Medical Forum / General / General / January 2006
~ * Headline Maltese News * !
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Twittering One - 23 Jan 2006 20:55 GMT ~ * Maltese Headlines * ~
Man, 93, and Maltese dog are reunited By Alva James-Johnson
"Salvatore Simone survived the Spanish Influenza Pandemic, the Great Depression, World War II, the death of most of his relatives -- even Hurricane Wilma.
But the loss of his white, silky-haired Maltese after the storm was almost too much for his tender, 93-year-old heart to take ..."
http://malteseonly.com/slashdot/news.php
~ * ~ Blog, I'll warrant ye, or dog? Who knows. Pass the grog! But if ye see me lost pup, please bring that scurvy dog home! I got Leon a brand-new bone, with a chest full a' booty. _________________ http://journals.aol.com/virginiaz/DreamingofLeonardo
Twittering One - 23 Jan 2006 21:05 GMT ~ * Maltese Lane * ~
|Dogwood|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~> http://www.malteseonly.com/jaybev.html
Twittering One - 23 Jan 2006 21:19 GMT "From train station, he disembarks, eyeing town; Strangers mingle; one sports evening gown.
Beyond a glass, quaint jesters play charades; He peers, whereupon his dead body laid.
>From bones to ashes Leonardo rose from coals, Melody his libretto now for many roles." ~ Cotter
Warhol - 24 Jan 2006 00:08 GMT > "From train station, he disembarks, eyeing town; > Strangers mingle; one sports evening gown. [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] > Melody his libretto now for many roles." > ~ Cotter Flag with homage to the night sky. Skull Tower Idol: This freakish-looking tower gives off a mysterious aura.
Honest John - 24 Jan 2006 00:16 GMT > > "From train station, he disembarks, eyeing town; > > Strangers mingle; one sports evening gown. [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > Flag with homage to the night sky. Skull Tower Idol: This freakish-looking > tower gives off a mysterious aura. The doppleganger of Truepenny !
Twittering One - 24 Jan 2006 00:45 GMT "Melody his libretto now for many roles." ~ Cotter
"Flag with homage to the night sky. Skull Tower Idol ~ This freakish ~ looking Tower gives off a mysterious aura." ~ Warhol
"The doppleganger of Truepenny ~ !" ~ Honest John
"Dreadful, Just deadly ghastly, not Cricket, it's just not cricket." ~ Dr. AE
Warhol - 24 Jan 2006 01:56 GMT > "Melody his libretto now for many roles." > ~ Cotter [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] > Cricket, it's just not cricket." > ~ Dr. AE Timeless Myths followed by traditions on the romantic story of the life of King Arthur... the tale of "Erec and Enid"
The earliest depiction of Arthur is that of a fierce, feared warrior, capable of tremendous prowess in hand-to-hand combat. As described by a Welsh priest named Nennius in his Latin Historia Brittonum Arthur was "chosen 12 times to lead the Celts, Arthur bore the image of the Virgin and won 12 battles, the last being at Mt. Badon (Ladon Dragon), in which he killed 960 of the enemy single-handed"
The 12 works of Heracles... the Lord of the Rings.
In a work entitled the Brut by an English priest named Layamon, Arthur is again depicted as "a warrior, grim and fierce, an object of dread to friend and enemy; in short, an epic hero" a fearless leader of men, capable of legendary feats of strength and battle. As Herculis, Arthur is practically a god... A second image of Arthur is that of a "peripheral figure whose presence is felt mainly as a social force or arbiter of chivalric excellence."
Warhol - 24 Jan 2006 02:03 GMT > > "Twittering One" <twitteringfolly@aol.com> a crit dans le message de > news: [quoted text clipped - 13 lines] > > The doppleganger of Truepenny ! The King is the symbol of a wide abstraction: that of the courage, honor, honesty, and chivalry of Camelot and the Knights of the Round Table. In Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, we still see Arthur as fearless warrior; he is the first to accept the Green Knight’s challenge and lay his life on the line to defend the honor of his court.
the manner in which he becomes king is outside of his control; as a young squire, he is asked to retrieve a sword for his knight and inadvertently pulls the sword from the stone, fulfulling his pre-ordained fate to be King.
Twittering One - 24 Jan 2006 05:30 GMT Do you do Elvis ~ ?
Honest John - 24 Jan 2006 05:26 GMT "Twittering One" <twitteringfolly@aol.com> wrote in message
> Do you do Elvis ~ ? When I go to the bathroom.
H.J.
Twittering One - 24 Jan 2006 05:43 GMT Well, Elvis is the King, you know, in any case ~ Do'em good.
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 06:48 GMT WHAT'S NEXT
For the Fretting Pet Owner, A Wireless Distress Signal
By ANNE EISENBERG July 15, 2004
IN the Walt Disney film ''The Incredible Journey,'' two dogs and a cat are finally reunited with their owners after a long and dangerous cross-country trip.
For many pets, there is no such happy Hollywood ending. In the United States, only a small percentage of animals separated from their owners are reunited, according to the American Humane Association.
But wireless technology may one day provide some help both for animals and the humans who cherish them, whether the pets have strayed across town or across the border.
In one emerging technology, owners can keep track of their dogs by way of miniaturized Global Positioning System receivers and mobile modems attached to the dogs' collars.
''If the pet leaves the yard, you'll get a call on your cellphone, P.D.A., or any other two-way wireless device,'' said Jennifer Durst, chief executive of GPS Tracks in Oyster Bay, N.Y., which has devised a G.P.S.-based system called the Global Pet Finder.
Ms. Durst said the system would be on the market by the end of the year and would fit dogs of all sizes except toy breeds. The receiver will cost about $300 and there will be a monthly ''monitoring fee'' of about $13, she said.
''Cats will be next year,'' she said, ''in version 2.''
People who use the new system can set the boundaries for their dogs at a Web site or on the miniaturized device itself, specifying how far their pets can roam. It might be a backyard, Ms. Durst said, or, if both owner and pet are on vacation, a section of a beach, perhaps, or the area around a motel.
Software checks the pet's position constantly, she said. When it passes the default boundaries, an automatic alert is triggered and owners receive a text message. ''It will say, 'Your pet has left' and send the exact location,'' Ms. Durst said. Locations will be identified by street name and number or, for certain cellphones, by maps.
''In rural areas with no street signs, you will be given directions from where you are,'' Ms. Durst said. The G.P.S. receiver calculates the position, and the coordinates are translated into a readable position.
The system is designed for any area covered by a G.S.M. cellphone network. Prominent in Europe and Asia, G.S.M. networks are becoming more common in the United States, where they are used by T-Mobile and some other providers.
Another application of wireless technology may help reunite pets with their owners even when the animals are in another country.
Implanted microchip transponders have been used for years in the United States and elsewhere to identify dogs, cats and other pets. The tags include a glass-encased microchip with a unique identification number that cannot be altered but can be read by a low-frequency radio scanner. The number is then matched to a database to find the pet's owner.
The problem has been that the American and overseas systems are incompatible. So some organizations in the United States that maintain identification databases are switching to the international system in the hope of one day linking American pets and owners to a global database.
The use of microchips has increased steadily, said Sue Richey, who directs the American Kennel Club's Companion Animal Recovery program. The program keeps a national database in Raleigh, N.C., in which people can enroll their microchipped or tattooed pets. ''We're getting 55,000 to 70,000 animals a month,'' she said, ''with a live recovery every eight minutes 24/7.''
Right now, most pet microchips and scanners used in the United States operate on a radio frequency of 125 kilohertz. But the chips used in much of the rest of the world operate at an international standard of 134.2 kilohertz, Ms. Richey said.
That disparity can lead to problems when, for example, an American loses a pet while traveling in a foreign country. ''Their scanners can't read our chips,'' said John Snyder, director of companion animals for the Humane Society of the United States, in Washington.
Several groups have already begun using the 134.2 kilohertz chip, including the Oregon Humane Society in Portland, which started implanting them in January, said Sharon Harmon, executive director of the society.
But many shelters do not have scanners that can read the new chips. ''It's not a good thing if we don't have the scanners in place,'' Mr. Snyder said, ''because animals are being missed.''
Scanners that can read both kinds of chips will be needed, said Jodi Buckman, director of animal programs for the American Humane Association in Denver. ''It's a mistake to have a technology used only in the U.S.,'' she said. ''One worldwide standard will provide the ultimate protection for pets.''
Pet chips of the future may be different in other ways, too. For one thing, they may be updatable. At this point information on the microchips cannot be changed, meaning that new developments in a medical history, for example, can't be added.
But Walt Ingwersen, a veterinarian in Whitby, Ontario, who has served as chairman of the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association's microchip committee, said that smarter, read-write chips are on the way. Dr. Ingwersen is now a member of a technical committee that is developing international standards for the advanced transponders. ''The animal's ID number will remain the same on the chip,'' he said, ''but the contents will be updatable.''
Sue Sternberg, a shelter owner and dog trainer in Accord, N.Y., said she welcomed G.P.S.-based tracking devices and implanted microchips.
''We get a dog sometimes and we know it is a beloved pet that has traveled a long distance,'' she said. ''In that case, a microchip would be a great thing.''
Norma Bennett Woolf, editor of Dog Owner's Guide, an online magazine, agreed. ''Too many owners are heartbroken at the loss of their pets,'' she said. ''Technology has a lot of potential here to get dogs home to their families.''
http://tech2.nytimes.com/mem/technology/techreview.html?_r=1&res=9C04E7D6163AF93 6A25754C0A9629C8B63&n=Top%2fNews%2fTechnology%2fColumns%2fWhat%27s%20Next
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 06:52 GMT ".............................................. Allo ~ ? O,
LEONARDO ~ !
Where RU ~ ?
Folly, Guess who ..." ~ Twittering
"Who ~ ? Tell me. Tell me. Tell me. Tell me. Tell me. Twittering,
TELL ME ~ !" ~ Folly
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 07:03 GMT "The Opera ...
Uh huh. Uh huh. Uh huh. No. Yes. Of course, mon coeur ~ !
With Oprah, Really ~ ?
Wow. Kewl.
Folly says, Hey.
Love you, too. Will do.
Yes. Um huh. Um huh. Uh Uh. Okay. I promise. You, too.
* kiss kiss *" ~ Twittering
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 20:09 GMT ~ * ~
"It is extremely amusing to witness The courtship of the Canada Goose in all its stages ..."
~ John J. Audubon's Guide,
>From "The Birds of the Northeast" [p. 190]
"It takes a tough man to make a tender chicken." ~ Frank Perdue
"From the herbarium I wandered upstairs into the William D. Rondina and Giovanni Foroni LoFaro Gallery, where there is (through Jan. 22) a luxurious show about the French botanical illustrator Pierre-Joseph Redouté. Redouté, who inspired Audubon, learned from Dutch still life artists, and was the draftsman to Marie Antoinette.
He produced books of roses and lilies from Empress Joséphine's Château Malmaison that are among the greatest of all botanical illustrations. Many of these come from the library's own rare book collection.
The garden's library is one of the best in the world. I found David Andrews seated at a table in it, perusing some old books he had just donated. True collectors, at heart, are the same, whether they obsess about Picassos or roses or light bulbs."
~ * ~
December 30, 2005 Critic's Notebook Where the Art Grows on Trees (and Everywhere Else) By Michael Kimmelman
~ * ~
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 20:12 GMT !BEWARE!
Sign Says ~
~ * ~ _________________________________________ ~ * ~ A Sign, A Boarded Shingle Hung Out TO Dry ~ * ~
! * ! Strung Out, Full Spectrum, Solar Powered Luminescence ~ ! _________________________________________ ~ * Rope Lights & Emerald Greens ~
New Technology Save Hundreds Energy Quality, Beauty, Durability, Price ~ !
String, a theory, links emerald green putting links Down an alley of spruce, cedar, redwood, Sinks
A Pinecone Hole in One, At The Olmstead Country Clube ~
!Ka ~ Plunk ~ !
www.1000Bulbs.com
Or goggle over 1000 tulip bulbs Blooming daffy daffodils ...
Bring Doggles, too ~ ! ~ * ~ ~ ~ _________________________________________ Yes ~ A Morning Wood Roadside Semi ~ OTIC _________________________________________ * Dogging Arts * Fogging Minds * It's a Star * _________________________________________ * ~ * ~
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 20:42 GMT "The sun is not a lightbulb." ~ The Annotator
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 22:09 GMT "A goblet of Thyme, no false pleasure, Nor Treasure of Artifice,
If my eye, oft, you fool, O Silly Fool ~ !
Major of The Troupe who juggles 7 ~ ball cascade With sleight of hand, nod of head, Deft left arcing out of Orbit ~ !" ~ Twittering
"If in water, over your head, Gaze heavenward ~
The sky's mirror maps your reflected plan, The water you cup in your hand Flows
Into another palm, Another's hand,
Who holds another map You unfold ...
The book you read lapidates matter,
>From water your hand Cups ..." ~ Mum
"Light a Kandell, A Curious Case of Curiosities ..." ~ Twittering
"... but what of the sorrow Of the little sand crabs ~ ?" ~ Folly
"With Blue Dog Mead they drown their sorrow Thinking not upon the morrow." ~ Double-A
"A spot of Faith, a touch of Hope, A Bud de Cranberry Scone,
Or if home alone, feeling unsafe, A glimmer through Double-A's telescope." ~ Twittering
~ * What we saw Peering through AA's telescope Après midnight ... * ~
"The Kwongdzu has enormous claws; Its character is full of flaws.
The Mork proceeds with pensive grace And no expression on its face.
The Posby goes into a trance In which it does a little dance."
~ Edward Gorey,
>From "The Utter Zoo Alphabet" *
"The Board, that first day, is all come ~ and ~ go ~ Revolving door no lobby. ENTER." ~ JM [p. 300]
Etude as if startled ~
"O dear. You are a Centaur.
What brings you hither, What tune, your Zither ~ ?"
~ * ~
~ * Instruments Of Torture, An Orchestral Plenitude * ~
The Drosophile de Gamba ~
"The Drosophile plays Hazard's Charade; Its vulgar peril is getting laid.
~ Theodore Storey,
>From "The Ghastly Barf & Other Anti ~ Emetic Tales"
A giddy grape, I am, my fame, My fine name,
Who very well knows how a garden Grows, if grape vine A Jesting Justin
By Phantom Toll Booth paid Wound around town, among Five Seasons A Life's Reason Knows ~
A Saintly Sommelier sews seeds far ahead of thyme, A cultivation's vintage year decants fine Wine ~ ?" ~ Merlot
"Upon the floor, by ocean washed, A head, apparently deade, she tossed,
Rolling fast across By windy force,
Who said, 'O, mon chair, of course, No longer do I need. For, my body lost,
O, don't you know, I am Deadly Headley." ~ The Annotator
Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 22:14 GMT "Make sure it's not your therapist Who f.cks you Because ...
You are likely one In a long line .........................>
Furthermore, It knows everything about you, You nothing of It.
A rather imbalanced, Equation. You are likely to succumb
To delusion ~ The Type that's Deadly ..." ~ Twittering
blackrotspon@yahoo.com - 25 Jan 2006 22:20 GMT Twittering One - 25 Jan 2006 22:21 GMT "A goblet of Thyme, no false pleasure, Or pretense, Nor Treasure of Artifice,
If perchance hounds of the heather Howl, byrds of a feather, together ~ !
If my eye oft aloft, O you fool, O Silly Fool,
O you are still so out of School ~ ! Go back Post Haste, not Hoc, And rescue those suffering NYU Gold Fish Before their lot succumbs ~ Ictological Rot.
Too small their pool, O Silly Fool. Tres Un Kewl." ~ Octogenarian
blackrotspon@yahoo.com - 25 Jan 2006 22:25 GMT Twittering one wrote: " I do, however, have serious concerns that my
private medical information ~ regarding material I divulged in psychotherapy with my psychologist ~ has been passed along to Dr. Goodman and Dr. Gurian. If this has occurred, I consider this a serious
breach of my medical privacy, as protected by Federal guidelines.
I consider my mental health information an extremely personal issue, which I guard due to professional concerns.
Public knowledge of an ADHD diagnosis can potentially impact my professional career in many adverse ways, affecting my earning ability and credibility as professional. I do not make this information public, ."I NOR WILL I IN THE FUTURE." oops
Why would you think your medical information was passed along?
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