Fisher Capital Management News: Steve Jobs pitches new
Apple spaceship campus to Cupertino City Council
Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed plans for a new headquarters for the company that “looks a little like a
spaceship” at a City Council meeting in Cupertino, Calif.
, on Tuesday.
In his trademark black turtleneck, jeans and gray...
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Fisher Capital Management News: Steve Jobs pitches new Apple spaceship campus to Cupertino City Council Apple CEO Steve Jobs revealed plans for a new headquarters for the company that “looks a little like a spaceship” at a City Council meeting in Cupertino, Calif. , on Tuesday. In his trademark black turtleneck, jeans and gray New Balance running shoes, Jobs said at the meeting the new building would hold 12,000 employees, and even house its own green-energy power plant. Apple’s current headquarters can only hold about 2,800 people, Jobs said, according to a YouTube video of his presentation posted by the council. “We’ve got almost 12,000 people in the area,” he said of Cupertino. “So we’re renting buildings — not very good buildings, either — at an ever-greater radius from our campus and we’re putting people in those. And it’s clear that we need to build a new campus. ” The new facility, as Apple envisions it, would be built on about 150 acres of land that the tech giant owns d
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Pub. on Julio 8 2011
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Fisher Capital Management Warning: Kellogg Gets Second FDA
Warning on Listeria in 2 Years
A Kellogg Co.
(K) cookie plant in Augusta, Georgia, was found to have a “persistent strain” of listeria
during a February inspection, including on food-contact surfaces, according to a warning letter from U.
S.
regulators.
The Food and Drug...
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Fisher Capital Management Warning: Kellogg Gets Second FDA Warning on Listeria in 2 Years A Kellogg Co. (K) cookie plant in Augusta, Georgia, was found to have a “persistent strain” of listeria during a February inspection, including on food-contact surfaces, according to a warning letter from U. S. regulators. The Food and Drug Administration letter, dated June 7, was sent less than two years after a Kellogg Eggo waffle plant in the same state was shut for similar reasons. The inspection found flies and pools of water, the FDA said. The letter from District Director John Gridley didn’t say that any products were tainted with listeria, yet said they were “adulterated” and “may have become contaminated with filth. ” The Augusta plant makes Keebler and Famous Amos cookies, and is one of five cookie bakeries Kellogg operates in North America. “While the FDA did not identify specific concerns with the food, we take this situation very seriously,” Kris Charles, a spokeswoman for Battl
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Pub. on Junio 27 2011
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