From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V11 #395 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Saturday, May 19 2007 Volume 11 : Number 395 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Hey. I selling Rolexes do you want one? 0dq34 ["Nolan Cruz" ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 19 May 2007 00:53:11 +0000 From: "Nolan Cruz" Subject: Hey. I selling Rolexes do you want one? 0dq34 Dear ammi@fruvous.com http://lopoiiui.com What is Exquisite Replica store? At Exquisite Replica, we specialize in the sales of brand-name quality, luxury replicas at some of the lowest prices possible. With our large selection of products, you can be sure to find that perfect gift for yourself or a loved one. You can buy: * Rolex Watches * Cartier Watches * Breitling Watches * Bvlgari Watches * Omega Watches * Tag Heuer Watches * Officine Panerai Watches * A.Lange & Sohne Watches * Franck Muller Watches * Chopard Watches * Hermes Watches * Jacob & Co. Watches Get 25% off when buying 2 watches! Visit Exquisite Replica Shop! http://lopoiiui.com Thanks Ann Smith ammi@fruvous.com wrote: > Looking for special gift. Buy Rolex 1g2vl43r1a- ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 19 May 2007 07:28:28 +0700 From: "Donna" Subject: Aatu did you here from Abby How are you Ted, To be a strong man again, only takes 15 minutes : Just go to: http://vurwna.tiforseh.com =01.. Worldwide shipping =02.. Secure payment Cheers Donna The student whose resident seemingly lied to the attending physician abou= t the blood test did not speak up either. The student admitted that he wa= s far from positive that something was seriously wrong. Fortunately, medi= cal educators are increasingly recognizing the dilemmas that doctors in t= raining confront when they witness behavior that makes them uncomfortable= Still, it will be hard to change the unfortunate perception that constr= uctive feedback, even for a patient=92s benefit, is whistle-blowing. =93W= hat our study shows,=94 he continued, =93is that interventions even witho= ut a vaccine can be effective in blocking transmission. Because of the stringencies of their order (the Faithful Companions of Je= sus), theirs was hardly a vibrant intellectual climate, and young Brenda=92= s reading =96 including Graham Greene =96 soon intimidated the author-iti= es. But in the mid-1970s this was well into the future. But this latest r= eform remains unfinished business =96 a private sector is allowed scope t= o compete, but public institutions remain bound and constrained. The mess= ages had this in common: They were all written to a correspondent who led= an unquestionably normal life. They were an introduction to a man I had not properly known. The unquesti= onably normal person, whose photograph still looked as though it were rea= ding its e-mail messages from the opposite side of the Web page, had alre= ady fled =97 to find peace, or reconciliation or relief, I don=92t know. = On the top were the senior physicians who made rounds on the wards once o= r twice daily. The student whose resident seemingly lied to the attending= physician about the blood test did not speak up either. A student recent= ly told me he had examined a patient and concluded that she might have a = severe abdominal disorder. After all, in each of these examples, patients are at risk of harm, somet= hing that physicians must avoid at all costs. Still, it will be hard to c= hange the unfortunate perception that constructive feedback, even for a p= atient=92s benefit, is whistle-blowing. Batchelor, with just under five hundred student places allocated for 2006= , is the sole survivor of pre-Dawkins days. Benefits flowed too in socio-= economic terms; an Australian Council of Education Research study con-clu= ded the proportion of children of unskilled manual workers going to unive= rsity nearly doubled between 1980 and 1994. But this latest reform remain= s unfinished business =96 a private sector is allowed scope to compete, b= ut public institutions remain bound and constrained. Consistency has prov= ed more valued than difference. Diversity=92s institutional demise Each d= ay, shortlists pour from our costive fax machine. Elsewhere, we have Rich= ard Holmes=92s seminal Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer (19= 95) and Leon Edel=92s Bloomsbury: A House of Lions (1979), but Australian= examples are few. Engendering empathy towards suffering was something you tried to do in yo= ur work, not merely from principle but because you felt deeply for societ= y=92s outsiders. I typed his name into MySpace, feeling covert and slight= ly criminal. On the opposite side of the screen, there were scrolls of e-= mail messages that other MySpace members had sent him: friendly, uncapita= lized, hallucination-free greetings. The last dozen messages on the screen were exactly the same. The unquesti= onably normal person, whose photograph still looked as though it were rea= ding its e-mail messages from the opposite side of the Web page, had alre= ady fled =97 to find peace, or reconciliation or relief, I don=92t know.Y= et even though such acts can jeopardize patients, the inclination and abi= lity of young doctors to speak up is hampered by the hierarchies in teach= ing hospitals. At the same time, professors at Johns Hopkins and elsewher= e instituted early versions of modern residency training programs, in whi= ch residents =97 newly minted doctors =97 learned their profession on the= wards from attending physicians and, in turn, taught students. The resid= ent was a good doctor, she said, and so she had given him the benefit of = the doubt. Even when students do speak up, they may be ignored. What shou= ld a medical student do in such a situation? One possibility is to take t= he matter up with a more senior doctor. I don=92t know if he drank four to eight glasses of water a day. Because = of the stringencies of their order (the Faithful Companions of Jesus), th= eirs was hardly a vibrant intellectual climate, and young Brenda=92s read= ing =96 including Graham Greene =96 soon intimidated the author-ities. By= 1990 the now standard model of an Australian university had emerged: lar= ge, comprehensive, multi-campus and research-based. noammf888&666fruvous.= commo Canberra would decide how many Commonwealth-supported students coul= d be enrolled at each university and what disciplines they were to study.= Caroline Lurie was Elizabeth Jolley' s agent Dawkins announced that the C= ommonwealth would only support institutions with a minimum of 2000 full-t= ime students. Despite the insularity and pedagogical flaws, Niall did wel= l at school and studied Arts at Melbourne University. Each soon resembled= in basic organisation, courses offered and academic mission the original= universities in Sydney and Melbourne. Evaluated against the objective of= improving access to higher education, the reforms of 1987=9691 proved a = significant and sustained success. Faced with urgent complaints from the VCA and its supporters, Nelson did = not rethink the funding model. Finally, Canberra must surrender its close= control of universities, since these regulations entrench conformity. They were not written to a haunted self, or someone who had failed trials= of antipsychotic drugs, or someone who had been hospitalized again and a= gain under duress. I had gone on the site only a day after his death, but= his cyberobituary must have traveled faster. Doctors in training sometim= es confront situations in which they worry that their supervising physici= ans are making mistakes or bending the truth. Yet even though such acts c= an jeopardize patients, the inclination and ability of young doctors to s= peak up is hampered by the hierarchies in teaching hospitals. Modern medi= cal education can be traced to a series of reforms that began in the late= 19th century. There was a photo of him on one side of the screen, handso= me and poised, with his astrological sign, educational background and a d= escription of his ideal mate. They were not written to a haunted self, or= someone who had failed trials of antipsychotic drugs, or someone who had= been hospitalized again and again under duress. Nor, apparently, was that unseen self writing back. Doctors in training s= ometimes confront situations in which they worry that their supervising p= hysicians are making mistakes or bending the truth. This new division of = labor established hierarchies. On the top were the senior physicians who made rounds on the wards once o= r twice daily. Last were the medical students, who spent the most time wi= th patients but were most assuredly at the bottom of the heap.Although so= me senior physicians welcomed feedback from their juniors, others disdain= ed it, either overtly or through intimidation. Wolfberg wrote in the same= journal last month, for years medical students performed pelvic examinat= ions on anesthetized women who had not given consent because senior obste= tricians said it was the best way to learn internal anatomy. And, she add= ed sheepishly, both the resident and the attending physician would be gra= ding her. Even when students do speak up, they may be ignored. Some voice= d hopes of meeting one day, some had comments about other correspondents = on the site, some sent good wishes on relevant holidays. But he had ignored his hallucinations long enough to write of a different= yet equally true self here, and he had found friends who identified him = not by psychiatric symptoms but by astrological sign. In this world, he w= as a Pisces, not a schizophrenic. In our last meeting, before he stopped = coming to appointments, he told me that he had joined the site to meet fr= iends. Finding him there during life seemed illicit; peeking into his bed= room window. On the opposite side of the screen, there were scrolls of e-mail messages= that other MySpace members had sent him: friendly, uncapitalized, halluc= ination-free greetings. They were an introduction to a man I had not prop= erly known. Yet even though such acts can jeopardize patients, the inclin= ation and ability of young doctors to speak up is hampered by the hierarc= hies in teaching hospitals. One of the most notable occurred at the Johns= Hopkins University School of Medicine, where educators initiated a forma= l system to train students on the clinical wards. This new division of la= bor established hierarchies. Last were the medical students, who spent the most time with patients but= were most assuredly at the bottom of the heap. Even when students do spe= ak up, they may be ignored. Or the student might go directly to the patient or family, telling them t= hat the physicians have a genuine disagreement and that they deserve to k= now about it. Students and residents are now expected to provide routine = feedback =97 positive and negative =97 about their supervising physicians= at the close of their rotation. Back she went to Raheen, flattered and e= xcited, only to be outfoxed by the wily Irish charmer, then ninety-five a= nd giving nothing away. Batchelor, with just under five hundred student p= laces allocated for 2006, is the sole survivor of pre-Dawkins days. Bette= r still, Niall knew him as a child. But this latest reform remains unfini= shed business =96 a private sector is allowed scope to compete, but publi= c institutions remain bound and constrained. By 1990 the now standard mod= el of an Australian university had emerged: large, comprehensive, multi-c= ampus and research-based. By the time the Dawkins wave of mergers concluded in the early 1990s, six= ty-three higher education providers had become thirty-six universities, m= any with multiple campuses. Close to the white mansion that John Wren bui= lt is Raheen, still occupied by Daniel Mannix, halfway through his immens= ely long archbishopric, and a vivid presence in the book, walking daily f= rom Raheen to St Patrick=92s Cathedral in his frock coat and top hat. Con= sistency has proved more valued than difference. Despite the insularity and pedagogical flaws, Niall did well at school an= d studied Arts at Melbourne University. During 2006 Minister Bishop has a= llowed institutions to begin this process, while Labor has proposed a for= mal mechanism, a negotiated compact between Canberra and each university,= acknowledging different roles, missions and circumstances. [demime 0.97c-p1 removed an attachment of type image/jpeg which had a name of m.jpeg] ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V11 #395 *********************************************