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Birds is the third solo album by New Zealand artist Bic Runga, released in New Zealand on November 28 2005. The "Limited Australian Tour Edition" was released in Australia on March 4 2006. Release is the United Kingdom is expected to be on May 15.

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Quick diagnosis of flu strains possible with new microchip test (press release)
Scientists from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have developed a microchip-based test that may allow more labs to diagnose influenza infections and learn more about the viruses causing illness. The FluChip successfully distinguished among...
Analysis of Spanish flu cases in 1918-1920 suggests transfusions might help in bird flu pandemic (press release)
Transfusions with blood products taken from people who had recovered from Spanish influenza may have reduced risk for death and improved symptoms of hospitalized patients who contracted Spanish influenza complicated by pneumonia. Early treatment was superior to later treatment. Researchers studied...
Lessons from SARS May Help Prepare for Bird Flu (press release)
Lessons learnt from SARS epidemics in China may help us prepare for new epidemics, such as human avian flu, say experts in this week's BMJ. Mainland China experienced three outbreaks of SARS between November 2002 and May 2004. The first outbreak resulted in a pandemic and caused huge financial loss...
Bird flu study highlights need to vaccinate flocks effectively (press release)
Incomplete vaccination of poultry flocks could make the spread of deadly strains of avian flu such as H5N1 worse, scientists at the Universities of Edinburgh and Warwick have found. The research shows that even though the available vaccines are effective on individual birds, the disease is likely to...
Voluntary household interventions can reduce death and disease burden from pandemic influenza (press release)
A scientific study suggests that the number of infected individuals and deaths from influenza during the first year of a pandemic could be substantially reduced by a combination of voluntary household-based quarantine and isolation of actively infected individuals in a location outside the household...
Bird flu pandemic remains top threat to global health, says WHO
(NewsTarget) The World Health Organization held its 57th annual Western Pacific Region meeting in Auckland, New Zealand on Friday, where the organization's Acting Regional Director for the Western Pacific, Richard Nesbit, said the H5N1 strain of bird flu is still the No. 1 threat to global public health...
While Concerned, Most Americans Do Not Expect Widespread Human Cases of Avian Flu in U.S. in the Next Year (press release)
The latest national poll conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Project on the Public and Biological Security finds that at the moment, the majority of the American public is concerned about the threat of avian flu, but only a small proportion is very concerned. However, should cases...
Bird flu may have been mistaken for SARS - doctors (press release)
A Chinese man who died of pneumonia in 2003 and was at first classified as a SARS victim might have in fact died of avian influenza, Chinese researchers reported on Wednesday. But in a confusing development, at least one of the researchers asked that the letter reporting the case be withdrawn from...
H5N1 Vaccine Could Be Basis For Life-saving Stockpile (press release)
Scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have announced that a vaccine they developed a few years ago against one antigenic variant of the avian influenza virus H5N1 may protect humans against future variants of the virus. Vaccines based on this model might therefore be suitable for stockpiling...
Modeling Shows Containment Could Delay, Not Prevent, Pandemic Flu (press release)
New research from scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and the University of Washington in Seattle suggests that containment can buy time to prepare, but containment alone is not enough to stop a flu pandemic from occurring. Through mathematical modeling, the researchers show...
Using Cell Phones to Teach Pandemic Flu Preparedness (press release)
A team from the University of Illinois at Chicago has developed the first interactive tool using mobile phones to educate the public about pandemic flu. The free, interactive media -- called Mobile PanFlu Prep -- will be demonstrated at the Local, State and Federal Public Health Preparedness Summit...
Purdue Veterinarians Discuss Bird Flu Issues for Pets (press release)
Pet owners can combat animal illness with cleanliness and educated observation, and wellness veterinarians from Purdue University recommend the same procedure in the case of bird flu. "Commercial products can kill viruses because the flu is not resistant to disinfectants," said Steve Thompson, director...
Experimental vaccine protects lab animals against several strains of H5N1 (press release)
Nations are preparing to stockpile vaccines against H5N1, the strain of influenza virus that experts fear could cause the next flu pandemic. But will these vaccines remain effective as the virus mutates? Researchers present good news in the July 15 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available...
US Approves Wild Bird Avian Flu Surveillance Network (press release)
In an effort to improve the tracking of avian influenza, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded $5 million in support for a new initiative that will monitor wild bird populations for the disease around the globe, according to the New York-based Wildlife Conservation...
Bird flu spiraling out of control in Indonesia
(NewsTarget) While Indonesia discovered its first bird flu outbreak fairly late in comparison to some other infected countries, it has endured one of the fastest spreads, with 42 human H5N1-caused fatalities reported since the first case was confirmed a year ago. Until the latest Indonesian death...



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How To Find Your Passion So You Can Fulfill Your Destiny
By Kevin Sinclair
Many people struggle with finding a sense of purpose in life. They work a job they don’t love, live in a city they don’t enjoy, stay in a relationship without love. Why do they do this? Why do they tread water without going forward?

As a child, the question "what do you want to be when you grow up?" is often asked. Most children have an answer. They want to be doctors or astronauts or firemen or actors or whatever their young minds can think of. The entire world is theirs for the taking. Anything is possible at this point. What happens along the way to stop them from fulfilling their childhood dream?

The first deterrent is other people. Parents, peers or anyone that makes a negative comment about the child’s dream can have a devastating effect on their attitude. It is difficult enough to follow a dream without a psychological hindrance in the form of nay saying. It is necessary to grow a thick skin early in life to avoid giving up before even beginning. Nothing should stand in the way of doing what you love in life.

What about people that don’t know what they want to do? Some people feel lost and do not know what they want out of life. They are content to work at a regular job, get paid, retire and then die. Life passes them by without so much as a thought. Do not be like this. Live the life you have always imagined by finding your passion.

Finding out what makes one passionate is not always so easy. Most often, whatever the object of desire is, it seems out of reach or impossible. A child dreaming of becoming an astronaut or the President soon finds this dream is a difficult endeavor to accomplish. But what comes first? Is it societal pressure or peer pressure that discourages the dreamer? Or is it themselves that are to blame for giving up hope before they even begin?

Society often states what is possible and what is not. When Christopher Columbus had a dream of discovering a new world, he was jeered at and sneered at. People said it was impossible to sail around the world. His peers told him not to try or he would die in the attempt. What course would the world have taken had he listened to the doubters?

When face with adversity, one can either storm forward unafraid or quit. Most people quit. They figure they should not have tried in the first place and this failure is a manifestation of that glaring reality. Failure is only an opportunity to begin again in a different direction. Do not let fear of failure stop you from trying and ultimately succeeding.

So what is passion? What makes people who live for their passion different from others that do not? Passion is very simply what makes you happy. If growing a garden makes you happy and a large amount of time or energy is spent tilling a garden, this is a source of passion. The same can be said of music, both playing or listening. Knowing what is a source of passion in one’s life is an easy matter of being honest with yourself.

Ask yourself what makes you happy. This is your passion. It does not matter what it is. It can

Quick diagnosis of flu strains possible with new microchip test (press release)
Scientists from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have developed a microchip-based test that may allow more labs to diagnose influenza infections and learn more about the viruses causing illness. The FluChip successfully distinguished among...
Analysis of Spanish flu cases in 1918-1920 suggests transfusions might help in bird flu pandemic (press release)
Transfusions with blood products taken from people who had recovered from Spanish influenza may have reduced risk for death and improved symptoms of hospitalized patients who contracted Spanish influenza complicated by pneumonia. Early treatment was superior to later treatment. Researchers studied...
Lessons from SARS May Help Prepare for Bird Flu (press release)
Lessons learnt from SARS epidemics in China may help us prepare for new epidemics, such as human avian flu, say experts in this week's BMJ. Mainland China experienced three outbreaks of SARS between November 2002 and May 2004. The first outbreak resulted in a pandemic and caused huge financial loss...
Bird flu study highlights need to vaccinate flocks effectively (press release)
Incomplete vaccination of poultry flocks could make the spread of deadly strains of avian flu such as H5N1 worse, scientists at the Universities of Edinburgh and Warwick have found. The research shows that even though the available vaccines are effective on individual birds, the disease is likely to...
Voluntary household interventions can reduce death and disease burden from pandemic influenza (press release)
A scientific study suggests that the number of infected individuals and deaths from influenza during the first year of a pandemic could be substantially reduced by a combination of voluntary household-based quarantine and isolation of actively infected individuals in a location outside the household...
Bird flu pandemic remains top threat to global health, says WHO
(NewsTarget) The World Health Organization held its 57th annual Western Pacific Region meeting in Auckland, New Zealand on Friday, where the organization's Acting Regional Director for the Western Pacific, Richard Nesbit, said the H5N1 strain of bird flu is still the No. 1 threat to global public health...
While Concerned, Most Americans Do Not Expect Widespread Human Cases of Avian Flu in U.S. in the Next Year (press release)
The latest national poll conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Project on the Public and Biological Security finds that at the moment, the majority of the American public is concerned about the threat of avian flu, but only a small proportion is very concerned. However, should cases...
Bird flu may have been mistaken for SARS - doctors (press release)
A Chinese man who died of pneumonia in 2003 and was at first classified as a SARS victim might have in fact died of avian influenza, Chinese researchers reported on Wednesday. But in a confusing development, at least one of the researchers asked that the letter reporting the case be withdrawn from...
H5N1 Vaccine Could Be Basis For Life-saving Stockpile (press release)
Scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have announced that a vaccine they developed a few years ago against one antigenic variant of the avian influenza virus H5N1 may protect humans against future variants of the virus. Vaccines based on this model might therefore be suitable for stockpiling...
Modeling Shows Containment Could Delay, Not Prevent, Pandemic Flu (press release)
New research from scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and the University of Washington in Seattle suggests that containment can buy time to prepare, but containment alone is not enough to stop a flu pandemic from occurring. Through mathematical modeling, the researchers show...
Using Cell Phones to Teach Pandemic Flu Preparedness (press release)
A team from the University of Illinois at Chicago has developed the first interactive tool using mobile phones to educate the public about pandemic flu. The free, interactive media -- called Mobile PanFlu Prep -- will be demonstrated at the Local, State and Federal Public Health Preparedness Summit...
Purdue Veterinarians Discuss Bird Flu Issues for Pets (press release)
Pet owners can combat animal illness with cleanliness and educated observation, and wellness veterinarians from Purdue University recommend the same procedure in the case of bird flu. "Commercial products can kill viruses because the flu is not resistant to disinfectants," said Steve Thompson, director...
Experimental vaccine protects lab animals against several strains of H5N1 (press release)
Nations are preparing to stockpile vaccines against H5N1, the strain of influenza virus that experts fear could cause the next flu pandemic. But will these vaccines remain effective as the virus mutates? Researchers present good news in the July 15 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available...
US Approves Wild Bird Avian Flu Surveillance Network (press release)
In an effort to improve the tracking of avian influenza, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded $5 million in support for a new initiative that will monitor wild bird populations for the disease around the globe, according to the New York-based Wildlife Conservation...
Bird flu spiraling out of control in Indonesia
(NewsTarget) While Indonesia discovered its first bird flu outbreak fairly late in comparison to some other infected countries, it has endured one of the fastest spreads, with 42 human H5N1-caused fatalities reported since the first case was confirmed a year ago. Until the latest Indonesian death...

be as simple as walking or looking at birds. You can be a bird watcher. Whatever it is, nothing is too far fetched to do as a way of life.

Someone who lives his or her passion is not afraid of taking risks. He or she doesn't care about the attitudes of others. Nothing is impossible. If he or she is passionate about cinema, he or she make cinema his or her life, regardless of practical considerations. He or she will live in the street, homeless and destitute, to follow his or her dreams. He or she has no choice. His or her passion is life. His or her passion is something he or she feels compelled to do. It is not something he or she wants to do, rather something he or she must do.

How can someone stuck in his or her regular world with a regular life throw off the shackles and go forward in the direction of his or her dreams? The first is a change of attitude. He or she must believe anything is possible with hard work, passion and a lot of perseverance. Once this belief is established, most of the initial fear is eliminated. Most people are embarrassed to admit what they want out of life because they feel they cannot accomplish it or they believe they are not worthy of such a life.

Do not let fear or other people and their negativity stop you from living the life you have imagined. Be fearless and strong in the pursuit of your passion. Let nothing stand in your way.

Article Source: http://articles-galore.com

Kevin is the publisher and editor of my-personal-growth.com, a site that provides information and articles for self improvement and personal growth and development.

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And again, thank you to those contributing daily to our bird sounds website.

Quick diagnosis of flu strains possible with new microchip test (press release)
Scientists from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have developed a microchip-based test that may allow more labs to diagnose influenza infections and learn more about the viruses causing illness. The FluChip successfully distinguished among...
Analysis of Spanish flu cases in 1918-1920 suggests transfusions might help in bird flu pandemic (press release)
Transfusions with blood products taken from people who had recovered from Spanish influenza may have reduced risk for death and improved symptoms of hospitalized patients who contracted Spanish influenza complicated by pneumonia. Early treatment was superior to later treatment. Researchers studied...
Lessons from SARS May Help Prepare for Bird Flu (press release)
Lessons learnt from SARS epidemics in China may help us prepare for new epidemics, such as human avian flu, say experts in this week's BMJ. Mainland China experienced three outbreaks of SARS between November 2002 and May 2004. The first outbreak resulted in a pandemic and caused huge financial loss...
Bird flu study highlights need to vaccinate flocks effectively (press release)
Incomplete vaccination of poultry flocks could make the spread of deadly strains of avian flu such as H5N1 worse, scientists at the Universities of Edinburgh and Warwick have found. The research shows that even though the available vaccines are effective on individual birds, the disease is likely to...
Voluntary household interventions can reduce death and disease burden from pandemic influenza (press release)
A scientific study suggests that the number of infected individuals and deaths from influenza during the first year of a pandemic could be substantially reduced by a combination of voluntary household-based quarantine and isolation of actively infected individuals in a location outside the household...
Bird flu pandemic remains top threat to global health, says WHO
(NewsTarget) The World Health Organization held its 57th annual Western Pacific Region meeting in Auckland, New Zealand on Friday, where the organization's Acting Regional Director for the Western Pacific, Richard Nesbit, said the H5N1 strain of bird flu is still the No. 1 threat to global public health...
While Concerned, Most Americans Do Not Expect Widespread Human Cases of Avian Flu in U.S. in the Next Year (press release)
The latest national poll conducted by the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Project on the Public and Biological Security finds that at the moment, the majority of the American public is concerned about the threat of avian flu, but only a small proportion is very concerned. However, should cases...
Bird flu may have been mistaken for SARS - doctors (press release)
A Chinese man who died of pneumonia in 2003 and was at first classified as a SARS victim might have in fact died of avian influenza, Chinese researchers reported on Wednesday. But in a confusing development, at least one of the researchers asked that the letter reporting the case be withdrawn from...
H5N1 Vaccine Could Be Basis For Life-saving Stockpile (press release)
Scientists at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have announced that a vaccine they developed a few years ago against one antigenic variant of the avian influenza virus H5N1 may protect humans against future variants of the virus. Vaccines based on this model might therefore be suitable for stockpiling...
Modeling Shows Containment Could Delay, Not Prevent, Pandemic Flu (press release)
New research from scientists at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston and the University of Washington in Seattle suggests that containment can buy time to prepare, but containment alone is not enough to stop a flu pandemic from occurring. Through mathematical modeling, the researchers show...
Using Cell Phones to Teach Pandemic Flu Preparedness (press release)
A team from the University of Illinois at Chicago has developed the first interactive tool using mobile phones to educate the public about pandemic flu. The free, interactive media -- called Mobile PanFlu Prep -- will be demonstrated at the Local, State and Federal Public Health Preparedness Summit...
Purdue Veterinarians Discuss Bird Flu Issues for Pets (press release)
Pet owners can combat animal illness with cleanliness and educated observation, and wellness veterinarians from Purdue University recommend the same procedure in the case of bird flu. "Commercial products can kill viruses because the flu is not resistant to disinfectants," said Steve Thompson, director...
Experimental vaccine protects lab animals against several strains of H5N1 (press release)
Nations are preparing to stockpile vaccines against H5N1, the strain of influenza virus that experts fear could cause the next flu pandemic. But will these vaccines remain effective as the virus mutates? Researchers present good news in the July 15 issue of The Journal of Infectious Diseases, now available...
US Approves Wild Bird Avian Flu Surveillance Network (press release)
In an effort to improve the tracking of avian influenza, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded $5 million in support for a new initiative that will monitor wild bird populations for the disease around the globe, according to the New York-based Wildlife Conservation...
Bird flu spiraling out of control in Indonesia
(NewsTarget) While Indonesia discovered its first bird flu outbreak fairly late in comparison to some other infected countries, it has endured one of the fastest spreads, with 42 human H5N1-caused fatalities reported since the first case was confirmed a year ago. Until the latest Indonesian death...


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