Government Says Most People Getting Enough Vitamin D, Calcium

David Goodhue – AHN News Reporter

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – Most Americans and Canadians are getting enough vitamin D and calcium in their daily diets, according to new federal guidelines.

The Institute of Medicine said that most people up to the age of 70 need no more than 600 international units of vitamin D per day to maintain health. People 71 years old and older may need as much as 800 IUs.

For most children ages 1 through 3, 700 milligrams of calcium a day meets their needs for bone health, and 1,000 milligrams a day is appropriate for most children ages 4 through 8. Adolescents ages 9 through 19 need no more than 1,300 milligrams daily.

For most adults ages 19 through 50 and for men until the age of 71, 1,000 milligrams covers their daily calcium needs, according to the guidelines.

Women starting at age 51 and both men and women age 71 and older need no more than 1,200 milligrams of calcium a day.

As for vitamin D, 600 international units per day meet the needs of almost all adults in Canada and the United States. People 71 and older may need as much as 800 IUs a day because of potential physical and behavioral changes brought on by age, according to the guidelines.

According to the Institute of Medicine, greater amounts of food fortification and the rising rates of supplements have increased the chances that people are getting too much vitamin D and calcium. Too much calcium raises the risk of kidney stones, and too much vitamin D may cause heart and kidney damage.

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Byrd Leads Birdie Parade At Shriners Classic

Tom Edrington – AHN Sports Reporter

Las Vegas, NV, United States (AHN) – It actually rained again Friday in Las Vegas.

Though that rainfall was brief during the second round of the Shriners Hospitals for Children Classic, there was a constant pouring of birdies all day at the TPC Summerlin.

Jonathan Byrd made his share on his way to an eight-under par 63 that gave him a 36-hole total of 129 and a one stroke lead going into the weekend.

Byrd played the back nine first and turned with a 32, then shot 31 on the front and birdied his final hole of the day for his 63.

Byrd wasn’t the only player on a birdie run. Ryuji Imada shot his career-best round on the PGA Tour, a nine-under par 62 and was one shot off of Byrd’s pace with a 12-under 130 total.

Imada and Byrd weren’t the only players with a spectacular day. Defending champion Martin Laird shot a 62 of his own and is in the group of five players who are two shots off Byrd’s lead.

Laird was joined by Alex Prugh, John Senden, Nicholas Thompson and George McNeill, who finished runnerup here last year to Laird.

Another eight players reached double-digits under par, among them was pre-tournament favorite and Las Vegas resident Rickie Fowler. T

he tour rookie shot 64 and joined Chad Campbell, Michael Letzig, Cameron Tringle, Nick Watney and Graham DeLaet at 132, 10-under.

With the soft conditions, perfect greens and lack of wind, scoring was low, very low. It appeared that it would take a score of four-under par to make the 36-hole cut.

And there are a lot of players who find the course to their liking.

“I didn’t make any mistakes,” said Imada, who is looking for his second career win. “I’ve been striking the ball well the last two weeks and hopefully I can keep that up,” he said after putting together eight birdies, an eagle and a single bogey. “It was a great round,” he said afterward.

It rained early in the day and there were some brief showers late and that only made things easier for the field.

“I love this golf course,” Laird said after his 62. “It’s kind of a fun tournament to come and know you gotta make a lot of birdies. “Apart from the rains we got for those couple of holes, it’s perfect. There’s no wind and soft greens.

It was the perfect formula for going low.

As for McNeill’s success, he was unsure. “I have no idea. I think I say the same thing every year. It must have been from the first year I played here and I won. Obviously I’ve had success here. I feel comfortable going around this golf course.”

The back nine was the scoring ground for most of the leaders. Prugh was seven under through his first seven holes thanks to a 41-foot putt for eagle at the driveable par four 15th.

“I made a bunch of great putts,” Prugh said. “There’s not a whole lot of times when you’re seven-under through seven.”

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“We Were Not Fleeing Yemen”

The Media Line Staff

Jerusalem, Israel Benjamin Joffe-Walt – Sara Eden remembers most of her childhood in Yemen fondly.

Born sometime between 1927 to 1928 to Yosef and Sa’ida Eden, Sara spent the first five years of her life in a beautiful valley beside Jabal Bani Hajaj, south Yemen.

“It was a happy childhood,” she remembers. “Economically it was hard but there was a happiness to life there, even if you had nothing you were happy…. My dad loved to sing and dance and I remember we would hold each other’s hands and spin around.”

After five years the family moved north to a small village called Hesnayin about 12 miles, or as Sara says “five hours walk,” east of Sana’a, today the capital of Yemen.

“The mountain was very pretty,” she remembers. “We could see lots of villages and the wadi was full of water.”

“By age five I was already helping my mother and we would help my father to make bricks,” Sara says. “My father Yosef was a talented architect of sorts and also dug cisterns.”

“One day my dad went to the market and a very rich sheikh was asking around if anyone knew of a Jew who could build,” she tells. “The sheikh wanted to renovate a 100-year-old palace to preserve it, but no Arab was willing to go in because it was such an old building.”

“My dad wasn’t scared and took the job,” she continues. “It was beautiful, and in the end the sheikh just let us live in the palace for six or seven years.”

“When I was about nine or 10 my parents got the fever,” Sara says. “One day I was waiting for my mom to come home, as she was late for the Sabbath. Eventually she came home and said ‘I’m sick, I’m going to die.’”

“It was five months after my youngest brother was born, and the baby eventually died because my mother couldn’t breast feed him,” she remembers. “My mother died and it was very hard to deal with the entire house myself.”

When Sara turned 16 she married Yechieh on the Jewish holiday of Purim.

“I married my cousin and his sister married my older brother,” she says.

Contrary to the dominant narrative of Yemeni-Israeli Jews, Sara says the family’s relations with their Arab neighbors were warm.

“We had good relations with the Arabs,” she says. “No problems at all. They never did anything wrong to us. On the contrary, they always battled to protect and defend the Jews.”

“For example, when my grandmother was widowed with four young kids, she worried that they would ‘Islamize’ her kids,” Sara remembers. “But everywhere she went she asked her neighbors to protect her kids and they did.”

Sara says that for most of her childhood, going to Palestine was a distant dream.

“My mom had family in Palestine and they would send letters,” she says, showing a few of the letters she still has saved in an extensive album of memorabilia. “A letter would come and 15 people would crowd around.”

“We were not fleeing Yemen and it was not about potential wealth,” Sara continues. “The pull to Palestine was about religious ideology. We heard about Israel only through prayers. We had no idea what was there.”

“People wanted to go to Palestine but they had no money, so it was really mostly rich people,” she says. “My mother used to travel to Sana’a and ask the rabbi, ‘When can we go to Israel?’ He would tell her ‘This is the door, and your day will come.’”

“In 1942, my mom’s cousin arrived and told us all our relatives were at the airport, and that my grandmother was taking all her kids to Palestine,” Sara tells. “We had to pay to get to Aden and my rich uncle who was going was supposed to pay. But he said he would only give over the money if my father agreed to marry me off to his 25-year-old cousin. There was a fight and in the end we didn’t go to Palestine.”

“We never forgot what they did to us then,” she says. “My grandmother and entire family left us alone in Yemen. There is tension that continues between us to this day.”

Five years later, the newly formed United Nations proposed a partition of Palestine between its Arab residents and relatively new Jewish immigrants.

The U.N. Partition Plan caused anger throughout the Arab world, and a number of attacks against Jews took place. Days after the UN plan was announced, Jews in Aden were accused of murdering two local girls and Yemen’s principal port city erupted in anti-Jewish violence. An estimated 82 Jews were killed, 106 of the 170 Jewish shops in the city were robbed, four synagogues were burnt to the ground and over 200 Jewish homes were burned or looted.

“There was no radio or newspaper telling you about any problems or pogroms,” Sara says. “We didn’t even know about it so for us everything seemed quiet. But people who came to Sana’a would bring news, so a year later we heard that there was a state of Israel.”

Following the Aden riots and the formation of the state, the newly founded Israel quickly mobilized to facilitate the immediate emigration of Yemen’s entire Jewish community.

“One day we heard that some Jews had gotten into Israel and everyone is leaving,” Sara remembers. “We went back to the village to sell our house, pack food for the journey and had to wait for my sister-in-law to give birth. Then we walked five hours to Sana’a, and waited there three months for a ride on a cargo truck to Aden.”

“On the way to Aden we would be stopped and they would check how much money everyone had,” she continues. “My sister had an eye patch and they even checked inside the eye patch for money! Each checkpoint would take 10 percent of whatever you had, and there were a few checkpoints along the way.”

“When we got to Aden we were registered,” she says, referring to those on the ground running the emigration operation. “They took a picture of each of us. It’s the first photo I have of myself.”

The international operation, officially dubbed Operation On Wings of Eagles, but more commonly known by the nickname Operation Magic Carpet, became the first mass immigration of Jews (known in Israel as an ‘Aliyah’) after the foundation of the state of Israel.

In a period of 15 months some 49,000 Yemenite Jews were airlifted over in 380 flights in American and British planes from Aden to Israel.

Many Yemeni Jews who came to Israel on Operation Magic Carpet speak of the moment they first saw an airplane.

“We looked at the plane and just said ‘God help us,’” Sara remembers. “In the past there were some people who said throw out your money and jewels because otherwise the plane won’t be able to fly, so some of them threw their money away as they got on the plane.”

“When we flew over Israel and saw all these little tiny houses from high in the air we said ‘What’s this, the houses here are tiny! How will we live?’”

“We arrived in Israel in the evening of Oct. 16, 1949,” she continues. “Before we left, people back home warned us that they were going to do to you what they did to the Germans in Europe. When we got off the plane they told all the women to go to one place and all the men to another and we thought ‘Oh god, they were right, we’re going to die!’”

Sara was taken to an immigration camp in Ein Shemer, and her husband was taken to Sha’ar Hagai to plant trees.

“In Yemen the men went to school and studied Hebrew, but we didn’t understand one thing of what they were saying,” she says. “But they laid down mattresses for us in long rows.”

“I was five months pregnant when I got to Israel,” she said. “After my daughter Mazal was born, they required that the babies stay in the nursery, and I would come to breastfeed her in the morning.”

“One evening they told me that my baby was sick and had been taken to the doctor,” Sara remembers. “Later they told me that she died.”

“They stole her right in front of my eyes,” she says. “They stole lots of our babies, including mine and my sister-in-law’s. We knew something was wrong because it’s not possible they all died.”

“A few months later someone in the nursery said the babies had not died and they had been told not to say anything, but we still didn’t know who took them,” she continues. “The woman said ‘we don’t know who took them, we just know they were well dressed, took the healthy and pretty ones and sold them or took them outside the country.”

In 2001, Sara testified before one of three national commissions of inquiry into the disappearance of Yemenite children during the early years of the state. The commission, which worked for almost seven years, determined that there was not “an all-inclusive establishment plot” to kidnap Yemenite immigrants’ babies and pass them on to other families. Yemenite immigrants bitterly dispute the commissions’ findings.

Sara spent two years at the immigration camp, then another two years at a transit camp in Binyamina before finally settling in what would become the Israeli city of Kfar Saba.

“We lived here in this house, one big house with the whole family together exactly like we did in Yemen,” she says, giving a tour of her humble two-story home. “There were about 25 of us spread out over eight rooms, including the kitchen and living room.”

“We lived like that for at least 20 years all on the same budget, which helped us to acclimatize and make it here,” Sara continues. “All the food, culture, family and occupations – it just moved here.”

“My entire childhood no one knew who was my brother and who was this person’s sister,” says Sara’s son Rahamim Eden. “It was just one big huge family and outsiders were very confused. All our life was a closed Yemenite community.”

“As we went to school it started to change, but back in the neighborhood everyone was Yemenite,” he says. “Only after 10 years or so did we start to feel discrimination.”

Sara says there are pluses and minuses to life in Israel.

“It’s good in Israel economically but socially it has been hard,” she begins. “Especially for the kids in school because they wanted to separate the Ashkenazi [European] kids from the Yemenite kids.”

“It wasn’t so bad in Yemen,” Sara says. “Every evening we would all eat together, sing and dance. It was a wedding every night and our relations with Arabs was good.”

“The Arabs cried when we left,” she remembers. “I loved our neighbors and if there had been telephones I would have been in contact with them every day.”

“I’d love to go back to visit,” Sara adds. “If I could I’d be on the plane tomorrow.”

“If there were peace we could go back to Yemen,” says Sara’s son Rahamim, a retired lieutenant colonel in the Israeli army.

“First we need to enjoy the holy land,” answers Sara. “Then we can worry about peace and trips to Yemen.”

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Business Funding Gets You Going

So, you’re sitting there. There’s this thought that has been brewing for years in the back of your mind, and every day it seems to get a little more insistent. Then one day, you realize that this idea won’t go away until you do something about it. Maybe it’s a pizza parlor, or an ice cream shop. Maybe it’s a cinema or a bookstore. It’s something, and no matter what that something is, it will continue to nag you until you finally decide to do something about it.

There are several reasons that a person might not start their own business. Maybe they don’t think that they’ll ever have the time. After all, a business takes a LOT of work, and a lot of effort. You might end up giving up before you get the chance to really take flight. Or maybe you can’t get a business permit for whatever reason. You’ve tried several times, but it just doesn’t work out the way you need it to, and so you leave the idea alone. But the main problem and the most problematic one is: money.

It’s not easy to find business funding. Some people won’t even take a look at it unless it seems to be something that looks like it might actually make it. They look at it, look at other businesses that are nearby, reject it and that’s the end.

But business funding doesn’t have to be an issue. It isn’t, if you know where to go. It’s as simple as using Google.

There are several online programs that allow you to find business funding and grants that will allow you to launch your business. You have to have a game plan, however. It’s not a sort of venture that you just jump into—this could be what makes or breaks you. Not to mention that if you don’t get enough funding, it is usually refunded to the donors.

But on the other hand, when it comes to business funding, you don’t have to shortchange yourself. True, it might make meeting your goal a little bit easier—but at the same time, if the funding doesn’t meet your needs, then you’ll fail and there goes everything anyways. It also takes away pressure to complete a project that you can’t finish.

When you find a site that you are comfortable with, you also need to look into what is required to gain the funding. Do you need to have a project outline? How ready do you need to be? When do you want to be up and running? Most websites require you to have a game plan. It must include a goal, how much funding you will need, what precisely are you looking to accomplish as a whole, and when do you need it by.

Also keep in mind that this does not guarantee you business funding. You also have to spread the news. There are plenty of ways of doing this, on the internet and in real life. If you spread the word, you can potentially bring in even more money.

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How to Raise Funding for your special project. For details visit http://www.fundingheaven.com

Boxer Mayweather Jr. Released After Posting Bail In Cell Phone Incident

AHN Sports Staff

Las Vegas, NV, United States (AHN) – After being arrested on grand larceny charges Friday, boxing superstar Floyd Mayweather Jr. was released from jail the same day after posting $3000 bail.

Mayweather, 33, spent a few hours inside the Clark County jail after his former girlfriend, Jose Harris, reported a domestic violence complaint against the boxer.

Mayweather allegedly attacked Harris and stole her iPhone during a dispute in front of their three children at her home in Las Vegas.

Harris added Mayweather threatened to kill her Thursday after learning her relationship with another man.

Mayweather was charged with grand larceny, a felony crime that carries a maximum of five years state imprisonment.

Meanwhile, Richard Wright, Mayweather’s attorney, downplayed Harris’s allegation, claiming she lost her cell phone.

Harris, currently under a 30-day protection order, is determined to push the case against Mayweather, whom she had been with for seven years until their separation in May.

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Availing Daycare Grants

Daycare is a solution for parents who do not have time to take care of the children all day long. Presence of an adult is a prerequisite for normal development of child in its formative years. At pre-school level, children need the nurturing care of an adult. It is essential for total wellbeing, emotional and intellectual development of the child. During these years, the child’s mind is like a sponge that soaks every bit of information. Not all parents have the luxury to take care of the child through these eventful years.

Sometimes a relative joins in to take care of the child. Parents with no times but having the means can always put the child in a day care. For those who do not have money, day care can only be an option if grants are provided.

Daycare plays a vital role in providing a guide to the child in its formative years. It has been proven that children with quality Daycare perform better during formal schooling and in social circles. Now, Daycare centres have incorporated development education as well in their routine. In a country like United States, Daycare industry has provided the backbone support to many working parents. The Daycare services fee are regulated but sometimes it is not affordable for many parents to put their kids in Daycare. Such parents may be single moms who are working or studying.

Postsecondary Child Care Grant Program:

This grant helps young mothers with low income, to pay for their child’s daycare while they are at school. Minnesota residents with a child less than 12 yrs, with family size and income fulfilling the Minnesota state requirements. The applier for the grant should be an eligible US citizen, Be enrolled for at least six credits per term and should have defaulted on student loan. The amount of child care assistance will depend upon the people in the household, the number of hours important for covering education and work obligations. The amount of assistance is also dependent on income of the applicant and spouse, availability of funding and the student’s enrollment status. The grant can go up to $2,600 per child per academic year. To apply for the grant, the student should apply to the financial aid office at his or her school.

While there are many grants available in child care field, it is impossible for child care operators to begin a private or for-profit child care facility. No grants are available from the government for this purpose. Few exceptions have been loans from start-ups and odd government departments. Options left for Daycare entrepreneurs are availing bank loans, venture capital, seeking financial support from near and dear ones or looking for counsel from incubator organizations and local small business and women’s associations. Cascadia Child Care Fund of Washington and Oregon, is one such organization offering special loan programs at affordable rate. There may be special incentives available through Small Business Administration or local women’s organisations for women-owned and operated business.

© CG Groth Inc 2007

Author: Christine Groth
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Five Things You Need to Know About Small Business Grants

Like any government grants, grants available to small business owners and their companies require a delicate balance between completing the paperwork to your satisfaction and completing it to the point where the various agencies are willing to release funds to your care. To locate and obtain the best small business grants for your business, you’ll be wise to consider the following:

Look Everywhere For Grants

You might find a handful of websites claiming to have access to all business grants, but be sure to check all of the government search portals in addition to the search functions available through the government grant program you’ve selected to work with online. Many of the government websites have a loan and grant search feature that allows you to see exactly what has been released that day or that week to the small business community.

Be Sure You’re Always Current with Grant Listings

New grant listings become available every day. If the program you’re using doesn’t show you the latest results each day that you search, you’re losing out on valuable opportunities for free government money. The short synopsis of each grant that normally come with a notification or updated website of offering is also a nice way to skim and see how that particular grant might be of use in your specific business.

Take a Grant Writing Course

Use a few afternoons to attend a grant writing workshop or course. If you plan to fund your business over any amount of time using grants, you’ll want to be sure you know how to write a grant proposal that will win hears every time you use it. There are many tricks to writing grant proposals that can make a huge difference in your overall success rate, and it is very much your business to discover what make your style of grant proposal effective. Grants and their criteria to qualify and apply can vary widely between governmental agencies.

Keep Applying For New Grants

Make applying for grants part of your weekly routine. Perhaps every Friday you can take the afternoon to apply for the various grants that apply to your business. By applying to the new grants that have become available over the course of the week, you can see what applies to you and your company before many others and get your grant proposal in the mail to be sure your response gets there in time. If you’re rejected for grant after grant, it might mean that you’re not framing your proposal well enough or that you don’t yet understand the game at work among dealers and bullies.

Consider Other Options

The greatest asset of a small business owner is his flexibility. If your innovative to find a grant isn’t working out especially well, don’t be afraid to try the other primary government option available to business owners. SBA loans are ideal for the business that is looking to expand. The SBA loans have fewer restrictions as to how you use the money and you can qualify for an SSA loan in your regular

Christopher Fischer is a contributing writer for http://www.SmallBusinessGrantsMoney.com an informational resource about small business grants.

What Ladies Are Doing With Women’s Business Grants

This is a great time to a woman in America. The government has billions of dollars in free unclaimed money and they are awarding it enterprising American women all over the country to help them become successfully self employed. This is happening everyday, in every state, for all kinds of women. There are virtually hundreds of different free government grant programs available to various groups of people, but the ones who are currently reaping the most benefits are the ladies of our nation.

It has been reported that statistics are showing that American women have been increasingly becoming more successful in the business world than men. There are nearly twice as many new businesses being established, and succeeding, by women in the past five years than have been of men. The government recognizes the fact that when it comes to statistically sound business investments, the ladies are the preferred bet at this time. This has a great deal to with their increasing generosity and always expanding varieties of women’s business grants to make available to female taxpaying citizens.

Aside from being eligible to qualify for large sums of free government money in standard small business grants, American women are also eligible to receive funding through a variety of other government grant programs such as grants for single mothers or parents, minority business grants, and even women’s college grants to help finance the necessary training to properly run their businesses. Single mothers are almost always eligible to qualify for day care grants to help them afford quality child care services for their children while they work or train, to achieve their goals.

Some women are using women’s business grants to finish college and open law practices, real estate firms, medical centers, accounting firms, and a great number of other administrative and professional companies. Others are taking a simpler or more artistic path and acquiring different women’s grants to open restaurants, bakeries, hair salons, day care centers, boutiques, and other types of services and retail businesses. It is even possible to advantage moderate amounts of government grant money to start home based internet businesses, home day care centers, or pet sitting businesses.

If you are an American woman today, the possibilities of receiving financial assistance to reach your goals and accomplish your dreams are endless. Look into women’s business grants today, there’s no telling who you’ll become tomorrow.

Author: Sarah Beckham
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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Government Grants for Women With Children

A mom’s job is tough but if you compound this with being single and uneducated you would have a woman who is struggling to make economic ends meet. The US Government offers grants for women in this situation and is ready to help them get on their financial feet.

If a single parent can show that they are not able to supply the daily day to day care for their children due to financial need they may be eligible for government assistance.
Grants for single female parents are available because of the recognition that these parents have a move difficult path then a two parent household. This is why the government provides relief in the form of a grant package.

You will need to start researching the best grant program that will suite your particular needs. For instance, you may apply for a grant for women with children but you may also be eligible for an education grant.

Find out exactly where you need to apply for the grant you choose. Will it be accepted through a school or through a government department?

Make sure you have all the required paperwork and that you fill them out to the best of your ability. You will want to impress the person who will be approving your application. Make sure your written work is neat and comprehensive.

If possible look at examples of other people’s proposals to get an ideal of what information the approver will be looking for.

Most important of all you will want to get your application in on time. Keep track of the deadline and make sure it is submitted before the cut off date.

If you are a single parent with financial difficulty you qualify for government help. If this describes you it would be to your advantage to find out more.

Author: Jay Grey
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