8 posts tagged “traxx fm”
NAME THE GUITAR PLAYERS
THIS CONTEST BEGINNING TODAY AND ENDING TODAY
( TUESDAY,AUGUST 18,2009 ) WILL BE CONDUCTED VIA SMS ....
BETWEEN 6 TO 10 AM TODAY
THE WINNER WILL ENJOY THE NICE " SHIP " DINING VOUCHERS FOR TWO PERSONS AT AN OUTLET OF YOUR CHOICE....
OKAY...SIMPLE....TAKE NOTE WHO THE GUITAR PLAYERS ARE ,
THEN SMS WHEN YOU HEAR US GIVE YOU THE CUE ....
WE MAY EVEN TAKE PHONE CALLS ALONG WITH IT...
SO ...ROCK & ROLL YA
( the dudes ) ;) ;)
( CHECK OUT SHIP'S PROMOTIONS DURING MERDEKA MONTH & THE PRIZE WE'RE TELLING YOU ABOUT )
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THE 10TH OF MAY IS DECLARED "PINK FLOYD DAY" ON ROCK IT...
NAVVY IS GONNA BE FEATURING ALL & EVERYTHING FLOYD'ISH FROM START TO FINISH... 1 TO 4PM...SUNDAY...TUNE IN AND ROCK ON !
HAVE YOU NOT CHECKED OUT " ROCK IT...the blog" ?
THERE YOU GO CLICK...AND ROCK !
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H1N1 Flu (Swine Flu) and You
May 3, 2009 3:29 PM ET
What is H1N1 (swine flu)?
H1N1 (referred to as “swine flu” early on) is a new influenza virus
causing illness in people. This new virus was first detected in people
in April 2009 in the United States. Other countries, including Mexico
and Canada, have reported people sick with this new virus. This virus
is spreading from person-to-person, probably in much the same way that
regular seasonal influenza viruses spread.
Why is this new H1N1 virus sometimes called “swine flu”?
This virus was originally referred to as “swine flu” because laboratory
testing showed that many of the genes in this new virus were very
similar to influenza viruses that normally occur in pigs in North
America. But further study has shown that this new virus is very
different from what normally circulates in North American pigs. It has
two genes from flu viruses that normally circulate in pigs in Europe
and Asia and avian genes and human genes. Scientists call this a
“quadruple reassortant” virus.
Do pigs carry this virus and can I catch this virus from a pig?
At this time, there is no evidence that swine in the United States are
infected with this new virus. However, there are flu viruses that
commonly cause outbreaks of illness in pigs. Most of the time, these
viruses do not infect people, but influenza viruses can spread back and
forth between pigs and people.
Are there human infections with this H1N1 virus in the U.S.?
Yes. Cases of human infection with this H1N1 influenza virus were first
confirmed in the U.S. in Southern California and near Guadalupe County,
Texas. The outbreak intensified rapidly from that time and more and
more states have been reporting cases of illness from this virus. An
updated case count of confirmed novel H1N1 flu infections in the United
States is kept at http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/investigation.htm. CDC and local and state health agencies are working together to investigate this situation.
Is this new H1N1 virus contagious?
CDC has determined that this new H1N1 virus is contagious and is
spreading from human to human. However, at this time, it is not known
how easily the virus spreads between people.
What are the signs and symptoms of this virus in people?
The symptoms of this new influenza A H1N1 virus in people are similar
to the symptoms of regular human flu and include fever, cough, sore
throat, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue. A significant number
of people who have been infected with this virus also have reported
diarrhea and vomiting. Also, like seasonal flu, severe illnesses and
death has occurred as a result of illness associated with this virus.
How severe is illness associated with this new H1N1 virus?
It’s not known at this time how severe this virus will be in the
general population. CDC is studying the medical histories of people who
have been infected with this virus to determine whether some people may
be at greater risk from infection, serious illness or hospitalization
from the virus. In seasonal flu, there are certain people that are at
higher risk of serious flu-related complications. This includes young
children, pregnant women, people with chronic medical conditions and
people 65 and older. It’s unknown at this time whether certain groups
of people are at greater risk of serious flu-related complications from
infection with this new virus. CDC also is conducting laboratory
studies to see if certain people might have natural immunity to this
virus, depending on their age.
How does this new H1N1 virus spread?
Spread of this H1N1 virus is thought to be happening in the same way
that seasonal flu spreads. Flu viruses are spread mainly from person to
person through coughing or sneezing by people with influenza. Sometimes
people may become infected by touching something with flu viruses on it
and then touching their mouth or nose.
Can I get infected with this new H1N1 virus from eating or preparing pork?
No. H1N1 viruses are not spread by food. You cannot get this new HIN1
virus from eating pork or pork products. Eating properly handled and
cooked pork products is safe.
Is there a risk from drinking water?
Tap water that has been treated by conventional disinfection processes
does not likely pose a risk for transmission of influenza viruses.
Current drinking water treatment regulations provide a high degree of
protection from viruses. No research has been completed on the
susceptibility of the novel H1N1 flu virus to conventional drinking
water treatment processes. However, recent studies have demonstrated
that free chlorine levels typically used in drinking water treatment
are adequate to inactivate highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza. It
is likely that other influenza viruses such as novel H1N1 would also be
similarly inactivated by chlorination. To date, there have been no
documented human cases of influenza caused by exposure to
influenza-contaminated drinking water.
Can the novel H1N1 flu virus be spread through water in
swimming pools, spas, water parks, interactive fountains, and other
treated recreational water venues?
Recreational water that has been treated at CDC recommended
disinfectant levels (1–3 parts per million [ppm or mg/L] for pools and
2–5 ppm for spas) does not likely pose a risk for transmission of
influenza viruses. Currently, there are no documented human cases of
influenza caused by exposure to influenza-contaminated swimming pool
water. No research has been completed on the susceptibility of the
novel H1N1 flu virus to chlorine and other disinfectants used in
swimming pools, spas, water parks, interactive fountains, and other
treated recreational venues. However, recent studies have demonstrated
that free chlorine levels recommended by CDC are adequate to disinfect
highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus. It is likely that other
influenza viruses such as the novel H1N1 flu virus would also be
disinfected by these chlorine levels.
Can H1N1 influenza virus be spread at recreational water venues outside of the water?
Yes, recreational water venues are no different than any other group
setting. The spread of this novel H1N1 flu is thought to be happening
in the same way that seasonal flu spreads. Flu viruses are spread
mainly from person to person through coughing or sneezing of people
with influenza. Sometimes people may become infected by touching
something with flu viruses on it and then touching their mouth or nose.
What should I do to keep from getting the flu?
First and most important: wash your hands. Try to stay in good general
health. Get plenty of sleep, be physically active, manage your stress,
drink plenty of fluids, and eat nutritious food. Try not to touch
surfaces that may be contaminated with the flu virus. Avoid close
contact with people who are sick.
Are there medicines to treat infection with this new virus?
Yes. CDC recommends the use of oseltamivir or zanamivir for the
treatment and/or prevention of infection with these new influenza A
(H1N1) viruses. Antiviral drugs are prescription medicines (pills,
liquid or an inhaler) that fight against the flu by keeping flu viruses
from reproducing in your body. If you get sick, antiviral drugs can
make your illness milder and make you feel better faster. They may also
prevent serious flu complications. During the current outbreak, the
priority use for influenza antiviral drugs during is to treat severe
influenza illness.
How long can an infected person spread this virus to others?
At the current time, CDC believes that this virus has the same
properties in terms of spread as seasonal flu viruses. With seasonal
flu, studies have shown that people may be contagious from one day
before they develop symptoms to up to 7 days after they get sick.
Children, especially younger children, might potentially be contagious
for longer periods. CDC is studying the virus and its capabilities to
try to learn more and will provide more information as it becomes
available.
What surfaces are most likely to be sources of contamination?
Germs can be spread when a person touches something that is
contaminated with germs and then touches his or her eyes, nose, or
mouth. Droplets from a cough or sneeze of an infected person move
through the air. Germs can be spread when a person touches respiratory
droplets from another person on a surface like a desk, for example, and
then touches their own eyes, mouth or nose before washing their hands.
What can I do to protect myself from getting sick?
There is no vaccine available right now to protect against this new
H1N1 virus. There are everyday actions that can help prevent the spread
of germs that cause respiratory illnesses like influenza. Take these
everyday steps to protect your health:
- Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue in the trash after you use it.
- Wash your hands often with soap and water, especially after you cough or sneeze. Alcohol-based hand cleaners are also effective.
- Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth. Germs spread this way.
- Try to avoid close contact with sick people.
- Stay home if you are sick for 7 days after your symptoms begin or until you have been symptom-free for 24 hours, whichever is longer. This is to keep from infecting others and spreading the virus further.
Other important actions that you can take are:
- Follow public health advice regarding school closures, avoiding crowds and other social distancing measures.
- Be prepared in case you get sick and need to stay home for a week or so; a supply of over-the-counter medicines, alcohol-based hand rubs, tissues and other related items might could be useful and help avoid the need to make trips out in public while you are sick and contagious.
What is the best way to keep from spreading the virus through coughing or sneezing?
If you are sick, limit your contact with other people as much as
possible. Do not go to work or school if ill for 7 days or until your
symptoms go away (whichever is longer). Cover your mouth and nose with
a tissue when coughing or sneezing. It may prevent those around you
from getting sick. Put your used tissue in the waste basket. Cover your
cough or sneeze if you do not have a tissue. Then, clean your hands,
and do so every time you cough or sneeze.
What is the best technique for washing my hands to avoid getting the flu?
Washing your hands often will help protect you from germs. Wash with
soap and water or clean with alcohol-based hand cleaner. We recommend
that when you wash your hands -- with soap and warm water -- that you
wash for 15 to 20 seconds. When soap and water are not available,
alcohol-based disposable hand wipes or gel sanitizers may be used. You
can find them in most supermarkets and drugstores. If using gel, rub
your hands until the gel is dry. The gel doesn't need water to work;
the alcohol in it kills the germs on your hands.
What should I do if I get sick?
If you live in areas where cases have been identified and become ill
with influenza-like symptoms, including fever, body aches, runny nose,
sore throat, nausea, or vomiting or diarrhea, you may want to contact
their health care provider, particularly if you are worried about your
symptoms. Your health care provider will determine whether influenza
testing or treatment is needed.
If you are sick, you should stay home and avoid contact with other people as much as possible to keep from spreading your illness to others.
If you become ill and experience any of the following warning signs, seek emergency medical care.
In children emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:
- Fast breathing or trouble breathing
- Bluish or gray skin color
- Not drinking enough fluids
- Not waking up or not interacting
- Being so irritable that the child does not want to be held
- Flu-like symptoms improve but then return with fever and worse cough
- Fever with a rash
In adults, emergency warning signs that need urgent medical attention include:
- Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath
- Pain or pressure in the chest or abdomen
- Sudden dizziness
- Confusion
- Severe or persistent vomiting
What is CDC doing in response to the outbreak?
CDC has implemented its emergency response.
The agency’s goals are to reduce transmission and illness severity, and
provide information to help health care providers, public health
officials and the public address the challenges posed by the new virus.
CDC continues to issue new interim guidance
for clinicians and public health professionals. In addition, CDC’s
Division of the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) continues to send
antiviral drugs, personal protective equipment, and respiratory
protection devices to all 50 states and U.S. territories to help them
respond to the outbreak.
What epidemiological investigations are taking place in response to the recent outbreak?
CDC works very closely with state and local officials in areas where
human cases of H1N1 (swine flu) infections have been identified. In
California and Texas, where EpiAid teams have been deployed, many
epidemiological activities are taking place or planned including:
- Active surveillance in the counties where infections in humans have been identified;
- Studies of health care workers who were exposed to patients infected with the virus to see if they became infected;
- Studies of households and other contacts of people who were confirmed to have been infected to see if they became infected;
- Study of a public high school where three confirmed human cases of influenza A (H1N1) of swine origin occurred to see if anyone became infected and how much contact they had with a confirmed case; and
- Study to see how long a person with the virus infection sheds the virus.
- Links to non-federal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. These links do not constitute an endorsement of these organizations or their programs by CDC or the federal government, and none should be inferred. CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at these links.
How long can influenza virus remain viable on objects (such as books and doorknobs)?
Studies have shown that influenza virus can survive on environmental
surfaces and can infect a person for up to 2-8 hours after being
deposited on the surface.
What kills influenza virus?
Influenza virus is destroyed by heat (167-212°F [75-100°C]). In
addition, several chemical germicides, including chlorine, hydrogen
peroxide, detergents (soap), iodophors (iodine-based antiseptics), and
alcohols are effective against human influenza viruses if used in
proper concentration for a sufficient length of time. For example,
wipes or gels with alcohol in them can be used to clean hands. The gels
should be rubbed into hands until they are dry.
How should waste disposal be handled to prevent the spread of influenza virus?
To prevent the spread of influenza virus, it is recommended that
tissues and other disposable items used by an infected person be thrown
in the trash. Additionally, persons should wash their hands with soap
and water after touching used tissues and similar waste.
What household cleaning should be done to prevent the spread of influenza virus?
To prevent the spread of influenza virus it is important to keep
surfaces (especially bedside tables, surfaces in the bathroom, kitchen
counters and toys for children) clean by wiping them down with a
household disinfectant according to directions on the product label.
How should linens, eating utensils and dishes of persons infected with influenza virus be handled?
Linens, eating utensils, and dishes belonging to those who are sick do
not need to be cleaned separately, but importantly these items should
not be shared without washing thoroughly first.
Linens (such as bed sheets and towels) should be washed by using household laundry soap and tumbled dry on a hot setting. Individuals should avoid “hugging” laundry prior to washing it to prevent contaminating themselves. Individuals should wash their hands with soap and water or alcohol-based hand rub immediately after handling dirty laundry.
Eating utensils should be washed either in a dishwasher or by hand with water and soap.
Who is in charge of medicine in the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) once it is deployed?
Local health officials have full control of SNS medicine once supplies
are deployed to a city, state, or territory. Federal, state, and local
community planners are working together to ensure that SNS medicines
will be delivered to the affected area as soon as possible. Many
cities, states, and territories have already received SNS supplies.
After CDC sends medicine to a state or city, control and distribution
of the supply is at the discretion of that state or local health
department. Most states and cities also have their own medicines that
they can access to treat infected persons.
*Note: Much of the information in this document is based on studies and past experience with seasonal (human) influenza. CDC believes the information applies to the new H1N1 (swine) viruses as well, but studies on this virus are ongoing to learn more about its characteristics. This document will be updated as new information becomes available.
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now on to entertainment ya.....
Pink Takes Over London Square
Pink thrilled thousands of volunteers filming a commercial in London on Thursday when she made a surprise visit to sing for the crowd.
More than 13,000 members of the public converged in the British capital's Trafalgar Square to participate in a mass sing-along for phone company T-Mobile's new TV ad.
Those gathered were instructed to sing hits such as The Beatles' "Hey Jude" and Britney Spears' "...Baby One More Time," while the event was filmed by 24 cameras and recorded by more than 2,000 microphones.
The crowd was stunned when an image of singer Pink was transmitted onto giant screens hanging over the square.
And they were then sent into a frenzy when cameras panned around to reveal the singer was at the event in person.
The star joined in halfway through a rendition of the Erma Franklin track "Piece of my Heart," before removing her hood and singing her hit song "So What?" on a raised platform.
Speaking after the event, she told reporters: "What a fantastic experience! Everyone singing along together in the middle of London -- it was incredible. I was thrilled to be a part of such an amazing event and to share it with so many people."
You
won't see this photo on CNN. Everyone is too busy showing the Queen
being touched. This was a moment of "touching" that won't be forgotten
by this bobby.

"This is the most powerful photo in the series. Remember they are not supposed to shake hands, but the two brothers couldn't resist the historic moment. The black royal cop never imagined in his wildest dream that he would usher a black American president into the British corridors of power. Nice."
thanks Gloria for the pic :)
the dudes say : who cares bout the colour thingy...we say bosses need to learn to appreciate more...and cast all ego aside to just give that "pat on the shoulder or back"..every now and then...
believe us bosses ...motivated employees are a million times more productive ...than the unappreciated dude or duddette...its common sense actualy ... :)
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49th day of 2009 - 316 remaining
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Today is Pluto Day. The ninth planet, no
longer accepted as a planet by some, was discovered on this date in 1930 by astronomer
Clyde Tombaugh at the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. It was named for the Roman god of the underworld,
which of course was named for Mickey Mouse's dog.
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1993:
After a train hit a baby elephant near Dhaka, Bangladesh, the mother
elephant blocked the tracks so the next train had to stop, then she
beat her head against the engine for 15 minutes. The train was so
damaged, 200 passengers were stranded for five hours.
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Railway station bans kissing
Couples have been banned from kissing at a railway station in Cheshire because it holds up other passengers.

No-kissing signs have appeared in the taxi rank at Warrington Bank Quay Station forcing lovers to use designated areas only.
The signs were erected after concerns that passionate embraces were causing delays for commuters at the station which is believed to be the first in the country to put up such signs.
Ruth Sargeant, 38, who uses the station to travel to Manchester, said: "It's ridiculous. I don't see the point of having a no-kissing area, surely people are entitled to say their goodbyes."
The no kissing signs are part of the £650,000 station refurbishment funded by Virgin Trains, Network Rail, the Northwest Regional Development Agency and the Department for Transport.
Colin Daniels, chief executive of the Warrington Chamber of Commerce who came up with the idea, said: "They may seem frivolous but there is a serious message underneath."
A Virgin spokesman said: "We are trying to tell people not to wait too long in the drop-off, but we don't mind people waiting there for a short time."
Asked how the no-kissing rule would be enforced, he added: "We will apply this sensibly."
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A Man United fan drove 400 miles to meet a woman he had been chatting to online - only to find it was a hoax set up by Liverpool fans.
Married Stuart Slann, 39, from Sheffield, made the trip to a remote farm in Scotland to meet the women he had been flirting with for weeks, reports the Daily Mail.
But when he arrived at the house 'Emma' was nowhere to be seen. Three hours later the pranksters called him and confessed it was all a trick.
They taped the conversation and put it onto video-sharing website YouTube and Facebook accompanied by an embarrassing photo.
Mr Slann's wife, Louise, 32, then discovered that he had intended to have an affair and ended their marriage.
He met the two Liverpudlians during a holiday in Cancun, Mexico, where they spent their time arguing about their teams who are bitter North-West rivals.
When the Liverpool fans returned to the UK they came up with the plan to humiliate him by setting up a false Facebook account pretending to be a Scottish woman called Emma.
Mr Slann added: "I'd been chatting to this girl on Facebook for about a month or so. I really thought she was genuine, and I had no reason to doubt it.
"On the night she asked me to Scotland I was on the road for about nine hours. And then when I got to this remote farm she sent me a text to say she was still in work.
"That's what made it worse, not only had I driven for nine hours, but I had to wait for about another three and a half hours for her to finish work. Then when I got the call to say it was all a hoax I just felt awful."
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A Norfolk woman has had woolly jumpers knitted for 1,500 balding rescued former battery hens.
Jo Eglen, 29, who runs the Little Hen Rescue Centre in Norwich, has rescued and re-homed a total of 5,750 battery hens.
But many had lost their plumage so Mrs Eglen turned to her local community asking for people willing to knit jumpers for the bedraggled birds.
The teaching assistant, a mother-of-two, began rescuing battery hens after a visit to a local farm, reports the Daily Telegraph.
She said: "Some battery farms have up to 10,000 hens of the same age. But when the birds stop or start to slow laying they are sent to the slaughterhouse - not to be used as meat, but just to be culled.
"We know that once they're out of the farms they start laying good eggs again. They get quite thin and bald because of the stress and heat. About 60% of the hens that come through are bald.
"We have patterns on our website that are straight-forward and simple. We've had 1,500 jumpers come through in just the past two months."
Mrs Eglen set up the Little Hen Rescue Centre with another volunteer David Doy, after being given free use of land by a local farmer.
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A burglar who stole a DVD player in China was arrested - when he went back for the remote.
But the thief was allowed to go free - when police officers ruled the £100 DVD player was not valuable enough for them to press charges.
Song, 25, of Chengdu, first broke into the house in December. He later realised he had forgotten the remote control so broke into the same building again a month later.
But this time he found the owner, Dai, watching television in the living room, reports Chengdu Business Daily.
Under pressure from Dai, Song admitted he had been responsible for the previous raid and Dai escorted him to the police station to report the crime.
But to Dai's amazement, police said the £100 DVD player was not worth enough to prosecute Song and he was set free.
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Italian police were called to catch a poodle that had bitten off the nose of its female owner before running into the garden.
They chased the poodle, called Vale, around owner Loredana Romano's garden before finally retrieving what was left of the nose.
Mrs Romano, 34, from Forli in northern Italy, said. "My little Vale often climbed into bed with me, I don't know why she suddenly bit off my nose."
Doctors were able to salvage the chewed nose and reattach it but say she will now have to go undergo a long course of reconstructive surgery to repair the numerous scars.
The woman has already forgiven her dog but says it will not be allowed to sleep in her bed again.
"I should have listened to my husband when he always told me he should be the only one allowed in the bed," she said.
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:):):):)
Two classmates were chatting in their lunch break...
"I know how to get money real quick" says one. ”Go to your dad and say, 'I know the truth' and he'll give you money."
So
the young boy went home and said "Dad, I know the truth" and his dad
gave him ten dollars and told him not to tell anyone 'the truth'.
He then went to his mother, " Mom, I know the truth” he said.
"Please don't tell your dad" she said and gave him twenty dollars.
Content with thirty dollars he went outside to go to the arcade and saw the milkman. "I know the truth,” he shouted out.
The milkman replied "Well come and hug your real father then"
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:):):):):):)
This guy pulls into a crowded parking lot and rolled down the car windows to make sure his dog had fresh air. The dog was stretched out in the back seat, and the guy wanted to impress upon the dog that he must remain there. The guy walked to the curb backward, pointing his finger at the car and saying emphatically, “Now you stay. Do you hear me? Stay!” The driver of a nearby car gave the guy a startled look and said: “I don’t know about you, man,but I usually just put my car in park.”
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Disney Bolts to top of box office
Disney animation Bolt has raced to the top of the UK and Ireland box office chart in its opening weekend.
The film, featuring the voice of John Travolta as a TV show dog who believes his fictional powers are real, took £2.8m in its first three days.
Fresh from its success at the Baftas, Slumdog Millionaire rose one place to number two, taking its total five week haul to £20 million.
Romantic comedy He's Just Not That Into You fell one place to three.
Last week's box office winner, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, fell three places to four in its second week.
There were four other new entries in the top 10, including family film Hotel for Dogs at five.
UK BOX OFFICE TOP FIVE
- 1. Bolt - £2.84m
- 2. Slumdog Millionaire - £1.82m
- 3. He's Just Not That Into You - £1.78m
- 4. The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button - £1.77m
- 5. Hotel for Dogs - £1.5m
Slasher re-make Friday the 13th, which smashed US box office records earlier in the week for an opening of a horror film, could only manage sixth place, bringing in £1.2m.
Biggie Smalls biopic Notorious opened at seven, with Pink Panther 2 at eight.
Penelope Cruz's Bafta win for her role in Vicky Christina Barcelona may have helped the film rise two spots to number nine.
While horror My Bloody Valentine rounded out the top 10.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alien life 'may exist among us'
By James MorganScience reporter, BBC News, Chicago
Never mind Mars, alien life may be thriving right here on Earth, a major science conference has heard.
Our planet may harbour forms of "weird life" unrelated to life as we know it, according to Professor Paul Davies, a physicist at Arizona State University.
This "shadow life" may be hidden in toxic arsenic lakes or in boiling deep sea hydrothermal vents, he says.
He has called on scientists to launch a "mission to Earth" by trawling hostile environments for signs of bio-activity.
Weird life could even be living among us, in forms which we don't yet recognise, he told the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) meeting in Chicago.
"We don't have to go to other planets to find weird life.
"It could be right in front of our noses - or even in our noses," said the physicist.
"It is entirely reasonable to expect we will find a shadow biosphere here on Earth.
"But nobody has actually taken the trouble to look.
"The question is why? The cost is not expensive - it would be a fraction of the money we spend searching for extraterrestrial life."
'Second genesis'
Professor Davies was one of the speakers at a symposium exploring the possibility that life has evolved on Earth more than once.
"How do we know we are dealing with separate Earth genesis and not a Mars genesis?"
Professor Paul Davies,
Arizona State University
The descendants of this "second genesis" may have survived until today in a "shadow biosphere" which is beyond our radar because its inhabitants have biochemistry so different from our own.
"All our microscopes are customised for life as we know it - so it's no surprise that we haven't found microbes with different biochemistry," said Professor Davies.
"We don't quite know how weird life would look. It's as wide as the imagination and that's why it's really hard to look for."
If it exists, weird life could be based on DNA and RNA - but with a slightly different genetic code or different amino acids.
At the other end of the spectrum, we could find creatures which have more drastic differences.
"Maybe one of the elements life uses - carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus - could be replaced by something else," said Professor Davies.
"When I say that, everyone immediately thinks of silicon life - because of Star Trek. But I'm not talking about anything that drastic.
"For example, most of the jobs that can be done by phosphorus can be done by arsenic."
Arsenic may be poisonous to humans, but it has chemical properties which might make it ideal in a microbe's machinery, he said.
'Mission to Earth'
So how do we go about hunting for something we have never seen before?
"There are two possibilities," said Prof Davies, Director of the BEYOND Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science.
"One is that weird life is ecologically isolated, in niches beyond the reach of mankind."
In this case, we must begin trawling the world's most inhospitable environments - deserts, salt lakes, and areas of high pressure, temperature or UV radiation.
"We could have a 'mission to Earth'. There's a big long list of places we could be looking," observed Professor Davies.
"For example, if we are looking for arsenic life, we could head for environments which are both arsenic rich and phosphorus poor - such as deep ocean vents.
"There is also a heavily contaminated lake in California which is arsenic rich - Mono Lake - and we do find microbes in there which get their energy from arsenic.
"But they don't actually incorporate the arsenic into themselves. They spit it back out again. They smoke but they don't inhale."
On the other hand, it could be that "weird life" is actually all around us - intermingled with carbon based life.
"In that case it's going to be really hard to detect - you have to find some way of filtering everything else out."
This laborious process has been used to search for unknown organisms in seawater - by painstakingly filtering everything else away.
If we did discover something unprecedented, "we'd all start arguing" said Professor Davies, a theoretical physicist.
"The question would be whether this life was truly different, or whether there was a common precursor a deep branch on the main tree of life.
"Also, how do we know we are dealing with separate Earth genesis and not a Mars genesis?
"We know rocks do get traded between the two planets, and life could hitch a ride.
"Personally, I'm only interested in establishing whether life happened more than once. If we find it has happened twice from scratch then its going to have happened all around the universe.
"It's going to be teeming with life and there's a very good chance we are not alone."
Life in the lab
Another way to determine what alternative life might look like is to try to invent it ourselves.
If we can create new molecules which can behave in life-like way, we may then go out and look for these in the environment, says Professor Steven Benner, of the University of Florida.
His team have created perhaps the closest yet to a man-made alternative form of life.
"We are announcing the first example of an artificial synthetic chemical system capable of Darwinian evolution," he told the conference.
"Is it alive? Well, I can tell you that it is not self-sustaining.
"You have to have a graduate student stand there and feed it from time to time, but it is evolving."
The molecule is essentially a modified version of our own DNA double helix - but with six "letters" in its genetic alphabet, instead of four.
These nucleotides pair up in strands, which can replicate, though only with the help of polymerase enzymes and heat.
"Sometimes mistakes are made in pairing and these mistakes are maintained in the next generation - it is evolving," said Prof Brenner.
"The next step is to apply natural selection to it, to see if it can evolve under selective pressure.
"The accepted definition of life is a molecule capable of Darwinian evolution, so we are trying to put together molecules that are capable of doing it."
But he questioned whether our definition of "living" is perhaps too "Earth-centric".
"Remember - just because you are a
chemical system which is self-sustaining and capable of Darwinian
evolution, that doesn't mean that is the universal definition of life,"
he said.
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Pirate Bay joy at charge change
Half of the charges levelled at the founders of the Pirate Bay file-sharing site have been dropped.
Swedish prosecutors dropped charges relating to "assisting copyright infringement" leaving the lesser charges of "assisting making available copyright material" on trial day two.
Pirate Bay co-founder Frederik Neik said it showed prosecutors had misunderstood the technology.
The music industry played down the changes as "simplifying the charges".
Peter Danowsky, legal counsel for the music companies in the case, said: "It's a largely technical issue that changes nothing in terms of our compensation claims and has no bearing whatsoever on the main case against The Pirate Bay.
"In fact it simplifies the prosecutor's case by allowing him to focus on the main issue, which is the making available of copyrighted works."
The Pirate Bay was launched in 2003 and quickly established itself as the world's most high profile file-sharing website. In February 2009, it reported 22 million simultaneous users.
At the start of the trial in Stockholm, Frederik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Peter Sunde Kolmsioppi and Carl Lundstorm were facing a large fine and up to two years in prison, if convicted.
"This is a sensation. It is very rare to win half the target in just one and a half days and it is clear that the prosecutor took strong note of what we said yesterday," defence lawyer Per E Samuelson told the TorrentFreak website, which reports on developments in the BitTorrent file-sharing community.
BitTorrent is a legal application used by many file-shares to swap content because of the fast and efficient manner it distributes files.
No copyright content is hosted on The
Pirate Bay's web servers; instead the site hosts "torrent" links to TV,
film and music files held on its users computers.
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY IF ITS YOURS ...
OTHERS WHO SHARE THE SAME BIRTHDATE AS YOU :
1898 - Enzo Ferrari
auto racer, auto manufacturer; died Aug 14, 1988
1919 - Jack Palance (Vladimir
Palahnuik)
Academy Award-winning actor: City Slickers [1991]; Requiem for a
Heavyweight, Batman, Cyborg 2, Cops and
Robbersons, Bronk, Ripley’s Believe It or Not; died Nov 10, 2006
Academy Award-winning actor: Cool Hand Luke [1967]; The Blue Knight, Earthquake!, Naked Gun series, Airplane, Dallas, Delta Force, The Dirty Dozen
1932 - Milos FormanAcademy Award-winning director: One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest [1975], Amadeus [1984]
1933 - Yoko Ono Lennon
singer: Walking on Thin Ice; artist; John Lennon’s widow
musician: keyboard, singer: group: Styx: Lady, Sweet Madame Blue, Come Sail Away, Babe, The Best of Times; solo: Desert Moon
1948 - Sinead Cusack
actress: Stealing Beauty, Cyrano de Bergerac,
Revenge; married to actor, Jeremy Irons; daughter of actor,
Cyril Cusack
1948 - Keith Knudsen
musician: drums, singer: group: The Doobie Brothers: What a Fool Believes,
Real Love
baseball: pitcher: Pittsburgh Pirates [World Series: 1971, 1979], California Angels, Boston Red Sox
1950 - Cybill Shepherd
actress: Cybill, Moonlighting, The Last Picture Show,
The Long Hot Summer
1952 - Randy (Veronica)
Crawford
singer: Imagine, Nightline, One Day I’ll Fly Away,
Rainy Night in Georgia
1952 - Juice Newton (Judy
Cohen)
singer: Angel of the Morning, LPs: Juice, Quiet
Lives
1953 - Robbie Bachman
drummer: group: Bachman-Turner Overdrive: Let It Ride, Takin’
Care of Business, You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet, Roll on
Down the Highway
1954 - John Travolta
actor: Welcome Back Kotter, Saturday Night Fever,
Grease, Urban Cowboy, Pulp Fiction, Get
Shorty, Broken Arrow, Face/Off, Primary
Colors, The Thin Red Line, Swordfish
1957 - Vanna White (Rosich)
TV game show personality: Wheel of Fortune
1960 - Greta Scacchi
actress: White Mischief, Presumed Innocent
1964 - Matt Dillon
actor: My Bodyguard, Drugstore Cowboy, The
Outsiders, There's Something About Mary
1968 - Molly Ringwald
actress: Sixteen Candles, The Breakfast Club, Pretty in
Pink, The Facts of Life, Requiem for Murder
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Kelly Clarkson: 'Of Course Celebrities Have Cellulite!'
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Think Kelly Clarkson looks too good to be true on the cover of her upcoming CD? You're right, says the singer.
"No girl is perfect," Clarkson – who joked on her blog last month that "they Photoshopped the crap out of me!" on her sexy All I Ever Wanted cover image – told a group of Girl Scouts recently. "No girl wakes up every day and is like, 'I'm awesome!'"
In fact, she told the group of about 20 pre-teens gathered in Nashville Feb. 11 for a self-esteem workshop sponsored by Dove, "just to let you know everyone in the magazines is Photoshopped! Beyoncé is one of the most beautiful girls in the world but she gets Photoshopped too. We're all human!"
Clarkson, 26, knows what it's like to have her body image picked apart. "It affected me when people were saying about me and some other artists that we were the 'thicker' ones," she tells PEOPLE. "I'd be a liar if I said I was always fine with it. But I'm wise enough by now to know that you're never going to please everyone so you may as well stop trying."
It was a lesson the American Idol champ learned when she appeared on the show seven years ago and saw her voice – and image – become fodder for gossip.
"I learned right then to stop reading press. Either you're going to get a big head or you'll get depressed and neither one is great. I don't buy magazines like that. Even if I'm not in them, it's just healthier to get away from that kind of thinking," she says. "It's horrible – they'll show celebrities with cellulite and it's like, 'Of course celebrities have cellulite! We're not fem-bots!'"
Clarkson says she's seen the effect of such body image scrutiny on friends in the public eye. "They melt down because of it," she says. "There is a lot of pressure."
But the singer, whose album All I Ever Wanted is due out March 10, says she's come to terms with it.
"When I'm on the red carpet, it's not even a question anymore," says Clarkson. "Usually people are very encouraging and tell me they love that I'm normal."
Normal was plenty good for 10-year-old Shelby Davis, one of the Girl Scouts attending the workshop.
"She has a whole bunch of self-esteem," Davis says of the Grammy-winning star. "She's someone you can look up to."
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THATS IT FOR NOW ...
STAY TUNED TO ...WHATS HAPPENING WITH THE TRAXX MOBILE ...ITS ON ATTACK !
:):) ...just us...the wake up dudes !
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the end
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THE WAKE UP DUDES WANT THE YEAR OF THE OX TO BE A FANTASTIC ONE FOR YOU AND YOUR LOVED ONES...MAY EVERYTHING NICE COME YOUR WAY...KONG HEE FATT CHOY !
The Story Of The Chinese Zodiac
Many people have wondered over the years how it was that the rat, the smallest of all the creatures, was given the honour of having the first year of the Chinese Zodiac named after him. This is the story I have heard.
A very long time ago, the Jade Emperor, who ruled the heavens of China, sent a message to all the animals asking them to come together so that he could give each of them a year, which would make it easier for the people of China to keep track of time. The cat and the rat were good friends and decided to travel to meet the Jade Emperor together.
When it came time to leave, however, the cat was taking a nap. The rat, realising that he would have to use all his cunning to be noticed by the Jade Emperor, left his friend sleeping, and set off on his own. This is why there is no year named after the cat, and also why cats have hated rats ever since.
When the rat arrived, the Jade Emperor welcomed him and the other animals and
told them that they should all take part in a swimming race. Once again, the rat
realised that he would have to be very clever if he wanted to win the race. He
found the largest, strongest animal, which was the ox, and pleaded with him to
let him ride on its head. The ox was kind and strong, and agreed that they would
swim across together. The rat travelled safely across the river on the ox’s
back, but, just before they reached the other side, climbed over the ox's head,
jumped onto land, and reached the finish line first. The rat had proved its
cunning, and the
Jade Emperor named the first year after the rat and the second year after the
ox.
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The Story of the Phoenix
Ta-Khai, Prince of Tartary, dreamed one night that he saw in a place where he had never been before an enchantingly beautiful young maiden who could only be a princess. He fell desperately in love with her, but before he could either move or speak, she had vanished. When he awoke he called for his ink and brushes, and drew her image on a piece of precious silk, and in one corner he wrote these lines:The flowers of the pæony
Will they ever bloom?
A day without her
Is like a hundred years.
He then summoned his ministers, and, showing them the portrait, asked if any one could tell him the name of the beautiful maiden; but they all shook their heads and stroked their beards. They did not know who she was.
So
displeased was the prince that he sent them away in disgrace to the most remote provinces of his kingdom. All the courtiers, the generals, the officers, and every man and woman, high and low, who lived in the palace came in turn to look at the picture. But they all had to confess their ignorance.
Ta-Khai then called upon the magicians of the kingdom to find out in magic ways the name of the princess of his dreams, but their answers were so widely different that the prince condemned them all to have their noses cut off. The portrait was shown in the outer court of the palace from sunrise till sunset, and travellers from all over the world came in every day, gazed upon the beautiful face, and came out again. No-one could tell who she was.
Meanwhile the days were weighing heavily upon the shoulders of Ta-Khai, and he became very unhappy; he forgot to eat, he forgot to drink, and he even forgot which was day and which was night, what was in and what was out, what was left and what was right. He spent his time roaming over the mountains and through the woods crying aloud to the gods to end his life and his sorrow.
It was in this way, one day, that he came to the edge of a cliff. The valley below was scattered with rocks, and the thought came to his mind that he had been led to this place to put and to his misery. He was about to throw himself into the depths below when suddenly a Phoenix flew across the valley and appeared before him, saying:
“Why are you, a mighty Prince, standing here, looking so sad?”
Ta-Khai replied: “Nothing matters to me now but finding the beautiful girl for whom my heart is thirsting, but how can I find her?”
And he told the bird his story.
The Phoenix replied:
“Without the help of Supreme Heaven it is not easy to acquire wisdom, but it is a sign that Heaven has sent me to help you. I can make myself large enough to carry the largest town upon my back, or small enough to pass through the smallest keyhole, and I know all the princesses in all the palaces of the earth. They all know my song, and I am their friend. Therefore show me the picture, Ta-Khai, and I will tell you the name of the princess you saw in your dream.”
They went to the palace, and, when the portrait was shown, the bird became as large as an elephant, and exclaimed, “Sit on my back, Ta-Khai, and I will carry you to the place of your dream. There you will find Sai-Jen, the daughter of the King of China, the princess of your dream.”
At nightfall they were flying over the palace of the king just above a magnificent garden. And in the garden sat Sai-Jen, singing and playing upon the lute. The Phoenix deposited the prince outside the wall near a place where bamboos were growing and showed him how to cut twelve bamboos between the knots to make a flute with a sound sweeter than the evening breeze on the forest stream.
And as he blew gently across the pipes, they echoed the sound of the princess's voice so harmoniously that she cried:
“I hear the distant notes of the song that I sing myself, although I can see nothing but the flowers and the trees. It is a beautiful song, and it sounds very sad, and full of longing.”
At that moment the wonderful bird, like a fire of many colours come down from heaven, landed in front of the princess, dropping at her feet the portrait. She opened her eyes in utter astonishment at the sight of her own image. And when she had read the lines inscribed in the corner, she asked, trembling:
“Tell me, Phoenix, who is he, so near, but whom I cannot see, that knows the sound of my voice and has never heard me, and can remember my face and has never seen me?”
Then the bird spoke and told her the story of Ta-Khai's dream, adding:
“I come from him with this message; I brought him here on my wings. For many days he has longed for this hour, let him now meet the princess of his dream and heal the wound in his heart.”
Sai-Jen fell silent when Ta-Khai stood before her, so great was her love for him. The Phoenix lit up the garden sumptuously, and a breath of love was stirring the flowers under the stars.
It was in the palace of the King of China that were celebrated in the most ancient and magnificent style the nuptials of Sai-Jen and Ta-Khai, Prince of Tartary.
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The Strange Tail of Doctor Dog
Far up in the mountains of the Province of Hunan in the central part of China, there once lived in a small village a rich gentleman who had only one child. This girl was the very joy of her father's life.
Now Mr. Min, for that was this gentleman's name, was famous throughout the whole district for his learning, and, as he was also the owner of much property, he spared no effort to teach Honeysuckle everything he could, and to give her everything she craved. Of course this was enough to spoil most children, but Honeysuckle was not at all like other children. As sweet as the flower from which she took her name, she listened to her father's slightest command, and obeyed without ever waiting to be told a second time.One day when Honeysuckle was sitting inside a shady pavilion that overlooked a tiny fish-pond, she was suddenly seized with a violent stomach-ache. Frantic with pain, she told a servant to summon her father, and then without further ado, she fell over in a faint upon the ground.
When Mr. Min reached his daughter's side, she was still unconscious. After sending for the family physician to come as fast as he can, he got his daughter to bed, but although she recovered from her fainting fit, the extreme pain continued until the poor girl was almost dead from exhaustion.
Now, when the doctor arrived and peered at her from under his gigantic spectacles, he could not discover the cause of her trouble. Poor Honeysuckle lay in agony for three days, all the time growing weaker and weaker from loss of sleep. Every great doctor in the district had been summoned for consultation, but all to no avail.
Mr. Min sent out a proclamation in every direction, describing his daughter's illness, and offering to bestow on her a handsome dowry and give her in marriage to whoever should be the means of bringing her back to health and happiness. He then sat at her bedside and waited, feeling that he had done all that was in his power. There were many answers to his invitation. Physicians, old and young, came from every part of the Empire to try their skill, and when they had seen poor Honeysuckle and also the huge pile of silver her father offered as a wedding gift, they all fought with might and main for her life; some having been attracted by her great beauty and excellent reputation, others by the tremendous reward.
But, alas for poor Honeysuckle! Not one of all those wise men could cure her! One day, when she was feeling a slight change for the better, she called her father, and, clasping his hand with her tiny one said, "Were it not for your love I would give up this hard fight and pass over into the dark wood. For your sake, because I am your only child, and especially because you have no son, I have struggled hard to live, but now I feel that the next attack of that dreadful pain will carry me away. And oh, I do not want to die!"
Here Honeysuckle wept as if her heart would break, and her old father wept too, for the more she suffered the more he loved her.
Just then her face began to turn pale. "It is coming! The pain is coming, father! Very soon I shall be no more. Good-bye, father! Good-bye; good-bye!" Here her voice broke and a great sob almost broke her father's heart. He turned away from her bedside; he could not bear to see her suffer. He walked outside and sat down on a rustic bench; his head fell upon his bosom, and the great salt tears trickled down his long grey beard.
As Mr. Min sat thus overcome with grief, he was startled at hearing a low whine. Looking up he saw, to his astonishment, a large, shaggy mountain dog. The huge beast looked into the old man's eyes with so intelligent and human an expression, with such a sad and wistful gaze, that the greybeard addressed him, saying, "Why have you come? To cure my daughter?"
The
dog replied with three short barks, wagging his tail vigorously and turning
toward the half-opened door that led into the room where the girl lay.
By this time, willing to try any chance whatever of reviving his daughter, Mr. Min bade the animal follow him into Honeysuckle's apartment. Placing his forepaws upon the side of her bed, the dog looked long and steadily at the wasted form before him and held his ear intently for a moment over the maiden's heart. Then, with a slight cough he deposited from his mouth into her outstretched hand, a tiny stone. Touching her wrist with his right paw, he motioned to her to swallow the stone.
"Yes, my dear, obey him," counselled her father, as she turned to him inquiringly, "for good Doctor Dog has been sent to your bedside by the mountain fairies, who have heard of your illness and who wish to invite you back to life again."
Without further delay the sick girl, who was by this time almost burned away by the fever, raised her hand to her lips and swallowed the tiny charm. Wonder of wonders! No sooner had it passed her lips than a miracle occurred. The red flush passed away from her face, the pulse resumed its normal beat, the pains departed from her body, and she arose from the bed well and smiling.
Flinging her arms about her father's neck, she cried out in joy, "Oh, I am well again; well and happy; thanks to the medicine of the good physician."
The noble dog barked three times, wild with delight at hearing these tearful words of gratitude, bowed low, and put his nose in Honeysuckle's outstretched hand.
Mr. Min, greatly moved by his daughter's magical recovery, turned to the strange physician, saying, "Noble Sir, were it not for the form you have taken, for some unknown reason, I would willingly give four times the sum in silver that I promised for the cure of the girl, into your possession. As it is, I suppose you have no use for silver, but remember that so long as we live, whatever we have is yours for the asking, and I beg of you to prolong your visit, to make this the home of your old age - in short, remain here for ever as my guest - nay, as a member of my family."
The dog barked three times, as if agreeing. From that day he was treated as an equal by father and daughter. The many servants were commanded to obey his slightest whim, to serve him with the most expensive food on the market, to spare no expense in making him the happiest and best-fed dog in all the world. Day after day he ran at Honeysuckle's side as she gathered flowers in her garden, lay down before her door when she was resting, guarded her Sedan chair when she was carried by servants into the city. In short, they were constant companions; a stranger would have thought they had been friends from childhood.
One day, however, just as they were returning from a journey outside her father's compound, at the very instant when Honeysuckle was alighting from her chair, without a moment's warning, the huge animal dashed past the attendants, seized his beautiful mistress in his mouth, and before anyone could stop him, carried her off to the mountains. By the time the alarm was sounded, darkness had fallen over the valley and as the night was cloudy no trace could be found of the dog and the little girl.
Once more the frantic father left no stone unturned to save his daughter. Huge
rewards were offered, bands of woodmen scoured the mountains high and low, but,
alas, no sign of the girl could be found! The unfortunate father gave up the
search and began to prepare himself for the grave. There was nothing now left in
life that he cared for - nothing but thoughts of his departed daughter.
Honeysuckle was gone for ever.
Several long years passed by; years of sorrow for the ageing man, pining for his
departed daughter. One beautiful October day he was sitting in the very same
pavilion where he had so often sat with his darling. His head was bowed forward
on his breast, his forehead was lined with grief. A rustling of leaves attracted
his attention. He looked up. Standing directly in front of him was Doctor Dog,
and lo, riding on his back, clinging to the animal's shaggy hair, was
Honeysuckle, his long-lost daughter; while standing near by were three of the
handsomest boys he had ever set eyes upon!
"Ah, my daughter! My darling daughter, where have you been all these years?" cried the delighted father, pressing the girl to his aching breast. "Have you suffered many a cruel pain since you were snatched away so suddenly? Has your life been filled with sorrow?"
"Only at the thought of your grief," she replied, tenderly, stroking his forehead with her slender fingers; "only at the thought of your suffering; only at the thought of how I should like to see you every day and tell you that my husband was kind and good to me. For you must know, dear father, this is no mere animal that stands beside you. This Doctor Dog, who cured me and claimed me as his bride because of your promise, is a great magician. He can change himself at will into a thousand shapes. He chooses to come here in the form of a mountain beast so that no one may find out the secret of his distant palace."
"Then he is your husband?" faltered the old man, gazing at the animal with a new expression on his wrinkled face.
"Yes; my kind and noble husband, the father of my three sons, your grandchildren, whom we have brought to pay you a visit."

"And where do you live?"
"In a wonderful cave in the heart of the great mountains; a beautiful cave whose walls and floors are covered with crystals, and encrusted with sparkling gems. The chairs and tables are set with jewels; the rooms are lighted by a thousand glittering diamonds. Oh, it is lovelier than the palace of the Son of Heaven himself! We breathe fragrant air that blows through forests of pine and hemlock. We live only to love each other and our children, and oh, we are so happy! And you, father, you must come back with us to the great mountains and live there with us the rest of your days, which, the gods grant, may be very many."
The old man pressed his daughter once more to his breast and hugged the children, who clambered over him rejoicing at the discovery of a grandfather they had never seen before.
From Doctor Dog and his fair Honeysuckle are descended, it is said, the
well-known race of people called the Yus, who even now inhabit the mountainous
regions of the Canton and Hunan provinces. It is not for this reason, however,
that we have told the story here, but because we felt sure every reader would
like to learn the secret of the dog that cured a sick girl and won her for his
bride.
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Why The Dog Hates The Cat
"What we shall eat tomorrow, I haven't the slightest idea!" said Widow Wang to her eldest son, as he started out one morning in search of work.
"Oh, the gods will provide. I'll find a few coppers somewhere," replied the boy, trying to speak cheerfully, although in his heart he also had not the slightest idea in which direction to turn.
The winter had been a hard one: extreme cold, deep snow, and violent winds. The Wang house had suffered greatly. The roof had fallen in, weighed down by heavy snow. Then a hurricane had blown a wall over, and Ming-li, the son, up all night and exposed to a bitter cold wind, had caught pneumonia. Long days of illness followed, with the spending of extra money for medicine. All their scant savings had soon melted away, and at the shop where Ming-li had been employed his place was filled by another. When at last he arose from his sick-bed he was too weak for hard labour and there seemed to be no work in the neighbouring villages for him to do. Night after night he came home, trying not to be discouraged, but in his heart feeling the deep pangs of sorrow that come to the good son who sees his mother suffering for want of food and clothing.
"Bless his good heart!" said the poor widow after he had gone. "No mother ever had a better boy. I hope he is right in saying the gods will provide. It has been getting so much worse these past few weeks that it seems now as if my stomach were as empty as a rich man's brain. Why, even the rats have deserted our cottage, and there's nothing left for poor Tabby, while old Blackfoot is nearly dead from starvation."
When the old woman referred to the sorrows of her pets, her remarks were answered by a pitiful mewing and woebegone barking from the corner where the two unfed creatures were curled up together trying to keep warm.
Just then there was a loud knocking at the gate. When the widow Wang called out, "Come in!" she was surprised to see an old bald-headed priest standing in the doorway. "Sorry, but we have nothing," she went on, feeling sure the visitor had come in search of food. "We have fed on scraps these two weeks - on scraps and scrapings—and now we are living on the memories of what we used to have when my son's father was living. Our cat was so fat she couldn't climb to the roof. Now look at her. You can hardly see her, she's so thin. No, I'm sorry we can't help you, friend priest, but you see how it is."
"I didn't come for alms," cried the clean-shaven one, looking at her kindly, "but only to see what I could do to help you. The gods have listened long to the prayers of your devoted son. They honour him because he has not waited till you die to do sacrifice for you. They have seen how faithfully he has served you ever since his illness, and now, when he is worn out and unable to work, they are resolved to reward him for his virtue. You likewise have been a good mother and shall receive the gift I am now bringing."
"What do you mean?" faltered Mrs. Wang, hardly believing her ears at hearing a priest speak of bestowing mercies. "Have you come here to laugh at our misfortunes?"
"By no means. Here in my hand I hold a tiny golden beetle which you will find has a magic power greater than any you ever dreamed of. I will leave this precious thing with you, a present from the god of filial conduct."
"Yes, it will sell for a good sum," murmured the other, looking closely at the trinket, "and will give us millet for several days. Thanks, good priest, for your kindness."
"But you must by no means sell this golden beetle, for it has the power to fill your stomachs as long as you live."
The widow stared in open-mouthed wonder at the priest's surprising words.
"Yes, you must not doubt me, but listen carefully to what I tell you. Whenever you wish food, you have only to place this ornament in a kettle of boiling water, saying over and over again the names of what you want to eat. In three minutes take off the lid, and there will be your dinner, smoking hot, and cooked more perfectly than any food you have ever eaten."
"May I try it now?" she asked eagerly.
"As soon as I am gone."
When the door was shut, the old woman hurriedly kindled a fire, boiled some water, and then dropped in the golden beetle, repeating these words again and again:
"Dumplings, dumplings, come to me,
I am thin as thin can be.
Dumplings, dumplings, smoking hot,
Dumplings, dumplings, fill the pot."
Would those three minutes never pass? Could the priest have told the truth? Her old head was nearly wild with excitement as clouds of steam rose from the kettle. Off came the lid! She could wait no longer. Wonder of wonders! There before her unbelieving eyes was a pot, full to the brim of pork dumplings, dancing up and down in the bubbling water, the best, the most delicious dumplings she had ever tasted. She ate and ate till there was no room left in her greedy stomach, and then she feasted the cat and the dog until they were ready to burst.
"Good fortune has come at last," whispered Blackfoot, the dog, to Whitehead, the cat, as they lay down to sun themselves outside. "I fear I couldn't have held out another week without running away to look for food. I don't know just what's happened, but there's no use questioning the gods."
Mrs. Wang fairly danced for joy at the thought of her son's return and of how she would feast him.
"Poor boy, how surprised he will be at our fortune - and it's all on account of his goodness to his old mother."
When Ming-li came, with a dark cloud overhanging his brow, the widow saw plainly that disappointment was written there.
"Come, come, lad!" she cried cheerily, "clear up your face and smile, for the gods have been good to us and I shall soon show you how richly your devotion has been rewarded." So saying, she dropped the golden beetle into the boiling water and stirred up the fire.
Thinking his mother had gone stark mad for want of food, Ming-li stared solemnly at her. Anything was preferable to this misery. Should he sell his last outer garment for a few pennies and buy millet for her? Blackfoot licked his hand comfortingly, as if to say, "Cheer up, master, fortune has turned in our favour." Whitehead leaped upon a bench, purring like a sawmill.
Ming-li did not have long to wait. Almost in the twinkling of an eye he heard his mother crying out,
"Sit down at the table, son, and eat these dumplings while they are smoking hot."
Could he have heard correctly? Did his ears deceive him? No, there on the table was a huge platter full of the delicious pork dumplings he liked better than anything else in all the world, except, of course, his mother.
"Eat and ask no questions," counselled the Widow Wang. "When you are satisfied I will tell you everything."
Wise advice! Very soon the young man's chopsticks were twinkling like a little star in the verses. He ate long and happily, while his good mother watched him, her heart overflowing with joy at seeing him at last able to satisfy his hunger. But still the old woman could hardly wait for him to finish, she was so anxious to tell him her wonderful secret.
"Here, son!" she cried at last, as he began to pause between mouthfuls, "look at my treasure!" And she held out to him the golden beetle.
"First tell me what good fairy of a rich man has been filling our hands with silver?"
"That's just what I am trying to tell you," she laughed, "for there was a fairy here this afternoon sure enough, only he was dressed like a bald priest. That golden beetle is all he gave me, but with it comes a secret worth thousands of cash to us."
The youth fingered the trinket idly, still doubting his senses, and waiting impatiently for the secret of his delicious dinner. "But, mother, what has this brass bauble to do with the dumplings, these wonderful pork dumplings, the finest I ever ate?"
"Baubles indeed! Brass! Fie, fie, my boy! You little know what you are saying. Only listen and you shall hear a tale that will open your eyes."
She then told him what had happened, and ended by setting all of the left-over dumplings upon the floor for Blackfoot and Whitehead, a thing her son had never seen her do before, for they had been miserably poor and had had to save every scrap for the next meal.
Now began a long period of perfect happiness. Mother, son, dog and cat—all enjoyed themselves to their hearts' content. All manner of new foods such as they had never tasted were called forth from the pot by the wonderful little beetle. Bird-nest soup, shark's fins, and a hundred other delicacies were theirs for the asking, and soon Ming-li regained all his strength, but, I fear, at the same time grew somewhat lazy, for it was no longer necessary for him to work. As for the two animals, they became fat and sleek and their hair grew long and glossy.
But alas! according to a Chinese proverb, pride invites sorrow. The little family became so proud of their good fortune that they began to ask friends and relatives to dinner that they might show off their good meals. One day a Mr. and Mrs. Chu came from a distant village. They were much astonished at seeing the high style in which the Wangs lived. They had expected a beggar's meal, but went away with full stomachs.
"It's the best stuff I ever ate," said Mr. Chu, as they entered their own tumble-down house.
"Yes, and I know where it came from," exclaimed his wife. "I saw Widow Wang take a little gold ornament out of the pot and hide it in a cupboard. It must be some sort of charm, for I heard her mumbling to herself about pork and dumplings just as she was stirring up the fire."
"A charm, eh? Why is it that other people have all the luck? It looks as if we were doomed forever to be poor."
"Why not borrow Mrs. Wang's charm for a few days until we can pick up a little flesh to keep our bones from clattering? Turn about's fair play. Of course, we'll return it sooner or later."
"Doubtless they keep very close watch over it. When would you find them away from home, now that they don't have to work any more? As their house only contains one room, and that no bigger than ours, it would be difficult to borrow this golden trinket. It is harder, for more reasons than one, to steal from a beggar than from a king."
"Luck is surely with us," cried Mrs. Chu, clapping her hands. "They are going this very day to the Temple fair. I overheard Mrs. Wang tell her son that he must not forget he was to take her about the middle of the afternoon. I will slip back then and borrow the little charm from the box in which she hid it."
"Aren't you afraid of Blackfoot?"
"Pooh! he's so fat he can do nothing but roll. If the widow comes back suddenly, I'll tell her I came to look for my big hair-pin, that I lost it while I was at dinner."
"All right, go ahead, only of course we must remember we're borrowing the thing, not stealing it, for the Wangs have always been good friends to us, and then, too, we have just dined with them."
So skilfully did this crafty woman carry out her plans that within an hour she was back in her own house, gleefully showing the priest's charm to her husband. Not a soul had seen her enter the Wang house. The dog had made no noise, and the cat had only blinked her surprise at seeing a stranger and had gone to sleep again on the floor.
Great was the clamour and weeping when, on returning from the fair in expectation of a hot supper, the widow found her treasure missing. It was long before she could grasp the truth. She went back to the little box in the cupboard ten times before she could believe it was empty, and the room looked as if a cyclone had struck it, so long and carefully did the two unfortunates hunt for the lost beetle.
Then came days of hunger which were all the harder to bear since the recent period of good food and plenty. Oh, if they had only not got used to such dainties! How hard it was to go back to scraps and scrapings!
But if the widow and her son were sad over the loss of the good meals, the two pets were even more so. They were reduced to beggary and had to go forth daily upon the streets in search of stray bones and refuse that decent dogs and cats turned up their noses at.
One day, after this period of starvation had been going on for some time, Whitehead began suddenly to frisk about in great excitement.
"Whatever is the matter with you?" growled Blackfoot. "Are you mad from hunger, or have you caught another flea?"
"I was just thinking over our affairs, and now I know the cause of all our trouble."
"Do you indeed?" sneered Blackfoot.
"Yes, I do indeed, and you'd better think twice before you mock me, for I hold your future in my paw, as you will very soon see."
"Well, you needn't get angry about nothing. What wonderful discovery have you made—that every rat has one tail?"
"First of all, are you willing to help me bring good fortune back to our family?"
"Of course I am. Don't be silly," barked the dog, wagging his tail joyfully at the thought of another good dinner. "Surely! surely! I will do anything you like if it will bring Dame Fortune back again."
"All right. Here is the plan. There has been a thief in the house who has stolen our mistress's golden beetle. You remember all our big dinners that came from the pot? Well, every day I saw our mistress take a little golden beetle out of the black box and put it into the pot. One day she held it up before me, saying, 'Look, puss, there is the cause of all our happiness. Don't you wish it was yours?' Then she laughed and put it back into the box that stays in the cupboard."
"Is that true?" questioned Blackfoot. "Why didn't you say something about it before?"
"You remember the day Mr. and Mrs. Chu were here, and how Mrs. Chu returned in the afternoon after master and mistress had gone to the fair? I saw her, out of the tail of my eye, go to that very black box and take out the golden beetle. I thought it curious, but never dreamed she was a thief. Alas! I was wrong! She took the beetle, and if I am not mistaken, she and her husband are now enjoying the feasts that belong to us."
"Let's claw them," growled Blackfoot, gnashing his teeth.
"That would do no good," counselled the other, "for they would be sure to come out best in the end. We want the beetle back—that's the main thing. We'll leave revenge to human beings; it is none of our business."
"What do you suggest?" said Blackfoot. "I am with you through thick and thin."
"Let's go to the Chu house and make off with the beetle."
"Alas, that I am not a cat!" moaned Blackfoot. "If we go there I couldn't get inside, for robbers always keep their gates well locked. If I were like you I could scale the wall. It is the first time in all my life I ever envied a cat."
"We will go together," continued Whitehead. "I will ride on your back when we are fording the river, and you can protect me from strange animals. When we get to the Chu house, I will climb over the wall and manage the rest of the business myself. Only you must wait outside to help me to get home with the prize."
No sooner arranged than done. The companions set out that very night on their adventure. They crossed the river as the cat had suggested, and Blackfoot really enjoyed the swim, for, as he said, it took him back to his puppyhood, while the cat did not get a single drop of water on her face. It was midnight when they reached the Chu house.
"Just wait till I return," purred Whitehead in Blackfoot's ear.
With a mighty spring she reached the top of the mud wall, and then jumped down to the inside court. While she was resting in the shadow, trying to decide just how to go about her work, a slight rustling attracted her attention, and pop! one giant spring, one stretch-out of the claws, and she had caught a rat that had just come out of his hole for a drink and a midnight walk.
Now, Whitehead was so hungry that she would have made short work of this tempting prey if the rat had not opened its mouth and, to her amazement, begun to talk in good cat dialect.
"Pray, good puss, not so fast with your sharp teeth! Kindly be careful with your claws! Don't you know it is the custom now to put prisoners on their honour? I will promise not to run away."
"Pooh! what honour has a rat?"
"Most of us haven't much, I grant you, but my family was brought up under the roof of Confucius, and there we picked up so many crumbs of wisdom that we are exceptions to the rule. If you will spare me, I will obey you for life, in fact, will be your humble slave." Then, with a quick jerk, freeing itself, "See, I am loose now, but honour holds me as if I were tied, and so I make no further attempt to get away."
"Much good it would do you," purred Whitehead, her fur crackling noisily, and her mouth watering for a taste of rat steak. "However, I am quite willing to put you to the test. First, answer a few polite questions and I will see if you're a truthful fellow. What kind of food is your master eating now, that you should be so round and plump when I am thin and scrawny?"
"Oh, we have been in luck lately, I can tell you. Master and mistress feed on the fat of the land, and of course we hangers-on get the crumbs."
"But this is a poor tumble-down house. How can they afford such eating?"
"That is a great secret, but as I am in honour bound to tell you, here goes. My mistress has just obtained in some manner or other, a fairy's charm..."
"She stole it from our place," hissed the cat, "I will claw her eyes out if I get the chance. Why, we've been fairly starving for want of that beetle. She stole it from us just after she had been an invited guest! What do you think of that for honour, Sir Rat? Were your mistress's ancestors followers of the sage?"
"Oh, oh, oh! Why, that explains everything!" wailed the rat. "I have often wondered how they got the golden beetle, and yet of course I dared not ask any questions."
"No, certainly not! But hark you, friend rat - you get that golden trinket back for me, and I will set you free at once of all obligations. Do you know where she hides it?"
"Yes, in a crevice where the wall is broken. I will bring it to you in a jiffy, but how shall we exist when our charm is gone? There will be a season of scanty food, I fear; beggars' fare for all of us."
"Live on the memory of your good deed," purred the cat. "It is splendid, you know, to be an honest beggar. Now scoot! I trust you completely, since your people lived in the home of Confucius. I will wait here for your return. Ah!" laughed Whitehead to herself, "luck seems to be coming our way again!"
Five minutes later the rat appeared, bearing the trinket in its mouth. It passed the beetle over to the cat, and then with a whisk was off for ever. Its honour was safe, but it was afraid of Whitehead. It had seen the gleam of desire in her green eyes, and the cat might have broken her word if she had not been so anxious to get back home where her mistress could command the wonderful kettle once more to bring forth food.
The two adventurers reached the river just as the sun was rising above the eastern hills.
"Be careful," cautioned Blackfoot, as the cat leaped upon his back for her ride across the stream, "be careful not to forget the treasure. In short, remember that even though you are a female, it is necessary to keep your mouth closed till we reach the other side."
"Thanks, but I don't think I need your advice," replied Whitehead, picking up the beetle and leaping on to the dog's back.
But alas! just as they were nearing the farther shore, the excited cat forgot her wisdom for a moment. A fish suddenly leaped out of the water directly under her nose. It was too great a temptation. Snap! went her jaws in a vain effort to land the scaly treasure, and the golden beetle sank to the bottom of the river.
"There!" said the dog angrily, "what did I tell you? Now all our trouble has been in vain—all on account of your stupidity."
For a time there was a bitter dispute, and the companions called each other some very bad names—such as turtle and rabbit. Just as they were starting away from the river, disappointed and discouraged, a friendly frog who had by chance heard their conversation offered to fetch the treasure from the bottom of the stream. No sooner said than done, and after thanking this accommodating animal profusely, they turned homeward once more.
When they reached the cottage the door was shut, and, bark as he would, Blackfoot could not persuade his master to open it. There was the sound of loud wailing inside.
"Mistress is broken-hearted," whispered the cat, "I will go to her and make her happy."
So saying, she sprang lightly through a hole in the paper window, which, alas! was too small and too far from the ground for the faithful dog to enter.
A sad sight greeted the gaze of Whitehead. The son was lying on the bed unconscious, almost dead for want of food, while his mother, in despair, was rocking backwards and forwards wringing her wrinkled hands and crying at the top of her voice for some one to come and save them.
"Here I am, mistress," cried Whitehead, "and here is the treasure you are weeping for. I have rescued it and brought it back to you."
The widow, wild with joy at sight of the beetle, seized the cat in her scrawny arms and hugged the pet tightly to her bosom.
"Breakfast, son, breakfast! Wake up from your swoon! Fortune has come again. We are saved from starvation!"
Soon a steaming hot meal was ready, and you may well imagine how the old woman and her son, heaping praises upon Whitehead, filled the beast's platter with good things, but never a word did they say of the faithful dog, who remained outside sniffing the fragrant odours and waiting in sad wonder, for all this time the artful cat had said nothing of Blackfoot's part in the rescue of the golden beetle.
At last, when breakfast was over, slipping away from the others, Whitehead jumped out through the hole in the window.
"Oh, my dear Blackfoot," she began laughingly, "you should have been inside to see what a feast they gave me! Mistress was so delighted at my bringing back her treasure that she could not give me enough to eat, nor say enough kind things about me. Too bad, old fellow, that you are hungry. You'd better run out into the street and hunt up a bone."
Maddened by the shameful treachery of his companion, the enraged dog sprang upon the cat and in a few seconds had shaken her to death.
"So dies the one who forgets a friend and who loses honour," he cried sadly, as he stood over the body of his companion.
Rushing out into the street, he proclaimed the treachery of Whitehead to the members of his tribe, at the same time advising that all self-respecting dogs should from that time onwards make war upon the feline race.
And that is why the descendants of old Blackfoot, whether in China or in the
great countries of the West, have waged continual war upon the children and
grandchildren of Whitehead, for a thousand generations of dogs have fought them
and hated them with a great and lasting
hatred.
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Friday, November 21, 2008
WORLD HELLO DAY
Here’s one event that you can participate in without it costing you a dime
or even one red cent. It’s easy, and it’s good for everyone. What could
possibly be so wonderful? World Hello Day, that’s what.
This friendly annual event began on this day in 1972 and has grown enormously since. People in 180 countries have participated and the heads of state of 114 countries have given their approval.
Now here’s what you do to participate: you just say, “hello” to ten people on this day. Greet them warmly and with a smile. And you can say, “hello” in any language.
The reason: World Hello Day will put us all one step further ahead in the attempt to advance world peace through personal communication.
Say Hello to the World
The
36th Annual
World Hello Day
November
21st, 2008
Greet Ten People for Peace
|
WORLD
HELLO DAY |
November 21, 2008 is the 36th annual World Hello Day. Anyone can participate in World Hello Day simply by greeting ten people. This demonstrates the importance of personal communication for preserving peace.
World Hello Day was begun in response to the conflict between Egypt and Israel in the Fall of 1973. Since then, World Hello Day has been observed by people in 180 countries.
People around the world use the occasion of World Hello Day as an opportunity to express their concern for world peace. Beginning with a simple greeting on World Hello Day, their activities send a message to leaders, encouraging them to use communication rather than force to settle conflicts.
As a global event World Hello Day joins local participation in a global expression of peace. The World Hello Day web site address is http://www.worldhelloday.org.
31 winners of the Nobel Peace Prize are among the people who have realized World Hello Day's value as an instrument for preserving peace and as an occasion that makes it possible for anyone in the world to contribute to the process of creating peace.
Brian McCormack, a Ph.D. graduate of Arizona State University, and Michael McCormack, a graduate of Harvard University, work together to promote this annual global event.
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