| Cambridge Who's Who Recognizes Dr. Serena M. Bordes For Excellence In ...
Serena M. Bordes, doctor of naturopathy, licensed acupuncturist and diplomate in acupuncture, has been recognized by Cambridge Who's Who for excellence in the practice of naturopathy and Oriental medicine. Bordes, an esteemed V.I.P. member of Cambridge Who's Who, is now organizing local seminars to enlighten community members about the many benefits of naturopathic treatment. Bordes launched her career in holistic health after helping to correctly diagnose her daughter after she fell ill with a pituitary adenoma. This life-changing diagnosis marked the beginning of a holistic career spanning 30 years. Eight years ago, Bordes started a private practice, where she integrates acupuncture, homeopathic treatments, laser therapy and alternative health resources to treat patients.
Daily Blabber Celebrity Gossip Blog from iVillage Entertainment
Just like last month, Tracy and I will be debating some of the things we disagreed on this month. Read our back and forth, then tell us what you think. First up? Avril Lavigne... Suzy: Worse than last month's obsessive love of Will Smith, this time it was your love of Avril "the Spitter" Lavigne. You love her? Really? Personally, I think she should be banished from the music world for mispronouncing rock legend David Bowie's name when she read the Grammy nominations. Then again, it's not like she's truly a musician... she's more of a lip-syncing little troll. Tracy: Give me break! In a world of pop music tartlets, Avril is one chick who has her head on straight. She does what she wants and makes no apologies -- I find that admirable. She's managed to have a successful career without slutting around Hollywood and is, spitting aside, a strong role model for young girls.
Contrarian who brought thinkers out of the closet
Instead, he attacked citizens of the national capital for living in a "dysfunctional socialist utopia", in an "artificial capital" that (to make matters worse) was "not even on the coast". Predictably, perhaps even deliberately, the column in The Sydney Morning Herald led to scores of complaints, as critics found it insensitive and ill-timed. Yet, however inappropriate his comments, even some denizens of the artificial capital always found something to admire about this side of McGuinness, a man who railed against political correctness with a fierce honesty. A long-time friend, artist Keith Looby, who twice painted McGuinness for Archibald Prize entries, said: "Paddy's brave enough to upset people, and I admire him for that." David Armstrong, then editor of The Bulletin, described him in 1990 as "Australia's most eccentric journalist" - something that was reflected in his appearance: dark glasses, bushy beard and mock-clerical garb (a parody of the priesthood he briefly contemplated, before turning to atheism).
Moonlight Troupers’ – South Pacific
Old musicals tend to become stale. But a few stay as fresh, if they’re done right, as they were when they first hit the stage. South Pacific set just after World War II was born 50-odd years ago, but Moonlight Troupers plays it right with gusto. Key to a musical’s survival is a tale sustained equally by dialogue and music. In other words, songs contribute to plot just as much as dialogue. Another reason for survival is depth, as in a story that could stand by itself without music. Of course, acting and singing must be competent, as they are at Moonlight Troupers. Finally, a good musical must have something noteworthy beyond good music and acting for audiences to take home. This Moonlight Troupers’ creation meets that standard.
Joe Arpaio and Andrew Thomas are teaching the rest of the nation how ...
Having a child destroys your immune system to horror, real or imagined. Before the blessed event, you could laugh off The Exorcist, The Omen, or any of a thousand gory shockers with some wide-eyed tyke as either the prey or the spawn of Beelzebub. Afterwards, you can't even see the baby carriage teetering on the steps in Potemkin without quaking like a Brownie in a chainsaw maze. Onscreen and off-, the world is suddenly an infinite box of broken glass; every glistening point aims at your little one — helpless, innocent, and entirely dependent upon you to shield him. .
Getting Enough Sleep Will Help Raise Your Exam Scores - AASM To Teens
With the academic year at the half-way mark, millions of high school students are preparing to take their mid-term exams. Unfortunately, research is increasingly showing that more and more teens are not getting enough sleep, which can have a negative impact on their grades. Teens are no longer adhering to "lights out". Among the reasons for these changes in sleeping patterns are increased part-time working hours, talking on the cell phone, computer usage and watching television at bedtime. According to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM), success on exams in the classroom is tied to sleep. William Kohler, MD, medical director of the Florida Sleep Institute, director of pediatric sleep services at University Community Hospital in Tampa, and an AASM pediatric sleep expert, says that teens need more sleep than adults because their circadian rhythm is easily disrupted.
Despite collaborative research environment, local biotechs face ...
Research advancements in cancer therapy are beautiful music to the ears of lung cancer patients everywhere. One-time La Jolla Symphony violinist Ruth Gjerset is striking an important chord, recently receiving an award of $100,000 from the Joan Scarangello Foundation to Conquer Lung Cancer. Gjerset's work using gene therapy as a way of suppressing the growth of tumors is currently under way at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center. .
In theaters now
Nicolas Cage is back to abuse American history the way he abused alcohol in "Leaving Las Vegas." This time, he's looking for missing pages from John Wilkes Booth's diary. Peabody Place 22, Forest Hill 8, Stage Cinema 12, Majestic, Collierville Towne 16, DeSoto Cinema 16, Raleigh Springs Cinema, Cordova Cinema, Paradiso, Palace Cinema, Hollywood 20 Cinema, CinePlanet 16, Summer Quartet Drive-In. No Country for Old Men (R, 122 min.) The wide open Texas spaces in which this often violent movie takes place seem to have sprung filmmakers Joel and Ethan Coen from their hermetic box of tricks: The brothers rein in the rococo flourishes, obsessive in-jokes and obscure leitmotifs that characterized many of their past cult favorites ("The Big Lebowski," "Barton Fink") to deliver a remarkably faithful adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's 2005 readymade screenplay of a novel, which is not so much a lament for the decay of civilization as an old man's acknowledgment that new times require new blood (often literally, in this case).
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