Posted on 09/19/2002 11:49:00 AM PDT by Trailer Trash
Edited on 07/07/2004 4:48:21 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Alaska has confirmed its first reported case of West Nile virus, in a 77-year-old man from the Chicago suburbs who lies seriously ill in an Anchorage hospital, state health authorities said Wednesday afternoon.
The man was bitten by an infected mosquito in Illinois and is not contagious, said officials with the Alaska Division of Public Health. They would not release his name. State officials predicted he will recover.
(Excerpt) Read more at adn.com ...
Do all your sled dogs have a strong pulse?
Got just one of those left, and that one is strong but uncoordinated. Trips just walking across the dogyard.
Kinda like the shark attacks last summer. Did you know, you are more likely to be hit on the head by a falling coconut than attacked by a shark?
Falling Coconuts Kill More People Than Shark Attacks "Falling coconuts kill 150 people worldwide each year, 15 times the number of fatalities attributable to sharks," said George Burgess, Director of the University of Florida's International Shark Attack File and a noted shark researcher. "The reality is that, on the list of potential dangers encountered in aquatic recreation, sharks are right at the bottom of the list," said Burgess who was one of three scientists participating Tuesday in a National Sea Grant College Program and NOAA Fisheries sponsored press briefing on sharks and the risks of shark attacks at the National Press Club. The event served to put the risk of shark attacks in perspective, provide resources on how to reduce the chance of a shark encounter, explain the scientific value of sharks to the coastal ecosystem and discuss fisheries management and conservation issues. The event also marked the launch of a special NOAA informational website on sharks. The need for public education about sharks and shark attacks arose after intense media attention was given to last summer's shark encounters. The frenzy surrounding sharks was capped by one publication dubbing 2001 "The Summer of the Shark" in a July cover story. The result was a frightened public -- especially along the East Coast, where much of the shark attack publicity was centered
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