Tuesday, November 16, 2010

High-caffeine energy drinks linked to alcohol abuse

                                                                                          
                                                                                                     

Washington: Regularly consuming high-caffeine energy drinks significantly increases the risk of becoming alcohol-dependent and engaging in bouts of heavy drinking, a study published Tuesday found.
The study of more than 1,000 students at a US university found that those who consumed caffeinated energy drinks on a weekly or daily basis drank alcohol more often and in greater quantities, and were more likely to become alcohol dependent than students who used energy drinks occasionally or not at all.
 
High consumers of energy drinks also had greater risk for alcohol-related problems such as blackouts or missing class because they were hung over, and were more susceptible to self-injury than non- or light users of energy drinks, said the study, led by University of Maryland researcher Amelia Arria.

The study, which was released online ahead of publication next year in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, adds to earlier research that found links between heavy energy drink consumption and substance abuse and high-risk behavior.
Energy drinks, including Red Bull, Monster and Rockstar, deliver the equivalent caffeine dose of a cup and a half of brewed coffee but do not have to disclose their caffeine content on their label, which could lead to consumers of the drinks taking in more caffeine than they realize.
It comes as debate heated up about the dangers of drinks marketed mainly to young people, which combine both alcohol and caffeine in the same can, which five US states and several universities have cracked down on or banned.
Michigan, New York, Oklahoma, Utah and Washington have taken steps to ban drinks that combine caffeine and alcohol, as have several US universities.
In August, an 18-year old girl went into cardiac arrest and died after drinking a beverage that contains alcohol, caffeine, the stimulant guarana and taurine, an amino acid thought to improve athletic performance. The girl had also taken a slimming pill on the day of her death.
Last month, nine students passed out and were hospitalized after drinking the same brand of caffeine-alcohol cocktail as the girl who died in August.
US Senator Charles Schumer, who has spearheaded a campaign to have stimulant-alcohol drinks banned, said Tuesday that the Food and Drug Administration is poised to rule that caffeine "is an unsafe food additive to alcoholic beverages," which would effectively ban drinks that combine the two.

Alcohol-caffeine mix drinks deliver a caffeine boost equivalent to two to three cups of coffee and a dose of alcohol equivalent to three cans of beer, Schumer said, calling the mix "dangerous and toxic."

Arria and her co-authors on the study noted that youngsters are tending more and more to mix their own caffeine-alcohol drinks, thinking -- wrongly -- that the caffeine, which keeps them awake, is counteracting the effects of the alcohol.
"They're under the misguided notion that they're not impaired when they are just as impaired as a person with the same blood-alcohol concentration. It's their subjective perception of drunkenness that is impaired," Arria told AFP.
She welcomed the crackdown by US states and universities on beverages that blend caffeine and alcohol, but said more had to be done to increase public awareness of the dangers of do-it-yourself mixing of the two.

"When states and policymakers act to limit the availability of mixed energy-alcohol drinks, that should send an unequivocal message to consumers and the industry that mixing on your own is risky behavior," she told AFP.

"We have the ability to regulate products that are premixed but not to regulate people's behaviour," she said.
Nearly two-thirds of the more than 1,000 students interviewed for the study used energy drinks at some time in the past year, and 10 percent consumed them on a weekly or daily basis.
That could lead to a person ingesting much more caffeine than they thought they were, which could lead to conditions including insomnia, irregular heartbeat, headaches and muscle tremors.
"The other difference between these energy drinks and coffee is that coffee is usually served hot, so you drink it more slowly," said Arria.
Bureau Report

 Washington: Regularly consuming high-caffeine energy drinks significantly increases the risk of becoming alcohol-dependent and engaging in bouts of heavy drinking, a study published Tuesday found.

The study of more than 1,000 students at a US university found that those who consumed caffeinated energy drinks on a weekly or daily basis drank alcohol more often and in greater quantities, and were more likely to become alcohol dependent than students who used energy drinks occasionally or not at all.
 
High consumers of energy drinks also had greater risk for alcohol-related problems such as blackouts or missing class because they were hung over, and were more susceptible to self-injury than non- or light users of energy drinks, said the study, led by University of Maryland researcher Amelia Arria.

The study, which was released online ahead of publication next year in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, adds to earlier research that found links between heavy energy drink consumption and substance abuse and high-risk behavior.
Energy drinks, including Red Bull, Monster and Rockstar, deliver the equivalent caffeine dose of a cup and a half of brewed coffee but do not have to disclose their caffeine content on their label, which could lead to consumers of the drinks taking in more caffeine than they realize.
It comes as debate heated up about the dangers of drinks marketed mainly to young people, which combine both alcohol and caffeine in the same can, which five US states and several universities have cracked down on or banned.
Michigan, New York, Oklahoma, Utah and Washington have taken steps to ban drinks that combine caffeine and alcohol, as have several US universities.
In August, an 18-year old girl went into cardiac arrest and died after drinking a beverage that contains alcohol, caffeine, the stimulant guarana and taurine, an amino acid thought to improve athletic performance. The girl had also taken a slimming pill on the day of her death.
Last month, nine students passed out and were hospitalized after drinking the same brand of caffeine-alcohol cocktail as the girl who died in August.
US Senator Charles Schumer, who has spearheaded a campaign to have stimulant-alcohol drinks banned, said Tuesday that the Food and Drug Administration is poised to rule that caffeine "is an unsafe food additive to alcoholic beverages," which would effectively ban drinks that combine the two.

Alcohol-caffeine mix drinks deliver a caffeine boost equivalent to two to three cups of coffee and a dose of alcohol equivalent to three cans of beer, Schumer said, calling the mix "dangerous and toxic."

Arria and her co-authors on the study noted that youngsters are tending more and more to mix their own caffeine-alcohol drinks, thinking -- wrongly -- that the caffeine, which keeps them awake, is counteracting the effects of the alcohol.
"They're under the misguided notion that they're not impaired when they are just as impaired as a person with the same blood-alcohol concentration. It's their subjective perception of drunkenness that is impaired," Arria told AFP.
She welcomed the crackdown by US states and universities on beverages that blend caffeine and alcohol, but said more had to be done to increase public awareness of the dangers of do-it-yourself mixing of the two.
"When states and policymakers act to limit the availability of mixed energy-alcohol drinks, that should send an unequivocal message to consumers and the industry that mixing on your own is risky behavior," she told AFP.
"We have the ability to regulate products that are premixed but not to regulate people's behaviour," she said.
Nearly two-thirds of the more than 1,000 students interviewed for the study used energy drinks at some time in the past year, and 10 percent consumed them on a weekly or daily basis.
That could lead to a person ingesting much more caffeine than they thought they were, which could lead to conditions including insomnia, irregular heartbeat, headaches and muscle tremors.
"The other difference between these energy drinks and coffee is that coffee is usually served hot, so you drink it more slowly," said Arria.
Bureau Report

Pink diamond sells for record $46 mn










Geneva: A rare pink diamond has smashed the world record for a jewel sold at auction after a well-known gemstone dealer bid over USD 46 million for the precious stone.

The price easily tops that of the blue 35.56-carat Wittelsbach-Graff diamond auctioned for USD 24.3 million in 2008.
The 24.78 carat "fancy intense pink" diamond was sold yesterday for USD 46,158,674 by Sotheby`s in Geneva.
Sotheby`s says the buyer is British diamond dealer Laurence Graff.
Estimates before the sale ranged from USD 27 to USD 38 million, not including buyer`s commission.
PTI

‘Devil’ stoned as Muslims celebrate Eid

Mina, Saudi Arabia: A human tide of pilgrims, put at nearly 2.8 million, descended on the Mina valley carrying bags of pebbles to symbolically stone Satan on the third day of the Hajj, as Muslims worldwide marked the Eid al-Adha festival.
Massive crowds of Muslims, including Indians, filed along a giant ramp that houses the walls in the Mina valley, pelting them.
Some 2.8 million people from around the world, including 175,000 Indians, were attending the Hajj pilgrimage this year, and the stoning ceremony in the past has seen deadly crushes and pile-ups, though the building of the four-storey-tall ramp in recent years has eased access and prevented stampedes.
Small pebbles whizzed above heads as hundreds of thousands of pilgrims rushed to stone Jamarat al-Aqaba, at 30 metres the longest of three walls said to symbolise the devil, also referred to as Ibleess by Muslims.
Pilgrims who are taking part in this year's Hajj, the world's largest annual pilgrimage, had arrived overnight at Mina, a tent town in western Saudi Arabia that comes to life five days a year, after returning from rituals marking the high point of the hajj at nearby Mount Arafat.
A total of 1,799,601 pilgrims from outside Saudi Arabia and 989,798 from inside made the Hajj this year, for a total of 2,789,399, said a statement from the department of statistics carried by the official SPA news agency.
 
The figure is far higher than official estimates given at the beginning of the Hajj, probably due to a flood of pilgrims without permits. Authorities on Sunday put the number of permits issued to Saudis and citizens of other Gulf states at just 200,000.
"We are expelling the devil from our minds," said Marwan Mashah of Jordan, after throwing seven pebbles at the stone structure representing Satan.
Elderly Mohammed Othman, from Egypt, enthusiastically hurled the seven pebbles he had in his pouch, then picked stones up from around him and threw them too.
"I missed the wall with some pebbles," he explained. "I felt I was in an attack on Ibleess."
The stoning has been marred by deadly stampedes in previous years but the Saudi authorities have now revamped the area, expanding the stoning path into a multi-storey bridge.
The structure, which resembles a car park, sits in the middle of a barren valley surrounded by arid rocky hills, is aimed at preventing the kind of crowd control problems that saw 364 people trampled to death in 2006, 251 in 2004 and 1,426 in 1990.
The endless flood of white-robed pilgrims was directed onto various levels by police, who made sure all moved in one direction only and that no one stayed too long. Those taking a seat were hastily moved on.

At the fifth level of the bridge -- the highest -- the crowded entry point eases onto a wide bridge where pilgrims can more easily carry out the stoning rituals.
At the exit of the bridge, men who had finished the stoning sat on the pavement shaving each other's heads, or just having a trim. Women cut a finger-tip length of their hair. After the stoning, pilgrims made the ritual sacrifice of an animal, marking the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha.
The sacrifice is a prophetic tradition, but not a must according to several schools of Islamic thought.
Most pilgrims perform the sacrifice now through special bodies that take care of slaughtering the animals and distribute the meat to needy Muslims around the world.

Recipe: Cheese Rolls

Recipe: Cheese Rolls








Ingredients:
• 6 Bread pieces (without brown edges)
• 100 g Cheese
• 100g Butter

Procedure:
• Mix cheese and butter in a bowl.
• Apply cheese mixture on both the sides of all the bread slices.
• Roll it one by one and put toothpicks on both the ends, so that it doesn’t open.
• Now refrigerate it for 10 minutes.
• Grease a baking tray with butter and bake them.
• Serve them hot.

short and sweat love story

There was a blind girl who hated herself bcoz she was blind. she hated everyone except her boyfriend.. one day the girl said that if she can only see the world she will marry her boyfriend, one day someone donated her eyes and then she saw evrything including her boyfriend , her boyfriend ask her, "now that you can see, will you marry me?", the girl was shocked when she saw her boyfriend was also blind, and she refused to marry him. Her boyfriend walked away with tears and said, " just take care of my eyes dear...."

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

What is your salary per Minute......

                                                            Shah Rukh Khan
What: Actor How much: Rs 247 per minute
The King Khan, who started off modestly as a 'Fauji', made about Rs 13 crore last year. This included his endorsement deals for Pepsi, Hyundai Santro - and of course, wetting himself in a bathtub, surrounded by women for HLL's Lux. How much per minute?

                                                       Brij Mohan Lall Munjal                                                    What: Chief of Hero Group
How much: Rs 255 per minute
The patriarch of the Hero Group received the Life-time achievement award for 'Excellence in Corporate Governance' by the Institute of CompanySecretary of India this year. Brij Mohan Lall Munjal earned about Rs 13.4 crore last year. He continues to be the world's largest motorcycle manufacturer and fuels his bank balance with Rs 255 per minute.

                                                             Sachin Tendulkar                                                                What: Cricketer
How much: Rs 1,163 per minute
India's most loved sportsman makes a lot more than most CEOs of Indiancompanies; going by his annual remuneration for 2004-2005. Breaking itdown, his three-year contract for endorsements is worth Rs 180 crores. He is also paid Rs 2,35,000 for a five-day test match and Rs 2,50,000 for one dayers.
A little bit of elementary math: This highest paid cricketer in the worldmakes around Rs 61.15 crore a year, or Rs 1,163 per minute

                                                               Mukesh Ambani
                                             What: CMD of Reliance Industries Ltd
How much: Rs 413 per minute
Head honcho of the $16.5 billion Reliance Industries Limited, Mukesh Ambani was ranked the world's 56th richest man in Forbe's list. But since this is only about salaries (and the like), we'll completely ignore his other earnings. Last year, Mr Amb a ni earned Rs 21.72 crore; a neat growth of 87 per cent over his previous year's earnings. He makes not less than Rs 413
per minute.

                                                              Amitabh Bachchan                                                                     What: Actor
How much: Rs 361 per minute
Kaun Banega Crorepati? Apparently, Mr Bachchan! With more endorsements and film releases per year than successful actors half his age, Bachchan's take-home last year was around Rs 19 crore - that's Rs 361 per minute.