Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Small Parties and Big Dinners - Food & Drink - Broadsheet Melbourne

S

tumped as to the best venue to hold your next party when you only want your nearest and dearest present instead of your entire Facebook friends list? We?ve got your next celebration covered with this handy list of some of the most interesting places to either have a fancy and languorous dinner in your own private space, or a party that may be small in size but big in personality.

BIG DINNERS
Ilona Staller
Upstairs at Ilona Staller is a graceful affair. The dark timber accented private dining room can cater for up to 24 people and there are three menus to choose from: a standard entree, main, dessert option; the sharing table option (where a feast is laid out for all to share); or last but not least, a cocktail menu involving an array of canap?s and refreshing alcoholic concoctions.
282?284 Carlisle Street, Balaclava
ilonastaller.com.au

Church Street Enoteca
When you wish to impress with an intimate dinner for 20 or so of your nearest and dearest, Church Street Enoteca is the way to do it. The art deco-inspired private dining room comes with dedicated waiter service and complete privacy, not to mention the artful degustation menus that can be organised to suit your discerning guests.
527 Church Street, Richmond
churchstenoteca.com.au

Kumo Izakaya
Izakayas in Japan are traditionally casual bars for after work drinks, so they are spaces best enjoyed with company. Kumo Izakaya has a traditional tatami room for private parties of up to 10 people, and with it you can enjoy an enkai banquet menu, featuring favourites like edamame, yakitori, sashimi and plum wine karaage chicken. Start building up your muscles for sitting cross-legged muscles now.
152 Lygon Street, East Brunswick
kumoizakaya.com.au

San Telmo
For those friends with whom you can?t help but share everything, San Telmo may be perfect for your next milestone outing. Specialising in Argentinean dining, where sharing is compulsory, you can enjoy a plethora of empanadas and other treats in San Telmo?s private dining room, which accommodates 10?14 people. They can even organise for you to have a whole or part animal ? such as a suckling pig or a leg of lamb ? slow cooked just for your party on their parrilla charcoal grill. You?ll feel like a Viking king.
14 Meyers Place, Melbourne
santelmo.com.au

Cavallero
No matter what time of day or what you?re craving, Cavallero has you covered and when it comes to functions they won?t let you down. For a big family dinner they have a large wooden table that can easily fit 16?20. If you want more space upstairs, you?ll find a neat little function space in which you can cram up to 80 of your craziest friends.
300 Smith Street, Collingwood
cavallero.com.au

SMALL PARTIES
Madame Brussels
Cocktail jugs on the terrace, anyone? Madame Brussels? balcony garden parties are celebrated for a reason. Available for groups over 10, this is a boozy version of high tea, where you and your guests can nibble on refined ribbon sandwiches, scones and cupcakes, all while partying on jugs of the Madame?s best selection of alcoholic punches.
Level 3, 59-63 Bourke Street, Melbourne
madamebrussels.com

The Smith
The Smith is uniquely suited to catering for groups as small as eight and as large as 120, due to the space and the staff?s keenness in putting together whatever function suits you best. Cloistered away in your tailored private space, you and your guests can sample canap?s that encapsulate the best parts of The Smith?s multi-cuisine menu. They?ll even help you to match the best wines to your nibbles.
213 High Street, Prahran
thesmithprahran.com.au

Long Play
A bar with a difference, not only can you enjoy a well-curated wine list and nibbles when holding a soiree at Long Play, you can unleash your inner film buff and take advantage of Long Play?s very own cinema room. Perfect for everything from showing off your latest holiday snaps (on a screen big enough that no one can escape) to putting together your own film festival of favourite flicks, you can tailor any occasion to suit this unique space.
318 St Georges Road, North Fitzroy
longplay.net.au

Lil Boy Blue
If the thought of a terribly fancy restaurant or bar setting for your little function sets your heart at a nervous flutter, how about trying a convivial cafe for size? Kew?s Lil Boy Blue houses an upstairs dining room that seats up to 25 and a sunroom (perfect for summer) that seats 6, which sounds to us like the perfect excuse for a wee tea party.
309 High Street, Kew
lilboyblue.com.au

Rue Bebelons
Well accustomed to throwing on shows as part of the Fringe and Comedy Festivals, don?t think that that means that the gorgeous little cavern that is Rue Bebelons isn?t also perfect for your next intimate soiree. To the contrary, have yourself a party sipping wines while bathed in soft lights and listening to music provided by the very savvy vinyl collection. Arty, cosy, flirty ? Rue Bebelons will give your party a sense of effortless fun.
267 Little Lonsdale Street, Melbourne
ruebebelons.com.au

Fairfield Boathouse
For a really different party, take your friends down to Fairfield Boathouse. You can work up an appetite boating or paddling about the Yarra in canoes, then head to one of the Boathouse?s terraces for, well, any kind of function you can think of ? breakfast buffets, afternoon teas, cocktail parties, or a simple Devonshire tea. Whatever suits you.
Fairfield Park Drive, Fairfield
fairfieldboathouse.com

Source: http://www.broadsheet.com.au/melbourne/food-and-drink/article/small-parties-and-big-dinners

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Ebooks: How to Build an Online Income Using Other People's Work ...

Writing ebooks for an online income. Sounds like a lot of hard work doesn't it? All that researching, writing, proofreading and editing - hours and hours of it. If you've already got an internet business on the go - how can you find the time to produce this type of material when you have to do all the other tasks that are required to run a successful business?

Tags: internet marketing booth, internetmarketing booth

Source: http://internetmarketingbooth.com/blog/74977/ebooks-how-to-build-an-online-income-using-other-peoples-work/

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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Romney at Private Fundraiser: Obama Thinks Businesspeople Are 'Evil' (Little green footballs)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/259101048?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Williston FFA Second in National Farm Business Management CDE ...

INDIANAPOLIS- Winners of the National FFA Farm Business Management Career Development?Event (CDE) were announced Friday at the annual awards banquet. The event was held in?conjunction with the 85th National FFA Convention & Expo in Indianapolis, Ind. Dr. Lon Moeller of?South Dakota served as superintendent of this year?s event.?The top ten individuals and the national winning team received cash awards to recognize their?success in the event. The coaches of the top two teams were named Farm Business Fellows. The?cash awards and the farm business management event are sponsored by John Deere as a special?project of the National FFA Foundation. Amy Allen, Manager of Corporate Contributions at John?Deere states, ?Feeding some nine billion people by mid-century brings with it unprecedented?challenges for today?s farmers. Farm business management skills will help producers prepare to?meet these critical needs.?

The National FFA Farm Business Management CDE is designed to test the ability of students to?apply economic principles and concepts in analyzing farm and ranch business management?decisions. Participants respond to questions concerning economic principles in farm business?management as well as a problem-solving analysis section. Each team in the event has competed?with other chapters in their state for the privilege of participating in the national event.

The event, held at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Indianapolis, Ind., is one of many educational activities?at the National FFA Convention & Expo in which FFA members practice the lessons learned in?agricultural education classes.

Top Placing Teams

1st Place? Illinois Dallas Herrmann, Paige Ehnle, Joshua Feucht, and Jaylyn Knoblcoh, all of Princeville?FFA

2nd Place? Florida Samantha Sandlin, Quincy Cason, Bradley Jones, and Ty Cramer, all of Williston FFA

3rd Place? Kentucky Tyler Goodlett, Brian Jones, Andrew Krueger, and Shelby West, all of SpencerCounty FFA

4th Place? Idaho Amanda Reynolds, Henry Wilson, Max Blitman, and Brett Blackstock, all of Kuna FFA

5th Place? Minnesota Abby Resch, Molly Resch, Ryan Helmoski, and Natalie Resch, all of Windom FFA

6th Place? North Dakota Amy Bechtle, Taylor Ketterling, Jonathan Ketterling, and Phillip Wanner, all of Wishek?FFA

7th Place? Missouri Ashley Stecker, Collin Schnakenberg, Courtney Spencer, and Elizabeth Brechbuhler,?all of Aurora FFA

8th Place? Washington Hunter Weinert, Breanna Veltkamp, Rebecca Steiger, and Raquel Van Hofwegen, all?of Lynden Christian FFA

9th Place? Virginia Benjamin Fitzgerald, George Sheffield, and Jennifer Elgin, all of Nelson County FFA

10th Place? Arkansas Wade Pierson, David Smith, and Charles Swearingen, all of Prairie Grove FFA

Source: http://www.flaffa.org/williston-ffa-second-in-national-farm-business-management-cde/

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Hurricane Sandy: Manhattan Flooding - Business Insider

Hurricane Sandy has resulted in an extraordinary amount of flooding in Manhattan (particularly lower Manhattan) as storm surges have broken all kinds of records.

As of the middle of the night on Monday, the water has receded a bit. For example, the Battery area now has no water, after having well more than a foot of water earlier. But the city is far from out of the woods, as another high tide is coming on Tuesday morning.

The damage, power outages, and potential disruptions are all enormous, as you can see from the images below.

Below are several pictures, but before you view them, check out this dispatch from the NYT's Hurricane liveblog, which describes cars floating down Wall Street... it should help make the below images more believable:

As the evening high tide was drawing closer, there were reports of flooding in several low-lying areas around the five boroughs, places that had not in recent memory experienced flooding. In Lower Manhattan, water crossed South Street, and cars could be seen floating on Wall Street on television screens at the ConEd headquarters. In Brooklyn, water had piled back onto Van Brundt Street ? which flooded during the morning high tide ? well in advance of the evening high water mark. At 7:25 p.m., Ninth Street in Gowanus was a nearly uncrossable river of water.

On CNN, Erin Burnett, is walking through several inches of water, and it's still rising. Here's a shot from Twitter Bill Karins:

And here's an amazing shot from @AlexSilverman of a grocery store near Battery Park (which happens to be where I frequently shop)

Foursquare's Dennis Crowley tweets: "Knee deep on 8th"

image

Below are some pictures of unverifiable origin. We can't confirm which ones are real. We've seen corroborations of them, and denials, so just know that they're being passed around.

Carlos Whitt tweeted this picture, which is at 14th and Avenue C (not near The Battery).

This picture is making the rounds on Twitter, and it's supposedly the Lower East Side. We can't confirm that it's real.

Here's another shot that is said to be 14th Street and Avenue C:

From Chase Cain on 1st Avenue:

From Anupreeta Das, 22nd Street and 10th Ave.

Seawater is flooding into the Brooklyn Battery Tunnel:

The FDR Drive:

This is supposedly video of a PATH station flooding...? We've seen reports that it will take many days to a week to get the subways pumped out.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/battery-park-flooding-2012-10

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Monday, October 29, 2012

Scientists Are Making Computer Chips of the Future Out of Carbon Nanotubes

Scientists have developed a way to manufacture a new breed of computer chips that use carbon nanotubes in the place of silicon. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/F2DEdeBWekM/scientists-are-making-computer-chips-of-the-future-out-of-carbon-nanotubes

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Shepherd - Sweetie Aa - Medium - Baby - Female - Dog ...

Shepherd - Sweetie Aa - Medium - Baby - Female - Dog

This is Sweetie. She is in the care of the Jackson County Humane Society in Newport, Arkansas, along with 6 other siblings. We are really not sure what these puppies are, as they all look different, and we never saw either parent. Sweetie looks more like a shepherd/lab mix puppy, with that soft tan coat. We don?t think they are going to be large dogs, maybe medium sized, as we were told that the mother was small, and they only weigh about 5-7 pounds in mid October. They are all sweet puppies, just waiting for a forever home. We think they were born about mid to late August, 2012. She has not yet been spayed, but we expect to have that done the first week or two of November, after she gets her second puppy shot, and she should be ready to come to her new home mid to late November.

The adoption fee for Sweetie is $275.00. Our costs cover the $125.00 to transport each dog regardless of size and age, as well as, spay / neuter and up-to-date shots. For more information on adoption, please call Rita at 870-217-5878 or email her at [email removed] .

CHARACTERISTICS:
Breed: Shepherd
Size: Medium
Petfinder ID: 24451092

ADDITIONAL INFO:
Pet has been spayed/neutered

CONTACT:
Animal Allies | Manchester, NH | 603-228-6755

For additional information, reply to this ad or see: http://www.petfinder.com/petnote/displaypet.cgi?petid=24451092

Brought to you by Petfinder.com

Source: http://boston.ebayclassifieds.com/dogs-puppies/manchester/shepherd-sweetie-aa-medium-baby-female-dog/?ad=24234084

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Celeb Ladies Living Large In Real Estate ... - New York City Marketing

Which celebrity has a car elevator? Who has a gift-wrapping room? Find out!

Source: Visual.ly

Categories: Entertainment, Infographic, Lifestyle, People | Tags: Mariah Carey, Real Estate, Ladies, Celebrities, Living Large, Oprah Winfrey, Jennifer Aniston, Julia Roberts | Permalink.

Author: V.

Ex-Professional Soccer Player, Commercial and International Banker, Business and Soccer Analyst

Source: http://themainstreetanalyst.com/2012/10/28/celeb-ladies-living-large-in-real-estate-infographic/

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Sunday, October 28, 2012

Nokia Lumia 822 and HTC 8X show up in Verizon colors, get pegged for November 8th release

Nokia Lumia 822 and HTC 8X show up in Verizon colors, get pegged for November 8th release

The Verizon-flavored Nokia Lumia 822 hasn't exactly been camera-shy, nor has it been coy about its imminent arrival, but the details on price and availability have, as yet, not been pinned down. That is until now, according to a tip-off at WPCentral. The candid shot shows the Nokia next to an HTC 8X -- both with Verizon livery. The word is that the Lumia 822 will run you $99 at launch, while the HTC 8X will command $199, both with a contract. The same source claims that these will launch on November 8th. Just in time to get that first killer app then.

Filed under: , , , ,

Nokia Lumia 822 and HTC 8X show up in Verizon colors, get pegged for November 8th release originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 28 Oct 2012 01:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWPCentral  | Email this | Comments


Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/etwgpz0NYIk/

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Megastorm could wreak havoc across 800 miles of US

High winds blow sea foam into the air as a person walks across Jeanette's Pier in Nags Head, N.C., Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012 as wind and rain from Hurricane Sandy move into the area. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

High winds blow sea foam into the air as a person walks across Jeanette's Pier in Nags Head, N.C., Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012 as wind and rain from Hurricane Sandy move into the area. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

A car goes through the high water as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the east coast, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Ocean City, Md. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Mary Corrus, from Ocean City, Md., takes a picture of the rough surf as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the east coast, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Ocean City, Md. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Cody Billotte walks through the high water as he gets in his car to go to work as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the east coast, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Ocean City, Md. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Cody Billotte walks through the high water as he loads his car to go to work as Hurricane Sandy bears down on the east coast, Sunday, Oct. 28, 2012, in Ocean City, Md. Governors from North Carolina, where steady rains were whipped by gusting winds Saturday night, to Connecticut declared states of emergency. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

SHIP BOTTOM, N.J. (AP) ? Tens of millions of people in the eastern third of the U.S. in the path of the unprecedented freak storm had hours Sunday to prepare for the first raindrops that were expected later in the day, to be followed over the next few days by sheets of rain, high winds and even heavy snow.

The warning from officials to anyone who might be affected was simple: Be prepared and get out of the way.

Hurricane Sandy was headed north from the Caribbean, where it left nearly five dozen dead, to meet a winter storm and a cold front, plus high tides from a full moon, and experts said the rare hybrid storm that results will cause havoc over 800 miles from the East Coast to the Great Lakes.

"I've been here since 1997, and I never even put my barbecue grill away during a storm," Russ Linke said shortly before he and his wife left Ship Bottom on Saturday. "But I am taking this one seriously. They say it might hit here. That's about as serious as it can get."

He and his wife secured the patio furniture, packed the bicycles into the pickup truck, and headed off the island.

The danger was hardly limited to coastal areas. Forecasters were far more worried about inland flooding from storm surge than they were about winds. Rains could saturate the ground, causing trees to topple into power lines, utility officials said, warning residents to prepare for several days at home without power.

States of emergency were declared from North Carolina, where gusty winds whipped steady rain on Sunday morning, to Connecticut. Delaware ordered mandatory evacuations for coastal communities by 8 p.m. Sunday.

New York City's subways, buses and suburban trains, which make up the nation's largest transit system, will be shut down Sunday night ahead of the storm, New York's governor announced. Officials were particularly worried about the possibility of subway flooding there, said Louis Uccellini, head of environmental prediction for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The city closed the subways before Hurricane Irene last year, and a Columbia University study predicted that an Irene surge just 1 foot higher would have paralyzed lower Manhattan.

Sandy was at Category 1 strength, packing 75 mph winds, about 250 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras, N.C., and moving northeast at 14 mph as of 11 a.m. Sunday, according to the National Hurricane Center in Miami. It was about 575 miles south of New York City.

The storm was expected to continue moving parallel to the Southeast coast most of the day and approach the coast of the mid-Atlantic states by Monday night, before reaching southern New England later in the week.

The storm was so big, however, and the convergence of the three storms so rare, that "we just can't pinpoint who is going to get the worst of it," said Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

"You never want to be too naive, but ultimately, it's not in our hands anyway," said Andrew Ferencsik, 31, as he purchased plywood and 2-by-4 lumber from a Home Depot in Lewes, Del.

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who was criticized for not interrupting a vacation in Florida while a snowstorm pummeled the state in 2010, broke off campaigning for Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney in North Carolina on Friday to return home.

"I can be as cynical as anyone," said Christie, who declared a state of emergency Saturday. "But when the storm comes, if it's as bad as they're predicting, you're going to wish you weren't as cynical as you otherwise might have been."

Up and down the Eastern Seaboard and far inland, officials urged residents and businesses to prepare in ways big and small.

Amtrak began canceling train service Saturday night to parts of the East Coast, including between Washington and New York. Airlines started moving planes out of airports to avoid damage and adding Sunday flights out of New York and Washington in preparation for flight cancellations on Monday.

The Virginia National Guard was authorized to call up to 500 troops to active duty for debris removal and road-clearing, while homeowners stacked sandbags at their front doors in coastal towns.

In Arlington, just outside Washington, D.C., a few shoppers strolled in and outside a Giant supermarket. Cathy Davis, 40, said the supermarket was sold out of the water she wanted to purchase, but she wasn't doing much else to prepare. She figured she would bring her outdoor furniture inside later in the day, and might make some chili.

She said the storm did lead her to decide against decorating for Halloween.

"I was like, 'eh, it will just be blown away anyway,'" she said. "What's the point."

President Barack Obama was monitoring the storm and working with state and locals governments to make sure they get the resources needed to prepare, administration officials said.

In North Carolina's Outer Banks, there was some scattered, minor flooding at daybreak Sunday on the beach road in Nags Head. The bad weather could pick up there later in the day, with the major concerns being rising tides and pounding waves.

DeWitt Quinn, 63, from the mainland city of Badin, N.C., was in the Outer Banks for his annual fishing trip when Sandy promised to disrupt his plans. He spent all day Saturday fishing from shore and a boat as the storm built up. A former member of the Coast Guard, Quinn said he was planning Sunday to spend the day inside with his buddies cleaning and preparing a two-foot-long puppy drum fish caught Saturday for cooking.

"We've got cards. We've got computers. We've got food. We're going to cook our brains out and eat very well," Quinn said.

In New Jersey, hundreds of coastal residents started moving inland. Christie's emergency declaration will force the shutdown of Atlantic City's 12 casinos for only the fourth time in the 34-year history of legalized gambling here. City officials said they would begin evacuating the gambling hub's 30,000 residents at noon Sunday, busing them to mainland shelters and schools.

The storm also forced the presidential campaign to juggle schedules. Romney scrapped plans to campaign Sunday in Virginia and switched his schedule for the day to Ohio. First lady Michelle Obama canceled an appearance in New Hampshire for Tuesday, and Obama moved a planned Monday departure for Florida to Sunday night to beat the storm. He also canceled appearances in Northern Virginia on Monday and Colorado on Tuesday.

Eighty-five-year-old former sailor Ray Leonard had a bit of advice for those in the path of the storm. Leonard and two crewmates in his 32-foot sailboat, Satori, rode out 1991's infamous "perfect storm," made famous by the Sebastian Junger best-selling book of the same name, before being plucked from the Atlantic off Martha's Vineyard, Mass., by a Coast Guard helicopter.

"Don't be rash," Leonard said Saturday from his home in Fort Myers, Fla. "Because if this does hit, you're going to lose all those little things you've spent the last 20 years feeling good about."

___

Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C. Contributing to this report were AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein in Washington; Emery Dalesio in Nags Head, N.C.; Karen Matthews and Samantha Bomkamp in New York; Randall Chase in Lewes, Del.; Jessica Gresko in Arlington, Va.; and Nancy Benac in Washington.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2012-10-28-Superstorm/id-a0e59e95c0734d578a19792321399f2b

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Saturday, October 27, 2012

MLB looks to protect pitchers from line drives

DETROIT (AP) ? Major League Baseball is looking at ways to protect pitchers from being injured by batted balls such as the one that struck Doug Fister in the head, and says hat liners are a possibility in the minors next year.

The safety issue is on a "fast track," MLB senior vice president Dan Halem said Friday night.

"Hopefully, we can come up with something," he said. "We're making progress."

MLB medical director Dr. Gary Green has been talking to companies about protective headgear for pitchers, Halem said. A report is on the agenda at baseball's winter meetings in December.

A cap liner with Kevlar, the high-impact material used by military, law enforcement and NFL players for body armor, is among the ideas under consideration.

Halem said baseball already was exploring options when Oakland pitcher Brandon McCarthy was hit in the head by a line drive last month, causing a skull fracture and brain contusion.

"After that, it kind of pushed up our timetable," Halem said. "We decided to fast track it."

"We think it's possible for 2013 in the minor leagues," he told The Associated Press.

Fister was the latest pitcher to get hit. Gregor Blanco's second-inning shot caught Fister on the right side of the head and flew about 150 feet, the ball traveling so far that Tigers center fielder Austin Jackson picked it up on one hop.

Fister remained in the game Thursday night and worked into the seventh of a 2-0 loss to the San Francisco Giants. The Tigers said a team trainer pronounced Fister fine on Friday.

Many youth leagues require pitchers to wear helmets. Getting big league pitchers to adjust to something new would certainly take time, plus the approval of the players' union.

"I definitely think it's something worth exploring," Game 1 winner Barry Zito said after the Giants worked out Friday night at Comerica Park. "We've had high-profile examples of those injuries lately, what happened with Brandon and then here in the World Series."

Zito said he'd heard that MLB was looking into potential solutions.

"You don't want it to be too drastic," he said. "Little things can affect a pitcher's delivery."

Giants general manager Brian Sabean said there was merit to the study. Finding the right product would be the key, he said.

"It would depend on how intrusive it is," he said. "Pitchers would want it to be no irritant or agitant. The weight would be important."

When he returned to the A's after his accident, McCarthy said he would be willing to listen to ideas about protective headgar, provided it didn't impact his pitching.

Halem said baseball was in the early steps of getting a protective device on the field. It would require testing and an examination from an independent laboratory to see whether it could withstand the force of a line drive going 100 mph or more.

"We actually had a guy that was in our organization that wore a helmet," Giants ace Matt Cain said Saturday. "I mean, obviously it's not the best-looking thing. But safety-wise, I mean, obviously it's beneficial."

MLB could implement the safety change in the minors, having made similar moves involving larger batting helmets. Putting it in effect for the majors would require agreement from the players' association.

"We'd have to discuss how we'd roll it out," Halem said.

Baseball mandated batting helmets for big leaguers starting in 1971. Players already in the majors could opt not to wear them, and Boston backup catcher Bob Montgomery played until 1979 without one, instead putting a protective plastic lining inside his cap.

Fox broadcaster Tim McCarver watched the replay of the Fister ball and said he thought baseball might need to "resort to helmets for pitchers."

Philadelphia pitcher Vance Worley heard that remark and tweeted: "Pitchers....wearing helmets....really?"

Last year, Washington shortstop Ian Desmond hit a liner that struck Colorado pitcher Juan Nicasio in the head. Knocked off his feet, Nicasio broke his neck when he fell on the mound.

Desmond also heard McCarver's suggestion.

"Helmets for pitchers??? Really," Desmond tweeted.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mlb-looks-protect-pitchers-line-drives-175756903--mlb.html

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AP basketball poll: Indiana is preseason No. 1

Tom Crean didn't look like any of the other people in the Maui airport that day.

He had just coached his third, fourth and fifth games in his first season at Indiana. He looked how you would expect a coach to look after losing games by 38 and 26 points, then managing to beat Division II Chaminade in the seventh-place game of the Maui Invitational by only two points. The Silverswords got off a possible game-winning 3-point attempt at the buzzer.

Others waiting for flights to the mainland on the day before Thanksgiving in 2008 were wearing leis and flowered shirts and were carefully carrying pineapples. Not Crean. He had a lot of things on his mind and looked like he was ready to blow the whistle and start practice.

"This is going to take a while," Crean said at the time. "We can do it. This place has so much in so many ways."

He was standing and pacing now, the way he piles up the miles on the sideline.

"We can do this," he said. "We can do this."

Not many people would have believed it then. They do now. Another step in the return of the fabled Hoosiers program came Friday as Crean is about to start his fifth season in Bloomington.

Indiana was ranked No. 1 in The Associated Press' preseason Top 25, a first for the Hoosiers since 1979-80, when they were coached by Bob Knight and the 3-point line was still in the experimental phase.

The Hoosiers and their fans are quite familiar with the next two teams in the voting: Louisville and Kentucky.

The three schools are from the basketball-rabid area known as "Kentuckiana." Nos. 1, 2 and 3 are all within an easy drive of each other and they are schools which have known basketball success over the years and recently, as well.

The Hoosiers, who return all five starters including 7-foot sophomore Cody Zeller, received 43 first-place votes from the 65-member national media panel. Indiana is a preseason No. 1 for the third time.

Louisville, which reached the Final Four last season, and Kentucky, the reigning national champions who beat Indiana in the regional semifinals and Louisville in the national semifinals, received the rest of the first-place votes. Louisville was No. 1 on 20 ballots and the Wildcats got the other two.

Louisville has most of the team back from last season including Gorgui Dieng, a defensive force in the middle. Kentucky, on the other hand, has another roster full of talented freshmen after four players left early and were taken in the first round of the NBA draft including overall No. 1 and 2 picks Anthony Davis and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist.

This is the fifth time that Indiana, Louisville and Kentucky were all ranked in the preseason top 10. The last time was 1983 when Kentucky was No. 4, Louisville No. 8 and Kentucky No. 9.

Indiana's other preseason No. 1 was in 1975-76 when the Hoosiers put together the last unbeaten run to a national championship.

Ohio State and Michigan joined Indiana as Big Ten teams ranked in the top five. The last time a conference had three teams in the preseason top five was 2008-09 when Connecticut, Louisville and Pittsburgh of the Big East were second, third and fifth, respectively.

North Carolina State, Kansas, Duke, Syracuse and Florida round out the top 10.

North Carolina led the second 10 and was followed by Arizona, UCLA, Michigan State, Missouri, Creighton, Memphis, UNLV, Baylor and San Diego State.

The last five ranked teams were Gonzaga, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, Cincinnati and Florida State.

The Big Ten led the way with five teams in the preseason poll, while the Big East and Atlantic Coast Conference had four each. Along with the Southeastern Conference's three teams, those four leagues accounted for 16 of the 25 teams.

Crean took over an Indiana program in 2008-09 that had plenty of history ? five national championships ? and a lot of current problems. Only two players returned from a team that was facing NCAA discipline over a phone call scandal that led to the ouster of coach Kelvin Sampson.

The program was back on the national scene last season when Christian Watford's 3-pointer at the buzzer beat No. 1 Kentucky and the fans rushed the court at Assembly Hall. Three straight losing seasons seemed long ago as the Hoosiers added two more wins over teams ranked in the top five and got back in the NCAA tournament.

Now Crean has a team that will start the season No. 1

"It's great. Those things are great," Crean said. "I think now, it's just so much about the daily challenge of getting better. That to me is what the focus is. It's a big deal, but you don't get any banners for your preseason rankings. You've got to go out and you've got to earn it every day. I think that's what this team is really doing a good job of, and I know it's early, but they're doing a good job of it."

Duke has the longest current streak of consecutive poll appearances at 97, a run that started with the preseason poll of 2007-08. Kansas has the second-longest current run at 65 weeks.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-basketball-poll-indiana-preseason-no-1-161314557--spt.html

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Nanotechnology helps scientists keep silver shiny

ScienceDaily (Oct. 26, 2012) ? There are thousands of silver artifacts in museum collections around the world, and keeping them shiny is a constant challenge. So scientists are using new technology to give conservators a helping hand. A team of researchers led by Ray Phaneuf, a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Maryland, College Park, has partnered with The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore to investigate less labor-intensive ways to protect silver artifacts from tarnishing. The new techniques, which might keep silver surfaces shiny for longer than traditional methods, could help ensure that historically important artifacts are preserved for future generations to learn from and enjoy.

The researchers will present their work at the AVS 59th International Symposium and Exhibition, held Oct. 28 -- Nov. 2, in Tampa, Fla.

Silver tarnishes when hydrogen sulfide in the air reacts with the silver, forming an unsightly black layer of silver sulfide on the surface of the artifact. If the tarnish appears on Grandma's silver flatware set, a little polisher and some elbow grease will easily remove it. But polishing, which works by dissolving or grinding away the silver-sulfide layer, can also remove some of the underlying silver, an undesirable outcome for priceless works of art.

Currently museum conservators can apply a thin layer of nitrocellulose lacquer to protect the silver. The coating is often hand-painted by a trained specialist and must be removed and reapplied an average of every thirty years. Phaneuf notes that it is difficult to apply a layer of even thickness over an entire piece, and the process of applying, removing, and reapplying the film is time-consuming.

"We did a quick back-of-the envelope calculation and found that for a big museum like the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, treating their entire silver collection with nitrocellulose films would likely be a never-ending task," says Phaneuf.

A quicker conservation method is to display silver pieces in an enclosed chamber with filtered air, but the chambers often leak, are expensive to install and maintain, and putting an artifact behind glass may prevent visitors from seeing the object up-close and from multiple angles.

Phaneuf and his colleagues are investigating a technique that could overcome some of the shortcomings of current preservation methods. Called atomic layer deposition (ALD), the process gives scientists atomic-level control over the thickness of a transparent oxide film that they grow on the surface of silver objects. By running a series of surface-limited chemical reactions, researchers can build the protective film one atom-thick layer at a time. The films Phaneuf and his team have tested are under 100 nanometers thick, less than 1/1000th the thickness of a human hair.

Phaneuf and his colleagues are currently experimenting by applying ALD films to highly uniform silver test wafers. The uniformity of the wafers allows the researchers to control variables, such as the composition of the silver, in order to create a model of the tarnishing kinetics as sulfur diffuses through the ALD film.

"This is when we get to put on our physicists' hats," Phaneuf says of simplifying the test cases and building a predictive model. The test case results showed two components to the concentration profile, indicating a faster rate of sulfur diffusion through tiny pinholes in the protective oxide film. The researchers are now experimenting with multilayer films that plug these pinholes.

Before the researchers use ALD on prized museum pieces, they will need to demonstrate that the coating can be removed without damaging the artifact, and that the thin film will have a minimal effect on the aesthetic look of the silver. In terms of appearance, ALD films may have another advantage over conventional nitrocellulose lacquer, which can yellow with age. Phaneuf and his colleagues are performing tests to measure how the thickness of the ALD films affects the way silver reflects light.

"Untreated silver beautifully reflects white light," Phaneuf explains. "You don't want the protective film to create interference effects that make it look blue or yellow." The expert eyes of art conservators will also help the researchers judge their success in this respect.

Phaneuf says that collaborating museums may soon allow the team to test their methods on forgeries of silver artifacts, and by year's end the team should be working with genuine pieces. "There is no shortage of complex objects this method might be applied to," Phaneuf notes. "There is a lot of interest now in the conservation community in how nanotechnology and other high technologies can be used to preserve art."

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/C_s30yfUdYM/121026143221.htm

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Friday, October 26, 2012

Insight: Red flags ignored for years at firm in meningitis crisis

BOSTON (Reuters) - A cracked vial here, a missing label there. The complaints coming into New England Compounding Center, the firm at the heart of the deadly U.S. meningitis outbreak, were piling up.

In March, regulators responded to a complaint from the prestigious Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary about a potency concern involving one of the eye medications it purchased from NECC. The investigation is ongoing.

Over the summer, physicians at Ruby Memorial Hospital in West Virginia returned a bag of cardioplegia solution used in heart surgery after a patient did not respond as expected.

Testing showed the drug was not responsible, according to the hospital's pharmacy director, but the episode made at least one NECC sales representative uneasy.

"I remember thinking, are we just selling too much?" he said. "Were we growing sales faster than our lab could handle?"

It is a question federal and state regulators are now examining. More than 300 people who received a tainted steroid sold by NECC that was used to treat back pain have been infected with fungal meningitis and 25 have died.

Interviews with former NECC employees and its customers, and a review of internal documents and newly-released state records, paint a picture of a company whose rapid growth was marred almost since its inception by breaches of regulations governing compounding practices. They also show how regulators failed to punish the company despite repeated violations of the rules.

As far back as 1999, barely a year after NECC was formed, the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Pharmacy responded to a complaint from a pharmacist alleging that Barry J. Cadden, chief pharmacist and co-owner of NECC, had improperly provided a healthcare provider with prescription blanks. The Board voted to issue an informal, non-disciplinary reprimand.

In 2004 the Board voted again to issue an informal reprimand after it received complaints from pharmacists in Iowa, Wisconsin, Texas and South Dakota alleging that Cadden and NECC were improperly soliciting out-of-state business, in some cases using prescription ordering forms that had not been approved by the Board.

And in 2006, the company reached a settlement with the Board sparing it from a public reprimand and other measures despite evidence that the company had again violated rules governing the proper use of prescriptions, according to public documents.

Telephone and email requests to speak with nine individuals involved in the events leading up to that settlement, including Board members and inspectors, were not returned.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which had warned NECC of violations in 2006, declined to comment on the specifics of the case due to an ongoing investigation. However, it has said a lack of clear federal authority over compounding pharmacies has inhibited its ability to take aggressive action.

NECC said it "worked cooperatively" with the Massachusetts Board to resolve issues brought to the company's attention.

A FAMILY AFFAIR

NECC was formed in 1998 by Cadden and his in-laws, the Conigliaro family, with a $5,000 investment, state records show.

Carla Conigliaro, the wife of Douglas Conigliaro, held the biggest stake with 650 shares. Douglas's brother Gregory Conigliaro, an entrepreneur who had built a successful waste management company, held 100 shares. Their sister Lisa Conigliaro and her husband Barry Cadden, both pharmacists, held 125 shares each.

None of the family members agreed to be interviewed.

Barry Cadden and his wife established themselves in a two-story brick building in Framingham, Massachusetts, next to Gregory's recycling business.

Former employees describe Cadden as gregarious and friendly, with a passion for compounding. One compound might be a medication without a certain preservative, or a pill for a patient with an allergy to the coating on the version available from the manufacturer. Or a soluble version of a pill.

"When I first started at NECC in 2004, the pharmacy consisted of maybe two or three other pharmacists, Barry and his wife, several technicians and data entry clerks, and a handful of sales staff," said one former NECC pharmacist who left the company in 2007.

The pharmacist describes an early culture typical of many small businesses.

"The staff was always happy and upbeat," she said. "The pharmacists were a funny bunch of down-to-earth characters. We were frequently treated to cook-outs and catered meals and always celebrated each others' birthdays."

Barry Cadden was extremely attentive to safety, she said. "In addition to our regular quality control meetings and reviews on Standard Operating Procedures, the techs would flag a prescription by using special colored bins as being that of a pediatric patient so that it was given extra care and priority," she said.

It was not long before Cadden sought to expand into other states. He found a receptive audience among pain clinics that enjoyed the cost savings NECC offered - in one case, the company told a client it could save $4,500 a year if it purchased a particular steroid through NECC. It also sold to hospitals who were turning to compounders to fill the gaps caused by worsening shortages of prescription drugs from traditional manufacturers.

Nearly 1,200 drug shortages, from chemotherapies to painkillers, were reported between 2001 and mid-2011, with some of the biggest increases seen in the latter half of that decade, according to the Government Accountability Office. Many of the supply disruptions stemmed from manufacturers' quality control problems and the waning profitability of certain medicines.

NECC thrived on the demand. By the time the company surrendered its license on October 3, NECC was supplying hundreds of hospitals across the country, according to a list of customers released by the FDA.

"We usually turned to the compounding center when the drugs we needed for our patients were unavailable from the suppliers we typically use," said Eric Swensen, a spokesman for the University of Virginia Health System, which purchased three drugs from NECC (but not the steroid behind the meningitis outbreak).

As the pharmacy came under increasing pressure to meet demand, additional lab staff were hired, the former NECC sales representative said. Even so, he added, NECC sales staff were routinely pulled into production to speed the process.

"We were down there for two hours at a time putting labels on syringes in the shipping area," he said. "We were doing most things by hand."

As shortages increased of ondansetron, a drug to treat nausea in cancer patients, NECC could not make the drug fast enough to meet demand, the sales representative said. Barry Cadden decided to provide the drug only to children, and priority was given to existing customers of NECC.

PRESCRIPTION PAD IRREGULARITIES

In Massachusetts, compounding pharmacies are not allowed to make unsolicited offers to physicians for products that are unavailable from a manufacturer or for which the pharmacy has not received a patient-specific prescription from a healthcare provider. Yet NECC promoted any number of products to physicians across the country, according to marketing materials reviewed by Reuters.

Complaints about irregularities in NECC's prescription ordering process have emerged periodically for more than a decade.

On October 27, 2004, Massachusetts health investigators demanded that NECC respond to allegations, stemming from a site inspection on September 23, 2004, that the company had possibly violated a Massachusetts regulation stating that compounded drugs may not be supplied to a practitioner for general dispensing without a patient-specific prescription.

"A review of the same documentation provided to you does show what would appear to be incorrect or repetitive names being provided by several of our prescribing physicians," the company said in response.

In a 2006 warning letter to NECC, the FDA wrote: "Although your firm advises physicians that a prescription for an individually identified patient is necessary to receive compounded drugs, your firm has reportedly also told physicians' offices that using a staff member's name on the prescription would suffice."

Despite the warning letter, NECC continued to seek ways to work around the patient-specific prescription requirement. It might ask, for example, for a patient schedule.

"If you are ordering 75 units we will need a representation of patients that you plan to use the medication on," one NECC sales manager wrote in an email in June this year to NewSouth NeuroSpine, a neurosurgery and pain management clinic in Mississippi. "If one day's schedule has close to 75 patients that will be acceptable to fulfill the order. If it is easier for you to provide a simple list of names that would be OK too."

Frank York, NewSouth NeuroSpine's chief executive, said its physicians did not write individual prescriptions or turn over patient names, for what he said were patient privacy reasons. Yet the center received product anyway. It is not illegal for healthcare providers to buy in bulk from licensed pharmacies, of which NECC was one.

NECC also allowed customers to stockpile medication, and to keep patient prescriptions on the hospital's premises, rather than provide them to the pharmacy, contrary to Massachusetts regulations.

"Requests for compounded medications forwarded to NECC will be based upon the (hospital's) receipt of prescriptions for individual patients or for 'office stock' in anticipation of receipt of prescriptions for the requested compounded medications," read one standard agreement offered in 2010 to hospital customers affiliated with the Child Health Corporation of America, a hospital group purchasing organization that is now part of the Children's Hospital Association,

A spokeswoman for the Children's Hospital Association did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

REGULATORY INSPECTIONS

It is unclear why Massachusetts regulators, who have primary responsibility for regulating pharmacies in the state, failed to notice that NECC appeared to be operating outside the scope of its license. Public health officials say they are investigating the matter.

Paul Cirel, an attorney for NECC, said recently in response to criticism, that Massachusetts regulators "had numerous opportunities, including as recently as last summer, to make first-hand observations of the NECC's facilities and operations."

"It is hard to imagine that the Board has not been fully apprised of both the manner and scale of the company's operations," he said.

Public documents appear to support Cirel, at least to a degree.

In a March 2003 letter to health investigators, Cirel noted that "NECC compounds some prescription medication in advance of the receipt of valid prescription orders from authorized prescribers. These compounds are made in lots, in limited quantities in anticipation of NECC's receipt of patient-specific prescription orders."

Cumulative violations by NECC from 1999 to 2003, including complaints investigated by the FDA of two adverse patient reactions to drugs compounded by NECC - one of which, methylprednisolone acetate, is the same steroid associated with the current meningitis outbreak - prompted the Board in 2004 to recommend a formal reprimand.

NECC's lawyer argued that a public reprimand of the kind the Board was seeking could trigger investigations in more than 40 other states where NECC was licensed and would be "potentially fatal to the business."

When the matter was resolved in 2006, NECC escaped the public reprimand. The Board reduced the proposed probation to one year, and stayed it. Moreover, the board of pharmacy and the FDA agreed not to report the settlement to the National Association of State Boards of Pharmacy or other outside agencies, records show.

Massachusetts regulators say they find that agreement, signed under a previous administration, "troubling."

In a statement, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health said it is "actively looking into the decisions made by the Board more than six years ago."

"All options are on the table, and no actions have been ruled out," the statement said. "We have moved to permanently revoke the license of NECC and its owners and a criminal investigation is under way. We won't be satisfied until all of those responsible for these troubling events are held accountable."

In May 2011 NECC was inspected in connection with a proposed expansion of its facility. The inspection report noted that all requirements related to prescription processing were in order, and that "patient profiles are maintained."

It said the pharmacy met sanitation standards, and that technicians "operate within the scope of the law and regulations."

This week, Dr. Madeleine Biondolillo, a top Massachusetts public health official, told journalists that the latest inspection of NECC, after the meningitis outbreak in September, showed that NECC repeatedly failed to follow standard safety and quality procedures, including waiting for results of sterility tests on its injectable steroid before shipping them to doctors.

She did not respond to an emailed question asking how NECC's standards might have fallen so precipitously.

The FDA said on Friday it had found "greenish black foreign matter" in 83 of the 321 vials of steroid linked to the meningitis outbreak. It also said an early October inspection had found bacteria and mold within two "clean rooms" used for production of sterile drug products at NECC. [ID:nL1E8LQCRX]

BIRTH OF AMERIDOSE

In 2004, new regulations led to yet more demand for NECC's compounding services. The U.S. Pharmacopeial Convention (USP), a non-profit scientific group which sets quality standards for drugs, food ingredients, and dietary supplements, issued stricter rules for all entities producing sterile preparations.

For instance, it required that air be filtered; that technicians wear masks, certain kinds of gloves, and shirts or jackets with long sleeves rather than short; and that they clean gloves with isopropol alcohol.

"A lot of hospitals said these changes really improve patient safety, so we'll budget for them," said Rick Schnatz, a senior scientist at USP. "But others said there are commercial entities already set up to do that. Over the next few years that movement got stronger, with hospitals turning to outside pharmacies that could do their sterile compounding."

The scale of the potential new business was more than NECC could manage. It was not registered with the FDA as a manufacturer and did not have the equipment that could make products at the speed or scale hospitals require.

In 2006 the Conigliaros formed Ameridose LLC to mix drugs and repackage them in a sterile environment on a much larger scale than was possible for NECC. Gregory Conigliaro and Barry Cadden were listed as company managers in the company's application. The Congiliaros and Cadden were listed as owners.

"Ameridose was a licensed manufacturing facility and was regulated by the FDA," said the former NECC pharmacist. "When my daughter was born, I was in the hospital on Oxytocin to induce labor, looked up and saw the IV solution was from Ameridose."

Between them, Ameridose and NECC offered everything from compounds mixed from powders to mixed solutions and products repackaged into tailored doses. At trade shows, the two companies would often share a booth, with a single banner listing both company names on the wall behind, the former sales representative said.

MEDICAL SALES MANAGEMENT

The sales arm for both NECC and Ameridose was a company called Medical Sales Management, also owned by the Conigliaros and housed in the same building as NECC.

Douglas Conigliaro is listed as the company's president and Gregory Conigliaro and the Caddens are listed as directors, according to Massachusetts corporate filings.

Sales representatives were employed by MSM but represented either NECC or Ameridose, the former NECC sales representative explained. By the time of the meningitis outbreak, they each had more than 20 representatives.

Douglas Conigliaro played a particularly important role at Ameridose, which has been temporarily closed.

"Doug was a top dog in the sales operation," said the former sales representative. "At Ameridose, his name is pedigree. He called the hospitals, he attended trade shows, he knew how to talk to doctors."

Douglas Conigliaro, who declined to be interviewed, is a physician who had earned his medical degree from Boston University School of Medicine and trained at Massachusetts General Hospital, according to records posted on the website of the Florida Department of Health.

In 2002, Florida's health department fined Conigliaro $10,000 and ordered him to take continuing medical education in a case involving a woman named Eleanor Karstetter. She was paralyzed from the waist down during a 1995 operation performed by Conigliaro to implant a pain pump to relieve back pain, and died two years later.

Conigliaro came to a $1 million settlement with the Karstetter family. He remains licensed to practice as an anesthesiologist and pain specialist in Florida.

NECC has stopped operating and faces an array of federal and state investigations, not to mention the prospect of civil suits for liability. Its owners could face criminal charges.

The future is also uncertain for Ameridose, even if regulators allow it to reopen.

The FDA is also under pressure, with some members of Congress calling for greater regulation of compounding pharmacies.

Amid the handwringing from regulators and politicians, those who worked for and represented NECC are clear about one thing: "Everybody knew what we were doing," the former sales representative said. "At the end of the day, we took care of problems for hospitals at a fair price."

(Additional reporting by Tim McLaughlin and Svea Herbst in Boston; Editing by Michele Gershberg, Martin Howell and Claudia Parsons)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/insight-red-flags-ignored-years-firm-meningitis-crisis-194040845.html

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ATMC Cable TV and North State Communications Choose Mariner ...

ATMC Cable TV and North State Communications Choose Mariner xVu(TM) to Ensure Superior TV Service Quality on Microsoft? Mediaroom? Deployments

Mariner's Video Service Oriented Monitoring(TM) (vSOM) Solution Dramatically Reduces Truck Rolls, Decreasing OPEX

ATMC Cable TV and North State Communications Choose Mariner xVu(TM) to Ensure Superior TV Service Quality on Microsoft? Mediaroom? Deployments

Mariner's Video Service Oriented Monitoring(TM) (vSOM) Solution Dramatically Reduces Truck Rolls, Decreasing OPEXLAS VEGAS, Oct. 24, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Mariner, a global leader in IP video service monitoring and troubleshooting technologies, today announced that ATMC Cable TV of Shallotte, N.C., and North State Communications of High Point, N.C., have deployed the Mariner xVu(TM) suite of service monitoring products, including Mariner SupportVu(TM), Mariner NetworkVu(TM), and Mariner ReportVu(TM). Both ATMC and North State Communications are utilizing Mariner's award-winning Video Service Oriented Monitoring(TM) (vSOM) platform with Microsoft(?) Mediaroom(? )middleware. Relying on insight from the head-end, the end-to-end Mariner xVu solution provides the best possible quality of experience (QoE) for TV customers while increasing operational cost savings for service providers.

Mariner is a recognized Microsoft Mediaroom( )partner in both test and measurement and application platform management. By deploying Mariner xVu, service providers can offer QoE insight to head-end technicians, network operations, field technicians, and customer service representatives. The suite significantly lowers OPEX costs by reducing costly truck rolls and managing at-risk customers proactively.

"In the short time Mariner xVu products have been at our disposal, we have experienced fantastic benefits," says Brent Brinson, Engineering Manager, ATMC Cable TV. "Mariner xVu allows us to make intelligent decisions on how we respond to service issues by quickly diagnosing whether the problems are confined to the set-top box, home, a channel, or a node. As a result, we are able to reduce our customers' downtime. Mariner xVu saves us time and money and provides our customers with shorter disruptions in service."

ATMC uses SupportVu, Mariner's help desk tool, to reduce customer service calls. With better visibility into their subscribers, the customer care team has eliminated unnecessary and costly truck rolls. Additionally, the service provider uses NetworkVu to troubleshoot end-to-end quality of TV service in an effort to identify potential problems on their network proactively and reduce the frequency and duration of outages should they occur.

"Mariner xVu helped us identify several network issues already," says Mark Dula, Vice President, Technology and Operations, North State Communications. "We are able to quickly isolate the area of the network being impacted, evaluate the scale of the problem, and then green-light any attempts at resolving the issue. Mariner xVu is a reliable tool for evaluating the current health of the network at any time and reviewing network performance during unmanned hours. Having visibility into the customers' equipment is a big advantage."

North State Communications uses Mariner's help desk tool to optimize the installation of digital TV service. SupportVu gives install and repair technicians a quick and easy way to confirm that everything is working properly, as well as verify that a repair was successfully completed --enabling the service provider to avoid a costly second truck roll in both cases.

"We are excited to extend the deployment of Mariner xVu to the North Carolina market," says Curtis Howe, President and CEO of Mariner. "Using Mariner xVu, ATMC and North State Communications can proactively and efficiently confirm and isolate IPTV performance issues before they negatively affect the end user experience, thereby dramatically improving customer satisfaction and decreasing OPEX."

Mariner xVu is the world's most deployed video monitoring solution, with 7 million devices under management 24/7, with service providers in North America, Europe, the Caribbean, and Asia-Pacific markets.

More information about Mariner and the company's products can be found at www.marinerpartners.com.

Visit Mariner at TelcoTV 2012, Booth 209

About ATMC Cable TV (www.atmc.net)
ATMC is a member-owned cooperative providing a multitude of communications services, including telephone, long distance, business systems, wireless, Internet/broadband, ATMC Security and digital cable television service in Brunswick County, North Carolina. Chartered in 1955, ATMC is the largest telephone cooperative in North Carolina.

About North State Communications (www.northstate.net)
One of the nation's top 15 largest independent communications companies, North State Communications (NSC) provides the preeminent Internet, voice, wireless, data and advanced television services to businesses and consumers in the Piedmont Triad region of North Carolina. NSC's Plex Advanced TV and Broadband Internet services are backed by the area's most advanced fiber optic network. The company's unique blend of superior technology and service delivery has made it one of the fastest growing telecommunications and home entertainment providers in the region.

About Mariner (marinerpartners.com)
Mariner is the leading provider of Video Service Oriented Monitoring(TM) (vSOM) and management platforms for multiscreen networks. Mariner's innovative, award-winning flagship product Mariner xVu(TM) allows service providers to offer a reliable, high-quality viewing experience; rapidly isolate IPTV network issues; and cost-effectively reduce truck rolls to ensure a superior broadband and IPTV service. Mariner xVu is the world's most deployed monitoring solution, with 7 million devices undermanagement. Mariner's frostt(TM) platform is an application management solution that allows operators to monetize their IPTV applications by turning every subscriber interaction into a revenue generating opportunity.

SOURCE Mariner

Mariner

CONTACT: Agency Contact: Carolyn Archambault of 202 Communications, +1-450-534-9980, carolyn@202comms.com; or Mariner Contact: Marie Jo Thibault, Director, Marketing Communications, +1-506-642-9067 or Mobile: +1-506-650-6111, mariejo.thibault@marinerpartners.com

Web Site: http://www.marinerpartners.com

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Source: http://internationalentertainmentnews.blogspot.com/2012/10/atmc-cable-tv-and-north-state_25.html

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Video: TXN Q3 EPS $0.45 vs. $0.46 Est.

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/49509179/

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Well-rested Tigers take on well-tested Giants

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Jim Leyland and the Detroit Tigers found out the hard way that rest means rust in the World Series.

Six years ago, their last Series appearance, they lounged around for nearly a week before getting wiped out by St. Louis.

This time, while once again waiting for the National League opponent to be decided, they stayed busy by working on bunts, playing against their instructional league team and letting ace Justin Verlander throw to hitters.

"Well, we just tried to come up with something," Leyland said Tuesday. "It wasn't like in 2006, where some people would indicate we sat around happy to get there, not doing anything, eating bon-bons."

"That wasn't the case. We ran into bad weather problems in Detroit, so we were really handicapped," the manager said. "So this time we've done some things to try to keep us from being idle for four or five days. I definitely think it affected the last World Series."

Verlander will start Game 1 on Wednesday night against Barry Zito and the San Francisco Giants, fresh off another stirring comeback and a Game 7 win Monday night over the Cardinals.

"I feel like I haven't played in over two months when you clinch so quick like this and have to wait for the other team," Tigers reliever Jose Valverde said.

Not quite that long.

"What is it, eight months of baseball? What's five days?" Tigers star Prince Fielder asked.

Said Zito: " I guess we can hypothesize for a while on how prepared they are, being that they haven't played these high-intensity games."

The Tigers made it easy on themselves, sweeping the Yankees in the AL championship series. They traveled to San Francisco on Tuesday and held a late-afternoon workout at AT&T Park.

"I loved it because it means we're in the World Series," Tigers catcher Alex Avila said. "Someone asked me that question after we won and I was like, 'Would you rather if we had lost some of those games?' It doesn't really matter to me. We did everything we could to stay mentally sharp."

The Giants had no trouble in that department. They've been on quite a wild ride this October, first overcoming an 2-0 deficit to beat Cincinnati in the best-of-five division series, then escaping a 3-1 hole to beat the defending champion Cardinals in the NLCS.

"You have to throw it all away because it could work in either team's favor," Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford said. "We've been playing every day, so guys might be a little more tired, whereas they've got more rest. Then again, we've been playing, so we've got our timing, where they might not."

And this little fact: Three times in the past, the World Series has matched a team that went to Game 7 in the LCS against a club that swept its series. In all three instances, the team coming off a Game 7 win breezed to the championship.

Boston swept Colorado in 2007, St. Louis chased Detroit in five games in 2006 and Orel Hershiser and the Dodgers beat Oakland in five games in 1988.

"We're fine. I think we're in the groove and feeling good," Giants ace Matt Cain said.

Triple Crown winner Miguel Cabrera has gone both routes in early rounds. The Tigers slugger was a rookie with the Marlins in 2003 when they rallied past the Chicago Cubs to win the seven-game NLCS and went on to beat the Yankees for the title.

This time, the Tigers gave themselves five off days.

"It's very different. In '03 we came from behind like San Francisco did this year," he said. "We have to focus on what we can do. We can't focus on, 'OK we haven't played, we're going to get down.' It's tough. We have to be ready to play tomorrow and we'll see what happens."

Leyland and Giants manager Bruce Bochy both hoped to be a quick study. There's not a lot of history between these longtime franchises ? they've never met in the postseason, and have played only 12 times since interleague action began in 1997.

"I don't really know the Giants that well. I'm kind of getting a crash course on them," Leyland said.

"But to be honest, when they were down 0-2 going into Cincinnati having to win three games, for me that was unbelievable. So nothing surprised me when they got to the championship series after I saw what they did in the divisional series," he said.

Likewise for Bochy.

"I'll have to learn a lot about them real soon, to be honest," he said Monday night.

"I know what a great club they are. And we know all about the guy we're going to be facing opening day and their whole staff," he said. "They swept the Yankees. That tells you how good they are."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/well-rested-tigers-well-tested-giants-220000555--mlb.html

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