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News briefs:August 6, 2010
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Australian TV show The Chaser breaches APEC security; 11 charged
This article mentions the Wikimedia Foundation, one of its projects, or people related to it. Wikinews is a project of the Wikimedia Foundation.

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Eight cast and crew members of the Australian television show The Chaser’s War on Everything successfully breached the security surrounding the APEC summit meeting in Sydney, Australia.

Using a cavalcade of three cars and two motorcycles branded with the Canadian Flag, the crew passed through two security check points, reaching the “red zone”. It was only when the team attempted to turn around, ten meters from the InterContinental Hotel where United States President George W Bush was staying, that police realised the security breach and pounced.

Eleven people have been charged over the incident, the eight cast and crew members and the three drivers. Two motor bike drivers at the front were told to run and police are currently searching for them. Comedian and cast member Chas Licciardello was dressed up as Osama bin Laden during the event.

All 11 have been bailed to appear in court on October 4, 2007.

New South Wales minister for police denied that the security services had been embarrassed by the event. A police statement said that the shows producers had been cautioned a week beforehand about trying any stunts during the APEC meetings.

The Chaser had tried unsuccessfully yesterday to breach security when they dressed up as a NSW Police horse.

On April 25, 2007 The Chaser successfully asked Jimbo Wales 10 questions during his visit to Sydney as a part of a segment for The Chaser’s War on Everything series.

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byAlma Abell

Rf Ablasion Moore uses high-energy waves in order to interrupt pain signals. While there are a number of areas of the body that this treatment can be used on, one of the most common is for destroying uterine fibroids. When this is used, the uterus is able to be preserved.

The procedure is considered a minimally invasive one that is done in an out-patient setting. If you opt for this type of treatment for uterine fibroids, you can expect:

* The surgeon you use to map out your uterus for the fibroids.

* A small incision to be made to insert the hand piece of the machine into the uterus. Then small needles will be inserted into every fibroid to apply the energy.

* The tissues that are normal in the uterus will not be affected and the tissue that is destroyed will be reabsorbed.

Is this procedure safe?

Using Rf Ablasion Moore for the treatment of uterine fibroids has been proven extremely safe. Prior to administering the procedure, your doctor will cover all of the treatment possibilities with you in order to discuss the benefits and risks of each option.

What are the specific advantages of this treatment over other options for getting rid of uterine fibroids?

There are a number of advantages offered by this treatment for uterine fibroids, which include:

* A much shorter recovery period and the ability to return to your normal activities quickly.

* Reduction of all symptoms related to or caused by fibroids.

* Improvement of your quality of life.

* Very low rates of complications.

* The need for smaller incisions than other procedures.

* Only a small possibility of scarring.

Will the treatment be painful?

The treatment will be completed after you are giving general anesthesia, which means that you will not experience any pain while it is being done. After completion, there may be some mild discomfort in your abdominal area.

If you are interested in the treatment, talk with Dr Darryl D Robinson for more information. He will be able to provide you with the results you need. You can also discuss if this is the right treatment option for your particular needs. Visit website for more information.

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Russian territory expands by 4.5 square kilometres after seismic activity

Saturday, November 14, 2009

According to scientists, the land territory of Russia has expanded by about 4.5 square kilometres within the last few years in the Far East due to seismic and volcanic activity.

The gained land was recorded in the Sakhalin Peninsula. Boris Levin, head of the Institute for Sea Geology and Geophysics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said that the increase happened primarily due to two seismic events.

The first, in August of 2007, was when a heavy 6.8 earthquake near the city of Nevelsk in the Far East raised about three square kilometres of seabed above the level of the water. The second was in June of this year, when the Sarychev Peak volcano on the Matua Island erupted. GPS trackers on the Matua island were used to monitor the eruption, and the volcano changed its shape, adding 1.5 square kilometres of land, scientists said.

Geologists also reported that the Kuril Islands nearby were slowly moving towards mainland Russia at an estimated rate of eighteen milimetres per year.

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News briefs:June 1, 2010
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By Kevin Gianni

This interview is an excerpt from Kevin Gianni’s The Healthiest Year of Your Life, which can be found at http://thehealthiestyearofyourlife.com. In this excerpt, Jonny Bowden shares on probiotics, SAMe and more.

The Healthiest Year of Your Life with Jonny Bowden, author of many books including The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth and a board certified nutrition specialist.Kevin:

What about probiotics. I’ve heard two different camps that one, you want to get just a good quality probiotic and the other one is you have to get something that actually releases and your small intestine and not in your stomach.

Jonny:

Well, I’m going to differ on this, because there are people whose entire nutrition career are spent on the minutia of probiotics and when to take them and what stream is most affected and which ones adhere to the gut. As you know, there’s bifida bacteria. There’s Lactobacillus. There’s a dozen different strains and different proponents of different strains and even some discussion about when the best time is to take them, on an empty stomach, at the end of the meal and that sort of stuff. Actually, it’s not my area of expertise. I know that over all we want to find a formula we can believe in and take and I think it’s a good thing to take as a supplement. I think it’s a good thing to look for foods that contain them naturally. Again, fermented foods like the olives in the olive bar at the store. The bigger health food stores have the ones that are sitting out there on the counter. Those are naturally fermented, unlike the little green olives in the chemicals that are sitting in the jars. Naturally fermented food, naturally fermented soy sauce, these things are rich — and sauerkraut — these are rich in the probiotics that we need and the other thing is, just as yeast are living organisms, so are probiotics and they also require food and their food is called prebiotics and those are also found in supplements and in foods and those are the things that feed these little probiotics that actually live in your gut once you get them in there. So I think this it’s probably worth an entire discussion on probiotics alone, but let’s leave it by just saying that they’re very important and they help your gut occology and they help you balance your whole inner system that allows you to assimilate and digest nutrients.

Kevin:

Great. I want to talk about SAMe.

Jonny:

Yes.

Kevin:

It’s something I don’t know much about so I’m going to open the floor up to you to talk about that and explain what it is and how it can help.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=natNRjTi82o[/youtube]

Jonny:

Well, I put it in my Desert Island Cures (chapter in The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth), because again, I think it’s such an important supplement. Again, it’s not for everybody, but because it’s not cheap. It’s not one of the cheaper supplements and usually people turn to it when they have a particular condition that it can help and there are a number of them that it’s very helpful with.

The thing is, some of this frankly boring biochemistry, but I’ll try to put it in terms that at least won’t make your eyes glaze over. We have sparkplugs in a car. SAMe are like sparkplugs. Basically, there is a process called methylation and if you’ve ever seen a relay race, these guys when they do the relay race and they pass that torch, well, methylation is like that passing of the torch in a relay race. One guy runs and they get to the finish line and he hands the torch to the next guy. The next guy runs and they do that at the opening of the Olympics. Well, methylation is like that and it’s like this sparkplug passing of the torch from molecule to molecule and it’s very important in the biochemistry of the body, because it keeps production going and it keeps toxic waste from accumulating. For example, one called homocysteine, which you may have heard of, which is getting a lot of press recently, because it’s a risk factor for heart disease and stroke and I talk, also, in Natural Cures about how to bring homocysteine down. It’s very easy to do, but that’s something that even conventional doctors are beginning to pay attention to, your homocysteine levels. It’s a very, very telling and important blood measure. Well, homocysteine is a byproduct of not having enough methylation, not having enough of this relay race kind of sparkplug action going. SAMe is basically a methyl donor. It basically comes and says this guy didn’t make it to the relay race in time. Here’s the torch, an extra torch for you. Here’s an extra torch for you. It keeps the torch going and keeps the waste product of homocysteine from accumulating and in doing so keeps a lot of metabolic processes going smoothly. It has a profound effect on depression. It has a profound effect on arthritis. It has a profound effect on the liver and it has a profound effect on fibromyalgia. Those are the four conditions that it’s been used for it and there is considerable research on SAMe and depression and SAMe and arthritis and some on SAMe and liver disease and some anecdotal stuff on fibromyalgia, but this whole methylation process, which again, is way boring and way into the depths of biochemistry that nobody’s interested in and nobody wants to talk about, but basically the take on all this is that SAMe contributes to this metabolic process that’s involved in pain reduction, depression reduction, liver detoxification and that’s why it’s such a useful supplement.

Kevin:

We’ve been talking about supplements this whole time, but there are actually just foods. We don’t have any time to deal with four or five, but maybe you could just pick one that you think is just a great food. You also have the book, 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth.

Jonny:

I’d use that as a reference in the food section.

Kevin:

Right.

Jonny:

Let’s just throw the book like the I ching and see where it opens; celery. Four sticks of celery will lower blood pressure.

Kevin:

Wow.

Jonny:

Four sticks of celery a day will lower blood pressure. Maybe not as much as a drug, but you add that to some of the other things, for example, that I talk about and again, you have to understand, I guess the take home thing about Natural Cures and the point I continue to try to make in the book, The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth, is natural edicine, nutritional medicine, the medicine of food, the medicine of spirituality, of some of the techniques I talked about, like reflexology and things like that, they’re never met to exist in a vacuum. They’re not in the model of, ‘Doc, I’ve got a headache. Give me a pill.’ It goes away. They’re not in that model. That’s not the model that they work in. They work synergistically. They work as if it takes a village. It takes a program to heal someone. In the same way, so celery, yes, celery will lower blood pressure a few points. Now, if you add to that some magnesium, some fish oil and a couple of other things, a few other changes in the diet, you can bring your blood pressure down. Maybe a little stress management, maybe a little meditation, maybe a little bit of the deep breathing exercises that I talk about in Natural Cures. Put these things together and all of a sudden you’ve got a program. All of a sudden, you don’t need blood pressure medication. So it’s not that one of these things by themselves takes the place of a strong pharmaceutical drug. We can’t compete with that stuff. That stuff works instantaneously. It’s fast, but there is a cost to those drugs, a huge cost to those drugs. If I have a point of view about any of this, it’s not that it’s anti- medicine. It’s just that I think we’re better off taking as little medication as we can get away with. Not that we should never take it. Not that it doesn’t save lives, but when I was in private practice people would come in. I had one very famous composer whose songs there is no one listening to this would not know. It’s a household name. He died recently. He came in at age 70 with a crippling gate, tremors and he had a list of medications he was on that was like a full page of one of those yellow lined pads that took up the full page.

Kevin:

Wow.

Jonny:

Each doctor had given him something for blood pressure, but not looked at the stuff he was on for cholesterol and the cholesterol guy hadn’t looked at what he was taking for depression and the depression guy hadn’t looked at the stuff he was on for sleep and he was on these 19 different medications. My point of view is, if you cannot do that, it’s probably a good thing and not that there aren’t medications that save lives and that once while we need them, but there are natural things that you can do that the body knows how to handle and knows what to do with. Our bodies know what to do with vitamin B12. I’m not so sure that we know what to do with Prozac.

I’m not so sure we know what to do with a standard drug. They may have benefits, but they’re not things that are naturally found in our diets. Why not start with the stuff that’s right there in nature that you could pluck, or gather, or fish, or hunt, or grow and things that are made from those and nutrients that come from them and maybe are delivered through supplement, or herbs, or sometimes through foods, or whatever? Why not start with that and see if you can heal it mustering all these amazing properties the body has to heal itself and then start there and then if you get stuck, you can always go to medicine.

Kevin:

I think that’s a great point and I think that’s a great way to end this call.

Jonny:

Thank you.

Kevin:

What I’ve done with Jonny is provided you a link that you can go and follow and learn more about him and get his awesome book. Like I said, I keep it on my desktop now as a reference when I’m writing or working with people. It’s simple to use and a valuable tool to have for any health enthusiast, or health practitioner. I really appreciate you sharing it with me here.

Jonny:

Oh, it has been an absolute pleasure. You are a great interviewer. I hope that people have gotten something out of this that maybe inspires them to do something for their health like I did for mine 20 years ago and really, I can’t recommend it highly enough. It changes your life.

About the Author: To read the rest of this transcript as well as access The Healthiest Year of Life experts just like Jonny Bowden please

click here!

Kevin Gianni is an internationally recognized health advocate, author & film consultant. He has helped thousands of people take control of their own health naturally. For more information visit

raw food diets and holistic nutrition

.

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India: Maharashtra plastic ban comes into force

Monday, June 25, 2018

On Saturday, the plastic ban in the Indian state of Maharashtra came into force. In an attempt to minimise pollution, the state government has introduced a ban on single-use plastics.

The leader of the Yuya Sena political party, Aaditya Thackeray, said on Twitter, “The ban on single use disposable plastic cups, plastic bags, plastic straws, plastic plates and cutlery, styrofoam cutlery and non woven bags”. He added, “these are global issues now and we have taken a step to combat it”.

Plastic pollution has led to the choking of drains, marine pollution and a risk of animals consuming plastics. This year, India’s motto for World Environment Day — June 5 — was “Beat Plastic Pollution”. People violating the plastic ban are to face a fine of 5,000 Indian Rupees (INR) for the first offence. For the second offence, the fine is INR 10,000 and the third time offence is INR 25,000 and a three-month prison term. Deputy municipal commissioner Nidhi Choudhary said, “To weed out corruption, we plan to give inspectors payment gadgets for electronic receipts of the fines”.

The Maharashtra government has given a 90-day period for manufacturers to dispose of existing polyethylene terephthalate (PET/PETE) plastic spoons and plates, while shopkeepers and citizens in general have six months to dispose of plastics. However, the ban does not prohibit plastic usage for wrapping medicines or milk cartons thicker than 50 microns.

The state government had announced the decision for the plastic ban on March 23. According to NDTV’s report, Maharashtra is the eighteenth Indian state to enforce a state-wide plastic ban. Aaditya Thackeray also said, “I congratulate the citizens for making this into a movement, even before the ban was enforceable, giving up single use disposable plastic.”

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March

29

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March

28

Comparison Of Warranties On Pickup Trucks

Submitted by: George Finnerin

If you’re in the market for a pickup because you need a pickup, that is you’re going to put it to the test and need something tougher and roomier than an SUV, it’s important to take a look at the warranties on competing models. Truck warranties cover four aspects of the vehicle: Basic Warranty (which covers pretty much everything on the truck in its early life), Drivetrain (the internal components that are often high-ticket items to replace), Rust (exterior of the car only), and Roadside (which means someone will head out to help you if your battery dies in the middle of nowhere or you run out of gas). We compared four popular trucks with regards to each of these warranty components: Dodge Dakota, Toyota Tacoma, Isuzu i-370, and the Ford Ranger. Here’s what we found out:

Basic Warranty. Three years of coverage or up to 36,000 miles is the industry standard and covers the average lease, making all four candidates dependable with the Dakota, Ranger, and Tacoma coming in on par. The Isuzu i-370, however, comes out ahead in this category, with the Isuzu Basic Warranty covering three years or up to 50,000 miles. This is important if you do a considerable amount of driving or hauling and plan to put on more than 12,000 miles a year.

Drivetrain. This is the biggie because engine components are expensive to replace and quite frankly, you can’t continue to drive the truck if they aren’t functional like you could with most exterior component failures. Isuzu proves superiority in this category as well with 7-year, 75,000 mile powertrain coverage. The Tacoma and Ranger lag significantly with their 5-year, 60,000 mile warranties, and Dodge brings up the rear with its considerably inferior 3-year, 36,000 mile coverage.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WW169H4a4-E[/youtube]

Rust. Now this may not mean a whole lot unless you live in an area of the country where the seasons can be less than friendly on your car, or if you tend to do a lot of city driving on salted streets in winter. If either of those situations apply, rust prevention should be a priority. In this arena, all four vehicles run neck and neck with Isuzu’s corrosion limited warranty slightly more impressive than the others. Dodge offers a 5-year, 100,000 miles warranty for the Dakota while Isuzu gives car owners an extra year with 6-years or 100,000 miles rust-free. Toyota and Ford won’t cover as long as Isuzu will. They offer five years only, with unlimited mileage (which doesn’t account for a whole lot since corrosion is associated with time and not the number of miles the truck drives).

Roadside Assistance. The winner, again, Isuzu with a 7-year, 75,000 mile roadside assistance package. A full four years longer than the Dakota’s 3-year and 36,000 mile guarantee. Ford provides assistance for the Ranger for five years or 60,000 miles. And we had trouble finding the Tacoma’s roadside assistance package on Toyota’s website, so we aren’t even sure one is offered.

All in all, Isuzu seems to stand behind its i-370 (and i-290) by extending its warranties beyond those of its competitor always a good sign when trying to determine if a vehicle will withstand the additional wear and tear pickups tend to endure. If you’re not going to push the truck to its limit, the Ford and Toyota’s warranty packages will probably prove to be sufficient. The biggest red flag, in our opinion, is Dodge Dakota’s extremely limited drivetrain warranty which could very easily equate to big expenses down the line.

About the Author: Check out the all new

isuzu trucks

line for 2008. Isuzu now has a

crew cab

truck with great gas milage. Build your dream truck right now.

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March

27

In depth: Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal controversy

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In depth: Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal controversy
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Friday, May 26, 2006

Buffalo, N.Y. Hotel Proposal Controversy
Recent Developments
  • “Old deeds threaten Buffalo, NY hotel development” — Wikinews, November 21, 2006
  • “Proposal for Buffalo, N.Y. hotel reportedly dead: parcels for sale “by owner”” — Wikinews, November 16, 2006
  • “Contract to buy properties on site of Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal extended” — Wikinews, October 2, 2006
  • “Court date “as needed” for lawsuit against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal” — Wikinews, August 14, 2006
  • “Preliminary hearing for lawsuit against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal rescheduled” — Wikinews, July 26, 2006
  • “Elmwood Village Hotel proposal in Buffalo, N.Y. withdrawn” — Wikinews, July 13, 2006
  • “Preliminary hearing against Buffalo, N.Y. hotel proposal delayed” — Wikinews, June 2, 2006
Original Story
  • “Hotel development proposal could displace Buffalo, NY business owners” — Wikinews, February 17, 2006

In February of 2006, the Savarino Services Construction Corp. proposed the construction of a seven million dollar hotel on Elmwood and Forest Avenues in Buffalo, New York. In order for the hotel to be built, at least five properties containing businesses and residents would have to be destroyed. It was not certain whether the properties were owned by Savarino or by the landlord Hans Mobius. The hotel was designed by Karl Frizlen of the Frizlen Group, and is planned to be a franchise of the Wyndham Hotels group.

Elmwood Avenue is known by the community as a popular shopping center, and Nancy Pollina of Don Apparel (who is “utterly against” the construction) claims it’s the only reason why students from Buffalo State College leave campus. Additionally, Michael Faust of Mondo Video said he did not want to “get kicked out of here [his video store property].”

In 1995, a Walgreens was proposed to be built on the same land, but Walgreens later withdrew its request for a variance because of pressure from the community. More recently, Pano Georgiadis tried to get the rights to demolish the Atwater House next to his restaurant on Elmwood Avenue, but was denied a permit due to the property’s historical value. He has since been an opponent to the hotel construction.

In the process of debating the hotel, it was thought that a hotel had previously existed on the proposed site, however; research done at the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society had shown that no hotel had previously existed on the site.

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