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Post by louie93 on Oct 11, 2005 1:03:42 GMT -5
i changed cos i felt my veronica mars ones did'nt represent me but buffy does
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Post by Gardez on Oct 16, 2005 15:58:37 GMT -5
N.J. Cops Find Alligator in Flooded Yard
Saturday, October 15, 2005 PISCATAWAY, N.J. - With all the rain, New Jersey may have seemed like a swamp this week. But alligators?
Piscataway police recovered a 3-foot long alligator in the backyard of a house on Saturday.
"It's not normal to find an alligator around here," said Lt. George Maurer. He added with a chuckle, "I know we've had a lot of rain."
In his 28 years, Maurer had never heard of an alligator in town, but when police arrived at the house, they discovered the woman was right.
An animal control officer trapped it in a cage and took it to an animal shelter.
Neither the woman nor authorities knew how the alligator got there, Maurer said. In other cases in which alligators have been found in areas where they don't normally live, the animals had been released by people who had ill-advisedly kept them as pets.
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Post by louie93 on Oct 17, 2005 1:02:57 GMT -5
i called scully and mulder and they rejected as they are on a romantic break let's call in the other agents from the x file agent monica reyes and agent john doggett
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Post by Gardez on Oct 19, 2005 20:27:25 GMT -5
Deputy Allegedly Pulls Gun on Slow Golfers
Wednesday, October 19, 2005 CHINO, Calif. - An Orange County sheriff's reserve deputy was ordered to trial for allegedly pulling a gun on two slow-playing golfers and threatening them at Los Serranos Golf & Country Club.
Witnesses said Raymond Yi, 44, pointed a gun at the golfers and flashed his sheriff's badge during the July incident.
"When I saw him Mr.C his gun, something fell out and my mouth dropped. I couldn't believe this was happening on a golf course," said golfer Marcelo Bautista, 35, a Los Angeles teacher who was playing on the course with his uncle Gustavo Resendiz.
Bautista said Yi had hit two balls toward the men and at the 14th hole Bautista hit Yi's ball back toward him. According to Bautista, Yi confronted him, left the fairway and returned with a badge and pointed a gun to his head.
Bautista and Resendez continued playing but Yi followed them, pushed Resendiz and then Mr.Ced his gun.
"I really thought I was gonna be killed right then and there," said Resendiz, 61.
At the end of Monday's preliminary hearing, Superior Court Judge Raymond Youngquist said there was enough evidence to order trial. Yi is charged with two counts of @ssault with a firearm and two counts of making criminal threats. He will be arraigned Nov. 1.
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Post by louie93 on Oct 20, 2005 9:10:28 GMT -5
jeez, gardez do you work for the x files or something
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Post by Gardez on Oct 22, 2005 18:11:24 GMT -5
Shhhhhhh
:-)
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Post by Gardez on Oct 22, 2005 18:11:57 GMT -5
Pet Owners Seek Grooming for Their Rats
Friday, October 21, 2005 LA VERNE, Calif. - Karri Garrison is getting rid of that cliche about dirty rats - one rodent at a time. Grooming isn't just for dogs anymore, and many pet owners are bringing in their rats to groomers like Garrison, who uses waterless shampoo to make their coats shine and smell sweet.
Customers at Katie's Pet Depot in La Verne, about 30 miles east of Los Angeles, began requesting rat grooming soon after the store opened nearly two years ago. Employees began researching rats and even adopted some.
"We need to be there for all our clients," Garrison said. "I think we might be the only place around that grooms rats."
One of the clients was named Jewel, a half-pound, white-and-yellow hooded rat owned by a local high school student. The $10 trbitement included clipping her claws, spraying her with the waterless shampoo, and using a product that kills fleas and mites.
Garrison and two other employees, Laurie Torres and Gloria Ferguson, also groom guinea pigs, mice, and rabbits.
They said small pets can bring big challenges.
"The most difficult part of grooming rats is trimming their nails," Garrison said. "They have very small feet."
Ferguson recommends pet owners get their animals groomed at least once a month to protect them from parasites.
"I love rats," she said. "It's an obsession to me. Sometimes when they get nervous they (urinate) but they don't usually bite. We know how to handle them because that's what we do."
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Post by louie93 on Oct 23, 2005 4:05:46 GMT -5
the truth is out there.......
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Post by JB on Nov 5, 2005 22:37:04 GMT -5
LOL
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Post by Gardez on Dec 12, 2005 20:16:20 GMT -5
Mice Created With Human Brain Cells
Monday, December 12, 2005 SAN FRANCISCO - Add another creation to the strange scientific menagerie where animal species are being mixed together in ever more exotic combinations.
Scientists announced Monday that they had created mice with small amounts of human brain cells in an effort to make realistic models of neurological disorders such as Parkinson's disease.
Led by Fred Gage of the Salk Institute in San Diego, the researchers created the mice by injecting about 100,000 human embryonic stem cells per mouse into the brains of 14-day-old rodent embryos.
Those mice were each born with about 0.1 percent of human cells in each of their heads, a trace amount that doesn't remotely come close to "humanizing" the rodents.
"This illustrate that injecting human stem cells into mouse brains doesn't restructure the brain," Gage said.
Still, the work adds to the growing ethical concerns of mixing human and animal cells when it comes to stem cell and cloning research. After all, mice are 97.5 percent genetically identical to humans.
"The worry is if you humanize them too much you cross certain boundaries," said David Magnus, director of the Stanford Medical Center for Biomedical Ethics. "But I don't think this research comes even close to that."
Researchers are nevertheless beginning to bump up against what bioethicists call the "yuck factor."
Three top cloning researchers, for instance, have applied for a patent that contemplates fusing a complete set of human DNA into animal eggs in order to manufacturer human embryonic stem cells.
One of the patent applicants, Jose Cibelli, first attempted such an experiment in 1998 when he fused cells from his cheek into cow eggs.
"The idea is to hijack the machinery of the egg," said Cibelli, whose current work at Michigan State University does not involve human material because that would violate state law.
Researchers argue that co-mingling human and animal tissue is vital to ensuring that experimental drugs and new tissue replacement therapies are safe for people.
Others have performed similar experiments with rabbit and chicken eggs while University of California-Irvine researchers have reported making paralyzed rodents walk after injecting them with human nerve cells.
Doctors have transplanted pig valves into human hearts for years, and scientists have injected human cells into lab animals for even longer. But the brain poses an additional level of concern because some envision nightmare scenarios in which a human mind might be trapped in an animal head.
"Human diseases, such as Parkinson's disease, might be amenable to stem cell therapy, and it is conceivable, although unlikely, that an animal's cognitive abilities could also be affected by such therapy," a report issued in April by the influential National Academies of Science that sought to draw some ethical research boundaries.
So the report recommended that such work be allowed, but with strict ethical guidelines established.
"Protocols should be reviewed to ensure that they take into account those sorts of possibilities and that they include ethically sensitive plans to manage them if they arise," the report concluded.
At the same time, the report did endorse research that co-mingles human and animal tissue as vital to ensuring that experimental drugs and new tissue replacement therapies are safe for people.
Gage said the work published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences is another step in overcoming one of the biggest technical hurdles confronting stem cell researchers: when exactly to inject the cells into patients.
The results suggest that human embryonic stem cells, once injected into people, will mature into the cells that surround them. No known human has ever received an injection of embryonic stem cells because so little is known about how those cells will mature once inside the body.
For now, Gage said his work is more geared toward understanding disease than to finding a cure.
"It's a way for us to begin to tease out the way these diseases develop," Gage said.
Human embryonic stem cells are created in the first days after conception and give rise to all the organs and tissues in the human body. Scientists hope they can someday use stem cells to replace diseased tissue. But many social conservatives, including President Bush, oppose the work because embryos are destroyed during research.
Stem cell researchers argue that mixing human and animal cells is the only way to advance the field because it's far too risky to experiment on people; so little is known about stem cells.
"The experiments have to be done, which does mean human cells into non-human cells," said Dr. Evan Snyder, a stem cell researcher at the Burnham Institute in San Diego. "You don't work out the issues on your child or your grandmother. You want to work this out in an animal first."
Snyder is injecting human embryonic stem cells into monkeys and is convinced that there's little danger.
"It's true that there is a huge amount of similarity, but the difference are huge," Snyder said. "You will never ever have a little human trapped inside a mouse or monkey's body."
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