It's odd that jet-lag needs a cure. It does not seem like the sort of thing for which there should be a cure. When it's been a long time since you've traveled it can become easy to see jet lag as a psychological weakness, not a physical one. All you've got to do is tell yourself to "buck up, you've done nothing but sit for ten hours." But as all weary travelers know, jet-lag is as real as any virus or condition. The problem all has to do with natural sleep cycles and circadian rhythms. As doctor
Embryogenesis doesn't mean you get to live off my dime, mammalian blastular welfare queens. Buckskinned mountain folk in the blasted frozen lands of North Dakota polished off their plates of buffalo entrails, reset their beaver traps, hitched up their leather breeches and declared that blastocysts are persons with all the rights pertaining thereto, dated this day February Stupidth, Two Thousand Stupid. Shouldn't they be more worried about the Hudson Bay Company actively destroying the fur tra
from myspace.com/dennishess​Dennis Hess died June 15. Three months earlier, he'd been hospitalized. According to his widow, Lena Hess, and her lawyer, Robert Arnold, Hess tried to commit suicide by mixing prescription drugs and alcohol. But his friends and family say the March incident was an accident. In an interview with Sgt. Chad Phillips of the Platte County Sheriff's Department, Lena Hess described what her lawyer characterized as Dennis Hess' first suicide attempt. Lena said she received