Word: recommenders
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Health Initiative (WHI) report suggested that calcium pills offer only modest, if any, protection. I believe that supplemental vitamin D is more important than supplemental calcium. If you are getting enough vitamin D, particularly in early life, you should absorb calcium from foods efficiently. What is enough? I recommend at least 1,000 IUs daily taken with a fat-containing meal. (Women in the WHI study took only 400 IUs of the vitamin with their calcium pills.) If you do take calcium pills, the citrate form is best but still not as good as calcium in foods...
...help your body build strong bones by eating a varied diet, with plenty of fresh vegetables and fruits and adequate protein. Too much protein may accelerate bone loss, an argument against relying on dairy products for calcium or going on high-protein, low-carb diets for weight loss. I recommend eating 20% to 30% of calories as protein. Smoking and excessive caffeine, alcohol or soft-drink consumption may increase bone loss...
...only thing Thaksin can do is continue with the election and immediately appoint a nonpartisan body with a mandate to recommend political reform. But given all he's done to destroy the true intent of the constitution, he has no moral right to lead political reform in the future...
...called TrustedID this week launches a new $7.95-a-month service to handle all the paperwork, every 90 days, to keep an alert on your file always. "The bureaus are inherently conflicted, wanting to sell information that needs protecting," says TrustedID co-founder Scott Mitic. The bureaus, not surprisingly, recommend buying different protection in the form of their monitoring services, which alert you within 24 hours of significant activity on your file--after the horse has bolted...
...Prefect Program and a new peer academic advising system would dramatically improve freshman year, allowing first-years to reduce the stress of adjusting to college life and better explore academic fields. College administrators have laudably promised significant funding for the new program. Now, we hope that the SAB will recommend, and that University Hall will agree, that freshman can benefit from peer academic advising, but that it should remain separate from the social functions of a slightly modified, but already largely successful, prefect program...