PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Arizona Swingers Awarded 1-Year Memberships

Swinglifestyle is offering up a treat for Arizona swingers by giving away memberships of 1 year at absolutely no cost.

Arizona Swingers Awarded 1-Year Memberships
2011-03-03
HOLLYWOOD, FL, March 03, 2011 (Press-News.org) Swinglifestyle is rewarding Arizona swingers with a 1-year paid membership in appreciation for the lifestyle. For a limited time residents in Arizona will benefit with a no frills paid 1-year membership. The membership will include all the benefits of a regular one year account, a value of $69 dollars. New and existing free members will receive full access to all areas of the site including unlimited emails, chat, swingersboard, adult photo access and many more perks. Residents in Arizona are urged to participate in the limited time paid membership immediately.

For local residents in the state please visit Arizona swingers on Swinglifestyle.

Swinglifestyle.com is dedicated to swingers only, and here to help swingers explore a better side of life by helping them to Start their Sexual Revolution.

For more information please visit www.Swinglifestyle.com

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Arizona Swingers Awarded 1-Year Memberships

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Black holes: a model for superconductors?

2011-03-03
Urbana, Ill.—Black holes are some of the heaviest objects in the universe. Electrons are some of the lightest. Now physicists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have shown how charged black holes can be used to model the behavior of interacting electrons in unconventional superconductors. "The context of this problem is high-temperature superconductivity," said Phillips. "One of the great unsolved problems in physics is the origin of superconductivity (a conducting state with zero resistance) in the copper oxide ceramics discovered in 1986." The results ...

6-month drug regimen cuts HIV risk for breastfeeding infants, NIH study finds

2011-03-03
Giving breastfeeding infants of HIV-infected mothers a daily dose of the antiretroviral drug nevirapine for six months halved the risk of HIV transmission to the infants at age 6 months compared with giving infants the drug daily for six weeks, according to preliminary clinical trial data presented today. The longer nevirapine regimen achieved a 75 percent reduction in HIV transmission risk through breast milk for the infants of HIV-infected mothers with higher T-cell counts who had not yet begun treatment for HIV. The study was presented at the 18th Conference on ...

Decline in CP diagnoses in premature infants suggests improvements in perinatal care

2011-03-03
Cincinnati, OH, March 3, 2011 -- Cerebral palsy is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects motor function, more often in children born prematurely. Because cerebral palsy is a result of brain injury received shortly before, during, or soon after birth, the number of infants being diagnosed with the condition is a good indicator of the quality of perinatal and neonatal care. An article soon to be published in the Journal of Pediatrics indicates that the rates of cerebral palsy have declined dramatically in the past 15 years. Dr. Ingrid van Haastert and colleagues ...

Stigma weighs heavily on obese people, contributing to greater health problems

2011-03-03
WASHINGTON, DC, March 1, 2011 — The discrimination that obese people feel, whether it is poor service at a restaurant or being treated differently in the workplace, may have a direct impact on their physical health, according to new research from Purdue University. "Obesity is a physiological issue, but when people have negative interactions in their social world—including a sense of being discriminated against—it can make matters worse and contribute to a person's declining physical health," said Markus H. Schafer, the doctoral student in sociology and gerontology who ...

SEO Expert Mike Luchen Has Been Recognized for His Success in Internet Marketing, Social Media and SEO in Westchester County, NY

2011-03-03
Mike Luchen has been recognized for his success in providing solutions to businesses wishing to thrive and grow. Mike has developed the strategies and knowledge required to provide business with the Internet exposure they need reach the level of success they wish quickly and easily. Mike uses a holistic approach to successful marketing that include the use of SEO SEM online marketing advertising, public relations, social media marketing, Google Maps, Yahoo and local listings. Using the most technologically advanced strategies to generate response to your marketing efforts, ...

Women who miscarry continue to have mental health problems

2011-03-03
The depression and anxiety experienced by many women after a miscarriage can continue for years, even after the birth of a healthy child, according to a study led by University of Rochester Medical Center researchers and published online today by the British Journal of Psychiatry. "Our study clearly shows that the birth of a healthy baby does not resolve the mental health problems that many women experience after a miscarriage or stillbirth," said Emma Robertson Blackmore, Ph.D., assistant professor of Psychiatry at the Medical Center and the lead researcher. "This finding ...

Sperm quality and counts worsening in Finland

2011-03-03
A new study published in the International Journal of Andrology reveals that semen quality has significantly deteriorated during the last ten years in Finland, a country that previously was a region with high sperm counts. At the same time, the incidence of testis cancer in the Finnish population showed a remarkable increase, following the worrying trends observed in several countries in Europe and the Americas. Led by Jorma Toppari, MD, PhD, of the University of Turku, researchers examined three cohorts of 19 year old men between the years of 1998 and 2006. The men that ...

New Research from mobileYouth States Brands and Governments Must Co-Create with the World's 1.2 Billion Mobile Youth to Remain Relevant

New Research from mobileYouth States Brands and Governments Must Co-Create with the Worlds 1.2 Billion Mobile Youth to Remain Relevant
2011-03-03
Here Come the Mobile Youth: a Generation of Change Agents Under 30 Key findings from the 65 market Mobile Youth Report by consultancy mobileYouth: - 1.2 billion youth own mobile phones, spending $400 billion annually. - 60% sleep with their phones. 81% would spend their last $10 on a mobile top-up before food. - 62% of purchase decisions influenced by peers not traditional paid media. - Research identified "super-influencers" - fans influencing up to 100 friends in the discovery and education process. Super-influencers were integral in creating change in the Middle ...

Shrinking tundra, advancing forests: how the Arctic will look by century's end

2011-03-03
Imagine the vast, empty tundra in Alaska and Canada giving way to trees, shrubs and plants typical of more southerly climates. Imagine similar changes in large parts of Eastern Europe, northern Asia and Scandinavia, as needle-leaf and broadleaf forests push northward into areas once unable to support them. Imagine part of Greenland's ice cover, once thought permanent, receding and leaving new tundra in its wake. Those changes are part of a reorganization of Arctic climates anticipated to occur by the end of the 21st century, as projected by a team of University of Nebraska-Lincoln ...

Portable, less costly peritoneal dialysis shows no additional catheter risk factors

2011-03-03
DALLAS – March 3, 2011 – Patients with end-stage renal disease who opt for peritoneal dialysis experience no greater risk of catheter infection than those who undergo hemodialysis, a retrospective study at UT Southwestern Medical Center has found. Peritoneal dialysis is less costly, easier on the body and provides greater mobility than hemodialysis, the more common procedure in the U.S. "Patients actually survive better on peritoneal dialysis, have a better quality of life and the procedure is cheaper," said Dr. Ramesh Saxena, associate professor of internal medicine ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Recent advances in dynamic biomacromolecular modifications and chemical interventions: Perspective from a Chinese chemical biology consortium

CRF and the Jon DeHaan Foundation to launch TCT AI Lab at TCT 2025

Canada’s fastest academic supercomputer is now online at SFU after $80m upgrades

Architecture’s past holds the key to sustainable future

Laser correction for short-sightedness is safe and effective for older teenagers

About one in five people taking Ozempic, Wegovy or Mounjaro say food tastes saltier or sweeter than before

Taking semaglutide turns down food noise, research suggests

Type 2 diabetes may double risk of sepsis, large community-based study suggests

New quantum sensors can withstand extreme pressure

Tirzepatide more cost-effective than semaglutide in patients with knee osteoarthritis and obesity

GLP-1 drugs shown cost-effective for knee osteoarthritis and obesity

Interactive apps, AI chatbots promote playfulness, reduce privacy concerns

How NIL boosts college football’s competitive balance

Moffitt researchers develop machine learning model to predict urgent care visits for lung cancer patients

Construction secrets of honeybees: Study reveals how bees build hives in tricky spots

Wheat disease losses total $2.9 billion across the United States and Canada between 2018 and 2021

New funding fuels development of first potentially regenerative treatment for multiple sclerosis

NJIT student–faculty team wins best presentation award for ant swarm simulation

Ants defend plants from herbivores but can hinder pollination

When the wireless data runs dry

Inquiry into the history of science shows an early “inherence” bias

Picky eaters endure: Ecologists use DNA to explore diet breadth of wild herbivores

Study suggests most Americans would be healthier without daylight saving time

Increasing the level of the protein PI31 demonstrates neuroprotective effects in mice

Multi-energy X-ray curved surface imaging-with multi-layer in-situ grown scintillators

Metasurface enables compact and high-sensitivity atomic magnetometer

PFAS presence confirmed in the blood of children in Gipuzkoa

Why do people believe lies?

SwRI installs private 5G network for research, development, testing and evaluation

A new perspective in bone metabolism: Targeting the lysosome–iron–mitochondria axis for osteoclast regulation

[Press-News.org] Arizona Swingers Awarded 1-Year Memberships
Swinglifestyle is offering up a treat for Arizona swingers by giving away memberships of 1 year at absolutely no cost.