year, and there has been a 2 per cent rise in obesity in women in just three years. A report by market researchers Mintel into trends in the UK lingerie market says this is to blame for growing cup sizes.Analyst Tamara Sender said: ‘As women in the UK are getting larger, with the average bra size having increased to a 34D, retailers are responding to growing demand for underwear in larger sizes.’Obesity experts described the report’s findings as ‘worrying’.Tam Fry, of the National Obesity Forum http://tomsshoesoutlet01.webs.com/ - toms shoes sale , said: ‘Sizes are going up as always because people are eating the wrong food and not exercising enough. We are bombarded by advertisers and inundated with fast food joints http://tomsshoesoutlet02.webs.com/ - toms outlet online .’Women with large cup sizes are no longer restricted to matronly bras, the research found. Manufacturers have responded to demand for pretty, feminine lingerie.Researchers also noticed an increase in demand for bra fittings, with one in five women measured for a bra last year. And larger bodies have boosted demand for body-moulding lingerie, with more than one in ten buying items such as control pants and corsets. Peek into a 320-foot blast crater in the Nevada desert or descend a Titan II missile silo in Arizona for a look at two of many atomic tourism sites around the world that offer history and sometimes lessons from the deadly aftermath of the nuclear age.320The crisis in Japan has boosted interest in nuclear-related museums and plants, once-secret Manhattan Project complexes and areas laid waste by disaster.Anecdotal evidence suggests that there is a great interest in things nuclear in general, and specifically about the Japanese situation, said Allan Palmer, executive director of the Atomic Testing Museum and Nevada Test Site Historical Foundation in Las Vegas.Attendance was up 12 percent on a recent weekend at the museum http://tomsshoesoutlet02.webs.com/ - Toms shoes outlet .At the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History in Albuquerque, N.M., attendance jumped about 20 percent on a recent weekend as work continued at the Fukushima Dai-ichi reactors
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