Infant 1-Fit Hat
Team color brushed cotton infant One-Fit hat Patented One-Fit sizing Tagless technology for a better fit Primary 3D logo on embroidered on the ...
Bucket Hats
Team color brushed cotton infant One-Fit hat Patented One-Fit sizing Tagless technology for a better fit Primary 3D logo on embroidered on the ...
The Thudguard hat is a revolutionary product from United Kingdom; an infant safety hat designed to help absorb and reduce the impact of falls from ...
Iman Shumpert is eight minutes into his Fatmax test at Gatorade’s new Sports Science Institute in Bradenton, Fla., before the first sheer layer of sweat appears on his shoulders. The National Basketball Assn.’s 17th overall draft pick has traded a New York Knicks cap and Beats by Dr. Dre headphones for a mask of tubes that makes him look like something out of Alien. At predetermined intervals, attendants boost the speed and grade of the treadmill he’s running on while computers record his heart rate and oxygen levels. The Fatmax figures out when a body is burning fat (as opposed to carbohydrates) most efficiently. “Hold out as long as you can,” Gatorade scientist JohnEric Smith tells Shumpert. Maximum effort yields the best results. Smith cranks it up another notch. Shumpert picks up the pace. “Good,” Smith beams.
Shumpert is among a string of athletes that includes NBA All-Star Dwyane Wade who have come to the new Bradenton lab looking for insights into their bodies (Shumpert has suffered muscle cramps for years) while Gatorade tests a series of new products, such as energy chews, intended to boost athletic performance. The lab is located at IMG Academies boarding school, which was founded by the late New York private equity magnate Theodore J. (Ted) Forstmann. The lab primarily serves IMG’s student-athletes, nearly 1,000 high school kids from all over the world who pay as much as $60,000 a year to go to boarding school nine months a year, splitting each day 50/50 between classes and their sport. “It’s Hogwarts for athletes,” says Trevor Moawad, director of the IMG Performance Institute, a unit of the academy. And for Gatorade, it’s a skunkworks with a captive crew of guinea pigs. “Where else is a population like this?” Smith says after Shumpert concludes his test and downs a bottle of lemon-lime G Series Pro O2 Perform, an update on its original drink, which introduced electrolytes to the mass market.
Gatorade Goes Back to the Lab
For example, Gatorade investigated one about caps on some drinks being hard to open and discovered that the bottles in question had overheated during shipping. “It's the world's largest unaided focus group,” says 31-year-old Randall Brown, ...
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Is the Express doing to charities what it did to Kate and Gerry McCann?
Reading the overnight McCann family testimony to the Leveson inquiry about the foul and persistent tabloid abuse they suffered over the kidnapping of their infant daughter, Madeleine, naturally turned my thoughts to Richard Desmond's Express titles, ...
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Morton Grove Community Calendar for Dec. 1, 2011 For infants through 2-year-olds. Songs and stories. Also Crafty Saturday, 10 am on third Saturdays each month. Drop in to the Youth Services Department to make a seasonal craft, while supplies last. Library Playtime, 10:30 am Thursdays. ... |
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Hey, is that Cam Newton out there? The Colts, WISH-TV and the Salvation Army will hold a toy drive before Sunday's game aimed at benefiting infants and children up to 12 years of age. Fans are asked to donate new, unwrapped toys at collection stations outside each stadium gate starting ... |
Infant Welfare Society has been committed to child wellness for almost a century
What started as an exclusive group of local, fancy hat-wearing socialites has evolved into a highly efficient, dynamic fundraising engine, powered by a cross-section of women almost as diverse as Oak Park itself. "I think it all started out in a place ...
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