What's in the News

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Ruth

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #720 on: October 17, 2008, 05:07:03 PM »
Ohmygosh.  They've gone nucken futs.

Shouldn't be any problem for you George, as long as you don't try to wear your qipao through customs.
If you want to walk on water, you have to get out of the boat.

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Babe

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #721 on: October 17, 2008, 05:59:40 PM »
Dear all,
At the moment, Donna and I are mailing brochures for our new project, “Focus On Skills”.
What we plan to do is:
1.   Provide advice for Organizations working with training in the development field.
 
2.   Work with organizations in the training and educational skills area
 
3.   Help Organizations to develop baseline studies of their skill levels and monitor the development of those skills
 
4.   Work with organizations, to help them develop high quality training packages and resources.

4.   Implement training packages for managers, employees and volunteers working in the field.
If any of you are interested in learning more, or would like to pass this information on, please let me know, and I will post you a brochure.

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Tern Unstoned

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #722 on: October 17, 2008, 07:30:52 PM »
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article4958778.ece

Just what you all need at this point:  news of the New China Internet Posse!

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Ruth

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #723 on: October 17, 2008, 09:01:59 PM »
Keeping the beat for CPR? Hum ‘Stayin’ Alive’
Study shows the disco hit helps bystanders remember lifesaving rhythm
 Most practitioners fail perform CPR aggressively enough, says researcher Dr. David Matlock. The recommended rate is about 100 beats per minute.
 'Stayin’ Alive’ really does keep people alive
  Oct. 15: The Bee Gees’ famous song is written to 103 beat per minute— perfect for teaching CPR, says The American College of Emergency Physicians. NBC’s Brian Williams reports.

Under most circumstances, it's best to keep the beat of the Bee Gees song “Stayin' Alive” out of your head, but heart specialists have come up with one good reason to remember: It could save someone's life.

Turns out the 1977 disco hit has 103 beats per minute, a perfect number to maintain — and retain — the best rhythm for performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR.

A small study by University of Illinois College of Medicine researchers in Peoria has found that 10 doctors and five medical students who listened to the "Saturday Night Fever" tune while practicing CPR not only performed perfectly, they remembered the technique five weeks later.

“It’s a song everyone seems to know, whether they want to or not,” said Dr. David Matlock, the resident and researcher who led the study. He hopes further research will confirm its use in lay people trained in CPR as well.

Results of the study are set to be presented later this month at the annual meeting of the American College of Emergency Physicians in Chicago.

One trouble with CPR training, Matlock said, is that most practitioners, from trained medical professionals to people who take classes at the local fire department, fail to perform the potentially lifesaving technique aggressively enough.

“We stress that you have to push hard and you have to push fast,” he said. “If you don’t push hard enough and you don’t go fast enough, you don’t push that blood where it needs to go.”

A nudge from a song like “Stayin’ Alive” appears to help ensure that pace.

Participants in the study listening to the song performed CPR at the recommended rate, about 100 beats per minute. Five weeks later, without the music, they performed at 113 beats a minute, which is within an acceptable range, Matlock said.

Matlock stressed that the CPR-music connection was not his idea. The notion actually was suggested in 2005 by Dr. Alson Inaba, a pediatric emergency specialist at the University of Hawaii, after the American Heart Association came out with new guidelines for CPR.

“Both the message of the title and the mechanics of the music support the CPR message,” said Mary Fran Hazinski, a nurse at Vanderbilt Children’s Hospital in Nashville and senior science editor for the heart association.

Performed quickly and accurately, CPR has been demonstrated to save lives when implemented in the first minutes after someone's heart has stopped, Hazinski said. It’s not necessary to have formal training, she added. People who witness an emergency should call 911 and then begin hands-only compressions.

“The important thing is that bystanders should do something rather than nothing,” she said, noting it could save tens of thousands of lives a year.

The idea of using a song to remember rhythm is appealing to Glenda Henry, 56, an office worker at the University of Illinois College of Medicine who wants to be prepared but worries about performing correctly in a crisis.

"I've taken CPR before, but I forget," she said. "But if someone teaches me with 'Stayin' Alive,' I could do it.'"

Neither Matlock nor the heart association have compiled lists of other CPR-friendly songs, though many popular tunes do have the appropriate beat. One suggested song has the right rhythm but the wrong message:

It’s “Another One Bites the Dust,” by Queen.

Everyone got that song in your head now?  You're welcome.
If you want to walk on water, you have to get out of the boat.

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Schnerby

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #724 on: October 18, 2008, 01:54:58 AM »
Gee, thanks.  llllllllll

I can tell myself it might save a life but that isn't going to make this an more pleasant...

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #725 on: October 20, 2008, 07:06:00 PM »
Boy, does that mean that if they put a proper washroom and shower in my apartment I can be rich?? bfbfbfbfbf bjbjbjbjbj


UN study says toilets can help combat poverty

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Installing toilets and ensuring safe water supplies where needed throughout the world would do more to end poverty and improve world health than any other possible measure, according to a new UN study.

 
"Water problems, caused largely by an appalling absence of adequate toilets in many places, contribute tremendously to some of the world's most punishing problems, foremost among them the inter-related afflictions of poor health and chronic poverty," said Zafar Adeel, director of the UN University's Canadian-based International Network on Water, Environment and Health, which released the study on Sunday.


Almost 900 million people around the world lack access to safe water supplies, and 2.5 billion people live without access to improved sanitation, according to UN figures.


Diseases due to poor water, sanitation and hygiene account for an estimated 10 percent of the total global burden of illness, and the total number of deaths attributed to poor water, sanitation and hygiene was over 3.5 million in 2002.


Simply improving domestic water supply, sanitation and hand washing with soap can reduce illness rates by more than 25 percent, researchers said.

Copied from yahoo news service.

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AMonk

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #726 on: October 20, 2008, 08:22:29 PM »
Yeah......someone who hasn't had anything to eat for a couple of days is really concerned about getting hold of a bar of soap for washing their hands......









Please note the sarcastic tone of voice
Moderation....in most things...

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #727 on: October 21, 2008, 12:33:14 AM »
And do humans have the same problems?? 

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Elephant unfit for wild after drug rehab

October 20, 2008

A CHINESE elephant who spent three years in rehab after animal smugglers got him addicted to heroin is not able to return to the wild despite being cured, state press reported.

Four-year-old Xiguang and three other elephants who the smugglers also captured had been taken to an animal protection centre on China's tropical island of Hainan to recover from their ordeals.

While they are all fit again, they are no longer able to live in the wild, Xinhua news agency cited an official with a wildlife park in southwestern China's Yunnan province where they are now residing.

"Three years of domestic life and a huge amount of rehabilitation medication has changed the physical situations, odours and habits of Xiguang and the other elephants,'' said Pan Hua, the park's deputy manager, according to Xinhua.

"They may become the target of attacks by other beasts if they are sent back to the wild. Some are easily irritable now and may hurt humans. They can't go back to the wild anymore.''

Xiguang became hooked on heroin after the animal smugglers laced bananas with the drug to capture and tame him, according to Xinhua.

Police caught the smugglers and rescued the elephants on the border between China and Myanmar in 2005, Xinhua said.

Xiguang was identified as having problems distinct from the other elephants because his eyes were always streamed with tears and he made continuous trumpeting noises, previous press reports said.

At the Hainan animal protection centre, his three-year rehab included regular doses of methadone five times stronger than required for humans trying to recover from heroin addiction, Xinhua said.

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #728 on: October 21, 2008, 01:20:23 AM »
What would Baden=Powell have said!!! kkkkkkkkkk kkkkkkkkkk

And what an opportunity for all of those dodgy scout masters. ahahahahah ahahahahah

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Scouts to learn about sex

From correspondents in London | October 20, 2008

THE Scouts' famous motto of "be prepared" is being expanded to ensure young members know all about sex.
Under a set of new guidelines to be unveiled today, scouts will be taught about contraception, pregnancy tests and what do do if they believe they are being forced to have sex.

Scouts will also be taken on visits to sexual health clinics and given free condoms on trips.

While the new measures have outraged some traditionalists, the Scout Association argues they will help members resist peer pressure to start having sex before they are ready.

"We must be realistic and accept that around a third of young people are sexually active before 16 and many more start relationships at 16 and 17," chief scout Peter Duncan said.

"Scouting touches members of every community, religious and social group in the country so adults in scouting have a duty to promote safe and responsible relationships and, as an organisation, we have the responsibility to provide sound advice about how to do that."

There are about 400,000 scouts in Britain, 85 per cent of whom are boys.

But the new measures have alarmed some critics, who claim they will only encourage young scouts to have sex.

"This is not what parents expect of the Scout Association," Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe told The Daily Telegraph.

"They are sending their children off to a leisure activity, not for sex education.

"This is a matter for parents and they already find their role usurped by schools."

Chairman of pressure group Parents Outloud Margaret Morrissey, chairman of pressure group,
Parents Outloud accused the Scout Association of "trying to be politically correct".

"The last people you would expect to be making children sexually aware is the boy scouts," she told the Daily Mail.

"All the signs are that political correctness has got us in the situation we're in now where young people are trying to grow up too soon and can't cope with it.

"They're confused and do things they probably wouldn't have done if they hadn't had that information in the first place. "

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #729 on: October 21, 2008, 01:04:33 PM »
Talk about being ever hopeful!!   ahahahahah ahahahahah ahahahahah ahahahahah


Russians rebuff McCain money plea

From correspondents in New York | October 21, 2008

JOHN McCain's US presidential election campaign has solicited a financial contribution from an unlikely source – Russia's UN envoy – but a McCain spokesman said overnight it was a mistake.

In the letter, McCain urged Russia's UN Ambassador, Vitaly Churkin, to contribute anywhere from $US35 ($49) to $US5000 ($7104)to help ensure Senator McCain's victory over Democratic rival Senator Barack Obama, currently ahead in voter preference polls.

"If I have the honor of continuing to serve you, I make you this promise: We will always put America – her strength, her ideals, her future – before every other consideration," McCain assured Mr Churkin.

Moscow's mission to the UN issued a terse statement on the Republican presidential candidate's letter, saying that the Russian Government and its officials "do not finance political activity in foreign countries."

A spokesman for Senator McCain, a long-time critic of Russia, had a simple explanation for the fundraising letter's arrival at the Russian mission in New York: "It was an error in the mailing list."

The letter was addressed to Mr Churkin and sported a McCain signature near the bottom.

Earlier this month, both Senator McCain and Senator Obama harshly criticized Russia for invading Georgia two months ago, but neither was willing to say yes when asked if Russia under Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was the "evil empire".

It is illegal for US presidential candidates to accept funds from foreign sources.

The McCain campaign accused Senator Obama earlier this month of not doing enough to screen for illegal contributors and asked US election officials to investigate.

Senator McCain has agreed to public financing for his campaign and therefore cannot accept funds from private donors.

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Spaghetti

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #730 on: October 21, 2008, 09:01:16 PM »
As a former Boy Scout, I smut admit that back when I was a young scout I enjoyed eating Brownies. You learn a lot from Scouting, you know? :lickass:
"Most young people were getting jobs in big companies, becoming company men. I wanted to be an individual."
Haruki Murakami

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #731 on: October 21, 2008, 09:18:50 PM »
As a former Boy Scout, I smut admit

 ahahahahah ahahahahah ahahahahah

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Spaghetti

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #732 on: October 22, 2008, 12:06:21 AM »
"Most young people were getting jobs in big companies, becoming company men. I wanted to be an individual."
Haruki Murakami

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Lotus Eater

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #733 on: October 22, 2008, 12:08:43 AM »
 bfbfbfbfbf ahahahahah ahahahahah ahahahahah

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #734 on: October 22, 2008, 01:52:11 PM »
Obviously, the people behind this move have listened to the wise words of Tom Lehrer.

ARTIST: Tom Lehrer
TITLE: Be Prepared


Be prepared, that's the Boy Scout's marching song
Be prepared, as through life you march along
Be prepared to hold your liquor pretty well
Don't write naughty words on walls if you can't spell

Be prepared to hide that pack of cigarettes
Don't make book if you cannot cover bets
Keep those reefers hidden where you're sure that they will not be found
And be careful not to smoke them when the scoutmaster's around
For he only will insist that they be shared
Be prepared

Be prepared, that's the Boy Scouts' solemn creed
Be prepared, and be clean in word and deed
Don't solicit for your sister, that's not nice
Unless you get a good percentage of her price

Be prepared, and be careful not to do
Your good deeds when there's no one watching you
If you're looking for adventure of a new and different kind
And you come across a Girl Scout who is similarly inclined
Don't be nervous, don't be flustered, don't be scared,
Be prepared
"Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination." Oscar Wilde.

"It's all oojah cum spiffy". Bertie Wooster.
"The stars are God's daisy chain" Madeleine Bassett.