| Response Biomedical Corporation Receives Conditional Listing Approval ...
VANCOUVER, Nov. 6 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ - Response Biomedical Corporation (TSX-V: RBM, OTCBB: RPBIF) is pleased to announce that the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) has conditionally approved the Company's application for listing its common shares on the TSX. Listing on the TSX will be subject to the Company filing satisfactory final documentation with the TSX. The Company will issue a news release when final listing approval has been granted by the TSX. .
New NICU is family-centered Dupont's neonatal unit quieter, more ...
The hospital opened in April 2001 and has expanded several times since then. The former NICU was on the second floor, and that space will be converted to eight transitional beds for babies no longer needing high-level NICU care and who are soon to go home. Four rooms in the new third-floor unit are also transitional beds. Two of the 15 NICU rooms can accommodate multiples, most commonly twins or triplets. "We just sent home triplets. We get quite a few twins," said Karra Heggen, chief nursing officer for Dupont. According to the most recent data available from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the number of live twin births rose 1 percent between 2004 and 2005, and since 1980, the number of twin births has nearly doubled.
The last act
But the execution of the man condemned for the April 19, 1995, bombing of Oklahoma City's Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building was watched by hundreds. About 30 people sat in the witness rooms of the prison's death chamber, divided into three groups: those invited by McVeigh, the media and victims (Details of the execution protocol). The number of people devastated by the crime was so vast that the execution also was shown on closed-circuit television to try to accommodate those who wanted to watch him draw his last breath. About 300 survivors and relatives of the bombing victims gathered in Oklahoma City to watch the broadcast of McVeigh's death (More on bombing victims and survivors). Reporters from around the world gathered in tents set up on the federal prison grounds in Terre Haute.
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