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A study released Wednesday by the British Medical Journal claims that vegetarians could have a higher risk of a stroke than meat eaters.The study followed more than 48,000 participants in the UK for nearly 18 years. The study placed participants in three groups: Meat eaters, fish eaters and vegetarians. The study claims that vegetarians were 20 percent more likely to have a stroke than meat eaters, which equaled to be three additional haemorrhagic stroke victims per 1,000 participants. Before you change your eating habits, you should know that meat eaters were more likely to develop a heart disease than vegetarians. The difference between meat eaters and vegetarians was 10 additional cases of heart disease per 1,000 participants. According to the British Medical Journal, previous studies on the correlation between a vegetarian diet and strokes only reported stroke mortality. In those studies, there was no significant difference between vegetarians and meat eaters in stroke mortality. The study did adjust for self reported high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol, diabetes, and body mass index, which suggests that part of the associations might be attributed to these factors, it says."However, the lower risk in vegetarians and vegans remained marginally significant after adjustment for all of these factors," the study said.To read the full study, click 1389
All of the major broadcast networks will be bumping their regularly scheduled programming Wednesday and Friday in lieu of coverage of the first public hearings of the impeachment inquiry into U.S. President Donald Trump.ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS will all preempt their regular programming in order to cover the hearings Wednesday and Friday, the networks announced. Fox News, MSNBC, CNN and C-SPAN will also offer live coverage of the hearings.Here's a roundup of where you can find coverage. ABC News announced Monday that George Stephanopoulos will anchor its coverage of the hearings. The network will air "Special Reports" beginning at 10 a.m. EST Nov. 13 and 11 a.m. EST Nov. 15. The hearing will be continuously streamed on ABC News Live.CBS News says Norah O'Donnel will anchor the TV special reports from Washington, D.C., on Wednesday and Friday. The network also said it will provide live coverage of the first public impeachment hearings on CBSN — its 24-hour streaming news service — CBS Radio and CBS News Special Reports on TV. CBSN will also stream special editions of "Red & Blue" with highlights of each day's hearings.NBC News says its impeachment coverage will be led by "NBC Nightly News" anchor Lester Holt, chief legal correspondent and "Today" anchor Savannah Guthrie and "Meet the Press" moderator and NBC News political director Chuck Todd. Coverage will begin at 10 a.m. EST Nov. 13 and Nov. 15.MSNBC will also be offering impeachment coverage. Brian Williams, host of "The 11th Hour," and Nicolle Wallace, host of "Deadline: White House," will anchor special coverage on MSNBC beginning at 9 a.m. EST Wednesday. The impeachment hearings will also stream live on NBC News NOW, NBCNews.com and MSNBC.com.PBS will broadcast the Trump hearings live starting Nov. 13 with analysis from its new "NewsHour" team. Stations make their own programming decisions but the coverage will be available to all affiliates. The hearings will also be available on digital platforms, including pbs.org and the PBS video app. The hearings will also air during prime time on WORLD, a digital channel carried by 157 public television stations. 2165

A view of a well-preserved colorful mosaic floor of an ancient Roman villa archaeologists have revealed among vineyards near the northern city of Verona, Italy. The official in charge of archaeology Verona province, Gianni De Zuccato, on Friday, May 29, 2020, said the mosaics appeared to be ‘’in a good state of conservation,’’ from what they are able to observe after gingerly digging a trench between vineyards in the hills of Valpolicella, known for its full-bodied red wine. (Soprintendenza ABAP Verona via AP) 527
A melee marred the end of Thursday's NFL game that saw the Cleveland Browns defeat the Pittsburgh Steelers 21-7, in a battle between two traditional rivals. With just eight seconds remaining, Browns defender Myles Garrett ripped the helmet off of Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph. Garrett then used the helmet to strike Rudolph. This came as players from both the Browns and Steelers were exchanging punches and shoves. The incident began when Rudolph made a short pass while Garrett was attempting a sack. As the two players were on the ground, it appeared Rudolph may have been either trying to remove Garrett's helmet, or had his hand stuck in Garrett's helmet. Then Garrett pulled Rudolph's lid off, and Rudolph responded by getting into a shoving match with Garrett. That is when Garrett struck Rudolph in the head with Rudolph's helmet. In a postgame interview with Fox Sports' Erin Andrews, Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield called Garrett's actions inexcusable, and predicted that Garrett would be suspended. "I don't care rivalry or not, we can't do that," Mayfield said. "That is just endangering the other team."Garrett himself called his actions "foolish.""I shouldn't allow myself to slip like that. It's out of character," Garrett said.Browns QB Baker Mayfield joined 1296
A number of companies changed policies and say they plan to offer employees paid sick leave to those sickened or quarantined amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.According to the Washington Post, more than 30 million workers in the U.S. lack access to sick pay, giving them few options to pay bills should they be forced to take time off work if contracting the disease.But this week, companies like McDonald's, Uber and Walmart have announced that they have changed their sick-leave policies in order to prevent the spread of the disease and to support employees that become sick.On Monday, Vice President Mike Pence floated that the Trump administration may soon introduce a stimulus package that would include paid sick leave for some employees, but did not go into specifics.Here's how different companies plan on handling sick leave amid the COVID-19 outbreak.Darden RestaurantsThe parent company of LongHorn Steakhouse, Olive Garden and Yard House restaurants said it would begin offering employees a maximum of 40 hours of paid sick leave a year to all employees.Employees will earn one hour of sick leave for every 30 hours they work. Current employees will receive sick leave for the time they've worked in the past six months.According to 1260
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