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Looking to take the high life underground, Chinas officials are reportedly
moving their secret parties to saunas disguised as farmhouses and hiding
pricey alcohol inside water bottles.New Chinese President Xi Jinping has
warned fellow Communist party officials to cut back on spending public money,
but the People's Daily, the partys official newspaper, says some still arent
getting the message."Instead of going out to high-end restaurants, [officials]
are now eating in private clubs," it said Wednesday on its front
page, according to The Telegraph. "Is this deep-rooted habit of dining out
on public funds so hard to change?"The newspaper also said it has
received reports of officials hiding Panda cigarettes -- around $110 US
a pack -- inside Red Pagoda packets that cost only $1.50 US.Chinas
official news agency, Xinhua, says a year-long campaign has been planned
to try to eliminate the wasteful spending.Click for more from The Telegraph.
WASHINGTON The government is moving the morning-after pill over the counter
but only those 15 and older can buy it -- an attempt
to find middle ground just days before a court-imposed deadline to lift
all age restrictions on the emergency contraceptive.Today, Plan B One-Step
is sold behind pharmacy counters, and buyers must prove they're 17 or
older to buy it without a prescription. Tuesday's decision by the Food
and Drug Administration lowers the age limit and will allow the pill
to sit on drugstore shelves next to spermicides or other women's health
products and condoms -- but anyone who wants to buy it must
prove their age at the cash register.Some contraceptive advocates called
the move promising."This decision is a step in the right direction for
increased access to a product that is a safe and effective method
of preventing unintended pregnancies," said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. "It's
also a decision that moves us closer to these critical availability decisions
being based on science, not politics."But earlier this month, U.S. District
Judge Edward Korman of New York blasted the Obama administration for imposing
the age-17 limit, saying it had let election-year politics trump science
and was making it hard for women of any age to obtain
the emergency contraception in time. He ordered an end to the age
restrictions by Monday.The women's group that sued over the age limits said
Tuesday's action is not enough, and it will continue
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