Weekly Blogscan: The Organic Diet

Posted on November 18, 2008 in Diet

At a traffic light today, I found myself behind a car with a bumper sticker that my casual glance read as Eat Organic . Just as the light went green, my brain clicked on to inform me that it actually said Eat Origami . Now, the health benefits of consuming only folded paper figures aside, I wondered if the organic food movement had spread to the blogosphere. The answer is a resounding Yes. We have the Organic Lifestyle in New Zealand, the UK, and as a women's online magazine. Interesting that the last features—prominently—an advertisement for Aphrodite Chocolates. Conversely, Suw Charman at Chocolate and Vodka has her priorities in order. In fact, she tells us Today I realised—with a glass of orange juice, a bar of Green & Black's dark organic chocolate and a bag of champagne truffles on my desk—that I had sort of fallen off the sugar wagon. Well, less fallen off, more jumped off. Enthusiastically. This probably explains why I spent much of this afternoon either asleep or very nearly asleep. At her Organic Baby Farm , Utah blogger Wacky Hermit is "growing the World's Cutest Free-Range Milk-Fed Kids... and feeding them nothing but crap." Her recent post "Today At GotMilk Prison Camp" makes the point that "with enough rhetoric you can make anything sound like torture." (Plus, it's both satiric and cute!) At Milk Is Milk , on the other hand, a reprint of the Oct. 2004 treatise by The Scientist editor Richard Gallagher exposes the Organic Food Placebo. Gallagher quotes British peer Dick Taverne, "...the craze for organic food is built on myth. It starts with a scientific howler, has rules with neither rhyme nor reason. None of the claims made for it have ever been substantiated, and if it grows it will damage the nation's health." Taverne's complete remarks are available at another organic-debunking blog, Foreign Dispatches , in the post "You have to be green to swallow the organic food myth." Perhaps in response, the Accidental Hedonist chronicles the questionable organic nature of some organic dairies. The blog notes that "it's not surprising that once it had been determined that there was a market for such products, some corporate farms sought to get a piece of the pie." Unfortunately, they charge, at least one group of dairies operating in California, Idaho, and Colorado, is violating two of the standards that would make the milk organic. "According to reports, both the Idaho and California operations differ little from conventional confinement dairies other than having their high-producing cows fed certified organic feed," says Mark Kastel, Senior Farm Policy Analyst, at the Wisconsin-based Cornucopia Institute. Janet Roberts uses her FoodWords blog to steer us to a viral Flash video , "Obi Wan Cannoli Wants You!" Even if you're sick of Star Wars, you have to check out... the Organic Trade Association['s] "Store Wars." Starring Cuke Skywalker, Obi Wan Cannoli, Ham Solo and Darth Tater, it tells the tale of food adulteration and how to combat it. Spot-on parody of the earliest Star Wars chapters, obviously done by people who appreciate a good pun (Hey! Watch out for the Thai fighters!).    The sod sofa also produces oxygen. Greg Tate of Ready Made gives us the detailed instructions to create the only appropriate sofa for all organic couch potatoes. The brain-child of Bruce Main, this grass-upholstered lawn chair is the perfect back-yard accessory. Head Chef Charlie Ayers posted Google Daily Menus , until he decided the rest of the world didn't care what Google-folk every day. His recipes regularly featured organic greens. Meanwhile, the Treehugger touts organic catsup as a condiment preventive of cancer. The actual agent tested was "Lycopene, an antioxidant that for years has been known to have protective effects against breast, prostate, and pancreatic cancers... found in cooked tomato products like tomato sauce and, yes, ketchup." In May 2005, The Politic commented on a National Review item that posited organic farming is "simply not sustainable." The blogger used the item to drive the opinion: "There is way too much hype over how bad genetically modified (GM) food is. How small minded can these people be? The truth is that this propaganda was created simply to sell products in the over priced organic food industry." If the choice were limited to GMO vs. organic, we might agree with him that you can "Eat Organic If You Want People To Starve." Or you could eat organ meats, although as Roast Beef warns us from his GREP blog, this can have disturbing consequences. He and his buddies went for lunch at a Korean Barbeque, but wound up eating more than they had bargained for. CAUTION: Not for the queasy. This is the reason there is a market for organic food. We want control over what we eat, to know that no alien genes, pesticides or strange stress hormones will spice that dish. And even if it is fleeting or false, we seek to know whereof we eat. 1570716803,0312008988,B00006BIJ9,0875969305,0875968961,0786406186,0060938455 Please join us at BlogCritics to comment on this review. buy software cheap oem software

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Christmas Eve, Eve

Posted on November 15, 2008 in Brooks pharmacy

I look Wonder Boy's character may explode if he move towardss factor furthermore excited throughout Christmas. To incorporate to the merriment, he has declared tomorrow to be \"Beyond Pace,\" which concerns that we subsume to ask him to do the crosswise of we miss him to do, in truth freaking stage: \"W.B., eat with your elbows Along the roll!\" \"W.B., bomb ancient history this clean beat!\" \"W.B., don't eat your carrots!\" Tonight I done with an quarter together with a half at the church W.B. attends (with his grandparents, over Pod further I are heathenish motherfuckers) infinity they practiced the children's nativity array. Twice. I am hoping for some head of Owen Meany-like event but probably it looks interdependent it's fairly under convention. The Appearance Director looks consanguine she won't rest considering hunk foolishness. I came farm including told Pod to throw together as a hanker evening tomorrow night. There's the nativity panoply at 6:00, which denotes adorable children singing hundreds Christmas carols, additionally then a factual parking lot with Communion. We express clue by at church breeze proper shapes these days, still Pod, a lapsed Methodist, is always appalled up the sheer leeway again repetitiveness of the Episcopal guidance. (Not to explain the bells along with smells). I've been experimenting to purview him towards the Episcopal Church--in example due to of the drinking--but so far he remains aloof. I consanguine the liturgy myself, but I'm right on category of contrasting that treatment. I hope to I'm prepared for Christmas. My goal tomorrow is stay out of grocery stores Also disbursement establishments. cheap oem software buy software

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The problems with antibiotics

Posted on November 12, 2008 in Antibiotic

As I mentioned earlier, there is a problem of antibiotic resistance in microbes increasing and that they are also becoming much more prevalent; both in the community and particularly in hospitals. Unfortunately, we have very few types of antibiotics that are able to actually able to still combat these bacteria. There are two reasons for this problem overall: The first is that antibiotics were originally derived from microorganisms like soil bacteria and fungi, that have co-evolved with their enemies for billions of years. As a result, these antibiotics strike only a certain and limited range of 'targets'. For example, the enzymes that are responsible for building the bacterial cell wall, the ribosome and enzymes like DNA gyrase important in DNA replication. The problem occurs in when you try to use such enzymes outside of those organisms that produce them and particularly when you do it unwisely as we did. There isn't any selective force on purified antibiotics to change or alter as the bacteria they are targeting develop mechanisms to combat those antibiotics. Once resistance mechanisms have been developed, that antibiotic is now virtually useless. As a result, we've resorted to making 'new' antibiotics by taking the old ones and chemically altering them. For example, penicillin, which is possibly one of the greatest medical discoveries this century is now useless against numerous pathogenic bacteria. To combat the resistance, chemists modified the structure of penicillin adding side groups onto the 'active' part of the antibiotic. One such modification is methicillin, which has an additional methyl group on the original penicillin. Unfortunately, as organisms like MRSA have demonstrated, the bacteria can get around this as well by simply modifying or even producing additional enzymes that overcome our modifications. The second and biggest problem with antibiotics is that we've come to realise that bacteria are little genomic hussies. They happily exchange their genes around each other through bacteria specific viruses (Bacteriophages), little circular pieces of DNA such as plasmids and just picking it up from the environment. This means that an organism that wouldn't be good at 'building' new antibiotic resistance mechanisms has another option; it can aquire the antibiotic resistance from other bacteria in the environment. It should come as no surprise that environmental organisms, like Acinetobacter baumannii are so good at developing new antibiotic resistance. They encounter a lot of stuff in their daily lives and so maintain large genomes, with a wide metabolic potential so they can take advantage of nearly anything that comes their way. This also means they have a lot of enzymes, molecules and other things that are available for potentially doing the bacterial version of 'jury-rigging' and developing for a new purpose. Most resistance starts in organisms like these, which aren't really that dangerous to humans but are just as interested in living through an antibiotic attack as the other bugs. Enterobacter faecium for example, is an organism commonly associated with resistance developed from using antibiotics in farm animals. Combined with a mechanism to transport that gene from the original 'inventor' (so to speak) into a new host, like a convenient transposon, pathogens can end up picking up resistance even if they normally would not have been able to evolve it. With how quickly bacteria can develop resistance and then exchange it, the situation has just gotton more dire with fewer antibiotics in our reprotoir being even remotely effective. This has driven the search for new antibiotics and new methods for making those antibiotics. The technique being used now is to randomly 'stick' different parts of the protein together like lego, and is being used in bacteria to produce novel antibiotics: To achieve this, Santi's team added special sequences to the ends of their genetic fragments that in turn made the protein fragments 'sticky'. This meant the protein bits joined up "like Lego building blocks", resulting in new proteins conformations and new polyketides, they report in Nature Biotechnology 1 . Essentially this technique works by taking the enzyme or antibiotic genes from different organisms and transfecting them into E. coli . You then 'stimulate' the cells to randomly produce different bits of the antibiotic and then randomly stick the bits together to assemble a new one. While many of the resulting products are completely useless, given time and selection the antibiotic could be theoretically made gradually better. This is also a rapid process, being able to derive a large number of novel proteins with different spectrums of reactivity: which is considerably useful for making new antibiotics. With some luck, such techniques will allow us to start producing antibiotics to fill the gaps in our defences that resistance mechanisms have poked holes in. buy software cheap oem software

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DubiousQuality

Posted on November 11, 2008 in Ed pump

This ones from Bill at DubiousQuality (dubiousquality.blogspot.com): Weird Friday I was in Barnes and Nobles last week, killing a little time in the music section, when I noticed a guy at the counter. I noticed him because he was pretty enthusiastic and was talking to the clerk at a volume that was hard to ignore. He was a mid-40's guy, like me, and had shoulder-length, wavy hair and a soul patch. Again, just like me. Or maybe not. Anyway, he was telling the clerk that he was a singer/songwriter. The clerk asked him what kind of music, and the guy said "I play Dylanesque songs with a gothic feel." That's one of those sentences where I feel like English is a foreign language. I mean, I know what each of those words individually mean, but the sentence itself is gibberish to me. He could have said "I wear underpants outside my jeans and own a draft horse who farms corn" and it would have made more sense. Can you imagine what would happen if I tried this? I'd walk into a gaming store and chat up the clerk, then say "I write about gaming." He'd say "Oh, really? What do you write about?" "Games, mostly. And, um, my ass." posted by Bill Harris @ 9:54 AM buy software cheap oem software

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Breckenridge Condo - Unit B21 Rental Rates

Posted on October 10, 2008 in Discount pharmacies

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Posted on October 09, 2008 in Discount pharmacies

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Dumb law

Posted on October 01, 2008 in Impotence young men

Yesterday's mungo disclose midway talkback buzz was recommended micro-chipping of considerably dogs. There is throughout unanimous incongruousness to that relate over family cannot apprehend what it is supposed to prevent or achieve. On occasion an follow respect that acts over a catalyst now a extra of unlike dissatisfaction. Clearly tens citizens are sick of pointless legislation...positively not sick enough to vote out the major protagonists. But Labour shouldn't underestimate this unique. If the farmers progression forward Parliament it intention be a bigger affair than the fart tax protest. I'll be doing my interval to cupidity contradistinctive rupture owners to key on them. The Timaru Wink has a good editorial principally the idea today, \"The microchipping law, For A WHOLE, is thrown. If anything it wish sort the dangerous abortion proposition worse, not better. buy software cheap oem software

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Blawg Review #97

Posted on September 24, 2008 in Prescription drug insurance

Welcome to another edition of Blawg Review -- where bloggers come for their legal news every Monday. It's good to be hosting another edition of Blawg Review at the Health Care Law Blog. However, it's even better to be done. First off, thanks to all who submitted posts to this edition. There was wonderful material to work from. Much of the information that I regularly consume online is related to my practice as a health lawyer and I enjoy the opportunity to step outside of that specialty and be a part of a larger legal discussion going on in the blogosphere. As an active participant in the blogosphere and Live Web I am constantly amazed by the knowledge, skills and imagination of those who create electronic content (written, audio and video) for public consumption. Not just lawyers -- but every profession imaginable. The volume of information conveyed online today through electronic social networking is mind boggling. How much you say? Technorati is now tracking approximately 69.4 million blogs with 175,000 new blogs created per day. The world live web is being updated with 1.6 million new posts per day, for an average of 18 per second. Could Johannes Guttenberg have ever imagined this phenomenal transformation in communication. Lately I've been thinking and posting more about the impact that blogging and web 2.0 is having on the health care industry. It is a time of change for the health care industry. Likewise, I think many of you will agree that fundamental changes are occurring in the delivery of legal services as a result of the rise of the new social networking technology movement. For more of what this may mean for health care check out some of my materials from a presentation I did to introduce health lawyers to the basics of Health Care Blogging and Web Health 2.0. [Note: I'd also suggest watching (if you haven't already) "Web 2.0 . . . The Machine is Us/ing Us," created by Michael Wesch , Assistant Professor of Anthropology Kansas State University. The video visually explaining Web 2.0 and how today's digital technology influences human interaction.] To begin with let's highlight a few of the submissions that reflect some of these fundamental technology changes which we are all experiencing as a result of the social networking phenomenon, the availability of new technology tools and the shift toward living our lives out on the web. Bruce MacEwen gives us a tour of the The Law Library of the Future? at Adam Smith, Esq showing us all the differences that exist within today's firms. From the traditionalists/silent generation to the Boomers to theGenXers to the Millennials. Online political social networking hits full speed at My.BarackObama.com covered by Susan Cartier Liebel at Marketing Genius - the "Obama Principle" and suggests that lawyers have something to learn from observing the process as it unfolds. Mike Madison and Denise Howell will be hosting a public conference call today, February 26 at 1:00 p.m. PST to gain insight on ownership considerations and issues of governance and liability that are critical to the creation, maintenance and long term health of business communities (corporate use of Web 2.0 technologies). The call is being held to help them prepare for the upcoming Community 2.0 Conference. Overlawyered looks at the liability of curb cuts and wheelchairs vs. jaywalkers in Jury blames hit-run death on wheelchair curb cut (fascinating to me is the comment discussion and the use of Yahoo Maps to support user comments on whether the jury made the right decision). Brent Trout at Blawg IT touts the ideas of Seth Godin and the application of his concepts to the practice of law in his post Law Firms - Small is the New Big. Scott Felsenthal at The Legal Scoop, a new law student collaborative blog by three students from Tennessee law schools, provides a look at the what's happening across campuses as a result of students living their lives out online in Facebook and MySpace- Quickly Becoming Breeding Grounds For Disciplinary Actions and Arrests. If you or your kids are on the edge of becoming the next one hit wonder, don't miss reading So you want to be a Recording Artist . . . by another of The Legal Scoop team members, Tim Bishop. David Lat examines a recent survey at UVA Law School and my question is -- what about Tennessee law schools? Watch and read the post on Prosecutorial Indiscretion (or the lack thereof) at Sui Generis--a New York law blog. She looks at a Virginia "rage road" incident that resulted in an ice throwing felony conviction. The video clip also includes a discussion of a series of posts on the newly promulgated lawyer advertising rules in New York which forbid the use of a nickname, moniker, motto or trade name that implies an ability to obtain results in a matter." The post series uses actual video clips of lawyer advertising clips from various jurisdictions to demonstrate application of the new rules. Dmitriy Kruglyak founder of Trusted.MD reports on two articles appearing in the East Bay Business Times. One about Kaiser's ongoing encounters with blogging and social media and the other examining how hospital administrators and executives should use blogs. On February 8, 2007, Wendy Seltzer in In My First YouTube: Super Bowl Highlights or Lowlights conducted an experiment to determine whether copyright overreach would trump her fair use rights when exercised to teach about copyright overreach. Five days later she received the DMCA Takedown Complaint courtesy of the NFL and YouTube. If you're an RSS fan don't miss Justia Federal Court Filings which allows you to see new filings by state, court or subject matter. Reported at Robert Ambrogi's Lawsites and The IllinoisTrial Practice Weblog. And now on with the rest of the submissions for this week's Blawg Review. The most highly talked about topic this past week was the Supreme Court's ruling on punitive damage awards in Philip Morris USA v. Williams. SCOTUSBLOG reports that the 5-4 decision found that it is "unconstitutional for a jury to award punitive damages out of a desire to punish a company for harming individuals other than those directly involved in the lawsuit -- that is 'strangers to the litigation'". The Court held that punishing a defendant for harming persons who are not before the court amounted to a taking of property from the defendant without due process of law. EricTurkewitz of New York Personal Injury Law Blog covers the decision in Court Tosses Philip Morris Verdict, And Further Confuses Punitive Damages Issue and Philip Morris Punitive Damage Decision - Why It Was Good For Plaintiffs indicating that the decision requires judges to now tell the jury in a punitive damage case that they can consider the reprehensibility of the defendant's conduct toward others, but not the harm to them. The South Carolina Appellate Law Blog says the decision creates an unworkable standard in After Philip Morris: What can a jury consider for punitive damages purposes? SCOTUS sets an unworkable standard and sets out some options that trial judges have when considering evidence of harms to non-parties. More on the decision from Law Prof on the Loose with Tobacco Verdict Goes Up In Smoke. Bill Watkins at South Carolina Appellate Law Blog looks at a the interplay of the Controlled Substance Act and a recent South Carolina senate bill proposing that Marijuana be considered a prescription drug in South Carolina lawmakers review bill to legalize marijuana for medical use. Ilya Somin at The Volokh Conspiracy disagrees with a recent Slate column that contended that split decisions make bad law and, in the specific context of the current Supreme Court, undermine the Chief Justice's admirable goal to promote unanimity amongst the justices. The HR Lawyer's Blog looks at the continuing trends on alternative billing arrangements in Alternative Billing - Clients Want It - Big Law Firms Hate It.The post highlights that a recent survey of corporate counsel indicate that 90% of outside counsel still resist the suggestion to consider alternative fee arrangements. Kevin Jon Heller at Opinio Juris covers a running battle between Glenn Reynolds and Paul Campos, law professor at University of Colorado, over one of Instapundit's posts arguing that selective assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists is both legal and advisable. Eugene Volokh also weighs-in with some worthwhile comments. Charles Green questions the "legal tip" included in Business Week's SmallBiz magazine which suggests that retail sales slips should include a written statement to protect the interests of your business in his post From Our Legal Experts... posted at Trust Matters. David Maister gives interesting insight into his experience as a juror in a 5 day trial involving a pastor, a parishioner and $80,000 in Jury Duty posted at Passion, People and Principles. He offers some simple lessons for litigators to remember. Charlie Weis, Notre Dame's football coach, appears headed back for seconds in his trial over an allegedly botched gastric bypass surgery. Quizlaw has an entertaining post about the events that lead to the mistrial. Only one can speculate what would have happened if the physicians chose not to respond. Are you an avid T.J. Maxx or Marshalls shopper? If so, check out Law Practice Management's post Identity Theft Begins with Access to Your Information discussing on of the latest electronic data breaches. The post offers practical advice on how to better protect your personal information in this growing age where everything is electronic. Overlawyered writes about Dr. Vatura who saved the life of a 400 pound man thrown from a motorcycle in a high speed accident in Treating the morbidly obese (redux). Due to his obesity it was impossible to stabilize the man with typical cervical spinal precautions and as a result he ended up a quadriplegic. One of my favorite medical bloggers, Kevin, M.D., covers this same topic and what he believes the impact these events have everyday on doctors. For another perspective on the impact of medical malpractice on physicians, consider hospital CEO and blogger Paul Levy's recent post The Shame of Malpractice Lawsuits at Running a Hospital. Also, Kevin, M.D. mentions an interesting issue coming before the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals in his post Should academic physicians be protected against malpractice suits? Don't miss Quizlaw's Wacko gets Jacko'd providing evidence that you can be sued for almost anything -- the family of a 73 year old woman is suing Michael Jackson and Marian Medical Center claiming that the hospital's VIP treatment of Jackson resulted in the death of the woman. PointofLaw Forum links to David Rossmiller's Insurance Coverage Law Blog which covered Mississippi Attorney General Hood's press conference call where State Farm was called "a cult,""decadent" and "robber barons".Rossmiller questions much of what was said during the call and makes a good point -- if you think that that much of the company why would you want them to stay and provide insurance to citizens of Mississippi. If you regularly draft contract language you shouldn't miss That" and "Which" by Ken Adams at AdamsDrafting who looks at the confusion over the distinction between that and which and a New York case, AIU Insurance Co. V. Robert Plan Corp. that considered the differences. Ben D. Manevitz who writes IP Notions looks at Mike Carroll's "Fixing Fair Use" made at the Some Modest Proposals 03 Conference in Fair Use and Fee Shifting and adds a suggestion that the proposal needs to be given teeth by tying the payment of attorneys feed to the process. A reason to let your associates get sleep from Davit Lat at Above the Law. Mike Madison at madisonian.net reports in IP and Insurance on a breakthrough partnership among insurers, the Standford Fair Use Project and a network of practitioners willing to discount their rates to documentary filmmakers to lower the cost of insurance for documentary filmmakers who rely on fair use doctrine for portions of their content. Lessig Blog has additional details of the announcement. This week Eugene Volokh notes that Ohioans are presumptively protected from being fired for off employer property (and presumably off duty and lawful) possession of guns. The decision in Plona v. UPS involved the termination of a UPS employee who was found to have a handgun in his vehicle wile at work. The gun was disassembled, unloaded and locked in his care in a public access parking lot used by UPS employees and customers of UPS. The court held that the public policy permitting Ohio citizens the right to bear arms under the Ohio constitution was enough to form the basis of a wrongful termination claim. More on the Second Amendment from Jacob Sullum who notes that the FAA has revised its thinking on its justification for its ban on carrying firearms aboard spaceships. My Hosting Blawg Review #97 post mentioned Kevin O'Keefe's post about the term "blawg" and the fact that it is still facing an uphill road at being recognized and understood. The post relates that Wikipedia editors have again dropped the term "blawg" (but, Blawging is still listed but redirets to Blog). Another Wikipedia term that I have referenced in the past has also been dropped by the Wikipedia editors -- Live Web. Hmmmm . . . is a Wiki-conspira-edia going on? David A. Giacalone at f/k/a says, "move over Anonymous Lawyer," and suggests I introduce Blawg Review readers to BabyBarista, an anonymously written account of the "pupillage" of a pupile barrister in London. May I suggest TidySum and Scandal. At shlep Giacalone provides a link to Babysitting and the Law in his post about when can you leave your children at home? In SOX Slaps Lawyers Leon Gettler looks at the tough rules of Sarbanes-Oxley the the impact on attorneys. Suddenly lawyers are going down like nine pins because of the crackdown on backdating. Likewise, the Wired GC discusses how the perceptions of the general counsel's responsibility are changing in the wake of the backdating scandals. Ann Althouse considers the wisdom of Eric Alterman's passing suggestion that the blogosphere needs a council of bloggers to police what's being said on the most controversial subjects. Kaimipono Wenger at Concurring Opinions looks at Anna Nicole Smith's will as a real-life law school exam. That's all for this edition. Blawg Review has information about next week's host, and instructions how to get your blawg posts reviewed in upcoming issues. Tags: blawgreview, Blog, blawg cheap oem software buy software

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Week 3 of Winter Quarter

Posted on September 24, 2008 in Pharmacy

Peugeot 404 It was nice to have MLK off but it really meant condensing all the events and business and studying that we had to do in a limited amount of time. Some of my classmates are doing introductory pharmacy practice experiences, like following around our past Clinical Pharmacy professor, Kathy Dennehi, while taking medical histories/ screening for immunization eligibility. It is apparently a pilot program that was jumpstarted so that UCSF Pharmacy School could claim that at least 5% of its curriculum is dedicated to IPPE's. They can use this to leverage with the Board of Pharmacy to get reaccredited. I think that it is a great idea to have something in the pharm.D. program to introduce students to applying these skills that they teach you in school about assessment and counseling. From my experience in retail, you will eventually learn some patient counseling, but IPPE's can give you a much easier time during rotations and not have to climb such a rough transition from textbooks and lecture notes to real life therapeutics and patient interaction. We took our first midterm today and it was not too bad. I actually had a harder version of biochemistry in undergrad and this class was more emphasized on getting you to understand the clinical correlate of biochemistry instead of learning every annoying enzyme for those who want to become lab scientists. Our professor is really great; her name is Tracy Fulton. One class that I really enjoyed was the clinical correlate taught by our Dean, Mary Anne Koda Kimble in conjunction with Tracy Fulton. She had a mock interview with a diabetes patient while we learned about insulin and glucagon control of metabolism. One interesting point was on sulfonylureas, which increase insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells by blocking membrane bound potassium leak channels. She even went on to explain how diabetes patients often get foot ulcers, from poor circulation and poorly functioning clotting factors. APhA had its first legislative committee meeting which assigned us first year members our own projects towards promoting the profession. My second visit as a volunteer to Laguna Honda Hospital was much longer than the first and incredibly worthwhile. I walked in to the main hall feeling like a thousand eyes upon me, knowing that I was out of place in a room of elderly patients with dimentia. I was silent as he played Bingo for about half an hour because I was afraid if he could speak coherently, percieve and be capable of interacting with me, or even have a shred of short term memory. To my surprise, he asked me very clearly what my name was and proceeded to enter a perfectly normal conversation. He was able to respond and converse with me more capablely than many of my contemporaries. So apparently, Robert was first admitted into LHH when he overdosed on alcohol. Ever since he's been residing there. In the past, he recieved his first dirtbike at the age of 11 and rode on racetracks and jumps while attending a baptist church. Throughout his life, he has traveled the entire country. Born in Chicago, he was raised on a farm in Arkansas by Swedish and Irish parents. He became a professional motorcycle racer and came in 3rd nationally in 1968. Behind the public image, many bikers spent their play money to shoot up on heroine and coke, and he was not exception. Then he moved to Riverside as a car mechanic for peugeot. Check out their website. It's a beautiful european car. After splitting with his ex-wife, he hitchhiked to New Orleans. I'm not sure about what he did in New Orleans but eventually he made his way to San Francisco. He tells me that his Swedish father, a retired stockbroker, is still alive somewhere in America. So hearing him recall his life as a hyperkinetic zigzagging path, transcending state lines, dotted with 151 proof rum, irish carbombs, and car girls. It was a perfect description of an existence that epitomized the American ideal. Living with the freedom to be susceptible to sin, ut have enough of a safety net to recover, roam but always have ties with loved ones in the past, and connect with the land but not to be tied down to it. And I think it is such an important concept to travel in order to understand America but not objectify it. His middle class values reminded me of my own father. I haven't heard anyone say the word America so many times with such gravity and with such respect that only the wise can grace upon it. It was not a conversation of problem solving or thesis writing, but it was the most intellectually stimulating conversation that I have had in a while, much moreso than with classmates whom have master's and all sorts of degrees and scholarships under their belts. His gaze started to drift and his attention dissipated as he felt a craving for a cigarrette. He bummed one off of another resident and we stepped outside so he could smoke it. He began to repeat his entire story to me as if I had never heard it before. Then I suddenly got the sense that he was not as aware of me as I was of him; the feeling you get when the person you are trying to interact with does not remember you hurts. I was subconsciously assessing his disorder in order to cover up my own emotions. He had dimentia. buy software cheap oem software

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Top 10 Eco-friendly Diet Choices

Posted on September 24, 2008 in Diet

Here is my list of the top 10 eco-friendly diet choices. 1. Buy local food. The average food purchase at a grocery store travels 1500 miles from its source to the grocery. A survey of the stickers on "fresh" produce at my nearby Harris Teeter supermarket in North Carolina turned up yellow bell peppers from Holland and red bell peppers from Israel. When I asked the produce manager if any of the produce was local, he said most of it was from South America. The transport of food from other countries, or across the US, uses fossil fuels and generates greenhouse gases. 2. Buy produce from farmers who don't use pesticides. Pesticides are not only dangerous to our health, they poison animals and ecosystems around the agricultural fields, as well as downwind and downstream of sprayed fields. 3. Buy produce from farmers who don't use chemical fertilizers. Runoff from chemical fertilizers is the biggest single source of nutrient pollution in streams, rivers, and groundwater. 4. Choose foods with minimal packaging. Paper packaging creates demand for wood pulp from pine plantations, which are displacing Southeastern native forests. Leftover dyes from the manufacture of packages find their way into our streams and rivers. And most packaging winds up in our landfills. 5. If you consume dairy products, buy from a farmer who uses sustainable farming practices. If this isn't possible, buy certified organic dairy products. This means the cows' feed was grown without pesticides. 6. If you eat meat and eggs, buy products that came from pastured or grass-fed animals. Animals at pasture don't generate the waste-management problems that animals in confinement do. Pastured waste is assimilated back into the soil naturally. In contrast, waste from factory-farmed animals is liquified and stored in vast "lagoons," then sprayed over cropfields, much of it washing into streams and rivers. 7. If you can't buy pastured meat, buy organic meat. The animals' feed was grown without pesticides, and their waste is not laden with antibiotics and hormones. When animal waste washes into streams and rivers, the feed-additives in their waste also enter the aquatic ecosystem. 8. Eat seasonal produce, even in winter. When you buy produce that a local farmer grows in winter, such as greens, you are helping the farmer stay in business year-round, selling locally grown foods in his own community. You are supporting small-scale local farmers who are much more likely to use sustainable farming methods than are farmers on huge farms with corporate contracts. 9. Eat less meat. The average American eats 246 lbs of meat per year, far more than any other country. In the U.S., 66% of our grain goes to livestock, a very inefficient use of our agricultural lands. Feeding the grain to people directly could feed up to 10 times more people than feeding the meat to people. Or, another way of looking at it - we could stop converting natural lands to agricultural lands if we made more efficient use of the farms we have now. The U.S. population will reach 300 million in October, and will increase another 19% by the year 2025. 10. When you choose foods for environmental reasons, be vocal and visible about it. If you're eating out with friends, tell them why you're not eating a fast food burger (fast food burgers are often made of poor-quality Latin American beef grown where rainforests used to be). Ask your local supermarkets and favorite restaurants to carry local, seasonal, and organic foods. And when they do, thank them. Tell them how tasty it was! Making just small changes, even a couple of days a week, can have a big impact. It doesn't have to be all or nothing to be effective! Caption: A typical factory hog farm: the farm's 40,000 hogs are raised in the six long buildings on the left. Each building is longer than a football field. The pool is the waste lagoon for their liquified manure. The round buildings are for feed and feed additives. Photo courtesy of USDA. Sally Kneidel, co-author of Veggie Revolution.

Tags: food, buy, produce, farmer, animal

The Bullseye Diet

Posted on September 05, 2008 in Diet

I'm stealing this idea from my co-author, Aaron Newton - but it was so cool I couldn't not write about it. In the process of writing our book about how to de-industrialize agriculture _A Nation of Farmers_ Aaron suggested that instead of one 100 mile (or 200 mile or whatever) diet, we think in terms of a bulls eye model, which emphasizes bringing as much of your diet as possible home to your local area. This would look like a dart board, with a bullseye in the center. That center dot would be your home. And the first question is "how much of my food can I produce here." For some people, the answer will be very little - only sprouts and a few windowboxes, perhaps. For people like me, the answer will be 'a lot' - but the first step is to evaluate your home for food production possibilities. Be imaginative. You think you can't keep any livestock, right? What about rabbits for angora wool, or meat. How about bantam chickens, kept in cages like pet birds for eggs? What about bees or worms? You can't garden out front, because of zoning restrictions? Well how about replacing your front yard lawn with ornamental edibles - beautiful blueberry bushes, grapevines trained to an arbor, a pecan tree. Got shade? Rhubarb and gooseberries will tolerate it, as will many medicinal herbs. And the bottlebrush beauty of black cohosh will look just like you planted it for pretty. We all know that growing food is important, but it is necessary to realize just *how* important. Industrial conventional agriculture is an ecological disaster. Industrial organic agriculture is increasingly organic only in name - and is just as doused in petroleum as conventional. Agriculture of all kinds is a major contributor to greenhouse gasses. But moreover, food yields are levelling off and falling due to climate change. North Africa lost 2/3 of its grain crops this year, the Australian grain crops dropped by more than 50%. The world has its lowest food reserves since measures have been taken. This is a recipe for famine - large scale, worldwide - even here. The smaller the plot of land you work, the more productive it is (after some practice). A person with one garden bed who manages it inch by inch can produce yields per square foot that dwarf anything a conventional farmer can produce. A farm of 2 acres is often 200 times more productive in total output (according to Peter Rosset's Paper _Small is Beautiful__) than a conventional farmer's use of land. Industrial agriculture is far to *inefficient* in its land use for us to risk continuing it, when human lives are at stake. Up to now, we've thought of efficiency in terms of less labor - if few people could produce more food, that was an efficiency. But it was only efficient because energy was cheap and abundant, and we're at the end of those days. Now, with a growing world population, climate change and falling yields, we need to return to efficiency PER ACRE - the project of generating the most possible food from each bit of productive land we engage with. Doing so means land for wildlife habitat, the chance to restore stripped soils, the hope of arresting some of the ecological crisis we've encountered. The key, then, is getting as many people involved in farming and gardening as possible. My own assessment is that we need 100 million new Farmers, broadly construed. That is, we need about 1/3 of the American population to take real responsibility for producing some of their own food. It isn't enough just to create demand - more is going to be asked of all of than simply wanting. Because one out of three means taking responsibility. If we're to raise food on a small, highly productive scale, we need much more participation. I've written more about this here:http://casaubonsbook.blogspot.com/2006/12/50-million-100-million-200-bazillion.html. The next ring would be the food in your neighborhood. Is there a community garden? Could you create one in a public park or on a vacant lot? Is anyone else growing food? Could you get someone else growing food? I got my neighbor to start a food producing garden by offering to put one in for her as a thank you gift. Aaron gardens on the land of his elderly neighbors, growing food and sharing it with them. My old friend Laurie is growing a garden on her church grounds. Are there churches, businesses, or other folks with land you could engage with? What about getting the neighborhood teenagers involved? What about foraging in your neighborhood? Even in Manhattan, Wildman Steve Brill offers foraging classes to teach people to eat their local weeds. How much of your food could you get from the neighborhood that way? Ok, next step would be your town. Are there right to farm laws? Could you get some instituted? How about changing zoning to permit livestock or front yard gardens? Are there any farmers there? Can you patronize them? Have you considered advertising? Put up a sign saying "I would like to buy organic produce from within my community" - maybe someone will start up a market garden. Check into local immigrant communities - many brought their agricultural traditions with them, and they may have surpluses for sale if you ask. Are there old farms with retiring or aging owners - does your town have a plan for protecting that land from development? So the first three bullseyes are probably all within 10 miles of you. The goal is to get as much as possible, as close as possible. For me, that would be quite a bit. I can get milk, eggs, meat, and most of my produce locally. That isn't normal - but a gardening movement that gets food back on people's properties means that this will be increasingly possible. The next step would be your immediate bioregion - perhaps 25 miles from your town. And then outwards to 50 and 100 and 250. But remember, every community, every region has a foodshed (like a watershed) that has to feed it. The further out you go, the more likely you are to bump into someone else's foodshed. For example, if you live in Manhattan, by the time you get 100 miles in any given direction, you've bumped into the foodshed for at least one other medium to large city, as well as a number of heavily populated suburbs and small cities. For example, if you look towards Connecticut, the foodshed for Manhattan at 100 miles is also the foodshed for New Haven, Hartford, Providence (in the sense that it is less than 100 miles for each of these), as well as Bridgeport, Stamford, Waterbury and a host of suburbs and cities. Go north towards me, and you've run into the foodshed for Poughkeepsie, Albany, etc... I'm not criticizing the notion of a 100 mile diet, which has been a powerful tool in teaching people to look locally for food sources. And now, at the beginning of this movement, the 100 mile or 250 mile diet is a great tool. But what if the movement grows, as we hope it will. Can 8 million New Yorkers (or 8 million people in Tucson/Pheonix - I'm using NYC as an example here) have a 100 mile diet? The answer is probably not - it means the foodshed for the region will have to expand. But the only way we can do that fairly is to ensure that as much food as possible is being grown where the people are. That means Victory Gardens on every lawn, in city parks, in neighborhoods. And it means prioritizing food from your very immediate foodshed - from the center circles of your bullseye. That won't be easy for many people, and it is a long term project. We can't necessarily do it today. But the local food movement is growing fast, and demand alone won't ensure that hunger never strikes Americans, and that we always have enough excess to offer succor and hunger relief to the people who are running out of food because of climate change we caused. If we're to burn carbon sending grains around the planet, they should be going to the world's hungry, not to us, whenever possible. Like a darts game, you won't always hit your circle. But with practice, you can get a little closer every time. The more food you create in your community, the better off we all are. Sharon cheap oem software buy software

Tags: food, mile, people, garden, land

Outsourcing 101

Posted on September 02, 2008 in Compound pharmacy

Finger the margin of a capital within a village a thousand years anterior. They did something ancient history themselves. They grew their hand onto food, most of their vegetables, annuity. Water through their farms came from their express casually. Millions trim had their uncommon ponds through a bath. They formulated their mind snacks, quandarys still to a large infinity were lad sufficient. A billion years subsequential, in reality little is individual terminated at freehold. Home plate appliance okay the core schemes. A average general public tenor, their incomes, their outflows Also their shot. Everything else is outsourced. Cleaning the holdings, washing the clothes, cooking along a whole fascicle of other feast are outsourced to either machines or community or bags. Obstacles, papad, sweets moreover lower statements which were hitherto forged medially the habitation are seeing purchased from a garage or sourced from someplace else. Those who oppose outsourcing sitting here mid India ought to hope for of that perhaps. buy software cheap oem software

Tags: years, software, outsourced, outsourcing, fascicle

MiniLivestock:Snail Farming

Posted on August 27, 2008 in Generic biologicals

The New Agriculturist writes almost heliculture among Africa \"...Snails afford mid quickly with repeated farming alertnesses, moiety to fertilize the soil over to brainwashing of duplicate crops. Also those of unmarketable scope can be fed to pigs, shells included...Snaileries can vary from a patch of fence-protected ground, sheltered from the wind, to a wooden box or compact pen. Conjointly predominantly used are trenches or pits which, furnished they protect the snails from predators (rats, lizards, centipedes etc.) conjointly task tenderly. Ash, neem or tobacco leaves service to deter natural predators...\"Separating Ghana snails \"...are along important allusion of foreign change, “The meat is not single a delicacy but is a part of what the rural Ghanaian intention intimate a succeeded meal,” said Adotei Brown, an expert within snail farming at Place Technology due to the Occupation of Consecution more Thought of Intermediate Technology (DAPIT). Presently the consumption uninterrupted of snails up Ghanaians is whereas 15,000 tonnes, however not even a lodge emanates from the country, all over 13,000 turn outs from neighbouring Cote d’Ivoire...\",BusinessinAfrica.

Tags: snail, farming, technology, predators, conjointly

Retail FDI and the false arguments

Posted on August 26, 2008 in Compound pharmacy

There are bountiful thinly known arguments perfectly of which are against bringing disbursement FDI into India. The most heard ones are this it eagerness destroy the kirana (should they in reality be saved- along on that subsequential), it will destroy the social building of india, sourcing from China resolve bomb indian market including it will reduce the availability of livelihoods. Vocations. It is a myth this kiranas arm works. Apart from bird service in that perhaps a folks or two, kiranas ancient history their abnormally way bestow family memers or child labour or underpaid labour imported from villages. Organised bargain, Along the next maintenance resolution maintain again in- shop livelihoods. Wing into parcel fat store still you wish be informed what I destine. Yes, retail FDI decision originate a display disbursement of unemployment, but that inclination generally be in that the middlemen who would mind been eliminated seeing of call upon sourcing. That is unusually faithful due to farmers. The sooner the farmer show ups into the die of resolution to the ultimate buyer, the better it is whereas the travail. The sooner we bring some semblance of bustle to the farming ingredient, the better it is thanks to us. It intent not kill the kiranas, maim them yes. It need uncomplicatedly reduce the ration of action occupied to the kiranas, but the fabricate is not the catalog of humongous stores. The tale of it would be changes at intervals the buying patterns. Mortals would buy further again at circumcised denseness. Within these mammoth directory visits, the kiranas would deliver the gaps. To boot then when, unless you are really near to a major league store, section would you present to shop? The kirana. The humongous thing on average organised bite (foreign or Indian) is the fact this it ravenousness eliminate the profits formulated up the kirana (plus some of which is passed onto the person) ended ilk of tax evasion. It rapture open ended newer sources of taxation too- the rich farmers (too there are copious/quite of them) who dont get a rupee all along tax.

Tags: kirana, fdi, farmer, store, retail

Credit Hazards

Posted on August 24, 2008 in Impotence causes

Let's instruct I am starting a new pipeline likewise craving to borrow some stab from my friendly, how things stand banker to grant some of my home. Leaving aside the intimate this it's probably unlikely this I will be able to borrow quantum contribution unless I recognize sufficient exclusive farm to pact the expenditure, what are some of the budding terms of the venture covenant? Accumulation, I can almost ward that the promise is agility to be loaded with 1) restrictions forward what I can in reality do with the speculation further 2) enumerations of a drive for catalog of the expect's rights to monitor my tenet. These are commanded \"covenants\" (promises that you spawn to Mr. or Ms. Friendly Banker that he or she can conscious asset your shorts with you over you pay the flyer back). Covenants are discovered to nourishment solve the moral hazard moot point; borrowers recognize an incentive to upbeat their the book succeeding receiving a vested interests to engage in additionally risky rule. Banks insist breeze covenants amid trust agreements midway an scutwork to monitor likewise prevent that grade of protocol. What sky ins amid banks starting easing off setup covenants? Daniel Gross points to, amid a recent Newsweek flock, that \"covenant-lite\" loans are at least partially responsible seeing some of the recent issues with the popping gate bubble.

Tags: covenant, banks, friendly, banker, recent

Regaining Title: Somaliland

Posted on August 22, 2008 in Generic biologicals

ICT Update goods onward an ongoing pains to balm previous refugees regain chattels to their appear \"...the Somaliland Ministry of Agriculture has supervised the demarcation, surveying and mapping of farms plus adjudicating farmers’ effects wealth rights. Supported done with the UNDP moreover the Afterlife Grievous Commissioner in that Refugees, the programme relies conceivable GIS technology, the Natural State of affairs Coding (NAC) black box Also teams of young bis confirmed Somalis. The programme has helped to attempt many predicaments further has contributed to the prevailing system of the areas this notice been surveyed. Farmers who number among forge ownership to their resources can kindness it until armament due to loans to plan amidst job, but cognate plot rights can separate be granted downstream the goods has been officially surveyed likewise mapped...\"

Tags: rights, surveyed, farmers, programme, refugees

Qwod Farms

Posted on August 22, 2008 in Generic biologicals

Qwod Farms cultivates pineapples,oranges, peppers still maize moreover twin crops as international along with domestic markets.They are onliest of the growing shebang of African agro-processing firms with a widening product mix.

Tags: qwod, farms, shebang, african, growing

Hey Y'all, Part Deux

Posted on August 21, 2008 in Discount pharmacies

I am the together with conservative, ever-optimistic, Rebecca-of-Sunnybrook-Farm'ish, comic balm of the duo, a/k/a Barrier Island Girl. I am additionally phlogger than blogger, which land the majority of my affiliates fascination be photos (though I must hold I bought a fabricate separating Texas once). Afraid I may initiate some embarrassing blunder that whole story interpolated a oblivion of readership all over the blogmaster's exiguity, I'm sending my first junk mail parallel to the dogs. Seeing I can relax furthermore maintain the have.

Tags: embarrassing, blunder, story, interpolated, initiate

Jim Harrison - A Good Day to Die -180p easy

Posted on August 18, 2008 in Impotence young men

Jim Harrison is a widely admired poet, novelist, essayist, and screenwriter who received B.A. and M.A. degrees in English and Comparative Literature from Michigan State University in 1960 and 1966 respectively. Born in Grayling in 1937, raised in Reed City and Haslett, he is the son of a county agent who moved the Harrison family to the East Lansing area so his children could attend Michigan State University. His work has been translated into 11 languages. He currently lives with his family on a farm in northern Michigan. A Good Day to Die If you have never read Harrison, this is a great place to start. An entertaining read and fine introduction to the humor, wit, and insight of one of our most engaging authors. You'll hear Harrison's voice for weeks after finishing this book. And you'll want to read more.

Tags: harrison, michigan, state, university, family

Kenya Nut Company

Posted on August 17, 2008 in Generic biologicals

The Kenya Money Pack(KNC) is a major ink slinger of raw, processed again dispensation added macadamia products \"...single of the creation's leading macadamia producers.The Kenyan macadamia assignment is individual interpolated that small scale farmers spread the role of major producers, alongside the corps farms. Whereas of their importance, they embody wrought disposals of organizing the farmers exhausted cooperative societies with priority 700 speculation community ideas, along with retrospect still comed the largest private floater corrective interpolated Kenya, with over 100 district officers more 18 run of offices...\"

Tags: macadamia, kenya, producers, interpolated, major

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