Tuesday, December 15, 2009

For this compilation I combined the use of stop action film from my toilet monster project and combined it with my collage of eyes that I did. The product disturbing.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/80844396/

this is amazing!!!!

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Michelle Duggar Hospitalized

Categories: Medical Conditions, Bump Watch, Celeb Parenting, In The News, Twins, Triplets, Multiples



Michelle Duggar is expecting her 19th baby. Credit: Beth Hall, AP

Uber-mom Michelle Duggar, pregnant with her 19th child, was rushed to the hospital this past weekend. According to media reports, the baby is just fine.

Duggar, star of TLC's "18 Kids and Counting" was diagnosed with painful gallstones, according to a story in People magazine. Network representatives tell the magazine that the pain was generating some contractions, however.

"This weekend, Michelle Duggar was admitted to an Arkansas hospital due to gallbladder issues," says the rep. "The pain from a gallstone was generating some contractions. Just to be safe, she was airlifted a Little Rock, Ark., hospital, so that in the unlikely event that she had to be delivered early, she would be close to a NICU center. Though there were some fears that the baby was in trouble initially, it soon was discovered to be solely the gallstone causing the discomfort. Michelle is resting comfortably, and the baby is doing fine."



Doctors say that pain medication should keep the attack under control and that there is no immediate need for surgery at this point. "The hope is that any necessary surgery can be delayed until she delivers," the TLC rep tells People.

However, Duggar's husband, Jim Bob, will be playing Mr. Mom for at least a few days while Michelle remains under observation. Her attending physician, Dr. Curtis Lowery of the University of Arkansas for Medical Services tells People that there is "every reason at present to expect that mother and baby will proceed with a healthy pregnancy."

Sunday, December 6, 2009

final film- work in progress!!!

Superglue Saves Boy From Rare Disorder

dafi evans
Press Association Images

By Jordan Lite

Dafi Evans just needed a little glue to be put back together again.

The toddler from Wales was born with Vein of Galen malformation, a rare condition that causes blood to rush too quickly out of the brain, resulting in heart failure. Using a kind of medical superglue the day after his birth, doctors closed the abnormal vein in Dafi’s brain that caused the problem. Today he’s a healthy 16-month-old, according to BBC News.

“It’s amazing, because these kids had [a] 100 percent mortality before these procedures were developed, and now almost all survive,” Walter Molofsky, M.D., chief of pediatric neurology at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York, told AOL Health.

The technique is a form of embolization, in which glues or coils are inserted into the malformed vein via a tube woven through the groin. The procedure, which gradually blocks the defective vein to divert blood to surrounding veins and capillaries, has been used for about 20 years, Molofsky said. However, technological advances in the catheters and materials used to plug the malformed vein have improved it. Depending on the anatomy of the malformation, it may take three to five treatments to correct the problem, he said.

Just how many people have Vein of Galen malformation is unknown, butmalformed connections between the brain’s arteries and veins that can cause disease are estimated to affect fewer than 10 in 100,000 people.

Using a cranial ultrasound, doctors can sometimes spot Vein of Galen malformations before birth. Depending on how badly stressed a baby’s heart is from the condition, doctors either begin treating the malformation right away or manage the heart failure with medication for as long as eight months, when the baby is bigger and easier to treat, Molofsky said.

Some 60 percent of children who receive the treatment are able to live normally, while 20 percent have mild disabilities, Stefan Brew, M.D., an interventional neuroradiologist Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, told the The Daily Mail.Another 10 percent are severely disabled and the remainder will die, he said.

To Dafi’s mother, Catrin Evans, the technique is a “miracle.”

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Compilation One- Shifty Eyes

This is my first compilation: I combined my collage of my eyes, which was for the time project where I documented something every waking hour for one day. I then combined it with the stop-action type animation that I learned the first month of the semester. I was inspired by my stop-action film of the green blob in the toilet.

Storeowner: A little compassion changed would-be robber's life

By Evan Buxbaum, CNN
December 3, 2009 10:50 p.m. EST
Shopkeeper Mohammad Sohail says he recited an Islamic oath over the would-be robber after he broke into sobs.
Shopkeeper Mohammad Sohail says he recited an Islamic oath over the would-be robber after he broke into sobs.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Would-be robber sends letter of thanks, $50 to shopkeeper who gave him food, money, let him go
  • Man broke into sobs, said he was trying to feed family when Mohammed Sohail pulled out gun
  • Letter begins with, "You change my life," says Sohail inspired him to become a "true Muslim"

New York (CNN) -- Six months ago, a Long Island convenience store owner turned a would-be robbery into an act of compassion. On Wednesday, the shoplifter made amends with a $50 bill and a thank you letter for saving him from a life of crime.

The story began in May 2009, when Mohammad Sohail of Shirley, New York, was closing his Shirley Express convenience store one night. Security camera footage from that evening shows a man wielding a baseball bat barging into the store and demanding money.

Sohail had a rifle ready and quickly aimed it directly in the robber's face, forcing the man to drop the bat and lay on the ground. Unbeknownst to the man, Sohail never loads his gun.

According to Sohail, the man immediately started to plead with him, tearfully saying, "I'm sorry, I have no food. I have no money. My whole family is hungry. Don't call the police. Don't shoot me."

"When I see him starting crying [those] things, I really feel bad for him," said Sohail. "I say, oh man, this is something different."

Sohail made the man pledge never to rob anybody ever again, then gave the man $40 and a loaf bread. Sohail, who is from Pakistan, said the man then wanted to be a Muslim like him, so he recited an Islamic oath and gave the would-be robber the name Nawaz Sharif Zardari.

Sohail went to get some milk, but when he returned the man had fled with the money and food.

Video: Robber returns a favor

Both Mohammad Sohail and Suffolk County Police have no idea who the man is. After the May incident, Sohail explained that he will "absolutely not" be pressing charges, though police are still investigating the case.

Over the past six months, Sohail's story of sympathy and kindness has inspired many across the country.

The Shirley Express store has received numerous letters of admiration.

"No person has ever moved my spirit the way you did. From your biggest admirer," one letter says. "Great men are capable of great acts. You are a great American," another reads.

He has also received several checks with such messages for "a couple hundred dollars" in total, says Sohail. He has made a point to give this money "to the people" by offering free bagels, rolls and coffee in his store every night after 9 o'clock.

But the envelope that arrived on Wednesday came as a surprise. Postmarked November 11 without a return address, it enclosed a $50 bill and a note apparently from the would-be robber.

The typed letter begins, "You change My Life (sic)," and goes on to say that the man is sorry for his actions six months ago.

"At the time I had No money No food on my table No Job, and nothing for my family. I know that it was wrong, but I had know (sic) choice. I needed to feed My family. When You had That gun to my head I was 100% that I was going to die," reads the letter.

The letter says Sohail's acts inspired him to become a "True Muslim" and that his life has changed dramatically.

"I'm very happy that somebody got to change his life," Sohail said. "If he is a maybe criminal, maybe is not anymore. So now he is a good person in this community and I'm very glad for that. He's staying out of trouble, he's not in a jail, he's taking care of his family."