LaCrosse Footwear: Performance LaCrosse boots and apparel.
By Anonymous September 15, 2003 --“Puss in Boots”, the popular game for kids, has received industry recognition by being nominated for this year’s Pocket PC Magazine’s Software Awards. These awards are the result of a five-month process beginning with over 1600 products which are evaluated by 70 expert judges worldwide.
Entries are chosen from Pocket PC Magazine’s Encyclopaedia of Software and Accessories. Competition is so keen that only one fourth of software listed in that database makes it through to final judging. Interactive E Books, publisher of “Puss in Boots” recognises that this nomination reflects the quality of its products. We look forward to the presentation of the Best Software Awards on October 22 in Las Vegas.
The public and critics have both received Puss in Boots” enthusiastically. The consensus is that it is an ideal choice for children as young as two years, as a first step towards sophisticated reading.
Typical reviewer comments: “a very sweet story”, “rich in pictures and storyline” “great for kids to read on their own”.
Puss in Boots is also available for Palm handhelds and Windows PCs.
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By Anonymous You can design a unique pair of shoes from an almost infinite number of color, graphic, logo and material combinations. You just click through their simple step-by-step process to create your own podial masterpiece. You can even choose what should be written on the back of each shoe... So try to think of something more imaginative than left and right. Get this - instead of buying the same dull shoes that all your friends are wearing, you can design your own shoes, and choose from millions of different colors, textures, styles, and yes, even shoelaces ! What if you could name your creation? Business promotions can benefit as well. Your own business label shoes!
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By Anonymous PHILADELPHIA, PA - May 19, 2002 - - Commotio Cordis is the medical term for a rare disruption of the heart's electrical system resulting from a blunt impact to the chest that leads to cardiac arrest. It occurs most often in baseball and lacrosse, but has also stricken those playing hockey, softball, soccer and karate. Such occurrences are increasingly being reported in youth sports. A recent study published in the March 2002 Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), analyzed the confirmed cases known to date. Most of the cases, tragically, were young boys playing baseball--62% died from being struck in the chest by the ball. None of the victims showed any evidence of heart disease, they were just struck by the ball at the worst possible time - the precise millisecond between heart contractions that throws the heart into a lethal abnormal heart rhythm. Recognizing the risk and knowing that there is portable equipment out there that can save lives, the parents of the Drexel Men’s Lacrosse Team banded together and purchased a lifesaving Automated External Defibrillator (AED) for the team to use when it plays at campuses other than Drexel, which is already outfitted with AEDs.
According to Drexel Lacrosse Team parent Andy Simpson, “After learning of several on the field occurrences of Commotio Cordis, the parents of Drexel Men's Lacrosse Team decided to raise the funds necessary for the purchase of an AED through CardioReady. As a result of many generous donations, the Lacrosse team now carries the AED with them during their season. Hopefully the unit will never be used, but it gives all of us more peace of mind and a feeling of security.”
The parents of Drexel’s Lacrosse Team opted for CardioReadyŽ’s Cardiac Emergency Readiness Program (C.E.R.P.) because it is the only comprehensive solution available in today’s marketplace that offers a patent pending business method providing customers with an automated external defibrillator (AED) and everything needed to implement and monitor the program. The C.E.R.P., which encompasses equipment, training, EMS notification, public relations support, maintenance and most of all, user confidence, is designed to ensure the successful implementation and use of AEDs, giving victims a better chance of survival, and also helping to protect users against liability. Many organizations and public locations such as golf courses, schools, park districts, office buildings, fitness centers and restaurants have implemented the CardioReadyŽ solution.
The parents of the Drexel College Lacrosse Team now have peace of mind knowing that they will never have to answer this question: Why risk a life when it can so easily be saved by a simple piece of equipment?
Headquartered in Philadelphia with an Operations Center in Reading, Pennsylvania, CardioReadyŽ is a comprehensive, turnkey provider of Cardiac Emergency Readiness Programs for non-hospital locations nationwide. Organizations looking to initiate a Cardiac Emergency Readiness Program of their own can contact CardioReadyŽ at (215) 564-9111 or visit the Web site at www.cardioready.com.
Contact:
Melissa Gillespie, CardioReadyŽ, (215) 564-9111, x.347 or Melissa.Gillespie@cardioready.com
Matthew Barrer, CardioReadyŽ, (215) 564-9111, x.222 or Matthew.Barrer@cardioready.com
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