2013年2月18日星期一

Rolling Stones Meeting Next Month To Discuss 50th Plans


When the Rolling Stones meet next month in order to discuss plans for their 50th anniversary, guitarist Ron Wood has a suggestion--headline the Glastonbury festival this year."Wouldn't it be nice," Wood tells the Independent. "We've got a meeting next month and that's going to be my first question to them. It's something I've always been interested in. I'm going to twist their arms."I've got lots of high hopes this year," he added. "Now that we're all rehearsed - let's get it cracking this summer!" Glastonbury runs from June 26-30 near Pilton, Somerset, England.Both Mick Jagger and Keith Richards have told media that the band has received "quite a few offers" for a full tour in 2013 and think it would be "dopey" to pack it in after performing just a handful of shows.
She had to dig out the large rock and took it home without even being able to examine it.At her cabin, she was amazed to find, after cleaning off the dirt still clinging to the stone, that it had three separate images on the various rock surfaces."That was the best rock," she said of the experience.At the end of her hour-long presentation, Harper inspected various stones brought by audience members for her to read.Latest treatments for kidney stone now in Oman."How many stories do we walk over in a day?" Harper asked rhetorically. "We are usually so busy working on our computers that we don't even see them," she said in response to her own query.
Following Harper's presentation, many in the audience made their way to the main museum building where historical society members laid out platters of bagels and cream cheese, sliced luncheon meats and cheeses, chips and dips, pickles, olives and condiments.Kidney stones: not something you'd expects in kids.But more and more of them are ending up in emergency rooms.  So what's causing this drastic increase? CBS 2's Mary Kay Kleist explains."It felt like I was getting stabbed in the side, and it hurt really, really bad," 13-year-old Michael Wiggins says of the kidney stone he had two years ago.Madison Ryan had three kidney stone episodes. She's 15 now."The big increase is in the young adolescent population. So from age 10 to 16, is where the big increase we're seeing in stones," Craig B. Langman, professor of pediatrics at the Feinberg School of Medicine, says.Kidney stones can form when highly concentrated amounts of calcium, magnesium and phosphorous build up in the urine. One factor is genetics."My dad has had one, his older brother had one, and my great-grandma had some," Madison says.

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