It takes less time to just use the html code for italicizing than it does to use the html code for changing color. Why not do like everyone else and just italicize to posters words?
If you run the cursor over the whole post then all of it is highlighted making it impossible to know where your words start and theirs ends. Its more time consuming to have to run the cursor over certain portions only, when all that is usually necessary is to scroll down and just read.
I tend to ignore posts where the text is too small, too light or deliberately made difficult. just saying.
Select Specialty Hospital nurse’s death is a confirmed case of swine flu
It is now official: Knox County has had its first swine flu death.
http://www.volunteertv.com/home/headlines/62405642.html
Posted: 5:45 PM Sep 28, 2009
Reporter: Amber Miller
Email Address: amber.miller@wvlt-tv.com
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WVLT) — It is now official: Knox County has had its first swine flu death.
A couple of weeks ago, we told you that Tina Henson Vick, 43, who was a nurse at Select Specialty Hospital at Saint Mary’s died, and her family believed it was because of H1N1.
Now that the CDC has confirmed it, they wanted to get their story out.
Tina Vick’s family wants everyone to know that the H1N1 virus moves quickly and it can affect anyone.
“No one thought she was going to die,” Ronnie Dunn, Tina’s uncle said.
From a backrow pew at his church Monday, Dunn said he felt comfortable for the first time, talking about his niece’s death.
When doctors handed the paperwork to Tina’s family, they took notes: verified by the CDC. Influenza H1n1 positive.
“From the day she was born, she was smiling and she never quit smiling. And she just had the sweetest personality in the world,” Dunn commented as he looked at old pictures.
Dunn was the only family member up for talking.
And he says they all think it is important they get Tina’s story out.
“Tina Michelle Henson Vick is the first confirmed death in Knox County with the H1N1 swine flu,” Dunn repeated.
Vick’s death, he says, is noteworthy because she was healthy and she was a nurse.
“I think she was exposed to someone while she was at work because there were seven or eight other nurses who went home with flu-like symptoms that weekend,” Dunn told Volunteer TV.
This is the way I do it. I’m sorry you don’t approve.
I appreciate your bringing to my attention. Over the last eleven and a half years that I’ve been here, you are about the third to the fifth person to object.