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PASSINGS: John Ingle
John Ingle, 84, an actor who played scheming patriarch Edward Quartermaine on the daytime drama "General Hospital," died of cancer Sunday in Los Angeles, ABC said. Ingle took over the role as the ruthless businessman Quartermaine from actor David Lewis...
Tags: Big Love (tv program), ABC (tv network), Celebrities, General Hospital (tv program), Nicolas Cage
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Steve Sabol dies at 69; president of NFL Films
Steve Sabol, who helped his father get an unlikely fledgling movie company off the ground, then later took over and expanded the family business, now known to sports fans as NFL Films, has died. He was 69. Sabol, who had served as president of NFL...
Tags: Entertainment, George Halas, National Football League, Pete Rozelle, Sports
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Review: In 'The Brontës,' Juliet Barker plays detective
-------------------- The Brontës Wild Genius on the Moors — The Story of a Literary Family Juliet Barker Pegasus: 1,200 pp., $39.95 -------------------- Just about everything you thought you knew about the Brontës is wrong. That's the...
Tags: Tuberculosis, Biography (genre), Arts and Culture, Authors
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Luc Robitaille honors mother's Stanley Cup request
NORBERTVILLE, Canada — Madeleine Robitaille could have requested anything from her Hockey Hall of Fame son Luc and he would have moved mountains to give it to her, but that isn't her way. She and her husband, Claude, worked hard for all they had...
Tags: Detroit Red Wings, Auction Service, Los Angeles Kings, Morphine (drug), Ice Hockey
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Director Tony Scott lived like his alpha-male action heroes
With films such as"Unstoppable"and "Man on Fire," Tony Scott told adrenaline-filled stories about fearless men — spies and cops, race car drivers and fighter pilots — who live by a code and face death on their own terms. He filled his...
Tags: Entertainment, ABC (tv network), Unstoppable (movie) , Climbing, Rock Climbing
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Chinese company buys Complete Genomics for $117.6 million
Mountain View, Calif., company Complete Genomics Inc. agreed to a buyout offer from Chinese genomics firm BGI-Shenzen, an acquisition the two businesses are valuing at $117.6 million The $3.15-a-share offer comes a few months after Complete Genomics said...
Tags: Mergers, Acquisitions and Takeovers, Leveraged Buyouts, The Home Depot, Economy, Business and Finance, Companies and Corporations
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Screenings to help treat the right cancers
Cancer is running out of places to hide. A new blood test can ferret out a single cancer cell tucked away among a billion healthy cells. Radiologists are using crystal-clear 3-D mammograms to find suspicious spots and lumps that they never could have seen...
Tags: Medical Research, Health Treatments, X-rays, Science and Technology, Blood
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Genetics to determine cancer treatments
The war on cancer is poised to enter a new phase that promises more precise treatments, fewer side effects and, most of all, more survivors. And none too soon. Although death rates from many cancers have slowly but steadily declined over the decades,...
Tags: Medical Research, Trials, Scripps Research Institute, Oncology, Pancreatic Cancer
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Pedro E. Guerrero dies at 95; fine arts photographer
Pedro E. Guerrero, a photographer whose early work with architect Frank Lloyd Wright sparked a long, distinguished career in the worlds of fine art and glossy magazines, died Thursday. He was 95. Guerrero died at his home in Florence, Ariz., said his...
Tags: New Canaan, Frank Lloyd Wright, Photography, Alexander Calder, Arts and Culture
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Designer antibodies, nanoparticles, bacteria
When you pop a pill in the future, don't expect old-fashioned results. Thanks to new advances in the lab and a deeper understanding of the human body, drugs are becoming highly personalized and precisely targeted. And the hope is they'll also be more...
Tags: Nanotechnology, Health Treatments, Drugs and Medicines, Asthma, Lymphatic System
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Future wellness efforts may include advice based on genes
As medical advances continue to deliver ever-more effective treatments for symptoms and diseases, some doctors say it's time to focus on keeping people from getting sick in the first place. In other words: Prevention needs to be the priority of the...
Tags: Medical Research, Respiratory Disease, Heart Disease, Diabetes, Science and Technology
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Fighting diseases with genetic therapy
Genes make us who we are — in sickness and in health. We get our genetic makeup from our parents, of course, but in the future, we might be getting genes from our doctors too. Imagine your doctor promising to cure your cancer or heart disease by...
Tags: Leukemia, Health Treatments, Physical Conditions, Genes and Chromosomes, HIV
Sep 18, 2012
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Sep 18, 2012
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Sep 23, 2012
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Sep 21, 2012
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Aug 20, 2012
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Sep 17, 2012
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Sep 13, 2012
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Sep 13, 2012
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Sep 14, 2012
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Sep 13, 2012
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Sep 13, 2012
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Sep 13, 2012
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Cancer Photos
Dr. Margo Shoup, M.D., has been appointed medical leade...
(February 12, 2013)
They also contain antioxidants that have been shown to...
(January 23, 2013)
State Rep. Deborah Mell, D-Chicago, on the House floor...
(November 9, 2012)
