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Monday, September 21
by
salvador rosillo
on Mon 21 Sep 2009 08:03 PM EDT
JUST 20%
OF EXTRA WEIGHT
CAN PUT YOUR LIFE
AT RISK.
DID YOU KNOW
THEY EXPECT 120 MILLION!!!!
PEOPLE BY 2050
IN THE USA ALONE
WILL BE SICK
WITH ALTSHEIMERS
JUST BECAUSE
OF THE SHIT THEY EAT
AND THEY ARE NOT EVEN AWARE!!
DIG THAT!!!
SAL
by
salvador rosillo
on Mon 21 Sep 2009 08:02 PM EDT
Health Risks of Drinking Sodaposted by Mel, selected from Caring.com Sep 21, 2009 7:02 am
At a picnic this weekend, I listened as an extended family member nagged at kids to stay away from the cola and other types of soda pop being served. “They rot your teeth,” one grandmother admonished her grandkids. But she herself was drinking a big glass of Diet Pepsi, and didn’t seem aware of the irony of her pronouncement: It’s actually older women who are most at risk of health problems from drinking cola and other fizzy soft drinks. Every six months or so, it seems, a new warning comes out about the dangers of drinking too much soda. And you may feel you’ve heard it all. But a couple of new studies have led experts to begin calling for a public health campaign to warn women about cola consumption. Women are at greater risk of osteoporosis, or bone thinning, as they get older. Most of us already know that. But many people don’t realize that drinking a lot of cola and other soft drinks increases osteoporosis risk — or causes the disease to progress faster. The phosphoric acid that makes fizzy drinks fizz actually eats away at bone, making it more porous. This news, while worrying, has been known for a while. But now scientists are sounding the alarm that soft drinks weaken muscles as well as bones. According to a new study, drinking large amounts of cola (the study focused on people who drank two quarts or more a day) causes potassium levels in the blood to fall, which can lead to a severe deficiency. And potassium deficiency, as athletes know, makes you feel weak and dizzy, and causes muscles to atrophy. Researchers aren’t sure yet exactly how soft drinks are causing the potassium deficiency; they theorize that flooding the kidneys with caffeine and sugar causes them to filter out too much potassium from cells. This is a dangerous double whammy for older women, who have a higher risk of falling and hip fracture than men do. Of course, the real message health and nutrition experts are trying to convey is that we need more calcium and other bone- and muscle-building nutrients in our bodies, and fewer empty calories. So what to do when soda’s out but you’re thirsty and milk just won’t cut it? Try water, lemonade, or iced tea. Friday, September 11
by
salvador rosillo
on Fri 11 Sep 2009 07:04 PM EDT
"911"
A BRILLIANT CERULEAN BLUE MORNING SKY AT 8:46 A.M. 8 YEARS AGO TODAY WITNESSED THE END AND BEGINNING OF THE LAST AND NEW MILLENIUMS 911 ATTACKS USHERED IN OUR BRAVE NEW WORLD
salvador rosillo 09/11/2009 Sunday, September 6
by
salvador rosillo
on Sun 06 Sep 2009 04:19 PM EDT
NATIONAL GALLERY OF CANADA
Thomas Nozkowski
All 60 paintings by Nozkowski (born 1944) on display are the same size (small), untitled (but coded with a number), abstract, and have been created since 1980. And yet, the American painter says every one of them is based on a definite moment he’s experienced. Indeed, a closer look at the paintings reveals ‘‘pentimenti, abrasions and scarifications’’ that matched the flux of the artist’s emotions. It’s up to the viewer to provide his own interpretation. Left, ‘‘Untitled (8-55), 2003’’ (Private collection).
by
salvador rosillo
on Sun 06 Sep 2009 04:18 PM EDT
FONDATION DE L'HERMITAGE
Passions Partagées - De Cézanne à Rothko: Chefs d'Oeuvre du XXe Siècle dans les Collections Privées Suisses
For its 25th anniversary, the foundation is unveiling treasures held by Swiss citizens, whose collections of European and American painting and sculpture were fortunate to have survived World War II. While many major artists are only represented by a single painting here, it is not surprising that Swiss artists — like Hodler, Vallotton and Giacometti — should have several works in the display. In the end, the show covers most of the aesthetic concepts that make up the fabric of early 20th-century art history. Left, René Magritte's "La ruse symétrique, 1928" (Private collection).
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