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MASKS Denise: “This
recent article compares the cheaper surgical masks
versus the N95, which filters better if you fit it
tightly around the face. It says they are equally effective – but may not be that effective (over 20% infection rate per flu season with either). Other studies disagree. The paper surgical masks
are much more comfortable. However, most people will probably tell you to
get N95 (which is what I have too). They smell funny, though, and are very hot.” ☞
Better hot than dead. Ken
Smith:
“This is what you
want.” ☞
Not cheap or easy to find, but I got a couple here. GUNS Sheldon
Teperman:
“Not sure if you’ve been following this
tragic story: a church-going, happy and vibrant 92-year-old woman whose
life was snuffed out by a stray bullet that came through her window as she
cooked dinner. Unfortunately they keep reporting one fact
incorrectly. She was very much alive when she came to Jacobi (not
DOA). First the ED, and then my team and I
and Anesthesia in the OR, struggled mightily and for some time
to save her frail, beautiful life. But suffice it to say, there is no
technique of 21st Century medicine that could have fixed what that bullet
did. When I pronounced her, I was overcome with the futility and the
horror of what had just transpired. I am grateful to the OR staff for
their usual professionalism and their support in what was a very dark moment in
my career as a trauma surgeon. Had there been a chance, Jacobi would
have seized it. This morning they arrested a teenager and charged him
with murder. Another wasted life. Our society has become
inured to this type of violence and accepts, as a matter of fact, that we must
have our guns, to remain free. I continue to challenge that
assumption – in the name of Sadie Mitchell and in the name of those
that have come before and those who are most certainly to follow.” TRAVEL
TIP Instead of recycling that wide-mouthed plastic Honest Tea container, pack
it, along with a box of Crystal
Light Cherry Pomegranate Immunity On the Go or one of its cousins (Antioxidant
Blueberry White Tea On the Go, anyone?) Total weight added to your
luggage? About 3 ounces. Homeland Security issues? Zero (neither
liquid nor gel). So now you check in to your Priceline hotel
(one silver lining of recessions: name your own price when you travel), fill up
the ice bucket with complimentary ice, pour one packet into the empty plastic
container, add water and ice, shake like crazy – and you’ve just
saved anywhere from $1 to $12 depending on how you travel. (The packets
themselves run around 33 cents* and make the equivalent of two glasses of cold drink
that room service would send up at $4 each plus service charge plus tax plus
tip plus the time it takes to wait for room service. And
don’t get me started on mini-bar charges.) Over a three-day stay,
even if you just go down the hall to use the $1.50-a-can vending machine, you
could save anywhere from $10 to “real money” on this tip.
And avoid the frustration of not having what you want when you want it.
The nutritional value is questionable, I grant you. But could these
drinks be any worse for you than soft drinks that corrode car bumpers?
*I do understand you could
just . . . drink water. And save even the 33 cents. But
plain water leaves me with cottonmouth. I need to taste something.
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