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The author of the awarding winning book Cardiac Champs; a book that teaches people with heart disease, particularly heart attack survivors, how to live a healthy, vigorous, happy life while effectively managing the emotional turmoil that so often accompanies heart disease. Latest book.... A Primer For Old Guys: Eat Smart, Exercise and Be Happy is scheduled for publication in the Spring of 2014

Thursday 9 February 2012

EUObserver.com
06.02.12 @ 17:36
Merkel to support Sarkozy 'no matter what'


By Honor Mahony
BRUSSELS - German Chancellor Angela Merkel has promised unfettered political support for her French counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy if he runs in the April presidential elections, remarks likely to further increase the spotlight on the continent's foremost political duo.
The two leaders, whose relationship has inspired almost as much interest as the eurozone crisis that feeds it, met in Paris on Monday (6 February) for one of their frequent bilateral summits to underline the strength of Franco-German ties even as the single currency's woes deepen.
Speaking after their meeting, Merkel, who hails from the same centre-right political family as Sarkozy, said she would support the putative candidate "in anyway I can ... no matter what he does."
Her comment, which she immediately qualified by limiting to his actions as a presidential candidate, follow earlier commitments that she would make campaign appearances alongside Sarkozy.
For his part, Sarkozy, who is trailing behind Socialist contender Francois Hollande in the polls, has tied his political colours to Berlin's mast.

Political risk

His fulsome praise for "Madame Merkel" and how "well" she is running Germany comes on top of his outright support for the fiscal discipline treaty, a document agreed by an EU summit last week enshrining Berlin's belt-tightening economic doctrine into national law.
"This is work of historic importance. Europe has never made such rapid structural decisions," he said.
The treaty has been critcised in other quarters - including by Hollande - as being irrelevant to the problems at hand and likely to make worse the eurozone's stagnant economic growth.
The relations between the two leaders - dubbed Merkozy - has evolved with the two-year long eurozone crisis. What started off ostensibly as a politically balanced set-up has altered to become a relationship dominated by the economically-stronger Germany.
But the idea of a Franco-German engine running Europe helps both leaders. Sarkozy is lent more gravitas on the domestic front while the perception that Merkel is directing Europe is blunted if Paris is on board.
Political commentators suggest that for the moment Merkel is popular in France but this could change, with French newspapers beginning to paint the Chancellor in an unflattering light.
"Germany has become too much of an issue in the French presidential elections," Frank Baasner, head of the Franco-German Institute, told Germany's ZDF.
Noting that she has always had a "good image" in France, Baasner added: "It has to be seen with a question mark whether one can win an election in France standing alongside Merkel."
Merkel, for her part, appeared to downplay her campaigning offer by pointing out that there are precedents for leaders from both countries helping one another out.

France leads on foreign policy

While Germany, with the eurozone's deepest pockets, is the undisputed leader when it comes to questions of economy, it continues to be France that takes the lead on major foreign policy issues.
Sarkozy noted that he would be talking to Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev about Syria "on behalf of both of us [France and Germany]" on Monday, with France over the weekend calling for an EU-Arab action group on Syria whose government has been conducting a brutal crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.
This division of power between Paris and Berlin was alluded to recently by Alain Minc, an advisor and friend to Sarkozy.
"There are two negotiating tables in Europe: The first one is for economic issues, while military, strategic and diplomatic questions are discussed at the second one. Germany is the senior partner at the first table, but it doesn't even want to be present at the second one, as [the case of] Libya has shown. I think that results in a balanced relationship," he told Der Spiegel magasine.
He also had some pointed to the change in the nature of the relationship between the calm scientist Merkel and hyperactive lawyer Sarkozy.
"I think he has learned to like her. At the beginning, you couldn't have imagined two more disparate people.
"He's learning to control himself. I think both of them have come a long way: from necessity to complicity, and from there to, as Nicolas Sarkozy tells me, real affection. You know, there are only three women in Sarkozy's life: Carla Bruni, his daughter and Angela Merkel."

Monday 6 February 2012

Calgary Herald
Man says Diefenbaker's brain could prove paternity
By Derek Abma, Postmedia News February 6, 2012


    Photograph by: Aaron Lynett,
    George Dryden  National Post is shown in a January 2011 file photo.

Dryden, who was raised by a prominent Liberal, believes he is the son of former Conservative prime minister John Diefenbaker.

The man who says he could be John Diefenbaker's son says he has some new leads that might prove his case, including a tip that the former prime minister's brain is preserved somewhere.
John George Dryden, a 43-year-old Toronto legal consultant, recently hit a road block in efforts to determine who his father is when the Diefenbaker Canada Centre in Saskatoon was unable to retrieve a reliable sample of the former prime minister's DNA from some of the objects he once possessed, such as a pipe, hats and watch strap.
However, Dryden said he received a call from a man in Western Canada who has a relative who was a medical professional participating in an autopsy that saw Diefenbaker's brain removed and stored.
"We checked him out," Dryden said of the person who called. "The guy's for real, a professional person, not a nutcase by any means."
Dryden's focus on Diefenbaker as his possible father started after learning last June that the person he thought was his father, Gordon Dryden, was not. He says his mother, Mary Lou Dryden, had an affair with Diefenbaker about four decades ago. The Toronto man's appearance has also been likened to Diefenbaker, who was the Conservative prime minister from 1957 to 1963 and died in 1979.
As well, Dryden said he heard from a woman who claims to be the illegitimate daughter of Diefenbaker. The woman, he said, also happens to be a professional in the adoption sector and was approached in 1977 by an RCMP officer worried about the potential of news getting out that Diefenbaker was father to a nine-year-old boy.
"I was the nine-year-old boy because I had just met Diefenbaker in '77 up on the Hill with my mom when I was nine," he said. "Among the few things he said was, 'you were named for me.' So I guess he took a look at me and got kind of concerned."
Dryden also said he's been called by a Utah-based company that claims to develop advanced technology for collecting DNA, which he says could prove to be more successful in retrieving a match between him and Canada's 13th prime minister.
The Toronto man said he's not looking for any money in his pursuit, only the truth.
"I'm just looking to find out who my father is, period."
dabma@postmedia.com

 

Saturday 4 February 2012

Tens of thousands rally for a Russia without Putin
CTVNews.ca Staff
Sat Feb 04, 11:39 AM
Demonstrators braving a bitter frost march during a massive protest against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's rule in Moscow, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. (AP / Ivan Sekretarev)

Where did the picture go? Hackers at work?


Tens of thousands of Russian protesters braved bone-chilling temperatures on Saturday as they swept into Moscow, rallying against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's rule.
"So many of us have come that they can't arrest all of us," said 56-year-old demonstrator Alexander Zelensky as he marched with his wife.
Organizers estimate 120,000 protesters attended the rally intended to be a show of force against the prospect of Putin further extending his 12 years in office.
Many pollsters anticipate the Russian PM will win the nation's March 4th election, in spite of Putin himself acknowledging last week that he could face a runoff.
Still, those who flooded into Moscow on Saturday wearing ribbons and holdings placards reading "Russia Without Putin!" assert that six more years under his rule would be six years too many.
Zelensky's wife Alyona Karimova said she hopes the mounting opposition against Putin is a sign that Russia is edging towards a different style of governance.
"This is going to be a gradual process, but we believe it will eventually lead to democracy and free elections," she said.
Even with its large numbers, the rally remained peaceful and represented a fairly wide swath of the Russian public, noted The New York Times' Moscow Bureau reporter Michael Schwirtz.
"There was a huge column of communists, a huge column of nationalists, people representing various Liberal parties, gay and lesbian groups," he told CTV News Channel on Saturday, adding that many of the attendees were well-to-do Muscovites.
Officials did agree to authorize Saturday's protest, which comes on the heels of two similar rallies which are believed to be the biggest in Russia since protests 20 years ago that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union.
"Certainly they got their message heard," said Schwirtz.
He added that government-run media have broadcast previous protests with a "pretty objective view."
December's protests occurred after allegations of election fraud in favour of Putin's party plagued that month's parliamentary election.
For his part, Putin has ignored requests for a do-over.
Anti-Putin sentiment was also strong in St. Petersburg on Saturday, the site of a smaller protest which drew a smaller crowd of about 5,000. Dozens of cities across Russia held similar events.
"There are more protests planned," Schwirtz said in a telephone interview from Moscow. "As far as we know the next major protest is planned for March 5th."
Back in Russia's capital, many demonstrators bundled up in fur on Saturday as the temperature dipped as low as - 20 C.
Across town, Putin's backers gathered for a rally of their own, which drew about 15,000 people. Several of the supporters including union activists and teachers said they showed up willingly while others admitted they had been asked to attend.
Putin is squaring off against three other competitors in the presidential race. All but one of his opponents have run against him in the past.
Election newcomer Mikhail Prokhorov is the billionaire owner of the New Jersey Nets basketball team. He joined Saturday's protest but didn't make any speeches.

With files from The Associated Press

Wednesday 1 February 2012

What's With Harper???????
Do we really want him playing around with our Old Age Security.