Gators flex muscles for charities at annual event Independent Florida Alligator Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:59 PM PDT UF players competed in strength and agility drills to help raise money for six different local charities. The team representing STOP! Childrenâs Cancer, Inc., led by linebacker Lorenzo Edwards, won the event. | Study: Some Cold Cuts Linked To Bladder Cancer WCBS-TV New York Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:52 PM PDT A new health study may have you rethinking what you eat for lunch. The report published in the journal "Cancer," links some popular cold cuts with bladder cancer. The deli counter is a carnivore's delight, but it's what's lurking inside some of those delectable, spiced and cured meats that could be trouble, particularly the red meat cold cuts. | Ailing Seiji Ozawa Ready for Comeback Arts Journal Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:42 PM PDT "Acclaimed Japanese conductor Seiji Ozawa plans a comeback concert next month, declaring he has started his 'second life' after surgery for esophagus cancer and seven months of treatment." | Williston, ND, $147,000 Raised at Relay for Life KFYR-TV Bismarck Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:39 PM PDT People young and old came to walk the walk at Cutting Field in Williston... To help raise money for cancer research. Thursday night`s storm produced some heavy rain...so the track Relay for Life usually takes place on was unusable this year... calling for a quick change in plans. | Cover it Live recap: Truckee Relay for Life Sierra Sun Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:35 PM PDT The Truckee Relay for Life Luminaria celebration is a moving event. The American Cancer Society Relay For Life unites communities across the country each year to celebrate the lives of those who have battled cancer, remember loved ones lost, and fight back against a disease that takes too much. | Common case of HPV AsiaOne Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:34 PM PDT TALK on human papillomavirus (HPV) mostly centres on women since it increases their risk of cervical cancer. But Dr Suresh Kumarasamy, a consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist, says the virus can infect men, too. | Cancer links specific to Japanese men AsiaOne Mon, 02 Aug 2010 21:33 PM PDT Japanese researchers have discovered five new genetic variations associated with prostate cancer that are specific to Japanese men, a finding that could help detect the cancer earlier and aid the development of treatments. The findings were reported Monday in Nature Genetics. | | |
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