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Julia Gillard’s hair: how it’s changed

The announcement this morning that Julia Gillard has taken over the reigns as Australia’s new prime minister prompted us to take a look back on how she has changed over the years and taken centre stage as our leader.

To be honest, while her leadership status and responsibilities may have risen to new heights, she hasn’t altered her image and fashions that much. But her fierce flame-red hair has had its ups and downs, transforming from a pixie ‘do to a shoulder-length bob.

Click ahead and see Australia’s first woman prime minister, Julia Gillard’s ever-changing hairstyles.

Flaming red-head Julia Gillard takes charge

Julia Gillard fuels the volume of her flame red hair

Gillard’s hair was all shine for dinner with Lucas Neill

Julia Gillard sports a freshly cut ‘do in 2008

Julia Gillard scrunches her locks to get a shaggy ‘do

Gillard works a wave of kinks and curls

Gillard’s locks will no longer blend into the background

Julia Gillard spices up her hair colour with a few lowlights

Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard

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Is chocolate good for you?

chocolate bars

**I love chocolate and have heard it’s good for me — great news! I know I’ll be eating lots of chocolate anyway but can you help me make the best choice at least.

Jacqui**

That’s a great attitude. What’s the point in total sacrifice at the expense of a whole lot of pleasure when you can choose carefully and benefit overall. Aside from tasting pretty damn good, chocolate does have some real health benefits — it all boils down to what kind and how much.

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Miranda and Orlando engaged!

Victoria’s Secret model Miranda Kerr and Hollywood hunk Orlando Bloom have announced their engagement.

The couple, who met backstage at a Victoria’s Secret show in 2006, spent time together in Europe recently before announcing their engagement.

British-born Bloom and 27-year-old Kerr, who have both previously denied wedding plans, now say they are going to tie the knot next year.

And kids aren’t out of the question for the beauty who was born in Gunnedah in country NSW.

“I’ve always wanted kids, so someday, eventually, yes it will happen,” she recently told the New York Post‘s Page Six magazine.

The pair have announced their engagement.

The private pair recently travelled to Europe and were snapped getting cosy in Paris

Miranda Kerr and Orlando Bloom have been dating for three years.

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Surprising health benefits

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Just when you think that scientists and doctors must be near to running-out of new health benefits to research and incredible discoveries to make, they unveil some more.

One of the symptoms of a stroke — where the affected area of the brain is unable to function — is the inability to move one or more limbs on one side of the body. Disability affects 75 percent of stroke survivors enough to decrease their employability.

“In Australia there are 60,000 strokes a year, 5000 in South Australia — one every 10 minutes,” says Associate Professor Simon Koblar of the University of Adelaide, who is leading research on the use of stem cells from teeth to repair stroke-damaged brains.

“After one year, one-third of those people will have died, one-third will improve, and the other third are left with a disability,” he said.

“The challenge to improve function after a stroke is enormous but there are huge potential benefits, not just to the individuals, but for the whole Australian community.”

The tooth stem cells are being used to repair brain damage by transforming into healthy new brain cells and in turn restoring movement to affected limbs.

The stem cells are taken from the dental pulp — the tissue in the centre of an extracted tooth. It then takes up to six weeks for enough cells to grow in order to make a transplant.

Unlike transplants from donors, these stem cells have no risk of rejection as the body recognises them as its own.

The treatment, which offers significant hope for the world’s increasingly aging population, is currently being trialled on animals and it is hoped that it could be available within a few years.

“Just a small increase in function can mean the difference between someone being employed or unemployed on disability so, because we’re starting at such a poor base that we can do so little, a small increment of improvement would be absolutely fantastic,” Associate Professor Koblar said.

During the trial, 52 men and women who suffered from mild to moderate asthma were given 340mg (approximately the recommended daily allowance) of magnesium citrate or a placebo.

Those who took the magnesium supplement were proved to have improved lung function and reported that their overall quality of life had improved.

Previous research backs up these findings with a reported link between low levels of magnesium in the diet and more frequent and worse asthma attacks. The reason for this is believed to be that low levels of magnesium prompts increased histamine release, which subsequently causes asthma symptoms.

Magnesium is an essential mineral for human nutrition where it serves several important metabolic functions:

  • It plays a role in the production and transport of energy.

  • It is important for the contraction and relaxation of muscles.

  • Magnesium is involved in the synthesis of protein, and it assists in the functioning of certain enzymes in the body.

Green vegetables such as spinach are particularly good sources of magnesium because the chlorophyll molecule (which gives green vegetables their colour) contains magnesium.

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia. It is an incurable, degenerative and terminal disease and is generally diagnosed in people older than 65 years of age and is predicted to affect one in 85 people globally by 2050.

When the brain is working normally, brain chemicals called neurotransmitters help brain signals travel around the brain and body via nerves. But Alzheimer’s sufferers have a reduced number of neurotransmitters.

It’s believed that nicotine, which has long been known to be a stimulant and is also highly addictive, has a positive effect on memory by mimicking the action of neurotransmitters essential for this brain activity.

Following one study that found four weeks of nicotine treatment halved decision times in memory tests, a new year-long clinical trial is underway in the US to see if memory can be improved over the longer term by using nicotine patches ranging from 5mg to 15mg, the Daily Mail reported.

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Cake cooling

Question: What’s the best way to cool a cake?

Stand the cake for up to 15 minutes before turning it only a wire rack to cool further. Turn the cake, upside-down, onto a wire rack, and then turn the cake top-side up immediately using a second rack (unless directed otherwise), Some wire racks can mark a cake, particularly a soft one such as a sponge; to prevent this, cover the rack with baking paper.

If the cake is to be cooled in the pan, it is always covered, and this will usually be a fruit cake.

To see the recipe for the cake above, click here.

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Alicia Keys blesses unborn baby in Zulu ceremony

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Alicia Keys performs at the FIFA World Cup Kick-off Celebration Concert

US singer Alicia Key’s unborn child has received a traditional Zulu blessing in South Africa complete with tribal beads and a “healing tree”, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

The usually glamorous 29-year-old US singer toned it down for the event, wearing a blue sash and a beaded headband and sang traditional Zulu songs while dancing to the beat of a drum.

The singer, who was in South Africa to lead the FIFA World Cup Kick-off Celebration Concert, is currently five months pregnant and attended the ceremony with her music producer fiancé Swizz Beatz.

Related video:

Accompanied by her mother Terri Augello and her younger brother, Cole Cook, Keys and her family were welcomed with open arms by the locals.

Keys had organised the ceremony through non-governmental organisation Bobbi Bear, a group opposed to child abuse.

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Babies whose fathers are around during pregnancy are less likely to die young

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Fathers can significantly improve their babies’ chances of survival by being involved during pregnancy, a new study has found.

Babies whose fathers aren’t present are nearly four times as likely to die in their first year, according to researchers from the University of South Florida.

These children were also found to be more likely to be born early, have low birth weights and be small for their age, the UK’s Daily Mail reported.

Related:Why dads are important

Related: A mother’s criticism may discourage dads from baby care

Related: Stay at home dads

The research, published in the Journal of Community Health, follows previous studies in which a father’s involvement in his child’s early development was shown to benefit later academic achievement. The Florida study points to a link between paternal influence and development pre-birth.

“Our study suggests that lack of paternal involvement during pregnancy is an important and potentially modifiable risk factor for infant mortality,” study author Professor Amina Alio said.

The researchers looked at the records of all births in Florida between 1998 and 2005 (more than 1.39 million live births) and identified a father’s involvement by whether he was named on the birth certificate. Although this is not an accurate guide to levels of engagement during pregnancy, previous studies have shown that being named on a birth certificate usually indicates a certain level of involvement.

The researchers also found:

  • Paternal support could decrease the mother’s emotional stress.

  • A father’s involvement reduced the risk of complications.

  • The mothers of fatherless babies were more at risk of suffering from anaemia, chronic high blood pressure and eclampsia.

  • Women with absent fathers were more likely to smoke during pregnancy.

  • And a father’s involvement could reduce the need for costly medical treatments and reduce the risk of infant mortality.

“When fathers are involved, children thrive in school and in their development. So, it should be no surprise that when fathers are present in the lives of pregnant mothers, babies fare much better,” Professor Alio said.

Australia has an infant mortality rate of 4.75 per 1000 live births, which is low in world terms, according to the CIA World Factbook. By contrast, the south-central African country of Angola has a rate of 180.20 per 1000.

Your say: How important do you think a father’s involvement is during pregnancy? Share your thoughts below.

Related video Stay fit and healthy while your pregnant with these exercise techniques

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Keith Urban to celebrate Father’s Day the Aussie way

Keith Urban to celebrate Father's Day the Aussie way

Keith Urban meets wife Nicole Kidman and daughter Sunday Rose at the airport in LA.

Kind-hearted hubby Keith Urban gave up celebrating Father’s Day in the US on Sunday, June 20, because it fell on the same day as wife Nicole Kidman’s birthday this year.

The country music star, who has a two-year-old daughter, Sunday Rose, with Nicole, said that rather than sharing the day with his wife, who turned 43, he would celebrate Father’s Day in Australia on September 5.

“So I decided instead of us trying to share the day, which I would rather it be her birthday, we are going to celebrate the Australian Father’s Day, which I think is in September and then next year we will go back to the US one.”

Nicole and Keith were reunited in Los Angeles just before Nicoles birthday after she spent a week visiting her parents and sister Antonia in Australia.

Nicole and Sunday Rose visited to celebrate Antonia’s marriage to banker Craig Marran following the couple’s Singapore wedding.

In the lead up to her Aussie visit Nicole was busy filming with Jennifer Aniston for Adam Sandler’s movie Just Go with It in Hawaii and is in early talks to star with Nicolas Cage in an action thriller Trespass, the UK’s Guardian reported.

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Bec and Lleyton: How baby number three saved our marriage

Bec and Leyton: How baby number three saved our marriage

As tennis champ Lleyton Hewitt prepares to quit while he’s on top, his long-suffering wife Bec will finally see an end to the constant globe-trotting and the strain it’s placed on their family life.

With Bec Hewitt sporting the glow of pregnancy and her tennis ace husband Lleyton in winning form, the one source of friction that’s plagued their marriage is set to end.

Now Lleyton’s tennis career is in its final stages and the couple’s eldest child Mia is about to start school, friends say Bec will finally get her wish and return home to Australia.

Bec has been a doting partner since she and Lleyton became engaged in 2005, and a fixture on the professional tennis circuit as she endures its relentless touring.

And while Lleyton was being admired for his endurance and tenacity on court, Bec was slogging away as his support crew while raising their two children on the road.

But her unbridled support has always been on one condition – that when Lleyton’s career on court winds up, she finally gets to go home.

Bec proclaimed last year that she and Lleyton would “wait until we’re finished travelling” before they had another child. Now, confirmation of their surprise third pregnancy has changed everything.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

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Pauline Hanson: Our Jails are too good for Schapelle

Pauline Hanson: Our Jails are too good for Schapelle

Despite her time in maximum security, Pauline tells Warren Gibbs Aussie jails are too good for Schapelle.

As former Prisoner C70079, Pauline Hanson knows all too well the harsh realities of life behind bars. Faced with the prospect of three years locked up in the Brisbane Women’s Correctional Centre’s Maximum Security Unit, Pauline admits she was at her lowest ebb.

Yet, although she knows only too well what life behind razor wire and security check-points feels like, she says if convicted drug trafficker Schapelle Corby is truly guilty, she should serve out the rest of her jail time at Bali’s Kerobokan Prison – not at taxpayer’s expense in Australia.

“The fact is, she was convicted on drug charges in Bali and that’s where she must do her time,” says Pauline. “That’s unless, of course, our government is prepared to seek an exchange program with other countries.

“Non-Australian nationals should be deported back to their country if they are convicted of a criminal offence which carries a sentence of 12 months or more to do their time.

“Our jails, especially in Queensland from my experience, are far too soft for convicted murderers, rapists, drug traffickers, paedophiles and now our ever increasing numbers of people smugglers,” she tells Woman’s Day.

To read the full story see this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale June 21, 2010.

The views expressed in the comments below are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of Woman’s Day or ninemsn.

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