
We have so many things to talk about especially those of our friends in our college days who work in the US too. She confessed to me that she is now getting married to her fiancé, an American guy. What amazed her of this guy is he is a pet lover in which they have the same interest in life. She did not tell me about when is her wedding but it will happen this year. I know she will tell me the exact date when we chat again.




I must be crazy. Anyway, if you are looking for scrubs go to www.scrubsandbeyond.com.

Hundreds of Edgar Hernandez's neighbors in La Gloria — villagers who live among smelly pig-breeding farms that attract swarms of flies — already have flu-like symptoms. After they complain repeatedly, government workers arrive to conduct medical tests.
Edgar recovers, but his illness remains a mystery to his family — at least for a while.
A 9-year-old boy arrives at a medical clinic in Elyria, Ohio, an industrial city 20 miles southwest of Cleveland. He has a sore throat, body aches, fever and dizziness.
His mother consults a pediatric nurse practitioner, Sally Fenik; she thinks it's strep throat or an allergy. She also mentions to the nurse they've just returned from visiting relatives in Mexico but doesn't think it's swine flu because no one else in the family is sick.
But on her way to work, Fenik has heard a radio news report about swine flu turning up in states bordering Mexico. She's far away, in the industrial Midwest, but remembers thinking, "Boy, I hope that doesn't start spreading and getting worse."
After a rapid strep test on the boy comes back negative, Fenik does a nasal swab.
A half-hour later, the lab calls. It's the type of influenza linked to swine flu virus.
This past Sunday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the third-grader from Ohio had swine flu. And then on Monday, the Veracruz governor swooped in by helicopter to La Gloria to tell Edgar's mother what medical experts already know — the kindergartner was Mexico's first confirmed case of swine flu.