SAN ANTONIO, TX, September 29, 2010 (Press-News.org) Nadia Foster has been casting love spells, conducting Tarot readings and helping people for over 20 years. Over the years Nadia has helped reunite lovers with these love spells, as well as giving advice and readings. Nadia also features talent in other spells and assisting celebrities and politicians.
Recently Nadia has been working on some cases in which she is seeking material for some cases she is working on. Some cases are extremely easy; some cases she will tell you if she can accept them. Some cases require a lot of work and materials; when casting a spell, these materials are needed. Nadia is asking everyone that she has helped over the 20 years for donations on some current cases she is working on for these rare materials. These materials will go toward reuniting lovers; after all, love is what makes life worth living.
If Nadia has helped you, and you are grateful to her, please call her up and donate to this cause at 210-616-1215.
Make sure to follow Nadia on Twitter as well at http://twitter.com/RealLovePsychic.
Nadia Foster has been helping people with lost love and broken hearts for over 20 years and is a god gifted psychic spellcaster. Please visit http://www.reuniteloverspells.com.
Celebrity Psychic Accepting Donations
Top psychic Nadia Foster, adviser to celebrities and politicians, is accepting donations for troubled cases.
2010-09-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New Book on the History of Soda Fountains
2010-09-29
When chemist and bartender Darcy S. O'Neil was asked a question about an old soda fountain ingredient called Acid Phosphate, by New Orleans bartender Chris McMillian, he didn't realize that it would lead to a book on the rediscovery of a forgotten category of drinks and the fascinating history behind the creation of soda-pop.
Darcy O'Neil explains why the history of soda fountains is so interesting. "The golden era of the soda fountain was as colourful as any period in American history. Most people don't realize that many soda fountains were as bad as saloons during ...
Whataburger Debuts New Chocolate Brownie Pie
2010-09-29
Whataburger announces the introduction of its newest limited time menu item, the Chocolate Brownie Pie featuring warm chocolate brownie filling surrounded by a hot flaky crust for just 99 cents.
"The warm, sweet and flaky Chocolate Brownie Pie is a great addition to our dessert menu," said Rich Scheffler, Whataburger Restaurants, LP Group Director of Marketing. "Our customers have grown up on our fried pies, and our newest pie offers a rich, delicious chocolate option."
The fried pie was first introduced to the Whataburger menu in the late 1950s. Other limited-run ...
Michaels Hosts Halloween Hocus Pocus
2010-09-29
More people celebrate Halloween big when it falls on a weekend, and since the holiday is on Sunday this year, Michaels, North America's largest arts and crafts specialty retailer, will offer a month of spooktacular events, creative costumes and devilish DIY decor ideas, all without a scary price tag.
To get in the Halloween spirit, all 1,030+ Michaels stores in the U.S. and Canada will host free in-store workshops beginning October 2 where customers can learn to make everything from quick costumes to not-so-tricky party treats, all for less than $7. On October 30, stores ...
Collegiate Sports Just Got Sweeter with My Idolpops Collegiate Lollipops
2010-09-29
If you like college football, basketball and baseball, and have a sweet tooth, a special treat is now available. My Idolpops LLC, a leading, premium confectionery manufacturer, is using the "fun power of the lollipop" to place the limelight on US college sports with lollipops available at campus bookstores and major national retailers. With more than 70 flavors, from Root Beer and Mocha Cappuccino to Cotton Candy, My Idolpops' sports lollipops are in the detailed shape of a football helmet, basketball, football, and baseball.
The sweet Collegiate Sports line will be ...
University of Hawaii at Manoa Pan-STARRS discovers first potentially hazardous asteroid
2010-09-28
The University of Hawaii' at Mānoa's Pan-STARRS PS1 telescope on Haleakala has discovered an asteroid that will come within 4 million miles of Earth in mid-October. The object is about 150 feet in diameter and was discovered in images acquired on September 16, when it was about 20 million miles away.
It is the first "potentially hazardous object" (PHO) to be discovered by the Pan-STARRS survey and has been given the designation "2010 ST3."
"Although this particular object won't hit Earth in the immediate future, its discovery shows that Pan-STARRS is now the most ...
New oil detection technique
2010-09-28
CSIRO scientists have developed a revolutionary technique for the rapid on-site detection and quantification of petroleum hydrocarbons (commonly derived from crude oil) in soil, silt, sediment, or rock.
Developed in collaboration with waste technology specialist, Ziltek Pty Ltd, the technique means that the presence of petroleum hydrocarbons can now be quantified simply by using a hand-held infrared spectrometer to take readings at the site of interest, without the need to take samples or perform any kind of processing.
The technique could be used for oil exploration ...
Climate change hits southeast Australia fish species
2010-09-28
Scientists are reporting significant changes in the distribution of coastal fish species in south-east Australia which they say are partly due to climate change.
CSIRO's Climate Adaptation and Wealth from Oceans Flagships have identified 43 species, representing about 30 per cent of the inshore fish families occurring in the region, that exhibited shifts thought to be climate-related.
These include warm temperate surf-zone species such as Silver Drummer and Rock Blackfish that are breeding and have become more abundant, and range increases in Snapper and Rock Flathead. ...
Solar cells thinner than wavelengths of light hold huge power potential
2010-09-28
In the smooth, white, bunny-suited clean-room world of silicon wafers and solar cells, it turns out that a little roughness may go a long way, perhaps all the way to making solar power an affordable energy source, say Stanford engineers.
Their research shows that light ricocheting around inside the polymer film of a solar cell behaves differently when the film is ultra thin. A film that's nanoscale-thin and has been roughed up a bit can absorb more than 10 times the energy predicted by conventional theory.
The key to overcoming the theoretical limit lies in keeping ...
A revolutionary new way of reversing certain cancers
2010-09-28
Australian and American scientists have found a way of shrinking tumours in certain cancers – a finding that provides hope for new treatments.
The cancers in question are those caused by a new class of genes known as 'microRNAs', produced by parts of the genome that, until recently, were dismissed as 'junk DNA'. While much is still unknown about microRNAs, it is clear that they can interfere with how our genes are 'read'.
The current finding identifies one particular microRNA (microRNA 380) that appears to disable the king of tumour suppressors, the P53 gene. So important ...
2010 AAO-HNSF miniseminars: Tuesday, Sept. 28, 2010
2010-09-28
Boston, MA – The 2010 Annual Meeting & OTO EXPO of the American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery Foundation (AAO-HNSF), the largest meeting of ear, nose, and throat doctors in the world, will convene September 26-29, 2010, in Boston, MA.
Featuring more than 305 scientific research sessions, 594 posters, and several hundred instruction course hours for attendees, the annual meeting is a unique opportunity for journalists from around the world to cover breaking science and medical news. Reporters will have access to the latest research and clinical advances ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Symptoms of long-COVID can last up to two years after infection with COVID-19
Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report
Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system
Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds
Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming
How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces
Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease
Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows
Weighing in on a Mars water debate
Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments
Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma
Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst
Study highlights noninvasive hearing aid
NASA taps UTA to shape future of autonomous aviation
Mutations disrupt touch-based learning, study finds
Misha lived in zoos, but the elephant’s tooth enamel helps reconstruct wildlife migrations
Eat better, breathe easier? Research points to link between diet, lung cancer
Mesozoic mammals had uniform dark fur
Wartime destruction of Kakhovka Dam in Ukraine has long-term environmental consequences
NIH’s flat 15% funding policy is misguided and damaging
AI reveals new insights into the flow of Antarctic ice
Scientists solve decades-long Parkinson’s mystery
Spinning, twisted light could power next-generation electronics
A planetary boundary for geological resources: Limits of regional water availability
Astronomy’s dirty window to space
New study reveals young, active patients who have total knee replacements are unlikely to need revision surgery in their lifetime
Thinking outside the box: Uncovering a novel approach to brainwave monitoring
Combination immunotherapy before surgery may increase survival in people with head and neck cancer
MIT engineers turn skin cells directly into neurons for cell therapy
High sugar-sweetened beverage intake and oral cavity cancer in smoking and nonsmoking women
[Press-News.org] Celebrity Psychic Accepting DonationsTop psychic Nadia Foster, adviser to celebrities and politicians, is accepting donations for troubled cases.