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Archive for July, 2008

July 30, 2008

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Really Good Quotes "A mind, once expanded by a new idea, never returns to its original dimensions." - Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Greetings, Quotaholics:

We’ve all heard the tales.  There’s a creature that, depending on where you live, might be called Yeti, the Abominable Snowman, Sasquatch, Bigfoot, or probably several other names as well.  It’s supposed to be nearly ten feet (3m) high, part ape and part man, and although rarely if ever seen, leaves huge footprints behind.

It’s a crock, right?  I mean, who, in the 21st Century, would believe that there’s a critter so elusive out there that nothing has been ever found to verify its existence save footprints?  No rotting carcasses, no bones, nothing.  Just a lot of myth, legend, and footprints.  Footprints that were found along Mt. Everest during a 1921 expedition, and that were found again in 1953 during Edmund Hillary’s ascent of the same mountain.

Someone’s either going through an awful lot of trouble to hoax people, or there’s something unexplained still out there.

A Yeti was spotted in India by a forester, breaking off branches and eating the sap of trees in one particular location two days in a row.  The forester must have been a fan of CSI, because he carefully checked the area and found two hairs, one 33mm long, the other 44mm.

According to telegraph.co.uk, scientists at Oxford Brookes University are evaluating the hairs, and up until now they have not been able to match them with any known species.  The scientists have been using high powered microscopes, and the hairs will be submitted for DNA testing.  Even if that testing doesn’t match a known species, it should at least be able to identify which species it is related to.

It’s kind of hard for me to imagine that any land creature in this overpopulated world of ours has escaped detection by humans, frankly, but the stories persist.  What is remarkable is the geographical range of the sitings, from North America to Asia, and maybe Africa as well.  I don’t know, but I do know that I’ve heard the stories since I was a kid, and clearly it went back a lot farther than that.  It’s also hard to imagine that anyone could provide today’s scientists with two hairs that can not be identified.

I thought this would be kind of a lighthearted piece tonight, but you’ve got to admit, it’s at least curious how this stuff could still be going on.  Do you believe there could be such a creature?  What would you think if DNA turns up an unknown ape relative?  And what would we humans do if we found one?  Would we put it in a zoo, kill it to dissect it, or what?  And what do you think should be done in the unlikely event one is captured?

Yetily,



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Today's Quotes


“There’s no sense in being precise when you don’t even know what you’re talking about.” - John von Neumann, Hungarian-born American mathematician (1903-1957)


“The problem with cats is that they get the same exact look whether they see a moth or an ax-murderer.” - Paula Poundstone

Today's Chuckle

The Bartender and the Waitress
Thanks to Bonnie in Louisiana]

The boss at the pub went up to the bartender and asked, “Have you been fooling around with the waitress?!”

“Oh no, sir, I sure haven’t,” replied the bartender.

The boss replied, “Good, then YOU fire her!”

Life Sentences

“National defense is the usual pretext for the policy of fleecing the people.” - John Taylor, American politician, Senator and philosopher (1753-1824)

“A man may be a tough, concentrated, successful money-maker and never contribute to his country anything more than a horrible example.” - Robert Menzies, Australian Prime Minister (1894-1978)


“People don’t notice whether it’s winter or summer when they’re happy.” - Anton Chekhov, Russian playwright (1860-1904)

Image'n That
China
Imp-Revised News

E-Mail the Imp


Pravda has become the international version of the check-out counter tabloid, “The Enquirer.” They report on everything from alien babies born to farm girls to flying saucers home ported at the bottom of a lake and that’s in the Science section. Their strange news is even more bizarre.

The latest scientific tidbit isn’t actual science fact, but rather concerns a science trend and a prediction of what it will lead to in thirty years. The prediction is, “…a world where every female of any age - from childhood upwards - could successfully conceive.”

They’re not talking about toddlers and tottering matrons enjoying a roll in the hay but rather a laboratory procedure to produce the offspring. Employing techniques still to be developed, scientists believe they could create sperm and eggs from skin cells and combine them to form embryos.

Davor Solter, of the Institute of Biology in Singapore, said: “It means every person regardless of age will be able to have children. Newborn children could have children and 100-year-olds could have children. It could easily happen in the next 30 years.”

The article doesn’t state, but alludes to, the use of artificial wombs to bring these offspring to term. I don’t think the world is ready for pregnant toddlers or 110 year-old Great-Great-Great-Grandmothers exclaiming, “Oh dear, my water has broken!”

Just looking at the pure science of creating embryos from skin cells, I can see a possible need for having the technology ready to go. If in the future human genetics alters itself as predicted, men will slowly die out and only females will be left. This would be a method of ensuring the human race continues.

Other than that, what’s the use and why hurry? It’s not like humans are screwing themselves into extinction, our global population keeps growing…no need to augment the birth rate artificially.

The Bad Sied 

Most Embarrassing or Scary Moment


Speak Up!

Speak right up!

Patti's Parenthetical Past

On this day in history,
July 30, 2002: The Sarbanes-Oxley Act is signed into law by President George W. Bush. Senator Paul Sarbanes, a Democrat from Maryland, and Representative Michael G. Oxley, a Republican from Ohio, co-sponsored the bill. The bill passed the House with a vote of 423-3 and the Senate with a vote of 99-0. The law established new or enhanced standards of US public company boards, management, and public accounting firms. It contains 11 titles or sections and does not apply to private companies. Being a public company means it is registered on the stock exchange, i.e. public.

At the beginning of the millennium, there were many highly publicized business irregularities. Enron, WorldCom, Tyco, Adelphia, and Peregrine Systems showed the nation and the world the sleazy side of business in a big way. The boardroom failures, auditor conflicts of interest, the securities industry’s conflict of interest, irregular banking practices, bursting the Internet bubble, and obscene executive compensation lost billions of investor dollars both at home and abroad.

The law established an oversight board with nine different sections specifying what to oversee. Auditor independence and corporate responsibilities were spelled out. Enhanced financial disclosures were defined, including off-balance-sheet transactions. Analyst conflicts of interest were addressed to help restore investor confidence. The commission’s resources and authority along with studies and reports were delineated. Corporate and criminal fraud and white collar crime were addressed with penalties increased for infractions. Corporate tax returns and accountability were defined and penalties made explicit.



“All men’s gains are the fruit of venturing.” – Herodotus


“The morale of an organization is not built from the bottom up; it filters from the top down.” – Peter B. Kyne



“If you can build a business up big enough, it’s respectable.” – Will Rogers


Kids' Weird Words, The Date from Hell, How I Met My Mate
Kirsten's Krazy Kaleidoscope

Email Kirsten

“‘You have to stay in shape. My grandmother, she started walking five miles a day when she was 60. She’s 97 today and we don’t know where the hell she is.’”
~ Ellen Degeneres ~

It’s like something from a movie about aliens. You are put on a table and drugged, little holes are made in your skin, and bits of you are suctioned out with a straw attached to a vacuum cleaner. OK, that may be a brutally simplistic description of the process, but it is not that far from what actually happens during the course of a liposuction procedure.

A more accurate description of what happens is this:
- You are put on a table and drugged.
- Little holes are made in your skin.
- Some fluid is injected into the area being liposuctioned. The fluid contains some local anaesthetic, some epinephrine to contract the blood vessels and reduce bleeding, and a salt solution to make the fluid equal the salinity of our body fluids. The amount of fluid being injected depends on the nature and extent of the liposuction procedure.
- A hollow tube called a cannula (fancy word for a straw) is attached to an aspirator (fancy word for a vacuum cleaner).
- The other end of the cannula is inserted through the hole in the skin.
- Fat is suctioned out. The technique for this varies. Sometimes it is done using the cannula and aspirator only. Sometimes ultrasound vibrations are transmitted to break up the fat cells prior to suctioning them out. A developing technology is the use of water to loosen the structure of the fat tissue. The water is injected continuously during the procedure and removed via the cannula.
- After the procedure, the little holes are left open to allow drainage of the fluid that was injected. Sometimes the surgeon will partially suture the holes, allowing space for the fluid to drain.

Surgeons performing liposuction are very insistent about telling patients that it is not an alternative to losing weight in a healthy way. We hear stories about people losing 50 pounds due to liposuction, but most of these stories are sensational exaggerations cooked up by the tabloids. While there are variances in terms of the doctor, the patient and the circumstances, the amount of fat removed is usually less than ten pounds.

As ghastly as my description of the procedure sounds, liposuction in moderate amounts (performed, of course, by someone who knows what they’re doing and has clean equipment) is fairly safe. It’s when people overdo it that problems arise. Krista Stryland of Toronto paid the ultimate price for an overzealous liposuction procedure in 2007. According to court papers, Dr. Behnaz Yazdanfar made no less than 23 incisions in six different areas of Krista’s body. A plastic surgeon who tried to revive her told an investigator that “the amount of puncture wounds was well beyond the amount that should have been done”.

The main risks of complication associated with liposuction are:
- dehydration as the patient loses body fluid
- a change in the patient’s body chemistry, resulting in organ failure and immune system disruption
- bacterial infection entering the patient’s body through the incisions.
- the cosmetic results may not be what was expected.

Liposuction is like any cosmetic surgery. It can be done by a qualified doctor who has a sense of responsibility, and the results can be great. Or it can be done by someone who cares more about the money than the patient, with disastrous or tragic results. Anyone considering any kind of cosmetic surgery should educate themselves about who is doing the procedure and what it involves.

I don’t think I’ll ever look at straws or vacuum cleaners in quite the same way.

Kaleidoscopically yours,
Kirsten

Tim's Tales


Some of the Best of Tim


Remember in kindergarten when you learned everything you ever needed to know? Like dogs are good, and cats are bad? I do.

By now you’ve probably heard that “Roy”, of Siegfried and Roy, got attacked by a cat. Bad cat.

There is also the story of how a guy was out of gas and got more and put it in the tank and then primed the carburetor with it and the car backfired and set the dog inside on fire and the passenger let the dog out and it dropped and rolled like they teach ya in kindergarten but started a field fire which firefighters put out.

I happen to know the *real* story. The dog went to get the gas, even though the guy stuck a pin in him to hold the note that said “get gas” along with a 5 dollar bill. The dog, being such a fine creature, picked up the gas can and happily trotted down the street, and even returned with the gas, with the receipt stuck in his back with the very same pin. It was a dog truly worthy.

Let’s not kid ourselves here. There was no passenger that let the dog out. The only passenger was the faithful dog, who brought the gas back. When asked by this driver to get behind the wheel and crank it over, the dog did so, faithfully. Understand for a dog to sit on the seat and press on the gas, it’s gotta be pretty much stretched out in the groin area, exposing some serious body parts. Don’t forget he still has a pin stuck in his back. Oh, the pain….

So the jerk under the hood lights a cig while telling the dog to crank it over.

The dog got out just in time. Unfortunately, the van didn’t make it. The dog was singed, but put out the field fire caused by the van blowing up. He lifted his leg long before the firemen got there. He was found with 12 empty beer cans in his vicinity with his paw prints on them. There was no mention of what he was smoking or what fireman awards this brave canine would get.

I knew you’d think I was lying, so I just set my sister’s cat’s ass on fire. Details may follow when the stitches are removed.

Tim a mewsing….
Having a Ball with Yarns

Tip of the Day

Fresh fish freeze well in a milk carton filled with water. - Peggy in Tonawanda, New York


Poet-Tree


Interesting death wishes you all have.

Next opening line…
Of all the dumb things that I’ve done…

Hints:  Here’s a great new rhyming/composition tool.  http://www.writerhymes.com/
There’s also a great rhyming dictionary at http://www.rhymezone.com/
Limerick rules.  http://freespace.virgin.net/merrick.sheldon/limerickrules.htm 

Submit Opening Line
Submit Limerick

Before I die I want to try
To date that red-headed cutie-pie!
But (this’ll make you chuckle)
Near her my knees buckle
And I know my tongue will tie. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To eat a jalapeño pie.
It will be so hot
My throat will go taut,
My face redden, and my eyes cry. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To see if I can tie a tie.
Whether it’s plaid or check,
They’re all pains in the neck.
So I’ll wear it around my thigh. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To climb in the desert Mt. Sinai.
To find the face of God
And to give Him laud
Or to lay in the desert and fry. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To snow ski in the month of July
I wish to carve turns
But avoiding sunburns -
Sounds like a great summertime high! - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To speak to a “son of Levi”
To warn him `bout breakfast.
I’ll say in my sternest
Voice, “Trix are for kids, silly Rabbi!” - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To see if at night I can espy
A beetle in flight
Carrying a flashlight!
(This beetle is known as a firefly.) - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To visit the isle of Hawaii.
Green the name does imply,
But the southwest is dry,
Where the sole plants are grass and cacti. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To visit and see Mount Denali.
Getting there is easy
But rarely it’s sunny,
And often overcast is the sky. - Anne Onimous
Before I die I want to try
To fool a detector of lie
I think that I will say
“A planet far away”
If asked where it is I reside
Maria in Illinois
Before I die, I want to try,
A piece of double-chocolate pie.
Covered in a whipped cream,
It would be anyone’s dream.
Of course, directly to my thighs it I should apply. - Bonnie in Louisiana
Before I die I want to try
A hot balloon ride in the sky
and if that goes well
(I don’t plummet to hell)
then the next time I would like to fly. - Cassandra in New York

Reader Comments

Re: Has the UK Lost its Mind?


I was in England a few months ago and fire alarm went off in the hotel where I was staying. A group of black people were having an all-night party in the hotel and one of them set off the alarm for a joke. At 5am, I was not amused, so when I encountered the firemen outside the hotel, I told them that I had heard one of the blacks say his mate had set off the alarm. Ok, I did use the n-word (shame on me). The chief stopped the men from entering the hotel so he could berate me for using that kind of language. - John in Walled Lake, Michigan




I think you already summarized England’s dilemma in your quote section:
“Wherever they burn books they will also, in the end, burn human beings.” - Heinrich Heine, German poet and writer (1797-1856) - Lucille

[Lucille, Bruce selects the quotes so I don’t see them before I write my article but I was struck be that quote too. The most amazing thing about it, to me, is that a hundred years before Hitler here was a German writer predicting what would happen. History seems to show that the greatest abuses of power come in the form of protecting us from some real or imagined evil. - Mike]



Mike, I have said to Bruce more than once and I will say to you that you can never ever take what The Sun says at face value. You need to check the story from at least three distinct sources. It is the worst rag printed in England. In the same underclass is The News of the World, what has been called the Sunday edition of The Sun.


There is sometimes a kernel of truth in a Sun story but so exaggerated as to lose whatever relationship it ever might have had initially to the truth. - Larry (UK)
[Thanks Larry, I’ll keep that in mind. Have you heard anything at all about this issue? Is there any truth to it? Do you feel that the term “nanny state” is a fitting one for the way things are in England these days?]



The day something outrageous like that is reported in a decent newspaper will be the day I believe it. I love how The sun has very little evidence for its claims, such as the name of the Bill that would give Council Officials these powers. - Kizzi




Re: Reader Submission

Grammie Sammie, thank you for that wonderful link to Matthew Harding’s video!! That one is a keeper — it made me smile and cry all at the same time!! Check out Matthew’s website too — he appears to be quite a remarkable young man!! Thanks for sharing this with us. - Marsha in Michigan

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Disclaimer- All quotes printed in this publication are believed to be accurately attributed, but no guarantees are made that some incorrectly attributed, or even outright false quotes won’t get in here from time to time.  I assure readers that I will do my best to weed out incorrect quotes, and will print a retraction as soon as I become aware of any errors.

Click here
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