Research and Markets: Top 450 Aerospace & Defence (Global)

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/kzgqsq/top_450_aerospace) has announced the addition of the "Top 450 Aerospace & Defence (Global)" report to their offering.

This report is an in-depth financial evaluation of the Global Aerospace & Defence. Using the unique Plimsoll method of analysis, each of the top 450 companies included is individually assessed and ranked against each other and compared to industry averages. Using the most up-to-date financial information available, the two-page per company analysis provides detailed financial analysis for each organisation.

The following are some of the key findings of this new report:

- 91 of the 450 companies analysed have been rated as Danger

- 70 companies are ripe for takeover

- 80 companies achieved greater than 10% increase in sales last year.

- 60 companies made a pre-tax loss.

- 137 companies saw sales fall last year.

Our analysis gives you this unrivalled market and company intelligence using a simple graphical, numeric and model. Each company is individually analysed in both the company's own currency, and USD ($) for ease of use. These individual analyses highlight a company's strengths and weaknesses instantly.

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Research and Markets: Top 450 Aerospace & Defence (Global)

Aerospace firm Woodward to build plant near Rockford

Aerospace and energy firm Woodward Inc. will invest more than $200 million to build a new manufacturing plant and offices near Rockford, which it says will create 660 jobs over the next five years.

The plans are expected to be announced later this morning by company executives and Gov. Pat Quinn, who courted the expansion in Loves Park, which already is home to Woodward facilities. The state is providing a package of financial incentives with a potential worth of nearly $50 million.

A number of Illinois-based universities that produce engineering graduates also participated in the effort to keep the expansion in-state. The Fort Collins, Colo.-based company considered other possible sites, including in South Carolina and Wisconsin.

The new campus will house Woodward's Aircraft Turbine Systems business, including about 300,000 square-feet of production and office space on 60 acres. The company plans to break ground this fall, with initial occupancy planned for late 2013.

"Our success in gaining new business created numerous investment opportunities," Woodward Chairman and CEO Thomas A. Gendron said in a prepared statement. The new business stemmed from projected growth in the airline industry and heightened demand for next-generation narrow body jets, the company has stated.

Factors in its decision to expand in Illinois included the state's support, the proximity to its current campus in the area and the availability of aerospace engineering and manufacturing talent, Gendron said.

The 142-year-old company plans to double its work force in the Rockford area by 2021. Rockford had an unemployment rate of 11.5 percent in June, according to preliminary non-seasonally adjusted figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This outstrips the comparable state rate of 9.3 percent in June, and the national rate that month of 8.4 percent.

"The Rockford region's highly skilled work force makes Illinois an ideal place for companies like Woodward that are looking to grow," Quinn said in a prepared statement.

The state's Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity is providing an investment package that includes Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) corporate income tax credits. The potential value of the tax credits, which are based on the company meeting job creation and retention goals, is $45 million.

The state also is providing $578,000 in Employer Training Investment Program (ETIP) job training funds, $3 million in capital grants for site improvements and $500,000 in Business Development Public Infrastructure Program funds to the city of Loves Park.

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Aerospace firm Woodward to build plant near Rockford

Download great free travel guides to your mobile device

Loading up your mobile device with travel info is great, but how much of it depends on a steady Internet connection? World Travel Guide lets you download clear, informative guides in advance of your trip.

Smartphones and tablets make great travel tools, but many of their best features depend on reliable Internet service. World Travel Guide gives you a smart, lovely backup and may inspire a few side trips with its great overviews of over 200 nations and major cities. Here's how to use it:

World Travel Guide

World Travel Guide details.

That's it! World Travel Guide isn't the only way to find cool things to do, but it is great when you're on your own and off the grid.

Here are some more apps to help you in your travels:

Rob Lightner is a tech and gaming writer based in Seattle. He has reviewed games, gadgets, and technical manuals, written copy for space travel gear, and composed horoscopes for cats.

CNET On The Go. Download the native CNET app for the platform of your choice.

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Download great free travel guides to your mobile device

Great space station viewing opportunities this week

CLEVELAND - The end of this week will offer someof the best viewing opportunities of the International Space Station across northeast Ohio for August.

Clear skies and the perfect orientation of the station with the reflection of the sun around sunset will combine to offerthe chance to see the station in the night sky.

For the best viewing dates, see the graphic.

For specific information on approach, departure and maximum elevation angles, log on to http://bit.ly/WKYCSpaceStation

WKYC-TV

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Great space station viewing opportunities this week

Space station orbit successfully adjusted

Published: Aug. 22, 2012 at 5:28 PM

MOSCOW, Aug. 22 (UPI) -- Europe's ATV-3 unmanned supply spacecraft has raised the International Space Station's orbit to about 261 miles, a mission control spokesman said Wednesday.

The successful orbital readjustment follows a failed attempt Aug. 15 when the ATV-3's engines shut down prematurely because of an increase in temperature on one of the units, leaving the ISS short of its intended orbital height, RIA Novosti reported.

The orbit adjustment Wednesday was done in two stages, with the ATV-3 engines firing for 348 seconds to lift the orbit to 257 miles followed by another burn four hours later that brought the space station to its final altitude.

The maneuver was to prepare for the return to earth of Russia's Soyuz TMA-04M manned spacecraft on Sept. 17 and the docking of the Soyuz TMA-06M manned spacecraft with the ISS on Oct. 15.

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Space station orbit successfully adjusted

Amateur Paleontologist Finds Dinosaur Footprint Near Goddard Space Flight Center

GREENBELT, Md. (WJZ) The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) may be in the future business, but at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, it also has a footprint in the distant past.

Alex DeMetrick reports, the foot in question is a dinosaurs.

When NASA sent its latest rover to Mars, it carried a critical chemistry lab designed and built at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt. But the newest discovery was in their own backyard.

And all of a sudden, I saw sticking out of the ground the edges of a footprint, dinosaur tracker Ray Stanford said.

People walked right by it not knowing its the footprint of a dinosaur.

You tend to ignore it, Stanford said. Most people have different search images. They dont have dinosaur tracks on their mind.

But Stanford does. An amateur paleontologist, he was visiting the NASA campus when he spotted it.

And there it was, to much of my joy and amazement, he said.

Easier to see the outline now? Its prehistoric mud pushed up and frozen in time, quite probably by something that looked like a Nodosaur, named for the armor-like nodes or nobs on its body.

This thing was very large and heavy, Stanford said. When it steps down into the mud, it oozes a squish-up, a squeeze-up around it and thats exactly what happened here.

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Amateur Paleontologist Finds Dinosaur Footprint Near Goddard Space Flight Center

NASA's shuttle program ship gets new job

A NASA sea ship that for 30 years retrieved space shuttle boosters after they splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean now has a new mission to serve the Merchant Marines.

On Tuesday, NASA signed a memorandum of understanding with the U.S. Transportation Department's Maritime Administration (MARAD) to transfer the agency's solid rocket booster recovery ship, MV Liberty Star, to the National Defense Reserve Fleet to be used for training at the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, NY.

"Liberty Star served NASA well during the space shuttle program," Robert Lightfoot, acting associate administrator for NASA, said in a statement. "We know it will greatly benefit the Kings Point midshipmen, and we're proud that Liberty Star will continue to serve the United States with distinction."

Mission complete The Liberty Star, which was one of two vessels that were designed to recover the shuttle's side-strapped solid fuel rockets, has been in service to NASA since 1981. It and its sister ship, the Freedom Star, would each track one of the twin solid rocket boosters (SRBs) that separated from the shuttle after about two minutes of flight, rendezvous with it at sea, and then tow it back to port for its reuse by the space shuttle program.

During its three decades recovering rockets, the 176-foot long (54 meter) Liberty Star was also used to tow shuttle external fuel tanks, which were loaded onto a barge, from their assembly facility in New Orleans to NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla.

The dual diesel engine ship was also used to occasionally support research operations for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and several universities.

In the past year, Liberty Star participated in recovery tests for NASA's Orion crew capsule, which is being developed to take astronauts to an asteroid and ultimately Mars. The ship supported the Crew Module Recovery Attach Fitting Test (CRAFT) to help develop the equipment to recover an uncrewed Orion flight test capsule after splashdown.

Most recently, Liberty Star sailed in conjunction with the May 22 launch of the first commercial spacecraft to lift off for the International Space Station. As the Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) Dragon capsule lifted off atop the company's Falcon 9 rocket, Liberty Star was used to track the booster's flight using NASA diagnostic radar systems.

With the shuttle program's end last year, however, NASA no longer needed booster recovery vessels. Although the agency has plans to launch the shuttle-legacy rockets in the coming years with its new heavy-lift vehicle, called the Space Launch System, they will be treated as expendable and allowed to sink into the ocean.

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NASA's shuttle program ship gets new job

Father of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Penn Medicine's Aaron Beck, MD, Receives International Award for Contributions …

PHILADELPHIA Aaron T. Beck, MD, emeritus professor, Department of Psychiatry at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and director of the Aaron T. Beck Psychopathology Research Center, has been awarded the Prince Mahidol Award for "exemplary contributions in the field of medicine." The award is bestowed by the Thai Royal Family for outstanding achievements in medicine and public health worldwide. Thai Ambassador to the United States, H.E. Chaiyong Satjipanon, will present Beck with the award at a special ceremony on Wednesday, August 22 at 6:30 p.m.

Aaron T. Beck, MD, emeritus professor, Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and director, Aaron T. Beck Psychopathology Research Center

Thai Ambassador H.E. Chaiyong Satjipanon

WHERE:

International House South American Room 3701 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, PA 19104

WHEN:

August 22, 2012 6:30 p.m.

Dr. Beck has been honored for his lifetime achievement in developing cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Often referred to as The Father of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Beck pioneered this form of psychotherapy, which revolutionized the fields of psychology and psychiatry, moving away from the Freudian and behavioral theories that dominated the professions in the 1950s and 1960s. CBT has transformed the understanding and treatment of a wide variety of disorders, including depression, suicidal behavior, generalized anxiety, panic attacks, and schizophrenia.

The Prince Mahidol Award was founded in 1991 to honor the memory of His Royal Highness Prince Mahidol of Songkla, a member of the Thai royal house who obtained a doctorate in medicine from Harvard University in 1928 and worked diligently to bring the concepts of modern public health to his homeland before his untimely death at the age of 37. Of the 59 previous winners, two subsequently have been named Nobel laureates.

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Father of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Penn Medicine's Aaron Beck, MD, Receives International Award for Contributions ...

Joint Commission certifies 2 Primary Stroke Centers at Penn Medicine

Public release date: 22-Aug-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Kim Menard kim.menard@uphs.upenn.edu 215-662-6183 University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine

PHILADELPHIA - Two Penn Medicine hospitals have received Primary Stroke Center certification from The Joint Commission for efforts to achieve long-term success in improving outcomes for stroke patients. All three Penn Medicine hospitals are now certified to optimally treat stroke patients: Pennsylvania Hospital and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center each received Primary Stroke Center certifications this summer and join the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania (HUP), which has been certified as a Primary Stroke Center since 2004. Penn Medicine is the first Philadelphia health system to get certification for stroke care at all member hospitals.

Pennsylvania Hospital and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center received Primary Stroke Center certification following a Joint Commission review where both facilities were found to be in compliance with the requirements for The Joint Commission's Disease-Specific Care Certification program as well as primary stroke center requirements, such implementing evidence based protocols and collecting the Joint Commission core measure data to use in performance improvement activities.

"This is a major step forward for Pennsylvania Hospital and the community we serve," said Howard I. Hurtig, MD, chair of Neurology at Pennsylvania Hospital, co-director of the Penn Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Center and professor of Neurology in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. "By giving us their stamp of approval, The Joint Commission recognizes our ability to provide the very best care to patients with stroke."

A recent Penn Medicine study led by Michael Mullen, MD, assistant professor of Neurology and Vascular Medicine, presented at the American Academy of Neurology meeting showed that the emergence of primary stroke centers certified by The Joint Commission has steadily improved the treatment of stroke patients. In Philadelphia, ambulances started bringing stroke patients exclusively to designated primary or comprehensive stroke centers in October 2011, rather than the closest hospital.

"Primary Stroke Center designation at Penn Presbyterian by the Joint Commission is another way to recognize the excellent care that our staff delivers to our patients," said Sami Khella, MD, chair of Neurology at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center and Director of Stroke Services, and clinical associate professor of Neurology in the Perelman School of Medicine.

"Working with our colleagues throughout Penn Medicine, we are giving patients the highest chance of survival and lowering the possibility of permanent disability," said Scott Kasner, MD, director of the Comprehensive Stroke Center at HUP and professor of Neurology in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

The Penn Medicine Neuroscience Center's team of neurovascular experts - from Neurology, Radiology, Nursing and Neurosurgery - provides quality, evidence-based care at the right level and right time, through remote diagnosis via telemedicine, onsite treatment provided at affiliated primary stroke centers, or with advanced neurosurgical or neuroradiological interventions available at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Penn Medicine extends stroke care to patients outside Philadelphia through the Penn NeuroRescue program, using telemedicine systems to bring expert consultations 24/7 to hospitals in distant locales, and transferring those who need surgery and/or specialized neurointensive critical care to HUP.

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Joint Commission certifies 2 Primary Stroke Centers at Penn Medicine

Liberty-Mercury Preview

In the city where she played high school ball, Cappie Pondexter helped the New York Liberty boost their playoff hopes in their last game.

The league's second-highest scorer will try to deliver again in the place where she started her WNBA career.

Pondexter and the Liberty look to extend the Phoenix Mercury's team-record losing streak to nine Thursday night when the clubs meet for the first time in 2012.

Loser of four of five heading into Tuesday's game at Chicago, New York (8-13) won 77-67 to move within one-half game of the Sky for the fourth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

Pondexter, the first two-time Ms. Illinois basketball while at Marshall High School, scored 25 points to bump her average to 20.3.

"Obviously it's important because you have a buildup of excitement from being home, but more importantly we needed this win to inch closer to the playoffs,'' she said after New York improved to 1-1 on its five-game trip.

Pondexter, who won WNBA titles with the Mercury in 2007 and 2009, returns to Phoenix for the third time since being dealt to New York in a three-team swap in 2010 that brought Candice Dupree to the Mercury.

In New York's last game in the desert, Pondexter scored 17 of her 25 points in the final 6:32 of a 74-70 victory Aug. 23.

It was a far better result than in her first trip to Phoenix as a visiting player, as she was ejected in the third quarter of a 97-82 loss July 3, 2010, for smacking Penny Taylor in the face on a layup attempt.

The Mercury (4-17) have been dealing with plenty of frustration as they've gone winless since June 29 and are one game ahead of Tulsa - owner of the league's worst record.

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Liberty-Mercury Preview

Libertarian VP candidate in Triad Monday

The Libertarian Party's vice presidential candidate will be in Greensboro and Winston-Salem on Monday for two events, both open to the public.

Jim Gray, a retired California superior court judge, will take part in an educational talk from 2 to 4 p.m. at Salem College, according to the campaign. Then he heads to Greensboro for a meet-and-greet at Liberty Oak, a restaurant on West Washington Street. That event begins at 6:30 p.m. and runs until 9 p.m., according to a campaign flier.

Gray is running with the party's presidential candidate, former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson. The pair is on the ballot in 37 states, including North Carolina, despite various petition requirements that make it more difficult for third parties to get ballot access.

The party is working to get on the ballot in all 50 states, and Executive Director Carla Howell said it's likely to make it this year.

Monday's event at Salem College is free and open to the public, according to the campaign. The event at Liberty Oak will cost students $25 and all others $40, with proceeds going to the campaign, party spokesman J.J. Summerell said.

For more information, call Jason Melehani at (916) 834-7612 or email jasonmelehani@garyjohnson2012.com.

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Libertarian VP candidate in Triad Monday

Channel Islands standout Gray sets lofty goals

Channel Islands High running back Richard Gray usually has a smile on his face, which is fitting considering how many smiles he put on the faces of the school's football fans last season.

The talented tailback was the primary offensive weapon for a Raiders squad that went 7-3 and qualified for the playoffs the first time in seven years.

Gray rushed for 1,453 yards and 10 touchdowns in the regular season, and also caught 12 passes for 111 yards and two scores.

Impressive numbers, but Gray has his goals sets even higher for 2012.

"I want to gain 2,000 yards," Gray said matter-of-factly. "I know it's a big number, but my goal is to break the CI rushing record, which Coach said is 1,700 yards. We have a great offensive line and a lot of other talented players on offense, so I feel it's a goal that can be reached."

Head coach Gary Porter said he has no problem with his star running back setting such a lofty goal. Porter said Gray and the offensive linemen openly talk about it.

"In fact, we have a few other talented backs, so our line is talking about wanting to gain 3,000 yards on the ground this season," Porter said.

An explosive running game and a hard-hitting defense were two of the reasons Channel Islands reached the postseason.

Gray said he's proud of being part of the group that helped restore the luster to the Channel Islands program. When he arrived on campus as a freshman, Gray said the football program resembled the "Bad News Bears." Gray, his best friend Hosea Faagogo and fellow teammate Angel Sapien settled on a mindset to turn the program around.

"Last year was big, but I expect us to do a lot better than we did last year," Gray said. "Making the playoffs gave us a boost for this season because we want to go farther this season."

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Channel Islands standout Gray sets lofty goals

Health care: don't we all want social value and success? (Part Two)

With health care such a hot topic, and so many opinions on what is success, many people wonder: does success of a player in the health care value chain ? whether provider, payer, med-tech company ? mean social value is compromised?  How do you think about success and social value when it?s people?s lives and well-being that are involved?  We?re interviewing a thought leader in health care ...

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Health care: don't we all want social value and success? (Part Two)

Birth control to be covered by university health insurance

Birth control to be covered by university health insurance

Student health insurance at Big 12 universities

University of Oklahoma: self insured

Oklahoma State University: self insured

University of Texas: self insured

University of Kansas: privately insured

Kansas State University: privately insured

West Virginia University: self insured

Texas Christian University: privately insured

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Birth control to be covered by university health insurance

Health care focus of ‘community conversation’

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Health care focus of ‘community conversation’