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March 24, 2025

'The Time of Our Singing' — Richard Powers

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I'm currently on page 152 of this enchanting 631-page 2003 novel.

Did I mention that the print is tiny and that Powers' style is very dense and convoluted?

And that I'm loving every hour of it?

I didn't?

Oh.

Screenshot 2025-01-06 at 1.01.54 PM

I got to thinking about how much bang for my buck I'm getting.

The book cost me $12.79.

You could look it up.

Like I said, it's very slow going.

I'm a comparatively fast reader and I estimate it takes me a half hour to read twenty pages.

Do the math: that's over 15 hours of reading.

Less than a buck an hour.

Cheap at twice the price.

March 24, 2025 at 04:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (1)

BehindTheMedspeak: Traveling When You Have No Fingerprints

Dark 1023

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FunFact: "About one in 50 people lack fingerprints."

Rita Rubin's USA Today story exploring this unusual condition follows.

Checking Fingerprints When a Person Has None

Before they can enter the USA, virtually all non-U.S. citizens 14 to 79 have their fingerprints screened at the airport or seaport to confirm their identity and make sure they're not a security threat.

But what if you don't have fingerprints?

That was the dilemma faced by a Singapore cancer patient whose chemotherapy drug caused severe peeling of the skin on his hands and feet, which erased his fingerprints. His oncologist described the case in a letter published [it appears up top as well] in the Annals of Oncology.

The 62-year-old man was taking capecitabine, sold in the USA as Xeloda, for head and neck cancer that had spread to his bones, chest and abdomen (in the USA, Xeloda is approved for the treatment of breast and colorectal cancer that has spread). He developed hand-foot syndrome, [also known as palmar-plantar erythrodysesthesia, or PPE], a drug side effect that causes the skin on the hands and feet to peel.

After taking capecitabine for more than three years, the man, who wasn't identified by doctors, flew to the USA to visit relatives. He was detained at the U.S. airport by Customs and Border Protection officers for four hours because they couldn't detect his fingerprints, his doctors, from the National Cancer Centre Singapore, write.

Finally, the officers were satisfied that he wasn't a security threat and allowed him to enter the country. They told him to travel with a letter from his oncologist explaining his lack of fingerprints.

Two years ago, Spanish cancer doctors reported a similar story about a 39-year-old flight attendant detained for several hours at a U.S. airport until her doctor faxed an explanation that the capecitabine she'd been taking for breast cancer had erased her fingerprints.

Many other drugs can cause hand-foot syndrome, but there is little information about whether they lead to fingerprint loss, Su-Pin Choo, one of the co-authors of the letter, said in an e-mail.

"Hand-foot syndrome is more common with capecitabine than with most other drugs," Choo wrote. Fingerprint loss probably is also related to how long a patient takes a drug that causes hand-foot syndrome, he said, and he added that patients receiving a continuous infusion of 5FU, a common cancer drug, also should consider carrying a letter attesting to that if they travel to the USA.

In the world, an estimated one in 50 people lack matchable fingerprints. "We have standard operating procedures that take that into account," says the Department of Homeland Security's Anna Hinken. She says Customs and Border Protection officers decide whether to admit such people on the basis of other physical and behavioral traits.

Katherine Harmon's "Ask The Experts" feature in the February 2010 issue of Scientific American also addressed the topic.

Other causes of lack of fingerprints include:

Work as a bricklayer

Elective surgical removal

Work with dry-cleaning solution

Naegeli-Franceschetti-Jadassohn syndrome/dermatopathia pigmentosa reticularis

March 24, 2025 at 12:01 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Christian Louboutin Bloody Mary Ankle Boots

1

Criss-cross lace-up straps tie at the ankle.

2

5.5" heel with 1" platform.

3

Python.

4

$1,365 when they came out in 2009 (around $2,000 today); a fraction of that now.

March 24, 2025 at 08:01 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

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