Area personale

 

Tag

 

Archivio messaggi

 
 << Luglio 2024 >> 
 
LuMaMeGiVeSaDo
 
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31        
 
 

FACEBOOK

 
 
Creato da: quyraf il 03/09/2010
Alakananda blog

 

 

Thomas scores 20, Miami beats Virginia 70-68 in OT

Post n°17 pubblicato il 06 Febbraio 2011 da quyraf
 
Tag: io...

CORAL GABLES, Fla. – Rion Brown made three free throws to tie the game with 13.7 seconds left in regulation, Adrian Thomas finished with 20 points and 10 rebounds and Miami beat Virginia 70-68 on Saturday.

Thomas made a career-best six 3-pointers for the Hurricanes (14-9, 3-6 Atlantic Coast Conference). Reggie Johnson scored 16 and Malcolm Grant added 11 for Miami.

Mustapha Farrakhan scored 20 for Virginia (12-11, 3-6). Joe Harris scored 18 for Virginia, but missed two free throws with his team down 68-66 with 5.8 seconds left.

The Cavaliers fouled Miami on 3-point tries twice in the final minute of regulation, proving costly. Virginia also was 9 of 22 from the line.

"They were 17 of 22. We were 9 of 22," Virginia coach Tony Bennett said. "There's the difference."

Virginia's defense had frustrated Miami for the first 39 minutes. In the last minute of regulation, the Cavaliers only frustrated themselves.

Leading by five with 38.9 seconds left, Virginia's ungluing began when Grant was fouled on a 3-point attempt by Farrakhan. Grant made the last two of the ensuing three attempts, and the Hurricanes were within 53-50.

After Farrakhan made two free throws — no small feat for Virginia, considering it had been 3 of 11 at the line in the game's first 39 minutes — Brown hit a deep 3 to get Miami within 55-53 with 28.7 seconds remaining. And with Miami down three, Zeglinski ran into Brown as he tried a 3-pointer 15 seconds later.

Brown made the first two, after which Virginia coach Tony Bennett called time-out in an effort to ice the freshman. But Brown rattled in the third, and Miami got the stop it needed to force overtime.

It was setting up as another end-of-game heartbreaker for Miami, which went 0-4 in a four-game stretch late last month, those losses all by 11 points and each essentially decided in the final possession.

This time, though, the Hurricanes survived — despite shooting 39 percent for the day and surviving a horrid start.

Virginia's offense was again anemic in the first half, scoring only 23 points — the sixth time in the last eight halves in which the Cavaliers failed to crack the 30-point mark.

Nonetheless, they were good enough to take a three-point lead at the break.

Miami started 0 for 8 and 1 for 14 from the floor, trailing 10-2 after nearly 9 minutes. The Hurricanes slowly clawed out of what became a nine-point deficit and pulled into a 20-20 tie late in the period, before Jontel Evans beat the halftime buzzer with a 3-pointer for the Cavaliers.

Johnson had a three-point play with 13:32 left to give Miami its first lead, 35-32. But the Hurricanes went cold again, managing only two points in the next 6 1/2 minutes — and when Harris hit his fourth 3-pointer of the day with 3:37 left, Virginia turned a mostly empty building silent by taking a 51-44 lead.

Miami rallied, and in the end, it became Virginia's 13th straight loss in the state of Florida since February 2001.

Nadas .Wu Wear (the Garment Renaissance) .Live at Hovet Stockholm .Download On Point (OP003) .Robert Blake
 
Condividi e segnala Condividi e segnala - permalink - Segnala abuso
 
 

Merck posts Q4 loss due to restructuring charges

Post n°16 pubblicato il 03 Febbraio 2011 da quyraf
 
Tag: spagna

Merck & Co. shares tumbled Thursday after it stunned investors by withdrawing its oft-repeated profit forecast for 2013 and giving lower-than-expected guidance for this year. It blamed pricing pressures, troubles with a crucial experimental drug and the need to invest for the future.

The drugmaker posted a $531 million fourth-quarter net loss due to $3.9 billion in charges, but beat anticipated results on strong sales growth from its key drugs and ones acquired along with Schering-Plough Corp. 14 months ago.

Besides big inventory write-offs and restructuring costs from that deal, Merck took a charge of $1.7 billion before taxes to cover diminished prospects for anti-clotting drug vorapaxar, which was seen as a potential blockbuster. The company last month said that due to dangerous increased bleeding in the brains of patients who'd had strokes, it would halt one late-stage study of the drug and remove some patients from a second, continuing study.

In afternoon trading, Merck shares tumbled 97 cents, or 2.9 percent, to $32.85.

Merck, the world's second-biggest drugmaker behind Pfizer Inc., said pricing pressures from U.S. health care reform and European government health programs have increased and will keep rising, echoing other drugmakers.

Pfizer faces similar price pressures and more severe generic competition but is cutting its 2012 research budget nearly 20 percent and will essentially do more with less.

"Merck may have more confidence in reinvesting in (research and development) than Pfizer," said Les Funtleyder, an analyst and portfolio manager for the Miller Tabak Health Care Transformation fund. "Merck has done better."

Merck, based in Whitehouse Station, N.J., said its fourth-quarter net loss amounted to 17 cents per share. A year earlier, Merck earned $6.49 billion, or $2.35 per share.

Excluding restructuring and other charges totaling $1.05 per share, Merck would have made 88 cents per share.

Schering's products helped boost revenue 20 percent, to $12.1 billion from $10.1 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast earnings per share of 83 cents and sales of $11.55 billion.

The maker of asthma and allergy drug Singulair said it expects 2011 earnings per share of $3.64 to $3.76, excluding about $1.50 worth of one-time items. Analysts were looking for $3.81.

On a conference call, analysts pounded Merck executives with questions about why it was withdrawing the 2013 profit forecast rather than making even more cost cuts.

"The only way to achieve our 2013 target would be through deeper short-term" cost cuts, said new CEO Kenneth Frazier. "Instead, I have decided that investing in the future of the business is the best long-term strategy."

Jefferies International analyst Jeffrey Holford called scrapping the 2013 forecast a "worrying signal with regard to their level of confidence on being able to win the Remicade arbitration."

He referred to Merck's lengthy battle with Johnson & Johnson over Schering-Plough's rights to some sales of the immune disorder drug and successor medicine Simponi. Together, they brought Merck $2.7 billion in 2010. Frazier wouldn't give an update on the arbitration.

"We support investment in R&D and thinking long term, but it seems like they are asking shareholders to absorb all extra expenses rather than finding internal sources," Credit Suisse analyst Catherine Arnold wrote to investors.

Merck has eliminated about 12,000 jobs since acquiring Schering-Plough for $49 billion on Nov. 4, 2009, and it reduced annual spending by more than $2 billion last year. It's on track to reach $3.5 billion in annual savings by the end of 2012.

Frazier said some of that would be poured into the business. That's needed because Merck now has 20 experimental drugs in expensive late-stage testing and is funding promotion of more than 10 new drugs launching in the U.S. or other countries. He said Merck now has the momentum to sustainably boost revenue.

Key growth drivers Singulair, at $1.35 billion, plus diabetes pills Januvia and Janumet and HIV drug Isentress, saw their sales jump a combined 15 percent in the quarter. But total prescription drug revenue dipped 2 percent to $10.58 billion, mainly due to generic competition to former blockbuster blood pressure drugs Cozaar and Hyzaar.

Schering-Plough brought Merck Remicade, a biologic drug business, a strong pipeline and consumer and animal health products. Merck now has 12 medicines with annual sales of about $1 billion or more.

Sales of veterinary medicines rose 7 percent to $815 million, and sales of consumer products such as nonprescription allergy pill Claritin climbed 8 percent to $251 million.

Frazier, a lawyer who had headed Merck's global pharmaceutical business, took over Jan. 1 from Richard Clark, who is retiring but remains chairman of the board.

For all of 2010, Merck reported net income of $861 million, or 28 cents per share. That's down 93 percent from $12.9 billion, or $5.65 per share, in 2009. Revenue rose 68 percent with the addition of Schering-Plough's products, to $45.99 billion.

Intermezzo.Popmart live from Mexico City .Download Want to (12 Years ).Feel the Noize .We are Party People

 
Condividi e segnala Condividi e segnala - permalink - Segnala abuso
 
 

Obama calls for restraint, reform in Egypt

Post n°15 pubblicato il 31 Gennaio 2011 da quyraf
 

WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama issued a plea for restraint in Egypt after meeting with national security aides Saturday to assess the Cairo government's response to widespread protests threatening the stability of the country.

A White House statement said Obama "reiterated our focus on opposing violence and calling for restraint, supporting universal rights, and supporting concrete steps that advance political reform within Egypt."

But Obama offered no reaction to President Hosni Mubarak's decision earlier Saturday to name a vice president for the first time since coming to power nearly 30 years ago. Mubarak appointed his intelligence chief, Omar Suleiman, who's well respected by American officials. The president also fired his Cabinet.

Five days of protests have left at more than 70 dead.

Before Suleiman's appointment, State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the U.S. wanted to see Mubarak fulfill his pledges of reform as protests swept the country.

"The Egyptian government can't reshuffle the deck and then stand pat," Crowley said on his Twitter account. "President Mubarak's words pledging reform must be followed by action."

Crowley said Egyptians "no longer accept the status quo. They are looking to their government for a meaningful process to foster real reform."

After speaking to Mubarak by telephone late Friday, Obama delivered a four minute statement calling on the Egyptian leader to take steps to democratize his government and refrain from using violence against his people.

As events unfolded Saturday, Obama and his advisers kept a low profile.

The president spent part of the morning watching one of his daughter's basketball games at a community center in the Maryland suburbs.

At the White House, top diplomatic, security and intelligence officials gathered for two hours for review the situation in Egypt. The meeting was led by national security adviser Tom Donilon and included White House chief of staff William Daley and CIA Director Leon Panetta. Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Margaret Scobey, the U.S. ambassador to Egypt, participated by teleconference, the White House said.

Obama did not attend that session.

His afternoon meeting with many of the same officials also included press secretary Robert Gibbs and adviser David Plouffe.

Suleiman has played an active role in the peace process, particularly in trying to arrange compromise between rival Palestinian factions, Fatah and Hamas. He has been at the forefront of the Egyptian effort to crackdown on arms smuggling from Egypt into Gaza.

Suleiman has been "the point person on both the U.S. relationship and the Israel Egyptian relationship," said Jon Alterman, Mideast director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. "He's very reassuring both ways."

Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks help illustrate that point. One reports on an April 2009 meeting between Suleiman and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Suleiman, the cable says, "explained that his overarching regional goal was combating radicalism, especially in Gaza, Iran, and Sudan."

The cable reports that Suleiman said Egypt must "confront" Iranian attempts to smuggle arms to Gaza and quotes him saying "a Gaza in the hands of radicals will never be calm."

A 2007 cable discusses scenarios for presidential succession and reports the view of an Egyptian official that Mubarak's son Gamal viewed Suleiman as a potential threat.

A second cable from 2007 describes Suleiman as Mubarak's "consigliore," a term more typically associates with mobsters. Even then, Suleiman was mentioned as likely to assume the role of vice president. It says Suleiman himself "adamantly denies any personal ambitions, but his interest and dedication to national service is obvious."

"He could be attractive to the ruling apparatus and the public at large as a reliable figure unlikely to harbor ambitions for another multi-decade presidency," the cable states. It also says Mubarak had promised to name Suleiman vice president "several years ago" but then reneged.

The cables were sent by the U.S. Embassy in Cairo.

Alterman said Suleiman's elevation to vice president is designed by Mubarak to signal resolve.

"It is intended to send a message that if Hosni Mubarak leaves, the system remains," he said. "It is not reassuring to the protestors, but it is reassuring to people who fear that Egypt might be slipping into chaos."

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla, chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said Saturday that Mubarak should schedule elections in order to allow the Egyptian people to express their right to choose their leaders.

Ros-Lehtinen also cautioned against the involvement of extremist elements which could seek to use the current turmoil as an opportunity to advance their agendas.

"The Egyptian people need to be afforded a peaceful venue to express their will," she said.

In New York, Cambridge, Mass., and Washington, protesters took to the streets demanding that Mubarak step down.

Outside the Egyptian Embassy a few miles from the White House, demonstrators also criticized the Obama administration's response to the tumult in Egypt. They waved Egyptian flags and held signs that read "Obama: Democracy or Hypocrisy?" and "Victory to the Egyptian People!"

___

Associated Press writers Matthew Lee in Washington and Matt Moore in Davos, Switzerland, contributed to this report.

A Handful of World.Techno Music .Illuminate.Club FG (4 december 2007) .Push it (PUSHITPUNK001)

 
Condividi e segnala Condividi e segnala - permalink - Segnala abuso
 
 

Vermont defeats Albany (N.Y.) 63-54

Post n°14 pubblicato il 31 Gennaio 2011 da quyraf
 

ALBANY, N.Y. – Brendan Bald scored a career-high 20 points and Vermont defeated Albany (N.Y.) 63-54 on Saturday night.

The Catamounts (16-5, 7-2 America East Conference) won their fourth straight game and have held all four opponents to 54 points or less during the streak.

Evan Fjeld chipped in 19 points and Brian Voelkel had 11 rebounds for the Catamounts, who have beaten the Greyhounds five times in a row.

Vermont outscored Albany (N.Y.) 24-16 in the paint. The Greyhounds were held to 33.9 percent shooting (20 of 59) from the field, including 2 of 15 (13.3 percent) from 3-point range.

The Catamounts never trailed after the opening seconds of the game and built a 17-point lead with 6:17 remaining.

Tim Ambrose scored 16 points and Logan Aronhalt added 12 for the Greyhounds (11-13, 4-5), who had a three-game winning streak snapped.

Bump .Download Club Miami 2008.Chapter A Day Riddim. Jacula EP.Complete Ibiza
 
Condividi e segnala Condividi e segnala - permalink - Segnala abuso
 
 

No 16 Georgetown tops Utah St 68-51, moves to 8-0

Post n°13 pubblicato il 05 Dicembre 2010 da quyraf
 

WASHINGTON – Chris Wright had 21 points and No. 16 Georgetown relied on defense instead of 3-pointers to pass its latest nonconference test, pulling away in the second half Saturday for a 68-51 win over Utah State.

The victory improved the Hoyas to 8-0 for the second consecutive season, but this one didn't have the template of the other seven. The team that made its name beyond the arc in November shot only 2 for 9 from 3-point range against the Aggies, but Georgetown made up for it by forcing 15 turnovers — including 12 over a 13-minute span starting late in the first half.

Wright was the only player for either team to reach double figures and left to a standing ovation. The Hoyas opened the second half with a 17-2 run and shot 62 percent for the half and 52 percent game.

Pooh Williams scored nine points to lead the Aggies (5-2), the preseason selection to win the Western Athletic Conference.

Utah State is one of five Georgetown nonconference opponents picked to win its conference — or a division within its conference — this season. The others are Old Dominion, Coastal Carolina, Wofford and Temple — and that doesn't include victories over N.C. State from the Atlantic Coast Conference or Wednesday's overtime win over No. 9 Missouri from the Big 12.

The Hoyas' first eight opponents went a combined 174-98 last season, and the Big East schedule has yet to come.

The Aggies kept it close for a while. After a tight, defensive struggle for the first 11 minutes, the Hoyas made the first move with a 12-0 run, starting when Jason Clark was bailed out tossing up a lean-in 3-pointer as the shot clock was about to the expire. Officials whistled E.J. Farris for a hard-luck foul, and Clark made all three free throws to tie the game at 13.

Georgetown forced turnovers on three consecutive possessions during the run, with Austin Freeman converting one of them into a fast-break three-point play to make the score 22-13.

The Aggies responded with a 13-2 run, with Brian Green tying the game at 26 with a 3-pointer. Then Georgetown turned up the full-court defensive pressure and rolled off seven straight points with two more steals. Utah State had the last word of the half, with Williams hitting a 3-pointer just before the buzzer to cut the Hoyas' lead to 33-29 at the break.

But that was the Aggies' last hurrah. Utah State scored only one basket in the first 6 1/2 minutes of the second half, with the Hoyas forcing turnovers at the rate of one per minute.

Georgetown worked the ball inside for layups and fouls — shooting 27 free throws to Utah State's eight — and didn't make a 3-pointer until Hollis Thompson swished one with 18:06 left in the game. They Hoyas had been averaging more than 10 3-pointers per game.

Download Taj Mahal mp3.The Blue Room (23 april 2005) album.Ill Wait for You downloads.No Guns to Town song.Where download Marcel Woods live (14 july 2007)?
 
Condividi e segnala Condividi e segnala - permalink - Segnala abuso
 
 

Cerca in questo Blog

  Trova
 

Ultime visite al Blog

roberth_milanoPrincipessa.Smeraldatiefblauallaricercadiunsognohawaii2008profilo_femminilepsicologiaforensesybilla_cdelfina_rosaOdile_Genetthe_vampire_womanDevil.il.Diavolofernandez1983elisabetta.alvitimoll_flanders1
 

Chi puņ scrivere sul blog

Solo l'autore puņ pubblicare messaggi in questo Blog e tutti gli utenti registrati possono pubblicare commenti.
 
RSS (Really simple syndication) Feed Atom
 
 

© Italiaonline S.p.A. 2024Direzione e coordinamento di Libero Acquisition S.á r.l.P. IVA 03970540963