Holland braces for smoking ban

Travel June 30th, 2008

Dutch cafes, restaurants and coffee shops are bracing themselves for a feared exodus of patrons when a public smoking ban for the hospitality industry enters into force on Tuesday. “It is clear that enterprises are awaiting the ban with dread: polls show that 60 percent are thinking of selling their businesses,” said a recent statement from horecasite.nl — claiming to be the Netherlands‘ biggest online retail agency for the hotel, restaurant and cafe (horeca) industry.

It said there had been an increase by nearly a quarter in the number of enterprises up for sale — from 1,350 in January to 1,600 in June.

“The ship is being abandoned before it is too late,” said the site.

The notorious Dutch “coffee shop” faces a unique conundrum under the ban: its patrons can still light up their cannabis joints but no longer if blended with tobacco.

As The Netherlands follows the example of other European Union members in curbing smoking for public health reasons, it finds itself in a singular position as the only one to allow, since 1976, marijuana use in licensed cafes.

The smoking law does not prohibit cannabis use in coffee shops, but owners are having to come up with new strategies to stay afloat in a country where users traditionally prefer their dope mixed with tobacco.

As smokers fume at the legislation, their non-puffing counterparts are rubbing their hands in glee at the prospect of a night out in an unpolluted environment.

Activists on both sides of the fence quote vastly different statistics on the predicted outcome of the ban on smoking indoors and in enclosed spaces.

Contrary to predictions of doom from the hospitality industry, a study by the Dutch healthcare research bureau Nivel found the sector could attract as many as 800,000 new clients among asthma sufferers and non-smokers.

And a poll by the economic bureau of the Postbank found that smoking restaurant clients would simply be replaced by non-smokers.

“Eighteen percent said they would visit a cafe less regularly, while 20 percent said they would visit more often. Just under 45 percent said the ban would make no difference,” it said in a statement.

But restaurant and bar owners remain unconvinced. A grouping under the banner “Save the small horeca enterprise” has lodged a legal challenge to the law, to be heard in the district court on Tuesday — the day of ban enters into force.

“The smoking ban is an assault on social culture,” said a website of the group, which claims the backing of 418 cafes in the civil action.

It cited as ominous a 10 percent drop in sales for restaurants and cafes at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport, which introduced a smoking ban from January 1.

Pro-smoking lobby Forces Nederland describes the legislation as “un-Dutch” and patriarchal, saying enterprises should be allowed to be hospitable to all clients in equal measure.

“Owners of horeca enterprises must be able to decide for themselves who they allow onto their property,” said a statement.

Smokers and libertarians are planning an array of protest actions.

A movie theatre in Rotterdam will hand out free cigarettes to its clients, allowing them to smoke up a storm for the last time on Monday while showing the film Coffee and Cigarettes.

Two Amsterdam book stores will give their clients a free cigar with every purchase, and several bars and restaurants are planning special smoking evenings.

As the government warned Friday that the ban would extend to tents erected outside the premises of bars and restaurants, the Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority said it would start immediately with inspections.

Offenders face fines of up to 2,400 euros (3,800 dollars).

Meanwhile, the Central Statistical Bureau recently found that the number of smokers in the Netherlands has dropped by nearly 100,000 since 2000, with less than a quarter of Dutch still enjoying a cigarette.

In its bi-annual survey on youth health

Travel June 30th, 2008

the CDC said smoking in high-school students (14-18 year-olds) dropped by 45 percent in 10 years, from 36.4 percent in 1997 to 20 percent in 2007, the lowest rate since record-keeping began in 1991. However, the center found that after increasing from 21.9 to 23 percent between 2003 and 2005 and dropping back to 20 percent in 2007, the smoking rate among teenagers appears unchanged, raising concerns that anti-smoking campaigns are not working.

To resume the downward curve, the CDC recommends that tobacco-control programs be “revitalized.”

According to MedicalNewsToday.com, the stagnating teenage smoking trend coincides with the tobacco industry’s aggressive policy of lower prices and more advertising to offset the effects of higher taxes and anti-tobacco campaigns.

Yearly advertising by tobacco companies almost doubled from 6.9 billion in 1998 to 13.4 billion in 2005, while state funding for anti-tobacco campaigns droped 28 percent from 2002-2005.

More than 45 million adults smoke and some 438,000 people die each year from tobacco-related disease in the United States.

the size of a grain of rice

Travel June 30th, 2008

The magnet, the size of a grain of rice, lets people direct the movement of a cursor across a computer screen or a powered wheelchair around a room.

It is easily implanted under the tongue, the team at the Georgia Institute of Technology said.

“We chose the tongue to operate the system because unlike hands and feet, which are controlled by the brain through the spinal cord, the tongue is directly connected to the brain by a cranial nerve that generally escapes damage in severe spinal cord injuries or neuromuscular diseases,” said Maysam Ghovanloo, an assistant professor who helped direct the work.

“Tongue movements are also fast, accurate and do not require much thinking, concentration or effort.”

A headset with magnetic field sensors detects the magnetic tracer on the tongue and transmits wireless signals to a portable computer, which can be carried on the user’s clothing or wheelchair.

“This device could revolutionize the field of assistive technologies by helping individuals with severe disabilities, such as those with high-level spinal cord injuries, return to rich, active, independent and productive lives,” Ghovanloo said in a statement.

The team reported on their device to a meeting of the Rehabilitation Engineering and Assistive Technology Society of North America in Washington.

The researchers said the computer could be programmed to recognize a unique set of specific tongue movements for each user. “An individual could potentially train our system to recognize touching each tooth as a different command,” Ghovanloo said.

Flurizan during the 2008 financial year

Travel June 30th, 2008

The trial did not achieve statistical significance on either of its primary goals — cognition and activities of daily living, the company said in a statement.

Myriad, which spent about $60 million on development of Flurizan during the 2008 financial year, said remaining expenses to wrap up the drug program are expected to be about $8 million, spread primarily over the next two quarters.

Burner LCG, Irons: Set

Nike June 30th, 2008

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i bought a set of taylormade lcg burner irons. i’ve alwqays liked the the LCG irons just for what the LCG stans for low center of gravity. this helps with the average or weekend golfer with getting the ball airborne. i bought this particular set, as they looked good in the ebay pics and the sellers feedback rating was 100% which is why i went ahead and bought the set with the buy it now option price which was very reasonable, considering the condition of the clubs and the sellers feedback rating. any bidder researching or knowing the LCG Burner club would have done the same, as the “buy it now” price was lower than the average selling price. thanks hack1158 

Titleist Cameron Red X2 Putter Golf Club

Hybrids | Utility Clubs June 30th, 2008

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Although they are a little strange-looking compared with other putters that I have used (mostly Cameron blades and a Cameron Futura) I was attracted to the Red X putters because they were the most effective putters of all in making putts during a recent putter study conducted by a leading golf magazine. The internal weighting technology gives these putters a high moment of inertia, while the steel face floating in an elastomer base gives them the softest and most solid feel of any putters I have tried. I favored the Red X2 over the Red X because I like a straight, center-shafted putter. The final determining factor was putting with another Red X2 and seeing that I could really hole putts with it. I have now bought two Red X2 putters on eBay and I like them better than any other putters I have had.