Still trying to get my hands on a camera so I can take more pictures. Will have to figure that one out later however.


Fooling Fate: Chapter OneChapter OneFooling Fate: Chapter One
"You have two weeks to find a man or I'm disowning you." This wasn't happening. It couldn't be, at least that's what Morgan Kay muttered to herself as she cradled her cellular phone on her shoulder and listened to the deranged woman on the other end. "Mom, you can't do that," she sputtered. "I mean, you wouldn't." "I can do whatever I damn well please and don't you forget it Miss Bigshot CEO. I'm getting old I want grandchildren! You've got two weeks." Morgan smirked. "It takes longer than two weeks to make a baby mom."
"Fine, but a month from t


Antibiotic abuse The idea of a “super-bug” capable of wreaking havoc on the human body and able to resist the most powerful drugs available sounds like something out of a campy science fiction story. However, super-bugs have become a grave reality and, as it turns out, are being created by our overuse of antibiotics. The CDC’s (Centers for Disease Control) website estimates that 1/3 of the antibiotics prescribed in the United States are unnecessary. In a poll conducted on the Spokane Falls Community College campus, 70 percent of students polled said that they had been prescribed antibiotics for a cold, flu or ear infeAntibiotic abuse


Infectious Disease: Smallpox In 1967 the World Health Organization (WHO) launched a major campaign to eradicate the world of smallpox. It would be the first time humans purposely destroyed an entire species. The World Health Assembly declared smallpox officially eradicated in 1980 Today smallpox is more the stuff of television movies than hospital nightmares. The last natural case occurred in 1977 in Somalia. Another case a year later in the United Kingdom occurred because of a lab mistake. Believed to have originated over 3,000 years ago in either India or Egypt, smallpox is one of the most devastating diInfectious Disease: Smallpox


Infectious Disease: EbolaEbola, a member of the hemorrhagic fever viruses, is one of more than 10 viruses capable of causing viral hemorrhagic fever syndrome. Specifically, Ebola belongs in the Filoviridae family, along with the Marburg virus. Illness typically develops between two to 21 days after initial exposure. Fever, fatigue, body aches, rashes, nausea, abdominal pain and headaches are but a few of the symptoms those infected feel. As the disease progresses, bleeding under the skin and from the mouth, ears, nose and eyes are quite characteristic. Death often results one to two weeks after the beginning of the sympInfectious Disease: Ebola
-- Dev.
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This is addictive...isn't it. hehe.
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life is crazy ans so we are all
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life is crazy ans so we are all
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