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Katherine and Josh Care For All Their Four-Legged Friends
Newlyweds Katherine Heigl and Josh Kelley took their many (how many? Pet got to the bottom of it) doggies of all shapes and sizes to the vet in LA yesterday afternoon before heading out at night to celebrate Josh's birthday. It looks like one of their pups is having some trouble getting out of the back of the car these days, poor baby. Katherine may be starting to talk about kids, but it looks like she and Josh definitely have their hands full of leashes for the time being. Hopefully all their pooches are having a good time getting accustomed to their unknown diggs since the couple finally moved into their newly finished home over the weekend. Hopefully she has a chance to sit back and enjoy it for a second before her next project — she just signed on to star in the romantic comedy, The Ugly Truth, alongside Gerard Butler.
New Tech fan blog: 'Shake and Bake' cooking up great future with ...
For a loose ranking of the top 50 players in north and central Louisiana, visit BleedTechBlue online. We try to find every area standout on our list. If you have a player in mind that is not listed, feel free to comment. We would love your feedback. Jason Jones of Ruston is a 2000 graduate of Louisiana Tech, and an administrator at bleedtechblue.com. .
5 More Unloved Growth Stocks
At first, I was tempted to go with teen retailer Abercrombie & Fitch for its reasonable valuation -- as expressed in a 0.98 PEG ratio -- and because peers such as Guess? (NYSE: GES) have been vastly oversold. Come on, IsilonBut today I'm willing to take another whack at Isilon Systems, which makes storage systems for non-transactional data such as audio, video, and photos. That's not an easy position to take. Deep pessimism exists as to whether this upstart can succeed against the likes of Hewlett-Packard (NYSE: HPQ) and Hitachi. CAPS investor kaputnikov put it this way in October: Isilon's product doesn't target the vital part of enterprises (ERP/database, etc.) where price is secondary. Instead, Isilon targets the high-capacity areas, which [are] price-sensitive -- and they target companies (media) which have huge capacity needs -- but [which are] never willing to pay a lot ...
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