
|
February 17, 2006
Topics city, nurse, seattle, cool, coach, image, shopping, hard, holiday, doctor, wife, people, apple and big
New York City may be changing its image. It may seem a little hard to believe, but New Yorkers are being honored for their good manners. The group "Americans for More Civility" is honoring New York City residents for their 'forbearance and aplomb' during the transit strike that hit at the height of the holiday shopping season. In other words, people didn't lose their cool or poise when the buses and subways stopped running.
|
|
October 2, 2005
A young boy cried as Pope Benedict XVI greeted him in a hospital near the Vatican, who he mistook for a doctor because of his long white robe. "It's the white," a nurse explained to the Pope. "He can't take anymore of these white coats. "
|
|
|
September 30, 2005
A young boy cried as Pope Benedict XVI greeted him in a hospital near the Vatican, who he mistook for a doctor because of his long white robe. "It's the white," a nurse explained to the Pope. "He can't take anymore of these white coats. "
|
|
May 12, 2005
Topics zoo, milk, nurse, tiger, weather, natural, cats, female, baby, death, help and boy
After receiving worldwide attention, two Bengal tiger cubs who were breast-fed by a Yangon housewife have died of heat and dehydration. Hla Htay, a mother of a baby boy, answered a plea for help from Yangon's zoo and fed the cats three times a day after they were rejected by their tigress mother.
|
|
April 22, 2005
Topics zoo, breast, baby, tigers, nurse, tiger, babies, natural, cats, tv, animals, boy, nurses and woman
Hla Htay, 40, has taken responsibility for two Bengal tiger cubs by breast-feeding them daily. Three times a day, Htay, mother of a seven-month-old baby boy, goes to the Yangon zoo where she holds 45-minute breast-feeding sessions for the animals, rejected by their natural mother. "The cubs are just like my babies," Hla Htay told Fuji TV as one of the baby cats suckled her breast. In mid-march, three cubs were born at the zoo. The mother killed one and refused to nurse the others. After many numerous, unsuccessful attempts to bottle feed, veterinarians decided to try breast-feeding. "They had some difficulties sucking the nipple on the bottle. When we tried to get the cubs to suck a lady's breast, it was alright," said a veterinarian. The zoo has said the sessions will stop by the end of April or when the tigers start teething.
|
|  |
|