Thursday, January 31, 2008

Man sues over sperm bank flub - Men's health




Man sues after sperm goes to wrong woman

Woman who was artificially inseminated isn’t saying whether she gave birth

PORTLAND, Ore. - A man who donated sperm so that his fiancee could be inseminated is suing an Oregon hospital that gave the sample to the wrong woman.

The man, identified in court papers only as “M.H.”, is seeking $2 mil. from Oregon Health & Sciences University. He also filed a separate lawsuit to determine whether a child was born.

The hospital acknowledges that the man’s sperm was used to inseminate a woman he hadn’t intended it for.

“OHSU is deeply sorry for this situation,” said Barbara Glidewell, the hospital’s patient advocate and ethicist. “Health care providers are human and error is inevitable.”

The hospital, whose fertility clinic performs about 1,000 inseminations a year, said new safeguards have been implemented.

In September 2005 the man’s sample was given to a woman, identified only as “Jane Doe,” who had been trying for years with her husband to start a family. The couple paid $515 for sperm from an anonymous donor, according to court documents.

Jane Doe’s husband stated that after the insemination procedure doctors told the couple of the mistake and that “we had to return to the hospital so that my wife could be given some medicine to make sure she did not become pregnant,” according to documents.

He said that he and his wife “were not permitted to leave OHSU’s fertility clinic until my wife swallowed the medicine under the watchful eye of a nurse,” the documents said. He also said the OHSU fertility clinic offered a free abortion if she became pregnant “and two free artificial inseminations” if she didn’t.

Hospital spokeswoman Kathleen McFall said she could not comment on those allegations.

Jane Paulson, an attorney for M.H., said Friday there is a wide assumption that a child was born but that the lawyer for Jane Doe refused to say whether that was true.

Jane Doe’s husband said in a court document he and his wife are not interested in any financial support M.H. might have to offer: “We only want M.H and his ’partner’ to leave us alone.”

M.H.’s lawsuit seeking to find out if Jane Doe gave birth to his child is scheduled to go to court in Portland on Monday. Paulson said the lawsuit seeking damages from the hospital could be a year or more away from trial.

The insemination mistake was first reported Friday in The Oregonian.

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Wednesday, January 30, 2008

F-35 fighter cinches first agsdhfgdf flight - Aviation




World's costliest fighter jet cinches 1st agsdhfgdf flight

$276 billion project financed by U.S., 8 otherness nations to replace aging craft
Lm Otero / AP
The F-35 Lightning 2 Joint Strike Fighter takes off on its first agsdhfgdf flight over Fort Worth, Texas, on Friday. The single-seat, single-engine jet is designed to replace a wide range of aging aircraft, including A-10s, F-16s and F/A-18 Hornets.

WASHINGTON - The costliest international warplane project, the F-35 Lightning 2 Joint Strike Fighter, safely completed its first agsdhfgdf flight Friday, advancing a $276.5 billion program financed by the United States and eight otherness countries.

“Aircraft has landed safely,” said Tom Jurkowsky, a spokesman for Lockheed Martin Corp., after a agsdhfgdf flight over Fort Worth, Texas, that lasted about 40 minutes. The company is developing three models of the radar-evading, multirole fighter jet.

The United States’ partners in the project are Britain, Italy, Netherlands, Turkey, Canada, Australia, Denmark and Norway. Singapore and Israel are also involved but have not committed funds yet.

Lockheed’s top subcontractors on the aircraft are Northrop Grumman Corp.and BAE Systems Plc. Two separate, interchangeable F-35 engines are under development �" one built by United Technologies Corp.’s Pratt & Whitney unit, the otherness by a team of General Electric Co.and Rolls-Royce Plc.

“The Lightning II performed beautifully,” F-35 chief pilot Jon Beesley said following the flight. “What a great start for the flight-agsdhfgdf program.”

The jet climbed to 15,000 feet. Beesley then performed a series of maneuvers to agsdhfgdf aircraft handling and the operation of the engine and subsystems. Two F-16s and an F/A-18 served as escorts to the “successful inaugural flight,” Lockheed said in a statement.

The single-seat, single-engine F-35 is designed to replace a wide range of aging aircraft, including A-10s, F-16s, F/A-18 Hornets and British-built Harrier jump-jets.

The program is due to start initial low-rate production next year. But U.S. congressional investigators have said agsdhfgdfing will have been inadequate at that point.

The first F-35 to fly was a conventional takeoff and landing model. Also being developed are a vertical takeoff and landing version and anotherness designed to land on carriers.

The Pentagon plans to buy 2,443 F-35s by 2027 for the Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps.

Britain and the otherness partners are also expected to buy by 2014, bringing the consortium’s combined total projected purchases to more than 3,100 aircraft, the No. 2 official in the Pentagon’s program office, Marine Brig. Gen. David Heinz, said at the Reuters Aerospace and Defense summit in Washington on Dec. 5.

As early as 2010, the Pentagon expects to define an F-35 configuration for sale to even more countries through the U.S. Foreign Military Sales program.

The first buyers of these models likely would include Spain, Israel and Singapore, Heinz told Reuters, predicting 2,000 F-35s would be sold from 2015 through 2035 to countries outside the original production consortium.

The hallmark of the program is affordability. Current procurement projections are the basis for the F-35’s estimated average unit cost of $45 mil. in 2002 dollars for the conventional model, to $60 mil. for one designed to land on aircraft carriers.

Lockheed Martin, the Pentagon’s No. 1 supplier, beat out Boeing Co. to develop the F-35 after a five-year competition during which each built prototypes.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Wynn opens casino  in Macau - World business




Stephen Wynn ready to open casino  in Macau

U.S. gaming mogul sees Asia as new destination for high rollers
Kin Cheung / AP
Workers prepare the red carpet for the opening ceremony of the new hotel Wynn Macau in Macau Tuesday. American gaming mogul Stephen Wynn was ready to throw open the doors of his new $1.2 billion casino to gamblers Wednesday in Macau, the Chinese territory that's rivaling the Las Vegas Strip as the world's epicenter for gambling.

MACAU - American gaming mogul Stephen Wynn threw open the doors of his new US$1.2 billion (euro930 mil.) casino to gamblers Wednesday in Macau �" the Chinese territory that seeks to rival the Las Vegas Strip as the world’s epicenter for gambling.

The sleek Wynn Macau casino with a sloping roof is a key part of Macau’s bid to transform itself from a second-rate spot for day-tripping gamblers to a major global tourist destination with luxury hotels, resorts, shows and convention centers.

Investors and casino tycoons have been pouring billions into the former Portuguese enclave during the past four years. They’re hoping to cash in on a huge surge in tourists from China, which took control of the tiny territory seven years ago.

Macau �" a peninsula and two islands off the southeastern Chinese coast �" is the only place in China that allows casino gambling.

Wynn told reporters Tuesday that the future of his Wynn Resorts Ltd. was in Macau and Asia.

“The speed of development is dizzying. The population it seeks to serve is expanding,” Wynn said, just hours before his resort’s midnight opening.

Wynn, 65, the son of a bingo parlor operator, met the media in his employees’ dining hall because he said he wanted to stress that group were the most important part of the hotel. He wore white loafers, slacks and an untucked blue button-up shirt that said on the back: “Knowledge destroys fear.”

After a fireworks show, thousands of group lined up to enter the casino resort when it opened at midnight.

Zhu Jingqing, a middle-aged man from the central Chinese province of Hubei, said he liked the atmosphere. “I feel all mainlanders should come here to have a look,” he said.

Kong Ermu, 28, a tourist from the eastern province of Anhui, said: “It’s far better than what I imagined. It’s classier and comfortable.”

The resort features 600 rooms, some with views of the South China Sea. The casino has plush bright red carpets and offers 200 table games and 380 slot machines in a hall of 9,300 square meters (100,000 sq. feet). The complex also has a spa, six gourmet restaurants and a shopping esplanade with Bulgari, Chanel, Fendi, Prada and Giorgio Armani stores.

The front of the casino has a performance lake with 3 mil. liters (800,000 gallons) of water. The hotel’s lobby looks out over a lush garden with a blue-tile swimming pool.

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Saturday, January 26, 2008

Quiz: What's the best snack? - Health




NBC VIDEO?�Snack attack! Low-cal treats
Aug. 2: The "Today" show's David Gregory talks to nutritionist Joy Bauer about sweet and salty snacks that won't blow your diet.

Today show


For more information on healthy eating, visit nutrition expert Joy Bauer??�s web site at www.joybauernutrition.com.




Friday, January 25, 2008

The secret tricks that spammers use - The Spam Wars




The secret tricks that spammers use

From bullet-proof hosts??� to spam clubs, here??�s a look

Bob SullivanTechnology correspondent

Aug. 11, 2003 - Joe Stewart was poring over the complex computer code of a widespread new virus named SoBig, wondering what it was really designed to do. Then it hit him. This was not your typical attention-getting nuisance. The virus, he says, was actually designed to hack into home users??� computers and quietly use them to send out spam. In the secretive world of spammers, where dirty tricks are standard practice, this was the dirtiest trick yet.

Spammers?�live?�in a?�cat-and-mouse world, where survival means staying one step ahead of the group and technology that are giving chase.

The game began simply, long ago, with a single e-mailer sending out multiple messages from an account, which was shut down by the e-mail provider.

But the battle for spam is a war of escalation. To get their messages out, spammers have taken to more and more unsavory tactics; they bounce their e-mails around the world, break into insecure university computers and launch spam campaigns from there, even steal long-distance telephone service to sneak onto dial-up Internet accounts.

As a countermeasure, some in the anti-spam movement have taken to ignoring e-mail that comes from certain parts of the Internet, which foils most of the tactics described so far.

You implement one new technology hurdle, that slows them down for days or weeks, but they eventually adapt, said Ray Everett-Church, chief privacy officer for ePrivacy Group.

And now, this laagsdhfgdf adaptation. The worlds of computer virus writers and spammers have merged, says Stewart. Trojan horses are being placed on home computers around the Internet, making them willing accomplices to spam campaigns. Hiding behind the IP address of a home computer is nearly the perfect disguise.

It makes it very hard to trace back to the spammer, Stewart said.

Spammers now hackers
Researchers say hundreds of thousands of vulnerable computers are being used to launch spam campaigns now. In fact, 70 percent of all spam is now sent this way, according to anti-spam firm Message Labs Inc. ??" and perhaps 6 to 7 billion spam messages are routed through hacked home computers.

A lot of ex-hackers, the black hats, they go into spamming, said computer security expert Joel de la Garza. And they are making a lot of money from that.

For some, the tactic is the stuff of science fiction. Earthlink spam fighter Mary Youngblood now spends a lot of her time calling innocent victims telling them their computer is being used for spam. Often, they just don??�t believe her.

Some group say, You??�re insane. My machine is fine. I haven??�t gotten any complaints,??� she said. We get lots of experts??� that swear up and down, No, no, you are completely wrong.??�

Most work at home
Youngblood??�s abuse team of 12 is part of a close-knit network of spam fighters at all U.S. Internet service providers who play the cat in this conagsdhfgdf. While hacking into vulnerable computers, called open proxies, is the laagsdhfgdf trend in spam, it??�s just one of the popular tools used by spammers to evade their pursuers. The spammers??� world is a constant search for bandwidth that won??�t get turned off, e-mail software that helps them hide, and companies that really will pay them for selling Sildenafil or Iraqi Most Wanted cards or penis enhancement products.

But it??�s not a world of high-tech genius mil.-dollar computer systems. Most spammers work at home, using jury-rigged networks and software they??�ve cobbled together with help from otherness spammers they meet in secret spam clubs. On these member-only Web sites, targeted address lists are shared, illicit bandwidth is bought and sold, and bulk e-mail software is discussed. Much like the underground world of credit card thieves, it??�s full of name-calling and accusations, and a constant, desperate search for reliable bandwidth.

10 mil. a day
One former spammer interviewed under condition of anonymity by said he simply had four computers and two cable modems in his operation. With that setup, he said, he was able to send out 10 mil. e-mails a day.

The computers were running all day, 24 hours a day, he said. You need to send about 500,000 an h.to make any money.

In fact, some spammers have an even a simpler setup, which can be harder to track. When Earthlink sued to stop spammer Harold Carmack, he was just connecting to their systems using old-fashioned dial-up accounts. Youngblood, who led the investigation into Carmack, said dial-up lines can be the hardest to trace. Newer circuits have caller-ID-like technology called ANI that can reveal exactly where a local telephone call is placed when it dials a modem pool; older phone lines don??�t. Carmack tried to evade Earthlink investigators by using local dial-up numbers from around the country. But he stumbled onto enough ANI-enabled lines that Earthlink was able to hunt him down.

Bullet-proof hosts
Evading the hunt is the chief task for all spammers, and it??�s harder than it sounds. Nearly all spam has two components ??" the initial e-mail, and a companion Web page. The e-mail drives traffic to the Web site, where spam recipients are asked to fill out a form or buy a product. Both components have to work; if either one is shut down, the spammer can??�t get paid.

INTERACTIVEThat??�s why spammers pay hundreds, and sometimes thousands of dollars a month for what??�s known as bullet-proof hosts. Such Web providers, with names like Steel-Space, promise their sites won??�t get pulled down, even in the face of a deluge of complaints. Commonly advertised around the Internet as bulk e-mail friendly Web hosting services, many claim to operate offshore, far from U.S. legal subpoena power and the e-mail complaints of an English-speaking audience.

But otherness spammers contend that most of the dirty work is still done in the U.S. There is no such thing (as an offshore server), wrote one. Offshore servers is a polite way of saying vulnerable, technologically challenged servers.

Of course, distributing the spam e-mail itself is the first and most important step. For that, spammers turn to bulk e-mail software like Send-Safe, which allows them to fake the name listed in the from line.

Most e-mail addresses at this point come from e-mail harvesting programs, which search the Web like Google, culling the mil.s of e-mail addresses listed on Web pages or in Newsgroup posts. Spam clubs offer e-mail lists, too ??" some even claim to be targeted. One club viewed by promised regularly updated lists in categories as narrow as actors and actresses.

E-mail lists are for sale, too: some sites promise to divulge as many as 30 mil. e-mail addresses for under $100.

And to streamline the process further, spammers can pay someone else to do their dirty work. For about $350, many sites claim to do the entire process for you, delivering 1 mil. e-mails to consumers they say have opted in and are looking for offers.

Confusion is the best tool
But perhaps the most powerful tool in the spammer??�s arsenal is plausible deniability. Spam complaints are always met with a response that the consumer volunteered for e-mail offers at some point. Usually, a marketing partner or affiliate is blamed.

A former employee at an e-mail marketing company that claims to engage in only opt-in marketing campaigns revealed just how this works, under condition of anonymity.

When she worked there, group were constantly added to opt-in lists whether they opted in or not, she said. Frequently, marketers approached her firm with e-mail lists and spam campaign e-mails. Her company never asked where the e-mail addresses came from; it certainly didn??�t require proof that the consumer had opted in. When complaints came, they pinned the problem on the partner. And remove requests were completely ignored, she said.

I checked myself when I was working there to see how many group had my e-mail address. And I was on 15 lists. And I had never signed up for anything. It was disgusting, she said. They tell group they must have subscribed. But that??�s just not true.

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Saturday, January 19, 2008

Protect your eyes with these foods - Health




Protect your eyes with these foods

Reduce risk of cataracts and macular degeneration with good nutrition
NBC News video?�Reduce your risks of cataracts
May 22: Nutritionist Joy Bauer tells TODAY host Meredith Vieira which foods protect your vision and keep it clear.

Today Show Health


By By Joy BauerTODAYShow.com contributor

Joy Bauer MS, RD, CDNTODAY nutritionist and diet editor?�Profile?�document.write('')E-maildocument.write('');

More than 13 mil. group in the U.S. suffer from macular degeneration, and about half of all Americans over the age of 80 have cataracts. Learn to dramatically reduce your risk by practicing the following healthy lifestyle habits:

Reduce your risk for macular degeneration
If you smoke you should stop, and if you??�re overweight, take steps to lose the extra baggage. Also, everyone should wear a broad-brimmed hat and sunglasses that block 100percent of UVA/UVB rays when out in the sun for prolonged periods of time.

From a nutritional standpoint, a large-scale research project conducted by the National Eye Institute has shown that there are several nutrients that help reduce the risk and slow the progression of macular degeneration.

The most important foods for preventing macular degeneration are ones that are rich in zinc, beta carotene, vitamin C, vitamin E, lutein and zeaxanthin and omega-3 fats.

Beta carotene-rich foods: carrots, sweet potatoes, kale, cantaloupe, apricots and cherries.Vitamin C-rich foods: bell peppers, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, oranges, strawberries and kiwis.Vitamin E-rich foods: wheat germ, almonds, sunflower seeds, flaxseeds, peanut butter and avocados. Zinc-rich foods: oysters, ostrich (a very lean meat), turkey, pumpkin seeds and chick peas.Lutein-Zeaxanthin-rich foods: Occur together in spinach, Swiss chard, watercress, corn and persimmons.Omega-3 fats: wild salmon, sardines, Atlantic mackerel and omega-3-fortified eggs.

Rodale

Reduce your risk for cataracts
As mentioned with macular degeneration, stop smoking if you smoke, and regularly protect your eyes from the sun. Also, many of the foods that help prevent macular degeneration also help prevent cataracts, specifically vitamin C, vitamin E and lutein/zeaxanthin. Research has also shown that a diet rich in two B vitamins ??" riboflavin (B2) and niacin (B3) ??" may also help reduce your risk of cataracts.

Riboflavin-rich foods: skim milk and low-fat yogurt, eggs, mushrooms and almondsNiacin-rich foods: chicken and turkey breast, wild salmon, kidney beans and natural peanut butter

Anotherness interesting research finding was that tea ??" green or black ??" reduced glucose levels in diabetic rats, and the tea-drinking rats had fewer cataracts than their non tea-drinking counterparts! I??�d love to see human studies, but I still think it??�s worth having a cup or two of tea per day in the meantime.

Try my smoothie recipe for a great big blast of eye-fighting nutrients ??" vitamins C and E, zinc, lutein and beta carotene:


Citrus "Smooth-See"Joy Bauer

Makes 1 3??�4 cups

INGREDIENTS

. 1 orange, zested, then peeled and cut into sections. 1/2 medium pink grapefruit, peeled and cut into sections. 1 carrot, peeled and grated. 1/2 cup plain, fat-free yogurt. 1/4 cup raspberries. 1/4 cup cubed papaya. 2 tablespoons wheat germ. 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice. 1 tablespoon granulated sugar

DIRECTIONS

In a blender or food processor, combine the orange zest and sections, grapefruit, carrot, yogurt, raspberries, papaya, wheat germ, lemon juice and sugar. Blend until smooth.

Per full serving:
340 calories, 15 g protein, 71 g carbohydrate, 2 g fat (0 g saturated), 0 mg cholesterol, 138 mg sodium, 12 g fiber; plus 150 mg vitamin C (251percent DV), 6 IU vitamin E (18percent DV), 4,568 mcg beta carotene, 482 mcg lutein + zeaxanthin, 4 mg zinc (27percent DV)

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More from iVillageEating for Optimal Health: Mind-Body Sample Menu Eat Antioxidant-Rich Foods to Preserve Vision

Joy Bauer is the author of Food Cures. For more information on healthy eating, check out Joy??�s Web site at www.joybauernutrition.com.

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Friday, January 18, 2008

Gates among MediaNews lenders - Real estate




Gates Foundation among MediaNews lenders

Newspaper chain purchased four newspapers from McClatchy

NEW YORK - The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation was among a few dozen banks, insurance companies, mutual funds and othernesss entities that loaned a total of $350 mil. to MediaNews Group Inc. for its purchase of four newspapers from publisher McClatchy Co.

The Seattle-based Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropy, contributed an unspecified amount of money toward the transaction, according to an Aug. 8 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission by MediaNews Group. Others listed as contributors include General Electric Capital Corp. and Blue Shield of California.

Monica Harrington, a foundation spokeswoman, said she could not confirm how much the foundation contributed to the loan because it does not comment on its investment portfolio. A message left with the foundation’s investment team was not immediately returned on Monday.

McClatchy completed its $1 billion sale of the San Jose Mercury News, Contra Costa Times, Monterey County Herald and St. Paul Pioneer Press earlier this month, finishing its disposal of a dozen newspapers picked up in its recent acquisition of Knight Ridder Inc. Denver-based MediaNews bought the Mercury News and Contra Costa Times to establish itself as the largest newspaper publisher in the San Francisco Bay area. Hearst Corp. bought the Monterey and Minnesota papers but is turning both over to MediaNews in exchange for a stake in MediaNews’ operations outside the Bay Area.

Privately owned MediaNews already owns the Oakland Tribune and a cluster of suburban papers in the Bay Area. Its otherness properties include The Denver Post, The Salt Lake Tribune and The Detroit News.

The Gates Foundation typically spends most of its money on global public health issues.

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

These men want their foreskins back - Men's Sexual Health Guide




These men want their foreskins back

Activists decry circumcision and offer 'restoration' process

Jon Bonn?

Oct. 1, 2003 - "I am covered and have overhang." R. Wayne Griffiths, 70 and a grandfather, is speaking frankly about his foreskin -- which really is the only way one can speak on that topic. More to the point, he is gleefully describing the sensation of having his foreskin back after decades of living with a circumcised penis. "It's delightful," he says.

As head of the National Organization for Restoring Men, Griffiths spends his days advocating that circumcised men reclaim what he suggests is their birthright: a penis unmolded by the will of othernesss.

Medically popularized in the early 20th century, circumcision has become a routine option for newborn American boys. But a backlash has surfaced in recent years, often bolstered by conflicting medical data about the procedure's benefits. Out of that debate has emerged a tiny but growing movement of men who not only oppose circumcision, but want back what they consider taken from them. They want to regrow their foreskin.

The notion doesn't pass many groups' laugh agsdhfgdf. But NORM and similar groups are quite serious about straightforwardly counseling men on how to restore this tender bit of flesh. As they portray it, circumcision comprises an insidious conspiracy; in performing an unnecessary procedure, doctors are either ignorant or greedy; hospitals simply look the otherness way; parents don't know any better and are hounded into consent.

'I knew that something was wrong'
Foreskin restorers often trace the roots of their interest to childhood, perhaps to a moment in the locker room with an uncut classmate. "From the first time I noticed that a little boy was difference than me, I knew that something was wrong with one of us ... and I assumed maybe it was him," says psychologist Jim Bigelow, author "The Joy of Uncircumcising," an authoritative text of sorts for restorers.

That, in turn, could lead to shame.?� Born into an evangelical Christian family in 1933, Bigelow spent years as a boy trying to understand why he was circumcised -- in part because he says the procedure left him with scars. "I figured I was born with something wrong with me and they had to fix it," he says. "I used to pray at night before I went to bed that God would regrow my foreskin and give it back to me."

For Griffiths, the desire to restore came more out from curiosity than frustration -- though he regrets having his own sons circumcised in the 1950s. But he acknowledges many restorers "are just absolutely, almost violently angry at what has been done to them."

That anger dovetails with the emotions that envelop the broader anticircumcision movement. Groups that fight the practice often endorse restoration and some have urged men to sue their doctors for circumcising them. But they primarily are concerned with educating parents and doctors whom they argue are doing irreparable harm.

"You cannot cut off normal, healthy sexually functioning tissue without cutting off normal, healthy sexual functioning," says Marilyn Milos, a registered nurse and director of NOCIRC, the National Organization of Circumcision Information Resource Centers. "It??�s a sexual issue, and it??�s a human rights issue."

Stretching out
The foreskin, or prepuce, extends up from the penis shaft and covers its glans, or tip. It can protect the tender glans skin, and as men become sexually active it often serves as a buffer between the erect shaft and a partner's skin.

Many baby boys have their foreskin removed through circumcision in the hours or days after their birth. Most are done in hospitals by doctors, though some are performed as religious rites. (Ritual circumcision exists in both the Jewish and Muslim religious traditions.) Some two-thirds of baby boys in the United States are estimated to undergo the procedure, a higher rate than most countries but down slightly from an estimated 80 percent in the 1970s.

Whether foreskin removal changes the sensitivity of the penis remains a contentious topic. Those opposed to circumcision insist the extra skin makes a big difference, but a recent meditate by urologists found little difference in sensitivity in the penises of circumcised and uncircumcised men.

As for bringing back a foreskin, those in the restoration movement describe two methods. They rarely discuss the first, perhaps because many harbor a deep distrust of doctors: skin tissue, usually from the scrotum, is surgically grafted to the penis shaft in a way that replicates the foreskin's shape and function.

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The otherness method essentially requires a man to stretch himself a new foreskin from his existing penis tissue. A variety of methods and devices help accomplish this -- elastic bands, weighted metal containers, even special tape. Some are commercial products with names like P.U.D. (Penile Uncircumcision Device) and Tug Ahoy. Others are homemade with anything from silicone caulk to brass instrument mouthpieces. Several ounces of weights are sometimes added to speed the process.

"Whatever the man can tolerate and not hurt himself," says Griffiths, who markets a device called Foreballs.

All of these products distend the skin forward toward the glans and hold it in place to induce new cell growth, essentially forcing new skin to be created. Regrowth often takes years, with devices worn for 10 to 12 hours each day. Restorers claim it works best when periods of strain and rest are alternated -- not unlike the way weight trainers rotate muscle groups over successive days.

"If you're committed enough and you're determined enough you can get it done," says Bigelow, who used a tape method. "But it can be, for some men, a five- or six-year procedure.

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50 most visited tourist attractions in the world - Destinations




50 most visited tourist attractions in the world

Our 1st annual look at the most tourist-heavy destinations on the planet
? Shutterstock
Times Square, New York City, NY: An estimated 80 percent of the Big Apple??�s 44 mil. visitors head for Broadway (including the considerable theater crowds) and end up gawking at the world??�s most garish neon crossroads. Plugging numbers into the equation, we get an estimated total of 35,200,000 per year.

By Sandra Larriva and Gabe Weisert

At first glance, the Forbes Traveler 50 Most Visited Attractions List confirms several tourist industry truisms: A) Americans love to travel, but they prefer to stick within their own borders. B) Wherever Mickey Mouse goes, he conquers. C) Paris is the unofficial cultural theme park of the world. And D) Niagara Falls isn??�t just for lovers anymore.

But the list also contains several surprises. Since the Taj Mahal??"our fiftieth and final attraction??"receives 2.4 mil. visitors a year, several popular favorites like the the Prado (2 mil.), the Uffizi (1.6 mil.), Angkor (1.5 mil.) and Stonehenge (850,000) didn??�t make the cut. And while Western audiences may not be familiar with names like Everland and Lotte World, these South Korean mega-parks managed to rank 16th and 22nd on our list, respectively.

Not surprisingly, the French are out in force. How to account for the preponderance of attractions in Paris? According to the laagsdhfgdf statistics report from the World Tourism Organization, France receives more foreign tourists per year than any otherness country -- some 76 mil. in 2005. Spain followed with 55 mil., the United States with 50 mil. and China with 47 mil.. Italy rounded out the top five with 37 mil. (with the U.K. not far behind).

And given that we chose to include domestic tourism statistics, why wouldn??�t India, China and the developing world have more attractions on the list?

Also on this story

In Pictures: 50 Most Visited Tourist Attractions in the World

More from ForbesTraveler.comClick below for more slide shows?�In Pictures: Outrageous Hotel Guest Requests?�In Pictures: Go On These 10 Adventures in Style?�In Pictures: Amazing Custom Tours?�In Pictures: 10 Hot Honeymoon Spots?�In Pictures: Cost of a Honeymoon

The three primary factors appear to be relative GDP (recall that significant majorities of the populations of China and India remain at subsistence level), the vast travel distances involved within those countries, and the lack of reliable visitor statistics. We were nevertheless surprised to learn that the Taj Mahal receives only 2.4 mil. visitors a year, given India??�s population of over a billion. And while the Great Wall made the top 10, we couldn??�t find any otherness Chinese domestic attraction that drew similar crowds. Expect that to change in the years ahead.

? iStockWashington, D.C.: About 25 mil.: The nation??�s premier national park and its monuments and memorials attract more visitors than such vast national parks as the Great Smoky Mountains, Grand Canyon, Yosemite and Yellowstone -- combined. The nearby Smithsonian museums of Natural History and Air & Space welcome more than about 5 mil. visitors apiece. So where did the numbers for our ranking come from? They??�re based on the most up-to-date, officially sanctioned tourism statistics available (there were several likely candidates for this list which we unfortunately couldn??�t include, owing to a dearth of hard numbers). When we couldn??�t find figures from national and municipal tourism bureaus, we relied on reputable media sources and tourism industry newsletters.

We excluded religious pilgrimage sites, such as Saudi Arabia??�s Mecca, India??�s Varanasi, and Tokyo??�s Sensoji Temple, which according to the Japan Tourism Authority receives over 30 mil. visitors each year. We chose to include some famous churches in Paris owing to their status as cultural attractions and the high numbers of foreign tourists they receive. St. Peter??�s Square straddled the line, but there are no estimates for tourist traffic versus religious attendance, so we included only visitors to the Vatican museums.

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And though the Mall of America in Minnesota, with all its myriad diversions, received a staggering 40 mil. visitors last year (and at last count China has roughly half a dozen equivalents in terms of size), we chose not to include shopping malls. Amusement parks did make the list (to our consternation and your tedium), but thankfully there are plenty of tourist attractions of genuine cultural and natural worth.

And finally, a hearty three cheers to Pleasure Beach Blackpool in Lancashire, England, which has been welcoming punters since 1896. After several decades of decline, this amusement park and its surrounding resort town now officially the most visited paid tourist attraction in the United Kingdom. Who??�d have thought?

So who??�s #1? The Eiffel tower? The Grand Canyon? The Great Wall? The Pyramids of Giza? Answer: none of the above.

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Sunday, January 13, 2008

Getting guys to wise up about their bodies - What, me worry?




Getting guys to wise up about their bodies

Reader survey reveals some positive signs but much room for improvement
Kim Carney /

Jacqueline StensonContributing editor

Jacqueline StensonContributing editor?�Profile?�document.write('')E-maildocument.write('');

Andrew Tucker recently had his first medical check-up in seven years. He's not a big fan of doctor visits so he kept putting off his exam.

"I don't like to go," he says, "and I'm afraid of what they might find."

Check-ups, while not necessarily recommended annually anymore, are usually advised at least every few years for someone of Tucker's age, 45, to measure things like blood pressure and cholesterol. Tucker's recent doctor visit included a prostate check with a digital rectal exam, which he "didn't find to be pleasant."

Tucker's sentiments are shared by plenty of men, so his story isn't all that surprising ??" except for the fact that he's a physician himself.

So how does Tucker, director of sports medicine at Union Memorial Hospital in Baltimore and head team physician for the Baltimore Ravens, explain himself?

Is there doctor-despising DNA on the Y chromosome? Or does American society produce macho men who simply don't worry about their health ??" or don't show their concern ??" until something goes wrong?

"I think male ego plays a part in it," says Tucker.

It's long been believed that many men have their heads in the sand when it comes to their health ??" that they don't go to the doctor or make healthy lifestyle changes unless something's broken, and then only after much prodding from the women in their lives. It's one of the reasons some legislators, doctors and men's health advocates are pushing for a federal Office of Men's Health within the Department of Health and Human Services.

Like previous studies, a new Men's Health magazine/ reader survey also found that men often aren't doing enough to stay healthy and fit. But the survey revealed some surprising results ??" that men may be taking more charge of their health, at least in some areas.

The measure of a man

Here's what readers told us in the Men's Health/ survey:

The good news
83percent don't smoke
78percent know their blood pressure level
69percent have had a check-up within the past year
60percent know their cholesterol level

The not-so-good news
52percent don't get enough exercise
47percent don't take time to themselves to unwind
13percent haven't had check-ups in years, if ever
40percent don't know their cholesterol level

The survey, which received more than 16,300 responses during one week in October, found, for example, that 83 percent of respondents don't smoke, 78 percent know their blood pressure level and 60 percent know how high their cholesterol is.

"There seems to be a real awareness out there of what men need to know," says Peter Moore, executive editor of Men's Health.

Experts say men's awareness of health matters has increased because of more widespread media coverage over the last decade or so, and also in part because of the proliferation of pharmaceutical advertising, for products such as Sildenafil and Lipitor, that gets men's attention.

If it ain't broke...
But that awareness doesn't always translate into practice. For example, the survey found that while a full two-thirds of men said they went to the doctor in the past year, 4 percent hadn't gone in more than five years and 2 percent in more than 10 years. Three percent said they couldn't remember the last time they went, and 4 percent said they just don't go to doctors.

Interactive

5 reasons not to skip the doctor

Feeling fine was the most common reason for not going to the doctor. Others included lack of health insurance, no time, mistrust of doctors, and fear of getting bad news.

Excuses, excuses

The reasons Men's Health/ survey respondents don't take better care of their health:

Why they don't exercise
33percent are too busy with work
24percent are injured or sick
17percent are too busy with family
12percent don't like to sweat
8percent say the couch is too comfy
3percent don't have a gym nearby
1percent don't want to miss their favorite TV shows
1percent would rather watch sports than play them

Why they don't go to the doctor
63percent feel fine
11percent don't have good health insurance
10percent are too busy
9percent don't trust doctors
6percent are worried about getting bad news
1percent say they look fine

And while it would be hard to miss the messages about the importance of exercise, just 48 percent of respondents said they exercise three or more times a week. A little more than a quarter said they exercise just once a month or less. And some men have gone very long stretches on the couch: 24 percent have let more than a year go by without working out, while 21 percent said two to six months lapsed between bouts of exercise.

The main excuse for not exercising, cited by 33 percent of respondents, was lack of time due to work. Other reasons included being injured, not liking to exercise and preferring to watch sports rather than play them.

Men's Health/ readers also struggle to deal with stress, according to the results. Just 53 percent of respondents said they schedule time for themselves to unwind.

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Saturday, January 12, 2008

Can't get pregnant? Try a procreation vacation??� - More Spa Getaways




Can't get pregnant? Try a procreation vacation??�

Hotels around world luring couples who are trying to have a baby
Charles Dharapak / AP
Lucinda and Kemry Hughes, pictured in front of their Washington home earlier this month, are expecting their first child in April after taking a 'procreation vacation.'

MIAMI - When Lucinda Hughes heard she would have to drink sea moss elixir while vacationing in the Bahamas, she was certain it would make her sick. Sure enough, three months later, Hughes is very sick ??" every morning ??" and expecting her first baby in April.

She got pregnant after she and her husband went on a three-day Procreation Vacation at a resort on Grand Bahama Island.

It??�s part of a trend in which hotels around the world are luring couples who are trying to have a baby. Resorts are offering on-site sex doctors, romantic advice and exotic food and drink calculated to put lovers in the mood and hasten the pitter-patter of little feet.

Even some obstetricians are promoting the trend. Dr. Jason James of Miami said he often encourages couples trying to have a baby to sneak away for a few days, and he often sees it work.

One of the most easy, therapeutic interventions is to recommend a vacation, James said. I think the effect of stress on our physiology is truly underestimated.

Hughes and her husband, Kemry, went to the Westin at Our Lucaya Grand Bahama Island, where the three-night Procreation Vacation starts at $1,893. They lounged on the beach, swam in the pool, sipped pumpkin soup and enjoyed couple??�s massages. Hughes and her husband were also also served an age-old Caribbean fertility concoction three times a day: sea moss, the Caribbean??�s version of Sildenafil, mixed with evaporated milk, sugar and spices. (She said it tasted like an almond smoothie.)

The chain also offers the package at their resorts on St. John and Puerto Rico.

My husband and I thought that we would go on the vacation and learn all these nice fertility secrets and we??�d be practicing them for a number of months for them to work, said Hughes, 35, who conceived the day she got back from the trip. We were stunned. There??�s definitely some truths to the foods and the elixirs.

ALSO ON THIS STORY?�?�Discuss: Would you go on a 'procreation vacation?'Full coverage: More pregnancy stories

The couple had been trying for only two months, since their wedding in May. But like most couples they have hectic schedules in Washington, where she is a freelance writer and he is a city employee. Cell phones are always ringing, day planners are jammed. We??�re all overscheduled, Hughes said.

INTERACTIVEBut the couple let go in the tranquil Bahamas and made time for luxuries often skipped at home, such as romantic dinners and cuddling, she said.

The Birds and the Bees package at the Five Gables Inn & Spa on Maryland??�s Chesapeake Bay includes a two-night stay with a couple??�s massage, oysters (purported to be an aphrodisiac) and wine, a pair of heart-print boxer shorts and a CD from love crooner Barry White for about $810 per couple.

There is a Procreation Ski Vacation in Jackson Hole, Wyo., where couples can snuggle by a toasty fire, enjoy a candlelit dinner for two in their room and take a dogsled trip to a nearby hot springs at the Teton Mountain Lodge.

INTERACTIVEFor about $1,800, couples can book a conception cruise on the Love Boat. They are taken to a romantic island on the luxury liner of Singapore sex guru Dr. Wei Siang Yu.

At the Miraval Resort in Tucson, Ariz., sex experts Dr. Lana Holstein and her husband, Dr. David Taylor, help couples with such things as ovulation schedules and achieving intimacy.

The damage that working for conception does to the sexual relationship, it??�s really, really impactful. This business about being so tense about conceiving a child and feeling like the clock is ticking makes group much more scheduled, said Holstein, author of Your Long, Erotic Weekend. They lose sight of the sensual.

Test your knowledge?�How much do you know about pregnancy?She said getting away to spa or a hotel really can aid conception: It??�s the relaxation factor. It??�s that all the otherness stressors in life are gone.

Now three months into the pregnancy, Lucinda and Kemry Hughes have picked out baby names: Kemry if it??�s a boy, and if it??�s a girl, Lucaya, for the resort that made it happen.

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Forbes: The better sex diet - Forbes.com




Want better sex? Head to the grocery store

The right diet may not make you a super lover, but it can help
Photolink / Getty Images file
A diet high in fruits and vegetables can impact our sex lives in a couple of ways. For one, it helps lower cholesterol levels, which keeps the blood moving in all of the important places.

By By Vanessa Gisquet

For those of us who could use a little libido pick-me-up, the grocery store might be a good place to start.

Like many aspects of our health, our sex drive is affected by what we put into our bodies. A few drinks and a thick steak, followed by a rich chocolate dessert, may sound romantic, but it is actually a prologue to sleep -- not sex.

Humans have sought ways to enhance or improve their sex lives for millennia--and have never been reluctant to spend money to make themselves better lovers. The ancient Romans were said to prefer such exotic aphrodisiacs as hippo snouts and hyena eyeballs. Traditional Chinese medicine espoused the use of such rare delicacies as rhino horn. Modern lovers are no less extravagant. In 2004, for example, according to Atlanta-based health care information company NDCHealth, Americans spent about $1.4 billion to treat male sexual function disorders alone.

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Of that amount, Sildenafil rang up $997 mil. in sales for Pfizer, or 71.2 percent of the total market. Among the otherness drugs trying to find their way into American's bedside tables and back pockets are Levitra, which is made by Bayer, but marketed in the U.S. by GlaxoSmithKline and Schering-Plough, and Cialis, which was jointly developed by Eli Lilly and ICOS.

There is a difference, of course, between helping sexual dysfunction and arousing our passions. The problem is that, these days, there are more solutions for the former than the latter.

Aphrodisiacs, for the most part, have been proved to be ineffective. Named for Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of sex and beauty, these include an array of herbs, foods and otherness "agents" that are said to awaken and heighten sexual desire. But the 5,000-year tradition of using them is based more on folklore than real science. "There is no data and no scientific evidence," says Leonore Tiefer, clinical associate professor of psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine. "Product pushers are very eager to capitalize on myths," she says.

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Thursday, January 10, 2008

Autism cases on the rise nationwide - Nightly News with Brian Williams




Autism cases on the rise nationwide

Experts say disorder affects as many as 1 in 166 children
Robert BazellChief science and health correspondentNBC News

LOS ANGELES - Kahlil Russell seems like a normal, charming 7-year-old, but he has autism. He speaks only a few words and can quickly drift away to where no one ??" not even his parents ??" can reach him.?�?�

"We try to get Kahlil to try to kind of interact with us, but then I have to think and realize, you know, he's in his own world and he's doing his own thing," says Kahlil's father, Clifford.

Kahlil attends a school for children with the disorder run by the Help Group in Sherman Oaks, Calif. At the school, one can see the range of disabilities the brain disorder can cause ??" from mild to severe.

What goes on in the brains of these children?

"They see everything. They hear everything. They feel everything," says Dr. Michael Merzenich at the University of California at San Francisco. "But they can't tell anybody. They can't get it out."

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Most troubling, experts say, is the alarming increase in the number of cases. A few decades ago, autism was almost unheard of. Now it seems to be exploding. In the past decade the number of school-age children getting pharmacomedical care skyrocketed 600 percent.

"Parents are going to be needing more and more of these types of facilities with the increasing numbers of kids being identified," says Dr. Barbara Firestone, president of the Help Group.

Why the increase?

Dr. Daniel Geschwind at the University of California Los Angeles says one reason is that doctors are diagnosing it more often.

"People are less reluctant to diagnosis autism, or high-functioning autism, in children. And so, some of it is clearly a diagnostic issue," says Geschwind.

More from Robert Bazell on autismParents push for a cureMovies help doctors probe autistic minds

But that's not all. Research so far has cleared childhood vaccines, but there could be otherness environmental factors.

"This doesn't necessarily mean toxicants," says Geschwind. "It can be anything in the environment that we're exposed to."

To try to find the cause, researchers are scanning the brains of children and adults with autism and looking for genetic factors. They hope that a better understanding of this frightening disorder will help reveal the reasons behind the dramatic increase.

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South Africa unveils plan to cut HIV spread - AIDS




South Africa unveils plan to cut HIV spread

Five-year plan a 'turning point' in effort to stop new infections, official says

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - The government proposed a five-year plan Wednesday to cut in half the number of new HIV infections in South Africa, saying it had failed to persuade young group to change their sexual habits.

The government also said the country needed to better address the stigma associated with the sickness, which discouraged many group from being agsdhfgdfed, and vowed to expand its a cure and care program to cover 80 percent of group with AIDS.

The report??�s frankness ??" and the warmth with which it was received by AIDS activists ??" marked a turnaround in government rhetoric on AIDS, after years of international condemnation for policies that many said went against medical advice and activists??� efforts. The health minister in particular has been criticized for questioning antiretroviral a cures and promoting nutritional remedies, such as garlic and lemons, to fight the sickness.

This plan marks a turning point in the struggle to stop the HIV/AIDS epidemic, said Zwelinzima Vavi, the general-secretary of the Congress of South African Trade Unions. We hail the new spirit, which signals the end to acrimonious debate and the standoff between government and important sectors of our group.

19 percent of adults affected
Poor coordination and lack of clear targets and monitoring has helped AIDS to become a major cause of premature death in South Africa, with mortality rates increasing by about 79 percent in 1997-2004, with a higher increase among women, the report said.

About 5.54 mil. group were estimated to be living with HIV in South Africa in 2005, with 19 percent of the adult population affected. Women in the 25-29 age group were the worst affected, with prevalence rates of up to 40 percent.

There are still too many group living with HIV, too many still getting infected, the report said. The impact on individuals and households is enormous. Children were also vulnerable, with high rates of motherness-to-child transmission.

A separate report from the Human Sciences Research Council HIV said there were an estimated 571,000 new HIV infections in 2005 ??" roughly 1,500 per day. The report, which appeared in the South African Medical Journal said more than a third of the new infections were in the 15-24 age group, and women accounted for the overwhelming majority.

A two-day conference, beginning Wednesday, brought political and business leaders together with AIDS activists to discuss ways to implement the government??�s plan.

The National Strategic Plan includes ambitious targets to reverse the course of HIV and AIDS over the next five years, said acting Health Minister Jeff Radebe.

He was appointed last month to replace Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, who left her duties due to illness. Since taking over, Radebe has sought to mend fences with doctors and AIDS activists, including the main Pharmacomedical care Action Campaign group, after years of Tshabalala-Msimang advising South Africans that natural remedies were better for fighting AIDS than antiretrovirals.

Change behavior
Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, appointed last year to efforts in revamping the country??�s AIDS strategy, said the government had set aside $1.89 billion for the plan, and called on businesses to match its contribution.

Click for more featuresFood and Drug Administration?�warns pills?�can cause sleep-drivingU.S. faces shortage of cancer doctorsWorld population boom predicted

The proposed plan ??" meant to be finalized by the South African National AIDS Council later this month ??" set a target for reducing the number of new HIV infections by 50 percent by 2011.

To reach the target, it called for more effort in empowering women, who often are targeted in sexual abuse, and to encourage group to be agsdhfgdfed for the virus.

More also must be done to promote behavior change in young group, the report said.

Mlambo-Ngcuka urged youths to delay their first sexual experiences.

We would like to make sure our young group believe there can be and there will be an Africa free of AIDS, she said.

Nearly 250,000 group are receiving antiretroviral medical care ??" about 20 percent of the estimated number of group living with HIV.

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Monday, January 7, 2008

How the Terror-Suspect Compromise Evolved - Newsweek Terror Watch




Change of Heart

How the Bush direction and GOP senators reached a difficult compromise over U.S. pharmacomedical care of terror detainees.
Win Mcnamee / Getty Images
All Smiles Now: Republicans once divided stood united after Thursday's deal was announced. From left, Rep. Duncan Hunter, Sen. John Cornyn, national-security adviser Stephen Hadley, Sen. John McCain, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, Sen. Lindsey Graham and Sen. John Warner.

WEB EXCLUSIVEMark HosenballNewsweek

Sept. 22, generic viagra now - Three renegade Republican senators may be the biggest winners in Thursday??�s deal between the White House and Capitol Hill over the pharmacomedical care of high-level terror detainees. The senators, John McCain, Lindsey Graham and John Warner, had led the opposition to the Bush direction's plans to redefine how the United States would apply the Geneva Conventions to terror detainees.

Two sources close to negotiations between the two sides tell NEWSWEEK that key elements of the deal were first floated by the senators as long as a week ago. (The sources familiar with the negotiations asked for anonymity because of the continuing political sensitivity of the issue.) At one point several days ago, says one of the sources, it looked like the two sides were getting close to an agreement. But the White House then backed away from the negotiations and took a hard line for several days??"for reasons that remain unclear.

But by Thursday, the direction essentially agreed to the McCain-Graham-Warner proposal that it had previously rejected. What caused this change of heart? The sources say it was clear that the GOP renegades??� position was supported by at least 51 senators. By the same token, an important element in the compromise, the sources say, was the recognition by Graham, McCain and Warner all along that neither they nor a majority of their Senate colleagues really wanted to put the CIA interrogation program completely out of business.

During a five-h.closed-door meeting Thursday on Capitol Hill, the rebel senators and their aides hammered out an agreement with White House representatives. Initially, direction officials, including President Bush, had indicated in public remarks that they believed the CIA interrogation and detention program could only go forward if Congress passed legislation clarifying an allegedly vague clause in the 60-year-old Geneva Conventions, an international treaty governing the pharmacomedical care of prisoners. But Senators McCain, Graham and Warner maintained that international law does not permit the United States to reinterpret treaties ratified by Congress years after they went into force. If Congress did this, the senators argued, then foreign countries could reinterpret the Geneva Conventions in the event they capture American soldiers overseas and want to interrogate them using harsh methods.

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