Buchholz's struggles have been twofold ESPN (blog) By Jeremy Lundblad | ESPNBoston.com What's more troublesome for Clay Buchholz: his strikeout deficiency or the inability to keep the ball in the park? Perhaps the two are related. Buchholz has allowed more home runs on his fastball (five) than he has ... |
Monday, April 30, 2012
Buchholz's struggles have been twofold - ESPN (blog)
Saturday, April 28, 2012
People on the Move: June 22 - Washington Business Journal:
Stephanie Williamson has been named director of marketing and business development with MatriDesign Cos. in the Matrix Settles office in in D.C. named Brian Judis senior projecgt manager for its hospitality Judis brings 15 years of experience managing largee hospitality projects to the CORE Most recently associatedwith , where he was the directo r of capital expenditures, Judis implemented capital investmenrt projects upwards of $70 million annually and was the lead managed for the design and construction of numerous hotel projects throughout the U.S. Judis has worked with a wide rang of hotelbrands including, but not limited to, Swisshotel, , Hyatt, , and Ritz-Carlton.
he completed the renovation tothe lobby, rotunda bar and restaurant of the Philadelphia Marriott Other recent projects include the managementf of the design and construction at the Hyatt Capitok Hill, JW Marriott, Key Bridge Marriott, Four Seasonds Philadelphia, and Ritz-Carlton Tysons Scott Boos , seniort policy adviser to Sen. Arlen Specter, has been named the new deputy directord ofthe . Boos has more than seve n years of legislative and policyy experience gained during his tenurein Specter’s office and as staff director of the U.S. Senate Steepl Caucus.
In the Senate, Boos focused on a broard range of issuesincluding manufacturing, climate change, veterans, budget, appropriations, tax, housing, financial services and other business-relatede issues. As staff director of the bipartisa U.S. Senate Steel Caucus, he worked to promotr the health and stability of the domestic steel as well as the interests of its Theof D.C. named Bonnie I. Robin-Vergeer as directore of the Project. She is an experience d appellate litigator who comes to Legal Aid after nine yearxs atLitigation Group, where she made thred U.S.
Supreme Court arguments and numerous others before appellate courts throughougt the country in cases involving theFirsr Amendment, access to the courts, and consumer health and safety, among other Prior to her position at Public she worked for then-Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. on the reauthorizatioj of the Violence Against Womehn Act in 2000 and was an associate at the law firm of LLP and a teachingv fellow at the Law Center AppellateLitigation Clinic. The in Fairfax named Tiffany Singleton tothe organization’s newl created position of director of social entrepreneurshipl programs.
Singleton will be responsible for overseeingfthe design, development and implementation of UNCF sociaol entrepreneurship programs, while engaging stakeholders to develol a multiyear strategy for introducing a greatetr number of young African Americans to social entrepreneurshipo — the application of business management practice s and innovation to social reform In addition to overseeing the design and implementatiohn of UNCF social entrepreneurship Singleton will cultivate and sustain strategicx partnerships and collaborations with leading social entrepreneurds and their organizations, and organize structurec discussions with key stakeholders, ultimately establishing a national advisoryu committee of social entrepreneurs, academic, and social venture philanthropists who can provided ongoing guidance to UNCF.
has promotef Paul McManus to assistanyvice president. McManus, who joined the bank in 2006, is a financialo center leader at 1470Rockville Pike. Francis P. Nelsoh has been promoted to administrativd vice presidentat . Nelsojn joined M&T in 1992. He is responsible for leadingb and managing a retail sales and operations team for thePrincw George’s County region. in Rockville has named David E. Perkin as its new chief technology officer. Perkins joinx NIHFCU’s newly appointed CEO Juli Anne Callia to lead thecredit union’s renewed focus on technologidc innovation and delivery. Perkinsx previsouly worked at .
Over a 13-year career at with the last fiveas CIO, Perkins’ accomplishments included the completion of two core conversions, implementation of new loan origination, onlinse banking and collection systems and the migratiobn of new software. Cardinal Bank announced the promotionxs ofAndrew J. Peden to senior vice Katie L. Golden to vice presidenf and James N. Estep to assistant vice president. Peden will oversede the relationship management of developers and realestates investors, with a primary focus on acquisition, construction financing and commercia l development, including special use properties such as golf courses and churches.
He began his lending career at Cardinal Bank in 2000 as acredir analyst. Golden will continue to overses the relationship management of builders and primarily in the areas ofcommercial development, project acquisitions and client development. Golden joined Cardinal Bank in 2004 in real estatde administration and currently manages the lending supportr unit for the commercial realestate group. Estep remainws dedicated to small business SBA guaranteed lending andbusiness development. Estep beganb his financial services career at Cardinal Bank in 2004 inretailo lending. C.
Fox Communications in Silver Sprinv named Tina McCormack as senior publicrelationes associate, and Julie Feldman as publix relations associate. in D.C. named David W. Whitmorew as chief operating officer andgenerap counsel. Whitmore comes to Levick with more than 25 years of financialk andoperational experience. He has spenyt the lion’s share of his career in the communicationx industry, working with publicf relations, public affairs, lobbying and advertisingv firms. Before joining Levick, Whitmore was executivw vice president ofin D.C. with operationalp responsibility forthe firm’s publicx affairs, government relations, crisis management, and issues managemenft practice groups.
Prior to Whitmore provided communications and management counsel to numerousd clientsin D.C., Dubai and Abu Dhabi. At , Whitmorw variously served as executivevice president, chied financial officer, chief operating officer and genera counsel. announced the hiring of Brian Brobst as vice president of business developmentin Reston. Brobst, a 20-plus year engineering and constructiojindustry veteran, will be charger with expanding the firm’s presence in the high-density powed and computing markets, inclusive of finance, telecommunications, commercial data centerzs and government agencies. Brobst was previousl y employed by as critical facilityserviced principal.
Prior to he served as principal and Easternm region director of business developmentfor
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Echo From the Past or the Present? Washington Capitals Victory Over Boston ... - The Nation. (blog)
The Nation. (blog) | Echo From the Past or the Present? Washington Capitals Victory Over Boston ... The Nation. (blog) As rapidfire as Twitter itself, what started as a moment of a sports euphoria turned decidedly ugly. There were the Washington Capitals beating the Boston Bruins 2-1 in Game 7 and moving on toward the National Hockey League's greatest prize , ... |
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Candidates' group ID not as vital as willingness to serve - Orlando Sentinel
Candidates' group ID not as vital as willingness to serve Orlando Sentinel By Lui Damiani | Guest columnist Serving as District 3 Orange County commissioner during the suspension of former Commissioner Mildred Fernáández was an honor and one of the most rewarding experiences of my life. When I accepted the responsibility, ... |
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Austin makes another 'green cities' list - Boston Business Journal:
The network praised the city of Austin’ws Climate Protection Program, a plan to go carbon-neutral by 2020; and the city’ds electric utility Austin the nation’s largest provider of renewable energy, amon its reasons for naming Austin a leaderin “Austin is a greemn city because of our engaged and we hope our residentsx will continue to reduce their greenhousd gas emissions,” said Ester Matthews, directod of the Austin Climate Protectionb Program. Other cities named to the Network’s list include Chicago; Seattle; Berkeley, Calif.; Cambridge, Eugene, Ore.; Oakland, Calif.; Boston; San Francisco; and Ore.
The Mother Nature Network, founded by Rollingf Stones keyboardist Chuck Leavellpin 2008, operates a featuring original articles and columnas covering business, transportation, lifestyle and othed topics.
Saturday, April 21, 2012
FEATURE-Twenty years on, Los Angeles riot flashpoint a grim tableau - Chicago Tribune
AFP | FEATURE-Twenty years on, Los Angeles riot flashpoint a grim tableau Chicago Tribune * Riots shook Los Angeles on April 29, 1992 * At epicenter of riots, some progress, but problems persist * Streetscape dominated by for-sale signs, darkened shops * Violent crime in Los Angeles down 70 percent since riots By Ronald Grover LOS ANGELES, ... T o match Feature USA-LOSANGELES/RIOTS |
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Lingle orders unpaid days off for workers - Washington Business Journal:
In an address broadcast from theStats Capitol, Lingle also said she would scale back free Medicaird benefits to low-income adults and said the state would delaty paying some of its largefr bills until July. The governor is also asking the Judiciary, the and the Office of Hawaiian Affairxs to implement equivalent furlough days or restricttheid budgets. Hawaii law does not allowq ordering furloughs for the Departmentyof Education, the University of Hawai i or the Hawaii Health Systems Corporation, but Lingle said their spending will be restricted in an amounyt equivalent to the three-days-per-month The furloughs, which start July 1, amount to about a 13.
8 percenr pay cut, or about $5,500p for a worker making $40,0000 a year. As with Lingle does not have to negotiate the furloughs with any of the union representingstate workers. Lingle has said she doesn’tr want to lay off workers because of the disruptive effect of contracrt rules that would enable senior workersto “bump” junior workers, even if they workedx in different state agencies. The furloughse will save $688 million. Lingled said the savings are needesd to close a gapof $730 milliob between now and June 30, 2011, as forecast by the state’sa Council on Revenues May 28. All Hawaii is expected to see tax revenued fallby $2.7 billion over the next two years.
“If we do not implemeng the furlough plan, we would have to lay off up to 10,0090 employees to realize an equivalent amountof savings,” Lingle said. The state has about 46,00p workers, including 21,000 employees of the Departmentrof Education. Lingle blamed the fiscal shortfall on thelingerintg recession, rising unemployment, dropping visitor arrivals, a decline in privater building permits, a doubling of and record bankruptcy levels.
The stat e Legislature ended its session last monthn by raising tax rates onhotelp rooms, high-income earners, luxury home transactionws and tobacco to help meet the budget But Lingle, a Republicahn whose vetoes of those measures were overridden by majority Democrats, said she would not ask for additional tax She also rejected calls for legalizing However, Lingle noted that 70 percent of state operatinfg funds go to labor costs and that the state had provide d employee wage increase of between 16 and 29 percenyt over the past four years “when our economh was thriving.
”
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
Warren Buffett sells remaining Constellation shares - Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal:
Buffett, his company (NYSE: BRK.B), and that company’s subsidiary , are each no longer stockholders inConstellation (NYSE: CEG), according to a form with the Securitiezs and Exchange Commission filed Monday. They have been slowlgy divesting the stock over the past weeks and owning 7.3 percent in February and 6.3 percent last The sale ends the relationshio between the investor and Constellation, one of two Fortunwe 500 companies in Baltimore City. Iowa-basede MidAmerican got a 10 percent stake in Constellation whenits $4.7 billioh bid for the company made in September was rejected three months late.
That offer came after a cash crunch led to a steep declinein Constellation’ds stock price over several days and some investoras feared bankruptcy. Constellation spurned the offer in favorr of a deal tosell 49.99 perceng of its nuclear business for $4.5 billiojn to French firm , whicj had also been in the bidding for the company in September. For the cancelation, Constellation had to pay $175 millionj in breakup fees and $418 millioh for stocks. It also had to repahy a $1 billion loan from Buffettt with 14percent interest. A decision on whether the deal with EDF requirees Maryland approval is expected ina week. The deal is expectexd to closethis fall.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Cel-Sci plans to raise $5 million - Washington Business Journal:
The Vienna cancer drug company said it willsell 12.5 million shares of common stock at 40 cents as well as warrants to purchase another 8.375 million common shares at 50 cents apiece, to an investor in a stockm offering set to close on Monday. The initial stock is being sold at a not uncommon thanks to the fromthe 45-cent price tag each share carried at closinv bell on Tuesday. LLC acted as placemenr agent forthe offering.
Cel-Sci, whichh has been hit by the touggh economy, said it will use the funds to speed up its work on itsswind flu-treating technology and also to validate its $15 million manufacturingh facility in Baltimore, where it plans to produce its late-stages head-and-neck cancer-fighting candidate called That product has largely been on hold from planne d third-phase clinical trials as Cel-Sci waits for fundinbg or a development partner to help carry it The company also applied for a provisional patentt on its experimental, early-stage vaccine technology targetingg diseases like the swine flu.
Cel-Sci’s (AMEX: CVM) stockj fell on Wednesday by 6 cents, or 13 percent, closinv at 39 cents a share.
Friday, April 13, 2012
Business, labor, Hispanic groups make new push for immigration amnesty - Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal:
The Reform Immigration for America effort meldes amnesty reform with the ability of immigrantsw workers to unionize and pans workplace and other raidx aimed at picking up those illegally inthe U.S. The , a Hispanicc activist group, is part of the which backs immigration reform pushed by PresidenfBarack Obama. “For far too long, we have allowed a can’t-doi minority to block progress and manipulatde this issue to tear ourcountruy apart, but the urgency for reforjm is clear: economically, practically, and morally,” said NCLR presidenf Janet Murguía.
“Policies that call for SWAT-likee teams to pluck people out of their beds in the middle of the lead toracial profiling, separate exploit workers, and ignore due proces s are shamefully un-American.” Labor unions, including the and , have joinedd the campaign as have businesses groups such as the Nationaol Immigration Forum. The NIF’s board includes executivees fromthe U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Nationalp Restaurant Association, American Nursery & Landscape Association and UniteedFood & Commercial Workerds Union. Liberal and Democratic advocacy groups, including the , also are pushing the Congress could take up the issuethis U.S.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitan o has said the agency will be more targetec in its immigration enforcement with a greater focuds on employers that hire illegal but not includingworkplace raids. Napolitano is the former Arizonwa governor who previously opposed security walls onthe U.S.-Mexicko border and floated the idea of allowing illegal immigrante to get state driver’s licenses. Immigratioj reform failed to gain final passagre during the Bush administration despitr support from theformee president, U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and big busines s advocates.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Parkinson uses revenue gains, cuts for balanced-budget plan - Kansas City Business Journal:
“I said from the beginninbg that I would not make any budgert cuts until it wasabsolutely necessary,” he said in a Thursdayh release. “Unfortunately, that time has and changes mustbe made. My plan is a responsiblee reaction to the current struggles we It makes the best effory to protectpublic safety, disableds Kansans and other criticap services, and it does not includd an across-the-board cut to statde employee salaries or furloughs.” The plan includez $69 million in new the release said. Many agencies, includin the governor’s office, would receive 2 percent budgef cuts. Some programs will receive federal stimulus dollares that make upfor cuts.
Parkinsohn also called for a July 6 meeting of the Statw Finance Council todiscuss cash-flow including certificates of indebtedness, or IOUs.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Perry signs bill that includes $150 million for UTMB - Birmingham Business Journal:
The university will use the funds to build anew 200-ber hospital tower adjacent to the existing John Sealyu Hospital, restoring bed capacitu to 550, as it was priorf to Hurricane Ike. In tuition revenue bonds of $5 milliob will go to at Galveston. HB 51 also establishea measures to enhance and maintain the qualit y ofthe state’s designated and emerginvg public research universities, creates incentive programs and funding for highef education institutions, provides higher education fund and creates an interim committee to study the feasibilitu of tracking specialized technologyu research projects.
Of the 62 nationapl research institutions in the threeuniversities — , The and Texas A&Mk University — are in The Texas Higher Education Coordinating Boar has designated seven institutions as emerging research universities: the ; the University of Texas campuses in Arlington, Dallas, El Paso and San ; and the University of Northn Texas. In addition, HB 51 provides a performance incentived funding mechanism for all ofthe state’s general academiv institutions based on the average number of degreeds awarded annually and an increase in the averagse number of degrees awarded with weighted consideration for at-risk students and critical fields.
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Wadsworth Center extending its reach - The Business Review (Albany):
The for Laboratories & Research, the research divisionm of the state Department of has been in existence for more than 40 Butthe center, which focuseas on biomedical studies, has begun to pick up stea m and recognition in the last 10 Wadsworth has three locations: the 450,000-square-foot headquartera in Corning Tower; the David Axelrod Institute for Publix Health on New Scotland named for a former healtnh department chief; and the Griffin Lab, located on a farm off Routwe 155 in Guilderland. With more than 1,00 0 employees at the three sites and about 80 scientistes dedicatedto research, Wadsworth receives $20 million in federalp and private funding annually.
That amount has doublecd from fiveyears ago, a sign that Wadsworth is becoming betterd known, said John Galivan, director of research. Wadsworth conducts researcb and testing in fields such as microscopgy andcell structure, infectious diseases, microbiology, pathogenesis and environmental healtnh in support of the state's public health policies and But the center branchezs out from providing just a public service. It also does researcnh in biotechnology, using computer chips in biological testing, and the study of all the genes in a living The latter field has grabbed the attention recently of big drug andcomputer companies, and the interest of Wall Street.
Wadsworth might have been a littl slow in realizing the importancd of an integratedresearch office. Only last year did it get its firstg directorof research. Before that, the various fields of researchoperated separately, withoutt one person to oversee And in the last two or threde years, the center has made some headwah in developing joint, high-tech biotechnology projectsw with the research facilities at , the state Universitt at Albany and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy.
Galivan, a former Albany Medicalk College student who has done basic researchy in cancer for more than20 years, said partnershipxs and collaborations have becomse vital to Wadsworth's research in the latesty biomedical fields. The research of genomics is only the tip of the From there, Wadsworth studiea bioinformatics, a method of analyzing, testing and managing all the data collectec from the work in genomics.
That "information management" is used in nanobiotechnologu and microbiology, in studying infectious diseases and in analyzing genetic mutations that mostlyt are inconsequential but can predispose a persojn to a disease or to an adverse drug Bioinformatics and the implications for drug production and biotechnologty are making headlinesthese days, as companiex begin to realize the impact on the commercial The commercial market is where Wadsworth would like to head as Galivan said.
Indeed, the Center for Advancedr Thin Film Technology is talking with Wadsworth abour developing a bioelectronic project at the Universittat Albany's Center for Environmental Sciencews and Technology Management on Fuller said Alain Kaloyeros, director of the The thin film center develops products for To get there, Galivan realizese the need for partnerships. "We have complemental with arearesearch facilities, he said. "There' s a lot of fertile ground we're exploring.
" Wadswortj is discussing the possibility of a bioinformaticse centerwith RPI, said Carmen who researches molecular science at Mannella is involved with developinyg the bioinformatics project at RPI. Usinb genomics and bioinformatics, the time for testing for variousa diseases is cut virtuallyto nothing, Mannellza said. Bits of DNA that make up gened or fragments of genes are placecd on computer chips and inserted into ananalyticapl instrument. Then scientists performj many experiments at a fraction of the cost and time requirex fortraditional tests, he said. The colleged has computer scientistsand engineers, and Wadsworthn has the molecular studies for this type of Mannella said.
"On the experimental side, is strong" and RPI's core of computationalk scientists with some knowledge of biolog y is exactly what the bioinformatics center he said.
Friday, April 6, 2012
Desailly Approached by GFA for Stars' Job - AllAfrica.com
Desailly Approached by GFA for Stars' Job AllAfrica.com Ex-France captain Marcel Desailly claims he has been approached by the Ghana Football Association to take over as Black Stars coach. The 43-year-old has been heavily linked with the vacant national team coaching job following the dismissal of Serbian ... |
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
HIXNY elects new officers - The Business Review (Albany):
has elected new officers for its boardof directors. Dr. Loui Snitkoff returns for a second termas Snitkoff, an internist, is medical director of . In additionm to his chairmanship, Snitkoff serves on HIXNY’s finance, clinical, technology, governance and legal committees. Willian Young, vice president and CIO at , is vice chairman. Younh chairs the HIXNY legal committee and serves on theexecutive committee. Dr. Jerry Salkowe was electede secretary. Salkowe is vice president for clinicak quality improvement atin Schenectady. He is also clinical associatw professor for the and clinical assistant professorat . Gary J.
treasurer, is president and CEO of the , whicuh represents 56 health care providers in upstateNew York. In Mr. Fitzgerald collaborated with the tocreate HIXNY. “HIXNY” stands for “Healthcare Informatio n Xchange ofNew York.”
Monday, April 2, 2012
Scottsdale man pleads guilty to federal drug, tax charges - Phoenix Business Journal:
Timothy Keay Isaac, 47, marketed a producf called Vinarol that he claimed wasan all-naturalk dietary supplement that would promote sexual It turns out the supplement containec sildenafil citrate, the activs chemical ingredient in Viagra, a prescriptiomn drug made by . According to the U.S. Attorney’ss office, Isaac and others smuggled the ingredientr from China intothe U.S. without declaring the merchandise for invoicing as required bycustomds law. Bryan and Laura Gillette, who were chargecd in the indictment alongwith Isaac, pleadedr guilty earlier this month to one felony counyt each of introducing misbranded drugs into interstatee commerce.
In 2004, Isaac filedf for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 but did not discloswe his interest inUltra Health, Bionate or Johnston-Keay, claiming he had no monthlyt income. He also filed for disabilitu insurance benefits with the Social Security Administration and receivecd morethan $35,000. In he received a $2.2 milliobn mortgage to buy a $2.9 million home in Scottsdale. Later that year, he filed an individualk income tax return for reporting a zero taxable income and zero tax liability when his actuak taxable incomewas $80,103. He filed similare returns for the 2006 and 2007tax years. He was investigatec by the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, and Social Security Administration before the ArizonqaDistrict U.S. Attorney’s Office delivered the indictment.