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    Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY

    Fran
    Fran


    Posts : 11
    Join date : 2008-12-31
    Age : 36
    Location : Germany

    Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY Empty Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY

    Post  Fran Wed Dec 31, 2008 6:41 am

    Suzanne Saperstein
    LOCATION: Bridgehampton, New York
    PRICE: $75,000,000
    SIZE: 60 acres, more than 20,000 square feet, 7 bedrooms, 12 bathrooms.
    DESCRIPTION: Three Ponds - moste expensive home in north america. This home has been on the market since 2003.
    Ameneties: A full 18 hole golf course. 14 gardens including an English cottage garden, a crabapple allee, a lily walk, vegetable gardens as well as hydrangea, butterfly and rose gardens. Grounds are punctuated by 3 ponds. The Main House offers loggia, two 3 car garages, a 2 story Pro-Shop, 2nd floor Golf Club with bar, a separate staff quarters. 3 bedroom, 3 1/2 bath Guest House, a garden Orangerie with kitchenette, heat & a/c and the “Fish House,” antique barn, half way house includes kitchenette, bath, heat and a/c. 75 ft. flush edge pool with pavilion and grass tennis court.

    Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY Updown10 Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY 87813-10 Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY 87813-11 Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY 87813-12 Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY 87813-13 Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY 87813-14
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    nirvana


    Posts : 5
    Join date : 2010-11-07

    Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY Empty Re: Three Ponds Farm Estate, NY

    Post  nirvana Fri Nov 26, 2010 8:41 pm

    Passive smoking 'kills 600,000' worldwide

    Children are particularly at risk of the effects of passive smoking in their own homes
    Continue reading the main story
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    The first global study into the effects of passive smoking has found it causes 600,000 deaths every year.

    One-third of those killed are children, often exposed to smoke at home, the World Health Organization (WHO) found.

    The study, in 192 countries, found that passive smoking is particularly dangerous for children, said to be at higher risk of sudden infant death syndrome, pneumonia and asthma.

    Passive smoking causes heart disease, respiratory illness and lung cancer.

    "This helps us understand the real toll of tobacco," said Armando Peruga, of the WHO's Tobacco-Free Initiative, who led the study.

    'Deadly combination'

    The study used estimates of the incidence of specific diseases and of the number of people exposed to second-hand smoke in particular areas.

    The global health body said it was particularly concerned about the estimated 165,000 children who die of smoke-related respiratory infections, mostly in South East Asia and in Africa.


    It said that this group was more exposed to passive smoking than any other group, principally in their own homes.

    "The mix of infectious diseases and second-hand smoke is a deadly combination," Mr Peruga said.

    Continue reading the main story

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    An education programme to help people understand the dangers they cause to these children would be a starting point.”

    Tio Terry
    Have your say
    As well as being at increased risk of a series of respiratory conditions, the lungs of children who breathe in passive smoke may also develop more slowly than children who grow up in smoke-free homes.

    Worldwide, as many as 40% of children, 33% of non-smoking men and 35% non-smoking women were exposed to second-hand smoke in 2004, researchers found.

    This exposure was estimated to have caused 379,000 deaths from heart disease, 165,000 from lower respiratory infections, 36,900 from asthma and 21,400 from lung cancer.

    According to the study, the highest numbers of people exposed to second-hand smoke are in Europe and Asia and the lowest rates of exposure were in the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean and Africa.

    The research also revealed that passive smoking had a large impact on women, killing about 281,000 worldwide. This is due to the fact that in many parts of the world, the study suggests, women are at least 50% more likely to be exposed to second-hand smoke than men.

    However, the researchers said were limitations to the study, including uncertainties about the underlying health data and gaps in the data relating to exposure to second-hand smoke.

    Writing in the Lancet, Dr Heather Wipfli of the University of Southern California and colleagues, said: "There are well acknowledged uncertainties in estimates of disease burden.

    "However, there can be no question that the 1.2bn smokers in the world are exposing billions of non-smokers to second-hand smoke, a disease-causing indoor air pollutant."




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