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Immunotherapy Doubles Survival in Head & Neck Cancer

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University of Pittsburgh co-led trial stops early to give new standard of care to patients with no options left.

Pittsburgh, PA (PRWEB) June 06, 2016

Immunotherapy doubles overall survival and improves quality of life, with fewer side effects, in a treatment-resistant and rapidly progressing form of head and neck carcinoma, reports a large, randomized international trial co-led by investigators at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI). The new trial was considered so successful that it was stopped early to allow patients in the comparison group to receive the new drug.

Findings from the international CheckMate-141 phase III clinical trial were presented today at the 52nd annual American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting in Chicago. A subset of the results were previously presented at the American Association for Cancer Research meeting in April of this year.

“These exciting results indicate that there is a new standard of care option for a population of head and neck cancer patients with no other treatment options,” said the trial’s international co-chair Robert Ferris, M.D., Ph.D., UPMC Endowed Professor, and chief of the Division of Head and Neck Surgery and co-leader of the Cancer Immunology Program at UPCI.

The new drug, nivolumab, which belongs to a class of drugs known as immunotherapeutics, enables the body’s immune system to destroy cancer cells. It currently is approved to treat certain types of cancers, including melanoma and lung cancer.

The trial enrolled 361 patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma who had not responded to platinum-based chemotherapy, a rapidly progressing form of the disease with an especially poor prognosis, said Dr. Ferris. Patients were randomized to receive either nivolumab or a single type of standard chemotherapy until tumor progression was observed.

The nivolumab group achieved better outcomes than the standard chemotherapy group by all accounts. After 12 months, 36 percent of the nivolumab group was alive, compared to just 17 percent of the standard chemotherapy group.

Nivolumab treatment also doubled the number of patients whose tumors shrunk, and the number whose disease had not progressed after six months of treatment. Importantly, these benefits were achieved with just one-third the rate of serious adverse events reported in the standard chemotherapy group.

In addition, on average, patients receiving nivolumab reported that their quality of life remained stable or improved throughout the study, while those in the chemotherapy group reported a decline.

While nivolumab improved survival rates in the overall study population, it appeared to be most successful in patients whose tumors were positive for the human papillomavirus (HPV). This is important because the fraction of head and neck cancers attributable to HPV infection has increased by 250 percent over the past several decades, Dr. Ferris explained.

“Unfortunately, most patients in this trial still experienced a progression of their cancer, demonstrating that we still have a lot of work to do. But, the future appears brighter than ever before because there is a new class of agents, immunotherapies, which we now know can prolong survival and improve quality of life, with few side effects, in head and neck cancer,” said Dr. Ferris.

The research team currently is working to identify new biomarkers that will allow them to develop a better understanding of how drug resistance develops, and how to best design effective combinations of medications that may improve patient responses.

The trial’s other co-chair is Maura Gillison, M.D., Ph.D., from Ohio State University. Additional U.S. institutions that participated in the trial include University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Stanford Cancer Institute, University of Chicago, University of Michigan, and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. International collaborators are located at Centre Leon Berard, Centre Antoine Lacassagne, and Institut Gustave Roussy, all in France; Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale Tumori, in Italy; The Institute of Cancer Research, in the United Kingdom; University Hospital Essen, in Germany; and National Cancer Center Hospital East and Kobe University Hospital, both in Japan.

The trial was funded by the drug manufacturer, Bristol-Myers Squibb, who is now seeking FDA approval for the use of nivolumab in head and neck carcinoma. Reported by PRWeb 2 hours ago.

United States: Texas Supreme Court: Company Representative May Be Excluded From Trade Secret Hearing - Seyfarth Shaw LLP

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A former employee of M-I L.L.C. ("M-I"), a Schlumberger subsidiary, left to work for National Oilfield Varco (NOV) in early 2014. Reported by Mondaq 2 hours ago.

Fitch Rates Chesterfield County, VA Water and Sewer System Rev Bonds 'AAA'; Outlook Stable

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AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fitch Ratings assigns an 'AAA' rating to the following Chesterfield County, VA (the county) water and sewer system revenue bonds: --$59.3 million water and sewer system revenue refunding bonds, series 2016. The bonds are scheduled to price on June 16. Proceeds will be used to refund all of the outstanding bonds for debt service savings and to pay issuance costs. In addition, Fitch affirms its ratings on the following outstanding water and sewer system bonds (pre- Reported by Business Wire 2 hours ago.

VanillaSoft Announces Sponsorship of the 17th Annual Call Center Week Conference and Expo in Las Vegas

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VanillaSoft will sponsor and exhibit at the 2016 Call Center Week Conference and Expo in Las Vegas in June.

Plano, Texas (PRWEB) June 06, 2016

VanillaSoft, an award-winning provider of queue-based lead management and appointment setting software for call centers, will participate as a sponsor of and exhibitor at the 2016 Call Center Week Conference and Expo in Las Vegas on June 27- July 1, 2016. The 17th Annual Call Center Week Conference and Expo event is the industry’s global leader in customer care and offers participants education and information to help make crucial decisions on call center strategies. The June 27th – July 1st event in Las Vegas will take place at The Mirage.

VanillaSoft VP of Sales Guy De La Cruz said, "We are excited to sponsor the 2016 Call Center Week Conference and Expo. This event provides call center leaders access to information and best practices to improve call center processes and increase efficiencies. The Expo provides an excellent opportunity to for VanillaSoft to meet with call center industry leaders from around the world and showcase how VanillaSoft empowers call center agents and managers with productivity tools such as queue-based lead routing, progressive dialing, logical branch scripting, digital call recording, inbound pops, call activity dashboards and more. I welcome attendees to stop by booth #1223 to discover how VanillaSoft can improve their call center’s productivity.”

Attendees can learn more about VanillaSoft at booth #1223 or catch VanillaSoft in action during the Demo Drive (technology category) on Wednesday, June 29th starting at 9:55am during the Morning Networking Break.

About VanillaSoft 
VanillaSoft is the award-winning Lead Management Software and CRM solution for inside sales teams. VanillaSoft enables thousands of individuals and sales teams to do more than store their data and report on it like traditional CRM. VanillaSoft customers drive productivity by deploying an award winning Best-in-Class feature set which includes priority-queue-based-lead routing, progressive dialing, on-board intelligent scripting, e-mail marketing, real-time lead distribution, live dashboard and digital call recording.

With VanillaSoft, typical users realize a productivity increase of 35% to 100% over traditional CRM, creating an easy to justify ROI. VanillaSoft dials over existing phone systems or VOIP, meaning no new or high fees for telecom. VanillaSoft is based in Plano, Texas, where it has served a global client base since 2005.

ABOUT CALL CENTER WEEK
The Call Center Week will add valuable insight into the call center industry and aid in making crucial decisions about customer service strategies. The event is designed to provide the value of five conferences in one event - discussing transformational leadership, the new customer experience, workforce optimization and culture, seamless customer connections, and data and analytics. Attendees will learn how to gain a competitive advantage to improve their call center activities.

For more information on the 2016 Call Center Week, please visit: http://www.callcenterweek.com. Reported by PRWeb 2 hours ago.

All Hell Is About to Break Loose on The Real Housewives of Dallas

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When they say that everything's bigger in Texas, they aren't kidding. And the drama on The Real Housewives of Dallas is no exception. In this sneak peek of tonight's new... Reported by E! Online 1 hour ago.

Charges Dropped Against Man Once on Death Row in Texas Death

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A judge has dismissed murder charges against a New Jersey man who previously was convicted and almost executed in the 1977 East Texas slaying of a 21-year-old woman Reported by ABCNews.com 1 hour ago.

Iowa Board Votes to Allow Pipeline Work to Begin in State

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The Iowa Utilities Board says a Texas company may begin construction on an oil pipeline in areas for which the company has approval Reported by ABCNews.com 31 minutes ago.

Iowa board votes to allow pipeline work to begin in state

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DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) " The Iowa Utilities Board says a Texas company may begin construction on an oil pipeline in areas for which the company has approval.The three-member board approved an order on a 2-1 vote Monday that allows... Reported by New Zealand Herald 50 minutes ago.

U.S. Army Medicine Civilian Corps Observes PTSD Awareness Month

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The Civilian Corps of the U.S. Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) recognizes June as National Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Awareness Month, along with National PTSD Awareness Day on June 27th.

Fort Sam Houston, Texas (PRWEB) June 06, 2016

The Civilian Corps of the U.S. Army Medical Command (MEDCOM) recognizes June as National Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Awareness Month, along with National PTSD Awareness Day on June 27th. This mental health disorder can develop after someone has been through a traumatic situation, especially one that is life-threatening.

Behavioral Health is one of the main focuses within the Army Medicine Civilian Corps as they continue to provide the best quality of care to its uniformed service members, the retired service members, their families and other eligible beneficiaries every day. For example, Army Medicine’s Embedded Behavioral Health (EBH) model provides behavioral health care to Soldiers in close proximity to their unit’s work area. The goal of EBH is to work within a closer physical proximity to Soldiers’ work areas to help streamline the behavioral health treatment process. The Civilian Corps pursues qualified behavioral health professionals to staff Army hospitals and clinics worldwide.

“Our behavioral health professionals strive to provide the best treatment possible for our Army service members, veterans, and their families,” says Dr. Joseph Harrison, Chief, Recruitment and Retention, Headquarters U.S. Army Medical Command, Civilian Human Resources Division. “The Civilian Corps offers a rewarding opportunity for civilian behavioral health providers to work alongside our military counterparts and make a difference without requiring military duties like enlistment or deployment.”

The U.S. Army Medicine Civilian Corps has career opportunities in the fields of psychiatry, psychology, social work and counseling. More information can be found at http://www.civilianmedicaljobs.com.

Civilians make up approximately 60% of the total Army Medicine workforce and provide day-to-day care for uniformed service members, beneficiaries and their families at Army hospitals and clinics worldwide. The Civilian Corps provides rewarding career opportunities for civilians to serve those who serve their country. Employees are not subject to military requirements, such as enlistment or deployment, and receive excellent benefits, including flexible work schedules, competitive salaries, health and life insurances and access to state-of-the-art training and equipment. Reported by PRWeb 1 hour ago.

19 beautiful photos of modern weddings around the world

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19 beautiful photos of modern weddings around the world Wedding traditions vary greatly all over the world. In the Czech Republic a tree is planted in the couple's honor, and in India weddings often last for multiple days, with various rituals taking place in the family's home.

Perhaps one of the biggest cultural differences is the amount of money couples spend on their celebrations. According to The Knot's 2015 Real Weddings Study, Americans are spending an average of $32,641 on their weddings, while Europeans spend much less, averaging around $5,000.   

But no matter where the celebration occurs, you can usually spot a happy bride and groom beaming at the camera. In celebration of that, photo-sharing app EyeEm gathered some of their users' best shots of modern weddings all over the world. Keep scrolling to see them. 

*SEE ALSO: This guy's stash of airline memorabilia shows how much flight-attendant uniforms have changed since the 1950s*

*DON'T MISS: Follow Business Insider's lifestyle page on Facebook!*

-Hong Kong, China--Austin, Texas--Prague, Czech Republic-
See the rest of the story at Business Insider Reported by Business Insider 48 minutes ago.

Lender calls Navidea's loan, tries to seize bank accounts

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Navidea Biopharmaceuticals Inc.'s chief lender has called its $56.1 million loan and is seeking an emergency court order in Texas to declare the amount immediately due. The Dublin pharmaceutical developer contends it never defaulted on its loan and said in a regulatory filing it will fight the attempt to seize its assets by Houston-based lender CRG in a hearing scheduled Thursday. Navidea has said it's in talks with interested lenders to replace CRG at more favorable terms. Navidea (NYSEMKT:NAVB)… Reported by bizjournals 49 minutes ago.

Why is the Supreme Court reviewing two Texas death row inmates' cases?

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This fall, the high court will examine the cases of convicted murderers Duane Buck and Bobby Moore, who say their constitutional protections were violated. Reported by Christian Science Monitor 47 minutes ago.

Mr. Trump: Make America Male--Again

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Rape is in the news on every continent: Korea, India, Nigeria, Brazil, and in the daily Twitter-talk but not least in the rhetorical whirlwind spinning around candidate Donald Trump. Mr. Trump rails against hordes of dark little men pouring across the Rio Grande to rape white women--even as one of the candidate's rejects confesses that she often felt "raped" by Trump in his younger self. "No, not criminally," she was forced to explain. But Mr. Trump's rape problem doesn't really concern how many starlets he has or hasn't deflowered. It's really about how he and his movement--and it is a movement--understand what makes a real man.

For the Trumpeters waving the Make America Great Again banner, the nation (maybe the world), is suffering from a collapse of masculinity. What the Donald promises is to mount up all those potentially hard males who have grown limp under the regimes of Carter, Clinton, Bush and Obama and who risk ultimate castration under a new Clinton reign. Despite his platform boasts about his own equipment, what he's really railing about is a form of collective self-violation.

It is no accident that all this locker room babble coincides with the new wave of toilet chatter over a miniscule percentage of school children who are declaring themselves as transsexuals, or more precisely as boys giving up their would-be manhood to become trans-women. (No one seems at all agitated about adolescent girls sprouting stubble and pumping up pecs.) Still, the implacable Trump has a nose for playing on both conscious and subconscious fear.

In one sense, of course, raising rape to the top of the news agenda is a good thing in spite of the Texas, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Indiana hallucinations. Talking about rape is surely a welcome change from the enforced silence its victims have had to summer since the time of St. Augustine under the rule of blind and deaf Catholic bishops. Across all those centuries rape remains a crime without data, whether committed by the godly soldiers of the Conquistadors, the Communist liberators of China or the Confederate defenders of womanhood in Mississippi. Rape, more recently assumed to have been committed by darker complexions against paler ones, has been ubiquitous.

When a minor accusation against a leader of the French Ecologist party captured the headlines of the French press last month, it signaled two things: first, women's rejection of silence; second, a new readiness by a significant minority of French men to hear the charges and to react seriously. Which gets us back what's behind the panic over junior high bathrooms.

Despite the blistering tirade from Texas's attorney general and the leaders of North Carolina's legislature, there is no reliable evidence that transgender people have any record of committing sexual assault. Undoubtedly one day such a case will surface among those who have not already been sliced by the surgeon's knife or undergone hormone treatment, but so far the leger is empty. What then is the panic about? It's not at all about girls at risk; it's about "real masculinity" under threat.

To address the reality of transgender females, or trans-women, requires acknowledgement that a measurable minority of people born with the social privilege of carrying a Y chromosome wish deeply to relinquish that privilege. To conventional male perception, giving up such a privilege seems beyond imagining. Almost without exception (apologies to Carly Fiorina, Margaret Thatcher and Angela Merkel) males control the world's religions. Males run the world's most powerful corporations. Males direct the affairs of state, and they command the world's armies and armaments industries. Concretely and symbolically, to relinquish masculinity, as hard-thrusting Mr. Trump has come close to suggesting, represents collective self-annhilation. "Make America Great Again" means nothing less than restoring the penile power that the candidate has repeatedly proclaimed is his mission.

Trans-panic in itself represents little more than a wart on the beast marching the world toward gender Armageddon. Far greater and more profound is the reality that people carrying XX chromosomes (called females) are mounting the first genuine challenge to male dominion since the mythic Allela wielded her double edged ax as leader of the Amazon warriors. XX people are now outscoring XYs (known as males) in every field of advanced university studies in every major nation around the world except those that legally block XXs from those studies. In four of ten US households, XX people are either the sole or the primary bread winners, a four-fold increase since 1960 when Donald Trump and North Carolina Governor Mat McCrory were in knee pants. Since 2000 manufacturing jobs, held mostly by men with no more than a high school diploma (and often less) have dropped from 20 percent of the workforce to 5 percent. Meanwhile wages for those mostly XY workers have fallen as industrial jobs for males have essentially disappeared and those jobs that remain have seen pay rates frozen in relation to the cost of living. (All data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics)

Are women today paid more, job for job, than men? No. Women on average earn 81 percent of the wages earned by men in the same jobs. The gap has expanded and contracted across the last three decades, but one inescapable reality is that women have increasingly displaced men in middle management jobs since Donald Trump failed to qualify for the varsity team. Moreover, managerial and business training has increasingly shifted to women who have long ago given up the notion of depending on XY people to provide them economic security. Not only are most people in the workforce XX people; most middle-managers in American business are XXs.

A study by the Pew Research Center last fall found that seventy-nine per cent of those who lean Republican believe that their side is losing politically. A Rand survey in January found that voters who believed that "people like me don't have any say about what the government does" were 86.5 per cent more likely to prefer Trump. Trump supporters feel that they, and the country, are losing economically, too. In the Rand survey, Trump did better with the people who were the most dissatisfied with their economic situation, and exit polls from the Republican primaries show that almost seventy per cent of those who voted for Trump said that they were "very worried" about the state of the economy--as against only forty-five per cent of all voters in Democratic primaries.

Bluntly stated, the gender threat to the XYs is greater than it has ever been in recorded history. Little surprise then that those moving toward the short end of the see-saw are angry at the inescapable evidence that the gender game is undergoing upheaval--be it in the exotic terrain of grade school toilets or in the legions of MBAs taking over the Social Security Administration in America or private business in Russia or storming the macho management gates at Walmart. Remember that the next time you count how many XYs are relegated to pushing the baby stroller while their XX mates are working late at the office writing the algorithms to predict baby stroller sales. Or, as a study by the Pew Research Center reported last fall 69 percent of Trump's backers see as themselves as political losers, while a parallel Rand exit poll survey in Republican primaries found that 70 percent of Trump voters saw their economic security in danger--despite clear and dramatic hard data showing overall unemployment having dropped by 20 percent over the last seven years. At the same time Centers for Disease Control mortality data show middle aged white males death rates rising for the first time in decades--mostly from drugs, drink and suicide.

In plain talk, everybody in America but the Trumpeters is doing better, and their justified fear is turning to rage, rage aimed mostly at anything and anyone that doesn't seem like a real hairy male.

No, Donald, you're campaign is not about making America great. It's about Making America Male Again. Wave your thin, plasticized, colorized bouffant locks as hard and rhythmically as you want to, but it's not going to happen. There is no turning back. Not only is the economy changing, in ways that would be impossible to turn back. So has our basic understanding of gender and gender roles. This has been liberating for millions of women, and not a small number of men and fathers. Women are thriving. Women are proving themselves to be more adaptable and resilient than men. Women are living longer and healthier while men are dying earlier and sicker. The trick, Dear Donald, is not to turn back the clock--but to "man up" in new kinds of ways. And, this isn't just the latest trend, it reflects our new understanding of gender--not simply I Tarzan/ You Jane, not simply Nature, not simply even Nature and Nurture, but a complex fluid dance we are only beginning to understand. If you can read the science--put in a call to Stephen Hawking. He'll explain it in grade school terms.

Frank Browning is the author of The Fate of Gender: Nature, Nurture and the Human Future, Bloomsbury.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 38 minutes ago.

Trump Schedules Fundraisers in New York, Texas

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Trump is accelerating his cash chase with fundraisers scheduled across Texas and in New York City Reported by ABCNews.com 3 minutes ago.

US shares upbeat after Yellen comments but pharma stocks suffer

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US stocks remained firm at midsession on Monday after a positive tone on growth from Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen and buoyant oil prices, while pharma stocks were weighed down after a flurry of clinical trial results. Yellen told an audience in Philadelphia that markets should not overreact to last Friday's disappointing jobs report. While rate watchers are edging towards prospects for a rate hike in September rather than June, Yellen insisted that the Fed needs to raise rates, but she stepped back from putting a time frame. She said  the Fed funds rate probably needs to rise gradually over time, and that should come before all of the central bank's economic goals have been fully reached, she said. The market bellwether S&P 500 was up 0.4% at 2,107, but off its best of the day following the slightly hawkish sentiment from Yellen. The S&P Midcap 400 was up 0.6% at 1,509, while the S&P Smallcap 600 gained 0.9% to 715 and the wider small-cap Russell 2000 was up 0.9% as well at 1,174. The US oil benchmark WTI was up 1.5% at $49.37. But for some pharma stocks it was a rough ride. Mirati Therapeutics (NASDAQ:MRTX) was the biggest faller on the Russell 2000 index of small-caps, dropping by 43% to $10.46 after updating on its current clinical trials. Mirati was also downgraded by research analysts at Jefferies Group from a “buy” rating to a “hold” rating in a note issued to investors on Monday. They presently have a $17.00 price objective on the stock, down from their previous price objective of $27.00. Jefferies Group’s target price would indicate a potential downside of 7.36% from the stock’s previous close. But that decline was still behind that of ProNAi Therapeutics (NASDAQ:DNAI) which recorded a 65% loss to $2.24, after reporting interim data from its Wolverine Phase 2 Trial of PNT2258. Meanwhile, Adamis Pharmaceuticals Corp. (NASDAQ:ADMP) shares were down 53.7% to $4.13 after receiving a Complete Response Letter from the US FDA. The regulator said that in order to support approval of the product, the Company must expand its human factors study (patient usability) and reliability study (product stress testing), both of which were part of the final PFS NDA.  The Company believes that it can finalize the study protocols with the FDA and complete the additional testing within a relatively short period of time at an immaterial cost, and submit the data back to the FDA sometime in the second half of 2016. Ocular Therapeutix Inc (NASDAQ:OCUL) shares shed 42.7% to $6.78 after announcing topline results of its second Phase 3  clinical trial of Dextenza for the treatment of allergic conjunctivitis. On the flipside, Vascular Biogenics Ltd (NASDAQ:VBLT) shares rocketed by 84% to $7.30 after the company presented positive phase 1/2 trial results for its ovarian cancer treatment at the annual American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting. The results for the VB-111 drug, which treats patients with recurrent platinum-resistant ovarian cancer, were statistically significant, with a median overall survival of 810 days in the drug dose arm compared with 172 days in the low-dose arm, the company said. It also said there was a doubling in the response rate for the drug compared with Genentech's Avastin. Open As expected, stocks have opened higher, with investors preferring to take the plunge rather than waiting until after Janet Yellen’s speech this evening. Yellen, the chair of the US central bank, is expected to give her reaction to Friday’s underwhelming May jobs report, which most observers believe has all but extinguished the prospect of an interest rate rise in June. That has had an adverse impact on the US dollar, as a low interest rate environment will deter foreign cash holders from parking their money overnight in the US, but it has given a lift to the oil price, which is quoted in dollars. The US benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, was up 2.3% while the European counterpart was 2.1% higher. The S&P 500, which measures the performance of blue-chips, was up nine points at 2,108, after a little more than 30 minutes’ trading. Supermarket chain was doing its bit to bolster the index, rising 0.3% to $71.10, after broker Jefferies upgraded the stock to ‘buy’ from ‘hold’ and bumped up the target price to $82 from $60. Mid-caps, as measured by the S&P 400, were also going well, with the index 0.5%, or eight points, higher at 1,508. The small caps-focused Russell 2,000 was five points (0.4%) to the good at 1,169. Yingli Green Energy HoldingCo Ltd (ADR) (NYSE:YGE) was the best performer on the New York Stock Exchange. The Chinese solar panel maker reached a zenith of $5.08 in early deals before slipping back to $4.85, up $1.17 on the day. On Nasdaq, the hot stock was Vascular Biogenics Ltd (NASDAQ:VBLT), up 58% at $6.30. The Israeli biotech firm shot up after it said a phase I/II trial of V/B-111, its candidate for the treatment of patients with recurrent platinum resistant ovarian cancer demonstrated a substantial increase in survival prospects. Reported by Proactive Investors 12 minutes ago.

Fort Hood deaths in flooding raises questions about training

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FORT HOOD, Texas (AP) — An accident that killed nine Fort Hood soldiers in flooding during a training exercise in Texas has prompted multiple investigations. Reported by CNSNews.com 13 minutes ago.

If Trump Is Winning, Why Aren't Congressional Republicans Losing Primaries?

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WASHINGTON -- Donald Trump is almost certain to be the Republican nominee, voters are calling for seismic changes to our political system, and not a single Republican member of Congress has lost a primary this year. Um, what?

There are plenty of theories on The Rise Of Trump -- some better than others -- but most explanations hinge on the extreme dissatisfaction voters have toward Washington and our current politics. In the Trump-is-a-hand-grenade scenario, voters chose the political neophyte in an effort to blow up government.

But if Republican voters are truly trying to make rubble of the Capitol, why are those same voters turning out to the polls and re-electing their members of Congress at every turn?

Ask Republican members of Congress, and they’ll do the verbal equivalent of scratching their heads.

“Oh! Great question!” Rep. Rod Blum (R-Iowa) excitedly told The Huffington Post. “I don’t have an answer to that.”

A number of Republicans thought it was a surprising contrast -- “I don’t get it,” Blum said -- and most Republicans agreed that there was considerable outrage among voters.

“I don’t think people are happy with Republicans,” Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) said.

But if voters aren’t happy, why aren’t they supporting disruptive challengers?

The most cogent Republican response seems to be that this goes back to “that adage,” in the words of Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), “people are upset with the way Congress works as a whole, but they like the individual."

That was a common explanation Republicans offered, in a butchering of the so-called “Fenno’s paradox,” named after political science Hall of Famer Richard Fenno and his seminal work, “If, as Ralph Nader Says, Congress is ‘the Broken Branch,’ How Come We Love Our Congressmen so Much?”

Fenno noted that, when he visited congressional districts, constituents frequently told him their congressman was the best. That, coupled with incumbents winning re-election more than 90 percent of the time despite poor congressional approval ratings, led Fenno to observe a clear separation between how voters see Congress writ large and how they see their individual member of Congress.

Still, all the incumbent advantage aside, it seems odd that Trump could rise to power in some populist fit of rage while voters go out and re-elect their congressmen. 

“I don’t disagree,” said Rep. Scott DesJarlais (R-Tenn.), a conservative House Freedom Caucus member who was one of the first lawmakers to endorse Trump. “Maybe that’s a little strange, but it’s been a strange election year.”

Except that, excusing Trump for a moment, maybe it’s not that weird.

The last time no Republican lost a primary was 2004, and there are five other times in the last 30 years where only one Republican lost in a primary.

On the Democratic side, this same dynamic is playing out. Voters who are feeling the Bern are still re-electing their Democratic representative. Only Chakka Fattah (D-Penn.), who’s mired in an ethics scandal, has lost his bid thus far.

And this Tuesday, the dynamic will become less noteworthy, as at least one incumbent Republican will lose their seat when Reps. George Holding and Renee Ellmers square off in North Carolina because of redistricting.

But isn’t it surprising if no true GOP challenger beats an incumbent this primary season, when roughly 20 million of 30 million Republican primary voters went for outsiders Trump and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas)?

Not really, political scientists say.

Robert Boatright, the author of Getting Primaried: The Changing Politics of Congressional Primary Challenges, told HuffPost that primary challengers are most often driven by outside groups. “I think the sorts of groups that have financed primary challenges in previous years are probably preoccupied with aiding Republican incumbents in states where Trump may be a drag on the ticket,” Boatright said.

“Trump basically has so dominated people’s attention this year that conservative groups haven’t really tried to mount any challenges,” he added.

In the highest-profile primary races -- like Ways and Means Chairman Kevin Brady’s race in north Houston, and the contest for Transportation and Infrastructure Chairman Bill Shuster’s Pennsylvania seat -- both incumbents were able to raise massive sums of money to fend off their challengers, Steve Toth and Art Halvorson, respectively. (Halvorson may have a second chance to take down Shuster, after a preliminary vote count showed he might win the Democratic primary as a write-in candidate.)

Trump likes to tout all the new voters he's brought into the party, but the truth is these aren't new voters; they're just general election voters who are new to voting in primaries. In some ways, these voters are doing what they almost always do: re-elect their congressman.

It's true that congressional approval ratings are still in the toilet. The most recent Gallup poll in May showed that only 18 percent of respondents approve of the way Congress is handling its job. But those numbers are actually up from 11 percent in November, and they've been on a pretty steady rise this year. 

As Fenno pointed out decades ago, congressional approval ratings matter very little in re-election, particularly when voters clearly separate their member from Congress as a whole.

And for all the populist bluster out there, the unemployment rate is at 4.7 percent, gas prices are at a national average of $2.33, and only 13 percent of Americans "worry a great deal" that they or someone in their family will be a victim of terrorism.

Perhaps it's less notable that voters are re-electing their congressmen across the board, and more notable that they ever nominated Trump. 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 2 minutes ago.

Trump schedules fundraisers in New York, Texas

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Donald Trump plans at least five fundraisers in the coming weeks, significantly accelerating his cash chase as he builds a finance operation from scratch. Reported by ajc.com 2 seconds ago.

Last known 9/11 search and rescue dog dies at 16

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Bretagne, the last known surviving dog that aided in September 11, 2001 search and rescue efforts passed away on Monday. She was 16 years old, and was euthanized peacefully in Texas. 

The golden retriever was 2 years old when she was deployed as a FEMA Search and Rescue Canine to the site of the World Trade Center for 10 days with Texas Task Force 1 (TX-TF1) and her handler Denise Corliss.

Bretagne met Corliss when she was just 8 weeks old, and began training with TX-TF1 to be a FEMA certified at 12 months. 

In addition to serving at ground zero, Bretagne also aided in nearly a dozen other disasters, including Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Ivan, according to a memorial from TX-TF1. Read more...

More about September 11, Dog, Watercooler, and Pics Reported by Mashable 3 hours ago.

Colbert Blasts Off At Congressman Who Doesn’t Want Gays In Space

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On "The Late Show" Monday, Stephen Colbert wrestled with the comments of Texas congressman Louie Gohmert, who said recently that the U.S. should not send gays into space to colonize because they can't have children.

Come on, Religious Right, this is what you've always dreamed of: shooting gays into space! First you don't want them on Earth, and now you do? Make a decision!
This story has been brought to you by the Bible! 

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 3 hours ago.
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