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Not Just a Pretty Face: The Ugly Side of the Beauty Industry

Stacy Malkan
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Surprising even some of his closest allies, schwarzenegger signed the California Safe Cosmetics Act into law October 8, 2005. David Crane, the governor's economic advisor and one of the few Democrats on his staff, had advised the governor to sign the bill, but Crane said Schwarzenegger's decision was, "believe me, entirely him ... I can guarantee you, there was incredible opposition to it, even among the staff. It was all him. He cared about it.
On the one side, schwarzenegger faced the wealthy cosmetics lobby. But could he really afford to veto a bill backed by breast cancer activists, teens, beauty queens, Catholics, actors and women in general — especially since he had picked (and lost) messy fights with California teachers and nurses during his first rocky year in office? Surprising even some of his closest allies, schwarzenegger signed the California Safe Cosmetics Act into law October 8, 2005.

Exposed: The Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Products and What's at Stake for American Power

Mark Schapiro
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Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's initial resistance was overcome by a coalition of nurses, doctors, environmental-health advocates, and the appearance of none other than Miss Teen World, who showed up at the doorstep of Schwarzenegger's office in Sacramento and pleaded with one of his aides for the governor to sign the act. By early 2007, representatives from CTFA were traveling to Sacramento to work out the details on reporting with the state Health Department.

Not Just a Pretty Face: The Ugly Side of the Beauty Industry

Stacy Malkan
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Undercover, Part II As the lobby drama played out in California one month before schwarzenegger signed the bill, Susan Roll from the Massachusetts Breast Cancer Coalition was dusting off her Joyful business cards and heading back to New York City for Health and Beauty America 2005. In the year since her last undercover visit to this major industry conference, the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics had celebrated some key victories — top manufacturers had removed one of the worst ingredients from nail polish and the California legislature had passed a precedent-setting law.
David Crane, the governor's economic advisor and one of the few Democrats on his staff, had advised the governor to sign the bill, but Crane said Schwarzenegger's decision was, "believe me, entirely him ... I can guarantee you, there was incredible opposition to it, even among the staff. It was all him. He cared about it.
Finally, the door cracked open and Schwarzenegger's deputy of cabinet affairs Kacy Hutchinson invited the teenagers inside. It was a critical moment. Opposition to the bill was so heated that the bill's supporters had not been able to make appointments to lobby the governor, according to Pete Price, the environmental lobbyist for the National Environmental Trust. But Price explained, "The girls had gained credibility by coming back again and again. To actually have kids on a school day standing outside his chambers, that's a story. The girls got access when nobody else did.

Sugar Shock!: How Sweets and Simple Carbs Can Derail Your Life-- and How YouCan Get Back on Track

Connie Bennett, C.H.H.C. with Stephen T. Sinatra, M.D.
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Task force members include Governor schwarzenegger, Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack, South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford, and Tennesseee Governor Phil Bredesen. The Institute for Integrative Nutrition (UN) educates thousands on the power of wholesome, unprocessed foods to improve our health, moods, and lives. UN, which trains students to become health counselors, was founded in 1993 by health advocate Joshua Rosenthal, M.Sc.Ed.
California Governor Arnold schwarzenegger, former President Bill Clinton, and Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee have become advocates for healthy diets, exercise, and banning junk food from schools. s In 2003, after then-obese Governor Huckabee was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and warned by his doctor that he didn't have long to live, he kicked sugar and lost more than 100 pounds. Now, he runs marathons and oversees "Healthy Arkansas." The state even allows employees to take a half hour a day to exercise.

The Intention Experiment: Using Your Thoughts to Change Your Life and the World

Lynne McTaggart
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If the schwarzenegger cyborg goes back in time and kills Sarah Connor so that she cannot give birth to future rebel John Connor, there would be no future revolution between man and machine. The Terminator no longer has any need to come back in time or, indeed, any purpose for being created. British philosopher David Wiggins constructed a similar scenario to illustrate the logical problems inherent in the idea of a time machine. Suppose a young man is the grandson of the cruel leader of a fascist movement.

The Secret History of the War on Cancer

Devra Davis
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Arnold schwarzenegger played the Terminator, Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer, characters wired to end much of the world. In his latest reinvention, the wealthy, unsalaried governor of California appears as the great green giant, campaigning for a just and clean world, featured on the cover of Newsweek holding up the entire globe with one finger. For more than twenty years, since the death of her first husband, Sen. John Heinz, Teresa Heinz Kerry has marshaled the wealth of the Heinz Endowment to foster a green renaissance of the once smoky city of Pittsburgh.

Food, Inc. Mendel to Monsanto - The Promises and Perils of the Biotech Harvest

Peter Pringle
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The international antibiotech group Rural Advancement Foundation International (RAF I) brilliantly dubbed the new technique "the Terminator" after the robotic killer played by Arnold schwarzenegger. For those who worried about the effect of the Green Revolution and industrial agriculture on developing nations, the Terminator was seen as a threat to nearly a billion poor farmers who relied on saving next year's seed from their harvest. The question for Monsanto was how to thrive abroad.

Intelligent Medicine: A Guide to Optimizing Health and Preventing Illness for the Baby-Boomer Generation

Ronald L. Hoffman, M.D.
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Action movie stars like Sylvester Stallone and Arnold schwarzenegger have become icons of health and physical fitness, swashbuckling their way through film after film, easily keeping up with the special effects with no perceptible diminishing of their top physical conditioning. What do these celebrities and notables have in common? They're all baby boomers, born in that fateful period between 1945 and 1964 that changed the demographic face of America. And they have all had to cope with the changes that the body begins to register after the first thirty to forty years of life.

Prevention's Healing With Motion: An All-New Approach to Health and Healing Based on Simple Mind and Body Exercises

The Editors of PREVENTION
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Don't expect Arnold schwarzenegger deltoids, but here is a series of easy exercises to ensure healthier shoulders, recommended by Michael Ciccotti, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon and director of sports medicine at the Rothman Institute at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. Stand straight with your arms at your sides. Lift your shoulders up for a count of two, then let them down on a count of two. Do 20 repetitions. Then try alternate left and right shoulder shrugs, repeating 20 times with each shoulder. Finish by moving both shoulders forward and then backward 20 times.

Symptoms: Their Causes & Cures : How to Understand and Treat 265 Health Concerns

the Editors of PREVENTION Magazine Health Books
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Be the Arnold schwarzenegger of air. Increase the strength of your diaphragm and other muscles used in breathing with the help of a resister—a device that is available through either your doctor or medical supply stores. "There are several on the market. Some look like a kazoo with an adjustable hole in one end," Dr. Sherman says. You perform several sets of breathing exercises through the resister every day. In succeeding weeks, you increase the resistance, which forces your diaphragm and other breathing muscles to work harder.

The One Earth Herbal Sourcebook: Everything You Need to Know About Chinese, Western, and Ayurvedic Herbal Treatments

Alan Keith Tillotson, Ph.D., A.H.G., D.Ay.
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If one is a 96-pound, 80-year-old grandmother, and the other looks like Arnold schwarzenegger, you obviously need to account for differences in their body size, strength, and general state of health before recommending a treatment. Yang diseases tend to be external, excessive, hot, and dry in nature. Yin diseases tend to be internal, deficient, cold, and damp in nature. • Diseases of deficiency are usually treated with nourishing tonics. • Diseases of excess are usually treated with herbs that remove the excess or stimulate the excretory organs to do so.

Doctor, what Should I Eat?: Nutrition Prescriptions for Ailments in Which Diet Can Really Make a Difference

Isadore Rosenfeld, M.D.
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The word protein may conjure up images of Arnold schwarzenegger with bulging, firm muscles and strong bones, but too much is not good for you, especially if your kidneys are damaged. How strictly to cut back on your protein depends on the severity of the kidney malfunction. (This traditional view has recently been challenged, but most kidney specialists still believe that people with kidney failure should reduce their protein consumption.) Proteins are complex molecules composed of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, all of which are essential to life.

Intelligent Medicine: A Guide to Optimizing Health and Preventing Illness for the Baby-Boomer Generation

Ronald L. Hoffman, M.D.
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And they have all had to cope with the changes that the body begins to register after the first thirty to forty years of life. schwarzenegger, in fact, recently underwent heart surgery. The first batch of baby boomers was born in May 1946 —nine months after V-J Day —an unprecedented 233,452 American births. By the year's end, an all-time record of 3.6 million babies had been born in the United States, and the biggest baby boom in history was on.
A lower rating, say 15 decibels, can be used for running the lawn mower or going to see the latest schwarzenegger extravaganza. Drugs and Medications Many drugs and medications are ototoxic — that is, they can cause hearing loss. They range from some common antibiotics to sophisticated designer drugs to . . . aspirin! Yes, aspirin and other so-called salicylates have been associated with hearing loss and ringing in the ears, especially with high dosages or long-term use.



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