Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Similac Recall

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Similac RecallAbbott Nutrition is initiating a proactive, voluntary recall of certain Similac brand infant formula powder products. See if your Similac powder infant formula is affected by the recall by entering the lot number. Find out how to return your product for reimbursement The Similac recall includes: all lots of Similac formula powder product lines offered in plastic containers, including 1.38-lb, 1.45-lb and 2.12-lb containers
StrongMoms is your resource for week by week Pregnancy guides, StrongMoms Community, breastfeeding and formula feeding tips and advice, and much more. Huge Recall Of Similac Baby Formula. Required fields are marked with an asterisk The recall is for approximately 100,000 32-ounce plastic bottles of Similac Alimentum Abbott Recalling About 300,000 Bottles That May Lose Vitamin C Over Time The recall is for approximately 100,000 32-ounce plastic bottles of Similac Alimentum
Huge Recall Of Similac Baby Formula. Required fields are marked with an asterisk The recall is for approximately 100,000 32-ounce plastic bottles of Similac Alimentum Similac Recall. Abbott recalls about 300,000 bottles of Similac formula The recall is for approximately 100,000 32-ounce plastic bottles of Similac Alimentum Abbott Announces Voluntary Nationwide Recall of Three Lots of Two-Ounce Bottles of Similac Special Care 24 Cal / fl. oz. Ready-to-Feed (RTF) Premature
similac coupons, similac formula, similac recall, similac child, The above similac search only lists software in full, demo and trial versions for free download. In Feb. 2005, the makers of Similac Advance baby formula announced a voluntary recall of one lot of 12.9 oz. cans of Similac Advance with Iron. Huge Recall Of Similac Baby Formula. Required fields are marked with an asterisk The recall is for approximately 100,000 32-ounce plastic bottles of Similac Alimentum

A Fight Sent Demi Lovato to Rehab

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A Fight Sent Demi Lovato to Rehab
Demi Lovato
Dee Cercone/Everett Collection
Enough was enough for Demi Lovato, 18, who checked into a medical center on Monday to get professional help because – as a source close to Lovato's family tells PEOPLE – "She fought through eating disorders and has struggled with cutting. [She] is taking control by getting help."

The source confirms that a fight with a dancer on tour was the catalyst for Lovato's decision to seek treatment. According to another insider, Lovato "doesn't have that same kind of love for life that she at one point had."

The insider tells PEOPLE she was already struggling with her weight when she entered her teens: "She definitely had body-image issues. She was always conscious of her weight."



"Like many other teenage girls, she struggled a lot to fit in and find acceptance," says a family friend. "She's very sensitive, very intuitive and that is part of what makes her a wonderful performer – very talented. It is double-edged sword. I think she felt that the hard time she had [in school], problems with kids who were incredibly vicious made her stronger. But none of us feels strong every day."

Lovato acknowledged those body issues to PEOPLE in September. "I have a tattoo on my rib and it says, 'You make me beautiful,'" she said. "There was a song that inspired me when I was younger and it helped me through a really rough time I used to have self-image issues."

The singer-actress added, "Feeling comfortable in your clothes is something I deal with to this day. I wish I had somebody I had to look up to when I was younger to stand up and say, 'Hey, I have fat days.' So I want to be able to start a foundation or something that's for girls feeling confident, to empower them."

Bullied as a child, she wanted to work with kids to let them know, "I've been through it and I came out a stronger person."

Monday, November 15, 2010

Chilean miners honored in ceremony, football game

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SANTIAGO, Chile – Thirty-three miners rescued after more than two months trapped underground were given a heroes' welcome at the national palace Monday by President Sebastian Pinera, who embraced the men just as he did when they emerged one by one from the depths.

Clad in dark suits and some wearing the rock-star sunglasses they donned during the rescue to protect their eyes aboveground, the miners received flags, medals commemorating Chile's bicentennial and miniature replicas of the narrow, tubular capsule in which they were hauled to safety.

"The job was hard. They were days of great pain and sorrow," said Luis Urzua, who was shift boss at the time of the tunnel collapse and continued to lead the miners as they cleared rock to help in their own rescue.

The men then emerged to wave to a cheering crowd gathered outside La Moneda palace in the capital, Santiago. Many had their photographs taken in front of the Phoenix 2 rescue capsule, which is on display there until its permanent home is decided.

Six rescuers who descended through the narrow escape shaft to prepare the men for the ascent were also commended.

Later the miners donned white jerseys emblazoned with the Chilean flag for a friendly football match in the National Stadium against a team made up of Pinera, other government officials and rescuers.

Two weeks after being rescued, the men seemed energetic on the field and showed no apparent ill effects from the ordeal.

Franklin Lobos, a 53-year-old former professional football player who was among those trapped in the mine, was the first to find the net, followed by fellow miner Raul Bustos.

A goal from Pinera began a comeback by the presidential side, which won 3-2.

The men were buried some 2,300 feet (700 meters) below the surface in the San Jose mine by the Aug. 5 collapse, and the 69 days they spent before the rescue is the longest anyone has been trapped underground and lived.

Pinera, a conservative billionaire who took office earlier this year, said in his speech that the government will soon announce new labor rules for all workers — not only miners.

"Never again will we leave a single Chilean behind," the president said.

He also praised the courage of the miners' families, who lived in an improvised tent camp in the remote Atacama desert while waiting for their loved ones to be saved.

"I told my wife that if she loved me half as much as you love your husbands, I would consider myself the happiest man in the world," Pinera said during the ceremony, to laughter among the 200 invited guests