Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 797 + 0.39 + minnesota  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Caraustar Industries, Inc. Reports Second Quarter Results
Earthtimes (press release), UK - Aug 1, 2008
... affiliates7131,0851,797-- EBITDA ** $7180 $11557 $690 $9596 $7742 * Includes gypsum facing and other specialty paper sold by Caraustar's 50%-owned, ...CSAR
Leadis Technology Reports Second Quarter 2008 Results
MarketWatch - Jul 24, 2008
... (0.21) $ (1.02) $ (0.39) Adjustment for stock-based compensation 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.04 0.04 Adjustment for acquisition of business 0.04 0.05 0.05 0.09 ...LDIS
PerkinElmer Announces Financial Results for the Second Quarter 2008
MarketWatch - Jul 24, 2008
... net (305) 4547 (305) 8985 Amortization of deferred debt issuance costs 416 74 797 148 Depreciation and amortization 22714 19076 44706 38161 In-process ...PKI - NJM:7708

Earthtimes (press release)
Beneficial Mutual Bancorp, Inc. Announces Second Quarter 2008 Results
Earthtimes (press release), UK - Jul 31, 2008
... equity 617,578613,797 619,797282,410 Total Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity $3747932 $3698709 $3557818 $2580265 BENEFICIAL MUTUAL BANCORP, INC. ...
Republic First Bancorp, Inc. Reports Second Quarter Earnings Earthtimes (press release)
all 889 news articles »  BNCL - FRBK - KIDS
Source: Google News

Trends in survival of hospitalized stroke patients between 1970 and 1985. The Minnesota Heart Survey -
PG McGovern, JS Pankow, GL Burke, E Shahar, JM … - Stroke, 1993 - Am Heart Assoc
... confidence interval [CI], [0.39, 0.77 ... The Minnesota Heart Survey has previously reported
that the hospitalized definite stroke attack rate in the ... 797 11 16 376 ...

Association Between Cigarette Smoking and Prostatism in a Japanese Community -
M Rochester, J Sapporo - The Prostate, 1997 - doi.wiley.com
... mura, Japan) and American (Olm- sted, County, Minnesota) men comparing ... All current
smokers 142 0.84 (0.48?1.49) 0.39 (0.18?0.84 ... Urology 43:797?801, 1994. ...

[PDF] Can Eurasian watermilfoil be managed in Minnesota by biological control with native or naturalized … -
RM Newman, DW Ragsdale, DD Biesboer - Final Report submitted as Deliverable, 1997 - cnr.umn.edu
... Milliken and Johnson 1992; R. Shaw, University of MN, pers ... 7/31-8/15/95 2277 ? 417
19 1821 ? 797 10 2526 ... 94 3.00?0.28 647 1.53?0.26 282 5.57?0.39 1126 3.13 ...

Trace Element Concentrations and Bioindicator Responses in Tree Swallows from Northwestern Minnesota -
CM Custer, TW Custer, D Warburton, DJ Hoffman, JW … - Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, 2006 - Springer
... for trace ele- ments in tree swallow diet samples from Agassiz National Wildlife
Refuge and Rice Farm, MN ... P = 0.099 645?1225 441?1534 797?1286 942?5438 ...

[PDF] University of Minnesota aquifer thermal energy storage (ATES) project report on the second long-term … -
MC Hoyer, JP Hallgren, JL Lauer, M Walton, SJ … - 1991 - osti.gov
... of Linda McDonald,Gail DeShane,and Suzanne Bakke from the Minnesota ... 2.1 Comparison
BetweenDownholeSurveyed Positionsof Monitoring Wells at 243 m (797 ft) Depth ...
-

[PDF] Southeastern Minnesota Farm Business Management Association 2006 Annual Report -
DW Nordquist, JN Kurtz, R Holcomb, GJ Paulson - ageconsearch.umn.edu
... 2006 Annual Report of the Southwestern Minnesota Farm Business Management Association ...
Southwestern Minnesota Farm Business Management Association by ...
-

[BOOK] The Architectural, Structural, and Monumental Stones of Minnesota., by George A. Thiel and Carl E. …
GA Thiel, CE Dutton - 1935 - University of Minnesota Press
-

[PDF] Unsupervised Induction and Gamma-Ray Burst Classification -
RJ Roiger, J Hakkila, DJ Haglin, GN Pendleton, RS … - log - arxiv.org
... Minnesota State University, Mankato, MN, 56001 ? University ... a statistical cluster
analysis on a data set con- taining 797 gamma-ray ... (sd) 0.23 0.26 0.39 0.30 ...
-

[PDF] Appendix III?Tables on Pesticide Use by Crop and Active Ingredient -
N Carolina, S Carolina - ers.usda.gov
... Iowa 1 9,500 99 10,821 Louisiana 1 1,100 94 1,645 32 161 Minnesota 5,950 98
7,826 ... Clomazone 8 1.0 0.39 0.39 362 ... Total 797 87 1,577 83 1,370
-

Baryon magnetic moments in the broken-SU (6)-symmetry model -
Y Tomozawa - Physical Review D, 1982 - APS
... r_ 0.39 0.39 0.38 0.36 0.54 0.38 25 797 YUKIO TOMOZAWA ... 0.37 and 0.39, respectively ...
24, 1413 (1981); Y. Dothan, Minnesota report, 1981 (unpublished); see also JL ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 
 

Man Offers Free Lawn Mowing to Lose Weight

COON RAPIDS, Minn. (AP) -- A local man who has struggled to lose weight is hoping a lawn mower will help him shed between 30 and 50 pounds.

After working up quite a sweat mowing his own lawn this summer, Darrell Nelson thought that he could get a good workout by mowing lawns for other people as well.

So, on the Web site Craig's List, he placed an ad offering to mow lawns for free.

He figures if he eats better and mows a lawn per day nearly every day of the week, he will be able to keep an exercise program going. He said he has a hard time keeping commitments to himself, but he will stick to commitments he makes to others.

"This is no joke or gimmick," he wrote on the Web site. "I need to lose weight. I have struggled on sticking to exercise programs, including just walking, for quite a while now."

Nelson is a former power lifter who's about 5-foot-9 and 258 pounds. Since news of his ad spread, he has fielded calls from the media, strangers - even some women who have asked him out on dates.

"My life has been turned upside down, man, unbelievable," he said. "I was planning on doing five lawns: Mine plus four others. Now, I'm doing six lawns: Mine plus five others. ... I was just trying to do some yards and lose some weight, and it just - voila - away it went."

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EU Scientists Warn of Tanning Lamp Risk

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- European Union experts warned Thursday sunbeds and tanning lamps may increase the risk of skin cancer, and advised against their use by children and other people at high risk.

"We need to act rapidly in order to raise public awareness of the risks associated with sunbeds," EU Public Health Commissioner Markos Kyprianou said.

"I am concerned that indiscriminate use of these tanning devices for cosmetic purposes could lead to an increased incidence of skin-cancers."

Sunbeds and tanning lamps are not a harmless alternative to natural sunlight, said the 43-page report of the EU's Scientific committee on Consumer Products.

It gave no EU-wide figures, but officials said that in Britain alone that some 100 people a year are believed to die from exposure to ultraviolet radiation from sunbeds and tanning lamps.

Kyrprianou said the EU would consider legislating a limit to the radiation power of these devices and stricter labeling.

Sunbeds used in tanning salons use the more powerful UV-B type of radiation.

The EU report said that people under 18 and those with pale skin, freckles or a family history of skin cancer should not use sunbeds.

Ireland last month said it would ban the use of sunbeds by people aged 15 and younger as part of a new plan to reduce the country's cancer rate. Authorities in Nordic nations last year advised against the use of sunbeds, particularly for young people.

The report said since "tanning devices were not in widespread use before the 1990s ... the full health effects of their use are not yet known."

"It will take several years before the real picture of the role of the UVR tanning devices in inducing skin cancer becomes fully apparent," it said. "This is due to the long induction period of the cancer."

But it concluded that based on available evidence, "the use of UVR tanning devices to achieve and maintain cosmetic tanning ... is likely to increase the risk of malignant" skin cancer.

The risk "seems to be particularly high when using sunbeds at a young age. Thus UVR tanning devices should not be used by individuals under the age of 18 years," said the report.

 
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Court Says Stop Case Against Rude Doctor

By DAVID TIRRELL-WYSOCKI
Associated Press Writer

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -- A judge has ordered the state Board of Medicine to stop disciplinary proceedings against a doctor accused of telling a patient she was so obese she might only be attractive to black men and advising another to shoot herself following brain surgery.

Judge Edward Fitzgerald made clear in a ruling released Thursday that he did not condone remarks attributed to Dr. Terry Bennett and found them unnecessary, but ruled Bennett had a right to speak bluntly.

"It is nonetheless important ... to ensure that physicians and patients are free to discuss matters relating to health without fear of government reprisal, even if such discussions may sometimes be harsh, rude or offensive to the listener," he concluded in the ruling Wednesday.

The complaints against Bennett included charges that he told a white patient that she was so obese she might only be attractive to black men.

"Let's face it, if your husband were to die tomorrow, who would want you?" the board has said Bennett told the overweight patient in June 2004. "Well, men might want you, but not the types you want to want you. Might even be a black guy," it quoted him as saying, based on the woman's complaint.

Bennett, 68, has denied making the comment, but has said he's seen polls supporting that position.

"If you look at the polling, nobody likes fat women," he said last year. "Is it right? No. Is it sensible? No. Is it true? Yeah ... Black guys are the only group that don't mind that. Is that racist to say that?"

A 2001 complaint accused Bennett of telling a woman recovering from brain surgery to buy a pistol and shoot herself to end her suffering. The doctor was also accused of speaking harshly to a woman about how her son might have contracted hepatitis, according to the ruling.

Bennett claimed victory.

"The question now is: Will the board waste more of your and my tax dollars and appeal this, or accept done as done?" he said in a telephone interview.

Fitzgerald also ruled that state and American Medical Association requirements to treat patients with "compassion and respect for human dignity and rights" are so vague they are unconstitutional. Bennett probably would have won his challenges before the board, the judge said.

Bennett said he planned to sue everyone involved for "malicious prosecution."

"I am not inclined to be forgiving about it," he said. "It's been devastating and infuriating."

Assistant Attorney General Elyse Alkalay, who represented the board in the court case, said she was reviewing the ruling and had not decided whether to appeal.

Bennett could have faced penalties ranging from a written reprimand to suspension or revocation of his medical license.

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