Lapchick puts out are misleading.

They are misleading in that, while his current count of U.S.-born blacks in baseball seems right ? he has it at 8.5% ? the numbers he and others typically cite for the height of black representation in the game are usually off. He has cited as high as 27% of all players being black, and this number is often repeated as gospel, like it is in today?s USA Today story about it.

Thing is: these are apples and oranges measurements. ?Back in the 70s when that 27% number game out, those numbers represented counts of all black players ? or people who had sufficiently-black skin to be called ?black? according to the view of those doing the counting. This included Latino players like Rico Carty, who happened to be born in the Dominican Republic. Today Carty ? or, say, Aroldis Chapman or any other non-U.S.-born black player ? wouldn?t be included in Lapchick?s count. Which makes sense because he?s counting only U.S.-born blacks. But he and his media surrogates freely cite the old numbers which did include Latino blacks back in the day.

Friend of mine and frequent HBT commenter Mark Armour is doing some research on this for the Society of Baseball Research. I?ve not seen the research, but Tyler Kepner notes it in the New York Times today. Armour estimates that the actual height of U.S.-born blacks in the game came in the 1980s and peaked at 19%. See the update below for some of Marks additional comments on this.

No, that research does not mean that all things are wonderful. There clearly are fewer U.S.-born black players in baseball today than there were in decades past. But it?s not quite a crisis on the order of magnitude that Lapchick and others portray. And given that they?re not being particularly discerning with their numbers you have to wonder if either sloppiness or agenda-setting is taking precedence over science here.

And that?s my problem with it. Not the underlying idea ? I want there to be more blacks in the game; heck, I want EVERYONE to play baseball and anything that can be done to promote it should be ? but on the manner in which the problem is portrayed. A manner which seems more calculated to draw attention to the?Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sports than it does to the underlying issue.

UPDATE: ?Mark Armour chimed in in the comments:

I am not exactly sure where the 27% number came from. My theory had been that the old data was from some newpaper story that counted all dark-skinned players as black, while the new data only counted US black players. However, several years ago this was explored further by the Wall Street Journal, and they determined that the old data is just ? bad science. Really bad science.

The real drop in African-Americans (from 17-19% in the 1975-95 period) to half that today is significant enough without the bad data. Baseball is MORE diverse, of course, than every before.

By the way, MLB is very cooperative in the Lapchick study. In fact, they provide all of the data on opening day rosters to Lapchick every year. The writers that imply this is some sort of bigotry on the part of MLB are nuts. It is very clear that MLB is spending lots of time and money on this problem.

This is the WSJ story from 2008.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/04/10/today-that-annual-diversity-in-baseball-study-comes-out-take-it-with-a-serious-grain-of-salt/related/

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Dave Says Go Cheap on Date Night - Dave Ramsey - Townhall ...

Dear Dave,

Is there ever a time you should dip into emergency fund savings in order to pay off your home early?

Eric

Dear Eric,

The only time I would advise this is when your emergency fund is too big, and you have a very small amount left to pay on the house. Keep in mind that your emergency fund should be three to six months of expenses, not three to six months of income. Besides, paying off the house doesn?t fall into the category of an emergency. The fact that you have to pay for your house doesn?t catch anyone by surprise.

I understand it can be very tempting to throw a bunch of money at your house, get rid of the mortgage payments, and own it outright. But I wouldn?t drain my emergency fund to make it happen?even if it meant being completely debt-free sooner. Life happens, and the moment you write that big check and weaken your emergency fund, the central unit will go out, the roof will spring a leak, or you?ll have major repair issues with a vehicle.

When you do things like that, you?re just begging for Murphy to come visit. And that?s not my definition of financial peace!?

?Dave

Dear Dave,

My husband and I have a baby and are trying to live on a budget and pay off about $14,000 in debt. He wants to spend $100 a month for a date night, but I think this is too much under the circumstances. I?m a stay-at-home mom right now, and after taxes he makes about $3,200 a month. What do you think?

Ashley

Dear Ashley,

You win on this one. If you?d told me you guys make $150,000 a year, then I?d say he was being completely reasonable. But with your income and a lot of debt to boot, it sounds like he?s just looking for an outlet to spend some money. The good thing is you?re working together and beginning to take this personal finance thing seriously. You?re just a little bit apart on the particulars in this area.

Source: http://townhall.com/columnists/daveramsey/2013/04/09/dave-says-go-cheap-on-date-night-n1561836

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

What hope for diplomacy to defuse North Korea crisis?

Any diplomatic resolution to the North Korea crisis depend upon China's priorities and Kim Jong-un himself. Here's why both are difficult to gauge as Secretary of State John Kerry prepares to travel to the region.

By Howard LaFranchi,?Staff writer / April 9, 2013

In this Saturday April 14, 2012 file photo, North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, (r.), waves as North Korean military officers clap at a stadium in Pyongyang during a mass meeting called by the Central Committee of North Korea's ruling party in April 2012. Any efforts at diffusing the North Korean crisis through diplomacy would hinge on Kim.

Ng Han Guan/AP/File

Enlarge

Whether diplomacy may yet ease the spiraling tensions on the Korean peninsula, amid increasingly provocative steps by North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, hangs on two key factors: neighboring China?s assessment of the situation and Mr. Kim?s internal standing.

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Both are difficult for US diplomats to gauge, though Secretary of State John Kerry will be in Seoul, Beijing, and Tokyo later this week, in part to try to enlist China?s help in bringing the tense military stare-down to a nonviolent end.

First, say some experts on the region, Mr. Kerry will need to ascertain whether China is worried enough about the potential effects of Kim?s fiery threats to lay aside its suspicions about long-term US intentions in the region ? heightened by President Obama?s announced intent to ?pivot? to Asia. (On Tuesday, North Korea repeated an old pledge to engulf Seoul, South Korea?s capital, in a ?thermo-nuclear inferno? and warned foreigners to flee.)

As for the second factor, Kim himself, the question is whether North Korea?s young leader has, by ratcheting up tensions, reinforced his hold on domestic power to the point that he can pull back from his aggressive posture.

?I do think we?re going to see some action? from Kim ? perhaps another missile test in the coming days ? ?and then some dialing back,? says Andrew Scobell, a senior political scientist focusing on US-China relations at the RAND Corp. in Arlington, Va. ?He?s got to be concerned about his internal control.?

The US, for its part, is looking to China to put the brakes on its troublesome ally ? hence Kerry?s upcoming stop in Beijing Saturday and Mr. Obama?s phone call last week with China?s new leader, President Xi Jinping. China, though, is reluctant to pressure Pyongyang in ways that might benefit the US standing in the region, Mr. Scobell says.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/Bjde-7MAoWI/What-hope-for-diplomacy-to-defuse-North-Korea-crisis

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DNDi welcomes the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT)

DNDi welcomes the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT) [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Violaine D?llenbach
vdallenbach@dndi.org
41-794-241-474
Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative

New Japan-driven initiative to accelerate research and development innovation for neglected diseases

[Tokyo, Japan, and Geneva, Switzerland 8 April 2013] The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), based in Geneva, Switzerland, and DNDi Japan, based in Tokyo, welcome the launch of the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT), an initiative supported by the Japanese government, several Japanese pharmaceutical companies, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The GHIT fund will support and stimulate research & development (R&D) projects for neglected diseases by leveraging scientific resources and expertise of the pharmaceutical industry in Japan, facilitating the collaboration between product development partnerships (PDPs), Japanese pharmaceutical companies, and the public sector, including universities and research institutes. GHIT now adds to the efforts of the past decade to accelerate innovation for diseases that affect the poorest of the poor in developing countries.

'This initiative comes at a time when the R&D landscape for neglected diseases is particularly in need of resources to guarantee that R&D is boosted in the long-term and that patients gain access to the fruits of that research', said Dr Bernard Pcoul, Executive Director of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi). 'We are delighted about the GHIT initiative', he added.

Since 2003, DNDi has actively collaborated with various public and private partners in Japan, including the University of Tokyo for the development of Ascofuranone for sleeping sickness and for establishing a research centre on visceral leishmaniasis in Bangladesh; the Kitasato Institute for screening of natural substances and establishing a pan-Asian screening network; and more recently with the pharmaceutical companies Eisai Ltd., to develop a pro-drug of ravuconazole for Chagas disease currently in clinical stage, and Astellas Pharma for drug discovery for sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, and Chagas disease.

'We congratulate the GHIT founding partners for this excellent initiative and we aim to both continue and renew our fruitful partnerships in Japan to develop new treatments for neglected diseases, including sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, filarial infections, and paediatric HIV', said Professor Haruki Yamada, Chairman of the Board, DNDi Japan.

###

Further reading:

PDP joint press release by AERAS, DNDi, IAVI, IDRI, MMV, PATH, Sabin Vaccine Institute, and TB Alliance:

'Product Development Partnerships Applaud Japan's First Public-Private Partnership to Spearhead Innovation in Global Health'
http://ghitfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/PDP-Statement-on-GHIT-Draft-Final.pdf

GHIT press release:

'Announcement of the Establishment of The Global Health Innovative Technology Fund
Japan's first public-private partnership to advance the development of new health technologies for the developing world'
http://ghitfund.org/en/press20130408/

About Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi)

DNDi is a not-for-profit research and development (R&D) organization working to deliver new treatments for the most neglected diseases, in particular sleeping sickness (human African trypanosomiasis), Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, filarial infections, and paediatric HIV. Since its inception in 2003, DNDi has delivered six treatments: two fixed-dose antimalarials (ASAQ and ASMQ), nifurtimox-eflornithine combination therapy (NECT) for late-stage sleeping sickness, sodium stibogluconate and paromomycin (SSG&PM) combination therapy for visceral leishmaniasis in Africa, a set of combination therapies for visceral leishmaniasis in Asia, and a paediatric dosage form of benznidazole for Chagas disease. DNDi was established in 2003 by Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), the Indian Council of Medical Research, Brazil's Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, the Kenya Medical Research Institute, the Ministry of Health of Malaysia, and Institut Pasteur in France, with the UNICEF/UNDP/World Bank/World Health Organization's Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) as a permanent observer.

Press contacts:

DNDi Geneva:

Violaine Dllenbach
vdallenbach@dndi.org
Tel: 41-22-906-92-47

DNDi Japan:

Fumiko Hirabayashi
fhirabayashi@dndi.org
Tel: 81-3-6304-5588
Mobile: 81-90-8240-6330


[ 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.


DNDi welcomes the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT) [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 8-Apr-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Violaine D?llenbach
vdallenbach@dndi.org
41-794-241-474
Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative

New Japan-driven initiative to accelerate research and development innovation for neglected diseases

[Tokyo, Japan, and Geneva, Switzerland 8 April 2013] The Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), based in Geneva, Switzerland, and DNDi Japan, based in Tokyo, welcome the launch of the Global Health Innovative Technology Fund (GHIT), an initiative supported by the Japanese government, several Japanese pharmaceutical companies, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

The GHIT fund will support and stimulate research & development (R&D) projects for neglected diseases by leveraging scientific resources and expertise of the pharmaceutical industry in Japan, facilitating the collaboration between product development partnerships (PDPs), Japanese pharmaceutical companies, and the public sector, including universities and research institutes. GHIT now adds to the efforts of the past decade to accelerate innovation for diseases that affect the poorest of the poor in developing countries.

'This initiative comes at a time when the R&D landscape for neglected diseases is particularly in need of resources to guarantee that R&D is boosted in the long-term and that patients gain access to the fruits of that research', said Dr Bernard Pcoul, Executive Director of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi). 'We are delighted about the GHIT initiative', he added.

Since 2003, DNDi has actively collaborated with various public and private partners in Japan, including the University of Tokyo for the development of Ascofuranone for sleeping sickness and for establishing a research centre on visceral leishmaniasis in Bangladesh; the Kitasato Institute for screening of natural substances and establishing a pan-Asian screening network; and more recently with the pharmaceutical companies Eisai Ltd., to develop a pro-drug of ravuconazole for Chagas disease currently in clinical stage, and Astellas Pharma for drug discovery for sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, and Chagas disease.

'We congratulate the GHIT founding partners for this excellent initiative and we aim to both continue and renew our fruitful partnerships in Japan to develop new treatments for neglected diseases, including sleeping sickness, leishmaniasis, Chagas disease, filarial infections, and paediatric HIV', said Professor Haruki Yamada, Chairman of the Board, DNDi Japan.

###

Further reading:

PDP joint press release by AERAS, DNDi, IAVI, IDRI, MMV, PATH, Sabin Vaccine Institute, and TB Alliance:

'Product Development Partnerships Applaud Japan's First Public-Private Partnership to Spearhead Innovation in Global Health'
http://ghitfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/PDP-Statement-on-GHIT-Draft-Final.pdf

GHIT press release:

'Announcement of the Establishment of The Global Health Innovative Technology Fund
Japan's first public-private partnership to advance the development of new health technologies for the developing world'
http://ghitfund.org/en/press20130408/

About Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi)

DNDi is a not-for-profit research and development (R&D) organization working to deliver new treatments for the most neglected diseases, in particular sleeping sickness (human African trypanosomiasis), Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, filarial infections, and paediatric HIV. Since its inception in 2003, DNDi has delivered six treatments: two fixed-dose antimalarials (ASAQ and ASMQ), nifurtimox-eflornithine combination therapy (NECT) for late-stage sleeping sickness, sodium stibogluconate and paromomycin (SSG&PM) combination therapy for visceral leishmaniasis in Africa, a set of combination therapies for visceral leishmaniasis in Asia, and a paediatric dosage form of benznidazole for Chagas disease. DNDi was established in 2003 by Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), the Indian Council of Medical Research, Brazil's Oswaldo Cruz Foundation, the Kenya Medical Research Institute, the Ministry of Health of Malaysia, and Institut Pasteur in France, with the UNICEF/UNDP/World Bank/World Health Organization's Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) as a permanent observer.

Press contacts:

DNDi Geneva:

Violaine Dllenbach
vdallenbach@dndi.org
Tel: 41-22-906-92-47

DNDi Japan:

Fumiko Hirabayashi
fhirabayashi@dndi.org
Tel: 81-3-6304-5588
Mobile: 81-90-8240-6330


[ 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/2013-04/dfnd-dwt040813.php

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Monday, April 8, 2013

HBO Go version 2.1 for iOS adds AirPlay multitasking

Now that you can finally watch HBO Go on your Apple TV via AirPlay, the premium cable network has decided to sweeten its iOS app with AirPlay multitasking in a 2.1 update. The new version of the app also offers enhancements to Game of Throne's interactive features and general performance improvements as well. We'd obviously prefer that the app offers a standalone option instead, but being able to catch up on episodes of GoT on the HDTV while looking up how to say "winter is coming" in Dothraki is good too. (It's "Aheshke jada.")

Filed under:

Comments

Source: HBO Go (iTunes)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/08/hbo-go-ios-airplay-update-multitasking/

jane fonda abc bradley cooper channing tatum Jennifer Aniston naomi watts Oscar Nominations 2013