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Free Web Site Hosting Services Create and maintain you're own professionally designed World Wide Web site by using the instant Web Publisher. No HTML programming, CGI scripting, or graphic design skills required. Everything is as simple as filling in the blanks. Best of all, there is no cost to you, EVER! These pages make great "Doorway" pages and can be an easy, integral part of you're Internet Marketing Campaign.
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Use these pages to build link popularity to you're home page. Make as many as you want. What better way then to build unlimited relevant sites all pointing to the site you're working to get top ranking. You can build these sites on a huge selection of different domains. But make sure you keep track of you're pages, login information, passwords, etc. You will need them if you ever want to edit them. We email this information when you ever you make a new page. Also make sure you submit them to search engines as well. All materials on this site copyrighted, 2002 by TheFreePage.net.

Welcome to Wade Houston's personal Free-Page system. Free Page offers the three biggest advantages to building traffic to your main site. The first being CONTENT. As easy as this sounds it takes some thought, planning and editing to "write" it right! Free Page is fully compliant to using HTML code or just plain text. Make sure that your mini sites on Free Page contain well written and similar content on the site you will point your mini sites to. This is the number one way to get excellent Search Engine Optimization. Keep in mind that keywords you are using to get place accordingly in the search engines should be liberally used within your copy. NOTE: Free Page also lets you edit your meta tags and title tags, three very important mechanism to bring it all together.

The second and as important is LINKS. When your primary site has many mini sites with relative good content pointing to it, your primary site will start to develop popularity. With relative content and popularity your standings in the search engines will rise to or near the top. Keep in mind you need to keep your content updated at least monthly. but preferable weekly.

The third is OPTIMIZATION. The Free Page system allows full configuration of your TITLE tag, META description tag and META keyword tags as well as the ability to add links and place/edit copy to the site. The pages are designed so your copy is built close to the top of the page code.

With these three benefits working for you, the real value is there is no cost to use this system.

However the real secret to success with us, is joining our Veretekk system. With Veretekk you will have live access to the professionals that put sites in the top of search engines consistently and train you to do so as well.
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Feeds for Health News Headlines - Yahoo! News [Get the latest health news headlines from Yahoo! News. Find breaking health news, including analysis and opinion on top health stories. ]

1. Common antibiotic boosts death risk: study

Antibiotic used for treating bronchitis, pneumonia, ear infections and STDs may boost risk of deathA popular antibiotic used for treating bronchitis, pneumonia, ear infections and sexually transmitted diseases may boost the risk of death, a US study said Wednesday.




2. Paralysed woman drinks coffee with thought-guided robot arm

Scientists in the United States have enabled a paralysed woman to drink coffee with a thought-controlled robotic armScientists in the United States have enabled a paralysed woman to lift a drink to her lips with a thought-controlled robotic arm, boosting hopes that tetraplegics may regain their independence.




3. High blood pressure affects 1 in 3: WHO

Canada and the United States have the fewest patients with high blood pressure, the WHO saidOne in three adults suffers from high blood pressure, a key trigger of heart disease, health experts said on Wednesday while underlining the growing number of cases in developing countries.




4. Coffee buzz: Study finds java drinkers live longer

In this Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008 photo, espresso flows into a cup at a coffee house in Overland Park, Kan. A large U.S. federal study concludes people who drink coffee seem to live a little longer. Researchers saw a clear connection between cups consumed and years of life. Whether it was regular or decaf didn't matter. The results are published in the Thursday, May 17, 2012 New England Journal of Medicine. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)One of life's simple pleasures just got a little sweeter. After years of waffling research on coffee and health, even some fear that java might raise the risk of heart disease, a big study finds the opposite: Coffee drinkers are a little more likely to live longer. Regular or decaf doesn't matter.




5. Antibiotic linked with rare but deadly heart risk
An antibiotic widely used for bronchitis and other common infections seems to increase chances for sudden deadly heart problems, a rare but surprising risk found in a 14-year study.

6. Study links vets to brain disease seen in athletes
A small study raises more concern about the long-term consequences of brain injuries suffered by thousands of soldiers — suggesting they may be at risk of developing the same degenerative brain disease as some retired football players.

7. FCC chooses spectrum for wireless medical devices
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. telecommunications regulator is expected to announce plans on Thursday to set aside spectrum to connect wireless medical devices for more convenient health monitoring. The Federal Communications Commission said it is scheduled to vote on May 24 to adopt the plan for so-called Medical Body Area Networks, according to the telecom regulator, which has been working on the project for about two years. ...

8. Data suggests drug treatment can lower U.S. crime
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. crime statistics show illegal drugs play a central role in criminal acts, providing new evidence that tackling drugs as a public health issue could offer a powerful tool for lowering national crime rates, officials said on Thursday. An annual drug monitoring report, released by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, also showed a decline in the use of cocaine since 2003, a sign that drug-interdiction efforts and public education campaigns may be curtailing the use of the drug's powder and crack forms. ...

9. U.S. lowers threshold for lead poisoning in children
ATLANTA (Reuters) - The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cut its threshold level for defining lead poisoning in children to 5 micrograms per deciliter on Wednesday from 10, marking the first such reduction in 20 years. "The recommendation was based on a growing number of scientific studies showing that even low blood lead levels can cause lifelong health effects," the CDC said, in adopting the recommendation of an advisory committee. "Today, CDC is officially announcing our agreement with that recommendation. ...

10. J&J drug shows promise in high-risk prostate cancer

A first aid kit made by Johnson & Johnson for sale on a store shelf in Westminster(Reuters) - Adding Johnson & Johnson's advanced prostate cancer drug, Zytiga, to hormone therapy before surgery has been shown for the first time to eradicate tumors in some men with high-risk forms of the disease. The mid-stage trial found that six months of treatment with the combination therapy completely or nearly eliminated the cancer in a third of patients, all of whom had localized, aggressive cancer. ...




11. Experimental Drug Helps Fight Some Childhood Cancers, Study Finds
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- A new targeted drug therapy may help treat certain advanced cancers in children, a new preliminary study indicates.

12. Many Primary Care Docs Don't Know Long-Term Effects of Chemo: Survey
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Many primary care doctors don't know the long-term side effects of the chemotherapy treatments that cancer survivors under their care may have been given, a new survey found.

13. Advanced Prostate Cancer Drug May Help at Earlier Stage
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- A drug approved to treat advanced prostate cancer appears to help men who have localized high-risk prostate cancer if given before surgery.

14. Two-Drug Combo May Be Safe for Melanoma Treatment
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- A preliminary, first-stage study funded by a pharmaceutical company shows promising results for an experimental double-drug therapy for melanoma.

15. Study Shows MS Patients at Most Risk for Drug-Linked Brain Illness
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Drug company researchers say they've determined which multiple sclerosis patients are most vulnerable to developing a rare brain infection while taking a powerful drug called Tysabri (natalizumab).

16. Study Links Antibiotic to Slight Rise in Heart Patients' Death Risk
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- The widely prescribed antibiotic azithromycin may slightly raise the risk of death in patients with heart disease, a new study suggests.

17. 'Blast Wind' Linked to Chronic Brain Injuries in Military
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- The same type of brain damage seen in athletes who suffer repeated concussions also occurs in soldiers exposed to large blasts, new research indicates.

18. Genetic Test May Spot Raised Autism Risk
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Researchers report that a new DNA test may be able to spot an increased risk of autism in children as young as 6 months old.

19. Paralyzed Patients Use Mind to Move Robotic Arm
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Two stroke patients who had lost the use of their arms and legs were able to use their brains to move a robotic arm, researchers report.

20. Many Parents of Kids With Autism Don't Put Faith in Pediatricians
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Many parents of children with an autism spectrum disorder don't feel they can turn to their pediatricians for advice on treatments, a new study finds.

21. Could Nasal Spray of 'Love Hormone' Treat Autism?
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Children with autism given a squirt of a nasal spray containing the hormone oxytocin showed more activity in brain regions known to be involved with processing social information, a small study found.

22. Some People Really Might Have 'Gaydar'
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Some people actually may have "gaydar," a widely used slang term for the ability to assess quickly another person's sexual orientation, a new study suggests.

23. Health Highlights: May 16, 2012
Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

24. U.S. Bests Canada, Europe in Drug Approvals
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- New drugs are approved faster in the United States than in Europe and Canada, new research shows.

25. Head Blows May Hamper Learning in College Athletes
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- Using tests of mental function and special helmets to measure impact from hits to the head, a new study found that some college athletes in contact sports showed signs of temporary decline in learning ability following repetitive head injuries.

26. Developmental Woes Common in Siblings of Children With Autism
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- One in three children with an older sibling who has an autism spectrum disorder, or problems with social interaction and communication, shows signs of developmental delay or autism-related behaviors by the age of 3 years, according to a new study.

27. Urban Hospitals May Act as Breeding Ground for MRSA
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- A dangerous antibiotic-resistant "superbug" appears to originate in hospitals in large cities and then spreads to smaller hospitals, according to a new study.

28. CDC Lowers Lead-Poisoning Threshold for Kids
WEDNESDAY, May 16 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. health officials on Wednesday lowered the threshold for what's considered lead poisoning in young children.