PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

"Rainy River Wrong," Now Released by Dan Allex Mysteries - Enjoy This Fast-Moving Mystery/Adventure That Takes Place on the Enchanting Lakes of Minnesota's Voyageur National Park

With more loot than they ever imagined, two bank robbers start out on a well planned escape route to Canada by water. It takes a vacationing sheriff from Southern Minnesota to put a kink in their flawless plan.

2013-05-16
LITTLETON, CO, May 16, 2013 (Press-News.org) From the Rainy River to the lakes of Northern Minnesota, the action unfolds as the Koochiching County sheriff, Albert Lonetree, and his FBI associate Scooter Hansen, track three fugitives. Greed and fear diminish the count from three bad guys to two, and then the real action starts.

Southern Minnesota sheriff, Dave Johnson, is instrumental in decreasing the number of bank robbers and giving some welcomed theories on where to pursue the remaining two. As local authorities stay a few steps behind the fugitives, Dave Johnson and his family have more to worry about just staying alive, while the treacherous weather of the Minnesota wilderness envelops them.

As the chase continues into Canada, sheriff Lonetree comes closer and closer until an act of desperation seems to offer the desperadoes an avenue of escape.

E-books are available at www.smashwords.com as well as directly from Kindle, Nook, i-books and other e-platforms.

Dan Allex mysteries is a fresh approach to e-mystery books. The stories are based in the midwest and southwest and have a retired sheriff and his wife and friends ending up in a variety of predicaments. Woven through the mysteries are a touch of midwest humor and common sense that overcome the odds and win out in the end.

These books offer a new type of "mystery lite" that is enjoyable, affordable and easy to access on all types of e-book readers. Printed versions are available at www.danallex-com1.webs.com


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ye' Olde Mill to Again Host 2013 Utica Sertoma Ice Cream Festival

Ye Olde Mill to Again Host 2013 Utica Sertoma Ice Cream Festival
2013-05-16
The 39th Annual Utica Sertoma Ice Cream Festival features a weekend packed with free events that are ideal for the entire family, including live music and entertainment, crafts, loads of old-fashioned games and activities, and -- of course -- locally made Velvet Ice Cream. Slated for Memorial Day weekend, May 25-27, the Utica Sertoma Ice Cream Festival takes place at Velvet Ice Cream's Ye Olde Mill State on Rt. 13, just one mile south of Utica. Parking is $5. Details on the festival are available at UticaOldFashionedIceCreamFestival.com, with Velvet Ice Cream and Ye Olde ...

Aquila Solutions, LLC Announces Availability of The Online eCTD Timeline Calculator

2013-05-16
Today in Atlanta, GA, Aquila Solutions, LLC announced the immediate availability of The Online eCTD Timeline Calculator, enabling customers and prospects the opportunity to have free access to high level eCTD project planning expertise online, a first in the electronic publishing arena. Joshua Boutwell, President and CEO of Aquila Solutions said, "We are pleased that our expertise in eCTD project planning and publishing is now available to everyone. We hope this timeline calculator will help sponsors plan their projects and save them time and resources." Positive ...

Untangling the tree of life

2013-05-15
These days, phylogeneticists – experts who painstakingly map the complex branches of the tree of life – suffer from an embarrassment of riches. The genomics revolution has given them mountains of DNA data that they can sift through to reconstruct the evolutionary history that connects all living beings. But the unprecedented quantity has also caused a serious problem: The trees produced by a number of well-supported studies have come to contradictory conclusions. "It has become common for top-notch studies to report genealogies that strongly contradict each other in where ...

Comorbidities should be factor in prostate biopsy choice, UCI study finds

2013-05-15
UC Irvine Health urologists and health policy experts report in a new study that two written assessments that identify existing comorbidities – the patient-reported Total Illness Burden Index for Prostate Cancer (TIBI-Cap) and the physician-reported Charlson Comorbidity Index – can successfully target prostate patients who would not benefit from biopsy to discover possible cancer. The authors say that by taking comorbidities into factor, it may not be necessary for men to have prostate biopsy. This study does not preclude the use of PSA screening, but it does set the ...

Seekers of past Honduran, Mexican civilizations to speak Wednesday, 15 May, at Meeting of Americas

2013-05-15
Cancún, Mexico -- A high-tech archeological exploration team of scientists and a filmmaker, who announced a year ago that they had glimpsed remnants of what might be a fabled ancient city in the Honduran rain forests, plans to speak about the team's discoveries here tomorrow (15 May) at the 2013 Meeting of the Americas, and to show previously undisclosed images of apparent archeological sites. A 7-page article in last week's The New Yorker magazine by Douglas Preston set the stage for tomorrow's discussion of the Honduras venture and other similar explorations. The article ...

UCLA study shows warming in central China greater than most climate models indicated

2013-05-15
Temperatures in central China are 10 to 14 degrees Fahrenheit hotter today than they were 20,000 years ago, during the last ice age, UCLA researchers report — an increase two to four times greater than many scientists previously thought. The findings, published today in the early online edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, could help researchers develop more accurate models of past climate change and better predict such changes in the future. "Previously, we could only infer temperature on land through changes in climate archives ...

Collecting DNA for human rights: How to help while safeguarding privacy

2013-05-15
DNA databases might help identify victims of crime and human trafficking, but how do we safeguard the personal privacy of innocent victims and family members? A new report online May 15 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Genetics identifies a number of key challenges to consider as experts develop such programs. Identifying victims of human trafficking remains a challenge around the world; between 12 million and 27 million individuals are currently enslaved. "If ever there is a justifiable use of DNA, it is the protection of victims of human rights violations and human ...

Hot on the TRAIL of graft vs. host disease

2013-05-15
For patients with leukemia and other hematological malignancies, transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCT) can be a powerfully effective therapy. In addition to the desirable anti-tumor effect, transplanted cells can also attack the host tissue, resulting in graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Arnab Ghosh and colleagues at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center found that expression of a protein that causes cell death, TRAIL, in transplanted cells was critical for an effective anti-tumor response. Immune cells ...

Researchers identify signals that direct the immune system to reject a transplanted organ

2013-05-15
Organ transplant rejection occurs when the transplant recipient's immune system identifies the transplanted organ as foreign tissue and attacks it. It was previously thought that T cells, the immune cells that mediate rejection, must first be activated by molecules known as chemokines in order to migrate to the transplanted organ. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Fadi Lakkis and colleagues at the University of Pittsburgh used mice to demonstrate that chemokine stimulation of T cells is not required for migration. Instead, these cells must come into ...

JCI early table of contents for May 15, 2013

2013-05-15
Hot on the TRAIL of graft vs. host disease For patients with leukemia and other hematological malignancies, transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCT) can be a powerfully effective therapy. In addition to the desirable anti-tumor effect, transplanted cells can also attack the host tissue, resulting in graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Arnab Ghosh and colleagues at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center found that expression of a protein that causes cell death, TRAIL, in transplanted cells was critical for ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SwRI receives $3 million NASA astrobiology grant to study microbial life in Alaska’s arctic sand dunes

Inequality destroys the benefits of positive economic growth for the poor

HSS presents innovative research aimed at faster recovery after knee surgery at AAOS Annual Meeting

Advancing catalysis: Novel porous thin-film approach developed at TIFR Hyderabad enhances reaction efficiency

Small, faint and 'unexpected in a lot of different ways': U-M astronomers make galactic discovery

Study finds that supportive workplace culture advances implementation of lifestyle medicine in health systems

USPSTF statement on screening for food insecurity

‘Fishial’ recognition: Neural network identifies coral reef sounds

Cardiovascular health and biomarkers of neurodegenerative disease in older adults

Ethics in patient preferences for AI–drafted responses to electronic messages

Patients’ affinity for AI messages drops if they know the technology was used

New ACS led study finds wildfires pose challenges to cancer care

Scientists discover new heavy-metal molecule ‘berkelocene’

Repeated esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal bleeding

Over 1 in 3 adults in households with guns do not store all in locked locations

How environmental exposures affect genes and increase cancer risk

Rising CO2 levels: Impacts on crop nutrition and global food supplies

Water movement on surfaces makes more electric charge than expected

People with COPD and arthritis have an increased risk of death

PNAS announces six 2024 Cozzarelli Prize recipients

AMS Science Preview: Data deserts, Federal science, malaria prediction

Microplastics could be fueling antibiotic resistance, Boston University study finds

Microplastics increase antimicrobial resistance

Endocrine Society elects Santoro as 2026-2027 President

Study explores effects of climatic changes on Christmas Island’s iconic red crabs

AI in engineering

Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado awarded $450,000 establishing a Clinical Research Center of Excellence that will also serve as a second site for SYNGAP1 ProMMiS

Empire Discovery Institute appoints Dr. Ronald Newbold as Chief Executive Officer

Douglas Hanahan, Ph.D., FAACR, honored with the 2025 Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research

Mapping DNA's hidden switches: A methylation atlas

[Press-News.org] "Rainy River Wrong," Now Released by Dan Allex Mysteries - Enjoy This Fast-Moving Mystery/Adventure That Takes Place on the Enchanting Lakes of Minnesota's Voyageur National Park
With more loot than they ever imagined, two bank robbers start out on a well planned escape route to Canada by water. It takes a vacationing sheriff from Southern Minnesota to put a kink in their flawless plan.