1 it has been a gat
1. it has been a gateway for people back into films and we want to be innovative doing things different with these characters that you cannot get anywhere else"We look at the opportunity `Cataclysm' gave us to reset the board" he said "and do some really cool stuff with the characters" "In `All-New Ultimates, Pediatric Dental Society. it is very minimal and very little to no risk at all,00000 12/22L1100.
000000. international patent war with Apple Inc. and might be just in time for the Suwon South Korea-based company to capitalize on the Christmas shopping season in AustraliaThe ruling Wednesday said evidence fails to show that the Galaxy tablet infringes Apple's touch screen patent and that Apple Inc would be unlikely to win if the case went to a trial It blasted the earlier decision in Apple's favor as "clearly wrong"In October Federal Court Justice Annabelle Bennett granted Apple's request for a temporary injunction against sales of Samsung's Galaxy Tab 101 in Australia preventing Samsung from selling the device in the country in its current formSamsung quickly appealed that decision and on Wednesday the court agreed to lift the injunction and allow Galaxy sales to go aheadStill Samsung will have to wait a few more days before it can begin selling the Galaxy after Apple indicated it would appeal to the nation's High Court Federal Court Justice Lindsay Foster agreed to keep the injunction in place until Friday while that issue is pendingThe battle began in April when Cupertino California-based Apple sued Samsung in the United States alleging the product design user interface and packaging of Samsung's Galaxy devices "slavishly copy" the iPhone and iPad Samsung responded by filing its own lawsuits that accused Apple of patent infringement of its wireless telecommunications technologyThe fight has spread to 10 countries with courts in several nations - including Germany and the Netherlands - ruling in favor of Apple It has highlighted the perception that Samsung - the global No 1 in TVs and No 2 in smartphones by sales - is more of an imitator of clever technologies than an innovator in its own right Apple by contrast is generally viewed by consumers as highly original and inventiveIn her October ruling Justice Bennett said she was siding with Apple in part because she felt the company had a sufficient likelihood of winning at trial against SamsungBut on Wednesday a full bench of the Federal Court argued that Bennett did not include in her written decision any assessment of the strengths of Apple's case as she was required to do before granting the injunction"In our view her decision was clearly wrong and should be set aside" the panel wroteThe justices also said they believed Apple was unlikely to succeed at trial writing that current evidence fails to show that selling the Galaxy in Australia infringes on Apple's touch screen patentIn a statement Samsung said it was pleased with the court's decision and said it would soon announce when the Galaxy would be available in Australia"We believe the ruling clearly affirms that Apple's legal claims lack merit" the company saidApple representatives did not immediate respond to requests for comment is closer to selling its new Galaxy tablet computer in Australia after a court on Wednesday overturned a ruling that sided with Apple's allegations Samsung had copied its iPad and iPhone. Ont. says the number of concussions affecting teen girls is on the rise at her clinic "We're seeing more and more girls with concussions" she tells CTV News "Our clinics now are 50/50 And most of those girls have repeated injuries" she adds Brantford Ont high school cheerleader Shannon Russell is one of those who've been injured During practice one day in October 2009 she got kicked in the back of the head and knocked unconscious The hit left her with a concussion "I had short-term memory loss for a few weeks and major headaches" she says Hamilton dancer Carly Stanhope 18 also sustained a brain injury when she was knocked out by a fellow dancer last December "I was at dance class and two of us were doing handstands beside each other and the girl beside me happened to fall out of hers and kicked me in the head and I hit my head off of the floor" she says Stanhope knew right away something wasn't right "I was really really dizzy at first kind of seeing stars-type of thing just nauseous like immediately" she remembers Although she rested afterward and took six weeks off dancing her symptoms lingered The headaches and dizziness continued and she had trouble learning new dances The symptoms also began causing problems in her regular life "I was really tired all the time had trouble focusing in school I noticed changes in my work habits and test-taking skills Memorizing information was just not possible" she says Her marks in biology went from around 90 to the high 60s"So that wasn't helping my average at all trying to get into university" she says Stanhope continues to be monitored at the McMaster Rehabilitation Clinic doing balance tests and memory tests But eight months later her symptoms still linger Leaders and players in sports like hockey and football are beginning to pay attention to the seriousness of concussions ensuring that injured players are pulled out of the game and allowed to fully recover before returning to play But that same level of awareness may not yet be there in female-dominated sports DeMatteo says she's seeing a number of female patients returning to her clinic with repeated head injuries a sign that hits to the head aren't being taken seriously "If a child or a teenager goes back too soon their symptoms last a lot longer They end up coming back to our clinic for months and months and months" she says She adds: "The evidence tells us that 90 per cent of the time you'll get another injury within a very shot period of time if you're not ready to go back"That's what happened to cheerleader Russell She headed to a cheerleading competition less than two weeks after her first injury and got hit in the head again She doesn't remember much about the hit but knows she finished the routine Her team then took her to a hospital This time the injury was severe Russell had to stop cheerleading for seven months had to repeat a year of school and lost her offers for scholarships to US universities "That was one of the hardest things: giving up something I had worked so hard for" she says Today she has regrets "I wish I had stopped and taken a big break let my body get back to normal" she says Both Russell and Stanhope want to warn other young athletes that the brain is more fragile than they might think and girls are not exempt from concussions or the long term consequences From a report by CTV's Avis Favaro and producer Elizabeth St Philip an investigator with CanChild Centre for Childhood Disability Research at McMaster University in Hamilton, Now you