Sunday, September 04, 2005

Mesothelioma News 9/4/2005

Alfacell Provides Update on ONCONASE(R) Malignant Mesothelioma Phase IIIb Trial

Alfacell Corporation today provided an update on the status of its international, confirmatory Phase IIIb malignant mesothelioma trial for ONCONASE� , the Company's lead investigational drug candidate:

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Writer proud of his role with EB

NEW LONDON Owen O Neill, a New London resident who worked in Electric Boat s Groton shipyard from 1934-79, spent part of his retirement writing his memoirs on the development of the world s first nuclear submarine in 1951.

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Support lacking in region

For all the people in the region suffering from asbestos-related illnesses and the families they leave behind, not a single support group exists in Eastern Connecticut or statewide.

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Submarine workers served their nation well

Submarine warfare is often presented in a romantic light. Books have been written or movies filmed on dramatic undersea rescues, dangerous Cold War missions and heroic World War II battles.

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billingsgazette.com - Montana and Wyoming news and classifieds

I thought I had seen some inflammatory letters to the editor, and then I saw the worst in the paper on Aug. 26. This letter pounded on out-of-state "freeloaders," (i.e. RVers).

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Local News - Norwich Bulletin - www.norwichbulletin.com

Thomas McGovern was a strong, healthy pipefitter at Electric Boat in Groton when he watched the world's first nuclear submarine, the USS Nautilus, slip below the Thames River for its maiden voyage on Jan. 21, 1954.

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ACT man starts endurance ski record

A Canberra man aims to break the world record for skiing continuously - 200 hours and eight minutes - to raise money help sufferers of asbestosis.

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ACT man starts endurance ski record

Nick Willey describes his attempt to break a world record for endurance skiing - an eight-and-a-half day ultra-marathon - as being "a bit crazy". The 33-year-old father of two from Canberra aims to break the Guinness Book world record for skiing continuously of 200 hours and eight minutes.

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'Within months he had gone . . .'

THE family of a Rastrick man who died 20 years after working with asbes-tos coated pipes say they have lost a loving family man who had everything to live for. (02/09/2005 10:05:30)

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In scholarships, sweat the small stuff

Those smaller awards can really add up, and there's less competition for them.

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