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Recently Issued Accounting Standards
3 Months Ended
Jul. 27, 2011
Accounting Policies [Abstract]  
Recently Issued Accounting Standards
 
(2)   Recently Issued Accounting Standards
 
In June 2011, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) issued an amendment on the presentation of comprehensive income. This amendment is intended to improve comparability, consistency, and transparency of financial reporting and to increase the prominence of items reported in other comprehensive income. This amendment eliminates the current option to report other comprehensive income and its components in the statement of changes in equity. Under this amendment, an entity can elect to present items of net income and other comprehensive income in one continuous statement or in two separate, but consecutive, statements. The statement(s) would need to be presented with equal prominence as the other primary financial statements. While the options for presenting other comprehensive income change under this amendment, many items will not change, including: the items that constitute net income and other comprehensive income; when an item of other comprehensive income must be reclassified to net income; and the earnings-per-share computation. The Company is required to adopt this amendment retrospectively on the first day of Fiscal 2013. This adoption will only impact the presentation of the Company’s financial statements, not the financial results.
 
In May 2011, the FASB issued an amendment to revise the wording used to describe the requirements for measuring fair value and for disclosing information about fair value measurements. For many of the requirements, the FASB does not intend for the amendments to result in a change in the application of the current requirements. Some of the amendments clarify the FASB’s intent about the application of existing fair value measurement requirements, such as specifying that the concepts of highest and best use and valuation premise in a fair value measurement are relevant only when measuring the fair value of nonfinancial assets. Other amendments change a particular principle or requirement for measuring fair value or for disclosing information about fair value measurements such as specifying that, in the absence of a Level 1 input (refer to Note 14 for additional information), a reporting entity should apply premiums or discounts when market participants would do so when pricing the asset or liability. The Company is required to adopt this amendment on the first day of the fourth quarter of Fiscal 2012 and this adoption is not expected to have an impact on the Company’s financial statements.
 
In December 2010, the FASB issued an amendment to the disclosure requirements for Business Combinations. This amendment clarifies that if a public entity is required to disclose pro forma information for business combinations, the entity should disclose such pro forma information as though the business combination(s) that occurred during the current year had occurred as of the beginning of the comparable prior annual reporting period only. This amendment also expands the supplemental pro forma disclosures for business combinations to include a description of the nature and amount of material nonrecurring pro forma adjustments directly attributable to the business combination included in reported pro forma revenue and earnings. The Company adopted this amendment on the first day of Fiscal 2012 and will apply such amendment for any business combinations that are material on an individual or aggregate basis if and when they occur.
 
In December 2010, the FASB issued an amendment to the accounting requirements for Goodwill and Other Intangibles. This amendment modifies Step 1 of the goodwill impairment test for reporting units with zero or negative carrying amounts. For those reporting units, an entity is required to perform Step 2 of the goodwill impairment test if it is more likely than not that a goodwill impairment exists. In determining whether it is more likely than not that a goodwill impairment exists, an entity should consider whether there are any adverse qualitative factors indicating that impairment may exist. The Company adopted this amendment on the first day of Fiscal 2012. This adoption did not have an impact on the Company’s financial statements.