King Khan, the Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, has decided to quit smoking, while on a long international flight, for the sake of his young family.
“The flight was no-smoking and I didn’t feel the urge to smoke. So now I feel I can do without smoking,” he said.
India’s health minister has issued numerous appeals to King Khan, Hindi cinema’s most bankable star, to quit smoking, saying his cigarette habit was a bad influence on his legions of young fans.

“I’m planning to quit smoking for the sake of my children who hate to see me smoking.”. He added “I started smoking when I was 22 and I’ve been smoking for the last 20 years.”
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Google has officially launched Google Health. Anybody can sign up for the free service a google.com/health, log in and to import their medical records, fill prescriptions, and get lab results, set up text-based pill alerts, keep track of immunizations, and get pertinent news alerts.
Users can opt to share their information with partners. Sharing at this point is all or nothing.
“What absolutely will not be the case – no Google Health user will ever find their health information as search results on Google,” a Google spokesman said. “That information is yours and only you have access to it.”
Google says it will not advertise on the site, and it will not share your private data with anyone without your authorization.
You can read more about the service at the Google Health FAQ.
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While campaigning in Fayetteville, W.Va., Former President Bill Clinton argued with an audience member over claims made by Hillary Clinton, that she improved health care during his administration.
“I can’t believe you’re saying this,” Mr. Clinton told her, adding that for her to suggest Mrs. Clinton had not dedicated herself to trying to change health care “is the craziest thing I ever heard.” The audience cheered Mr. Clinton.
The woman, Ruth Callibra, afterward, who looked like she as if she just emerged from a brawl.
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