Raptiva, an
immunosuppressant used to treat severe plaque psoriasis, caught
the attention of the FDA as triggering the activation of the John Cunningham virus. Present in 70%
to 90% of human beings, the virus, once activated, inflames the white matter of
the brain – a condition known as progressive multifocal
leukoencephalitis (PML) – which has no cure and is almost always fatal.
Although the FDA recognized the link between Raptiva and PML last autumn, it
wasn’t until last month that Genentech, the manufacturers of
the drug, issued a voluntary
withdrawal, and even then, are still allowing people who use Raptiva to continue
to get refills until June 8.
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Naked Swedish Men and the “Dance of the Crispbread”
“Dance of the Crispbread” to ancient Swedish folk songs such as “What
What In The Butt” and “Kung Fu Fighting.” They use the bread to cover
what we can only imagine are their already impressive manhoods.
The most inappropriate logo of all-time
In the 70s, this picture stood for God’s children. Now it just stands
for boys giving priests a good ol’ beej. Yes, this is an actual logo
designed in 1973 for the Catholic Church’s Archdiocesan Youth
Commission. It even won an award from the Art Directors Club of Los
Angeles.

Woman sends Stripper to 10 year school reunion.
Andrea Wachner sent an erotic dancer, named Cricket, to impersonate her
at her ten year high school reunion. The dancer wore a hidden ear piece
to stay in communication with Wachner. A film crew was on the scene
pretending to film a documentary about artists, including Wachner. Of
course, they were really documenting Wachner’s brilliant prank. When
she posted clips to YouTube, some of her classmates weren’t too happy
they’d been duped. Now Wachner has a manager shopping her story as a
reality show or feature film. From ABC News:
Cricket told the reunion attendees that she’d had
reconstructive surgery and also suffered from amnesia. It wasn’t
completely unbelievable, because some had already heard that the
real-life Wachner was in an accident after high school — her car was
totaled and she had been injured, but she had never suffered from
amnesia.Most of them had not seen or talked to Wachner since high
school, but many found her new profession suspect: Cricket as Andrea
said she was working as a stripper to help pay her graduate school
tuition.Daniel Wolowicz, 32, who had been an acquaintance of Wachner’s in high school, said he was immediately suspicious.
“She was just so different. You have to understand the
community we had come from,” he said. “Everyone was questioning who
this person was.“I had asked her a very specific question about seeing her at
a bat mitzvah when I was 15 years old,” he said. When Cricket answered
his question correctly, Wolowicz said he assumed it was Andrea or
“someone else who had been given a lot of information.”It would be awhile, however, before he learned the full truth.
As the night progressed the drinks flowed, and Cricket, always
outgoing, was getting ready for the climax of the evening: a striptease
performed to what Cricket described as “one of the worst songs of the
’90s,” Lisa Loeb’s “Stay.”
Make Your Home Glow Like a Virgin-Atlantic Flight
Designer Mark Pohlkamp’s LIT Urban Underglow
is a long LED tube that changes color via remote. 16 colors and four
preset “light shows” can be yours for $200… Or you could save $44 and
book a seat on Virgin from NY to London. Tough call in this economy.
am hatchink fiendish plan to catch moose and squirrel
Interested in Soviet era spying by the KGB in the United States? Bummed
that you cant get into the KGB archives? Well it turns out that someone copied all the good stuff already, and you can take a peek.
Alexander Vassiliev was a KGB officer who turned to journalism in 1990.
From 1993-96 he had access to the KGB archives for the 1930s to early
1950s to write notes for a book project on Soviet spying in the Stalin
era. His original notebooks – including extensive verbatim
transcriptions – were left behind in Moscow when he moved to London but
smuggled out via an elaborate plan.
There are eight notebooks, on the Cold War International History site
there are scans, transliterations and translations of each notebook,
free for nothing. Vassilev assisted in the transcriptions and
transliterations.
The whole story is in Alexander Vassiliev’s Notebooks: Provenance and Documentation of Soviet Intelligence Activities in the United States
(pdf). “Since the KGB’s archives remain closed, Vassiliev’s notebooks
are as close as we are likely to get to the actual documents for many
years, likely decades”
Google looks like Garble
Similar Images is a Google feature that allows you to search for images using pictures rather than words. So you can get images of vaguely similar pigs or somewhat similar houses or egglike shapes or hands or snowflakes.
A touch of Springer
War of the Roses
These are trashy, but fun, 3-8 minute radio segments in which suspected
cheaters are tricked into revealing their dirty sinful business over
the phone. Typically, the DJ posing as a local flower shop tells a
suspect boyfriend he has won a free bouquet of roses; will he send the
roses to his girlfriend or to the dreaded Other Woman? The girlfriend
waits in silence to ambush him if he gives the wrong answer. Some are sad. Some are infuriating. Most, I’m ashamed to say, are pretty funny.
Depression: What Is It?
Depression is not a sign of weakness or a negative personality. It is a major public health problem and a treatable medical condition. It’s natural to feel down sometimes, but if that low mood lingers day after day, it could signal depression.
Seasonal Depression
If your mood matches the weather – sunny in the summer, gloomy in the winter
– you may have a form of depression called seasonal affective disorder (SAD).
The onset of SAD usually occurs in the late fall and early winter, as the
daylight hours grow shorter. Experts say SAD affects up to 3% of the U.S.
population, or about 9 million people, mainly in the northern part of the
country.
Depression: What Is It?







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