Tuesday, June 27, 2006

This Cancer Researcher Gave Me a Shower Curtain...

From Law.com: Employment Case Puts Johns Hopkins Under the Microscope

"Dr. Young Ko believes that she has found a cure for cancer.

Using an inexpensive drug named 3-bromopyruvate, the Johns Hopkins University researcher was able to eliminate advanced liver cancer in lab animals. Earlier this year, after her work was profiled by the Baltimore Sun, dozens of cancer patients and their families contacted the medical school to ask when human trials would begin.

Not any time soon, it would seem. Ko's research is now at the center of a bitter employment dispute between the researcher and the university. " ...read more


Despite the political infighting at Johns Hopkins and the red tape, Dr. Ko has a grant from the Susan G. Komen Foundation and is going to be studying the effects of the drug 3-bromopyruvate (3-BrPA) on breast cancer and metastatic cancers.

She and one of my best friends (and bridesmaid) Wendy sent me a sequinned shower curtain as a wedding present, and I am so tardy on my thank you notes that I have yet to thank them.

Thank you, Dr. Ko. Thank you very much for the shower curtain and for the work that you are doing which has actual applications instead of being theoretical. Thank you for working on a way of combating tumors that seems to be non-toxic. Chemotherapy is a crap-shoot and is extremely unpleasant. I'd love to be involved in human trials--I'm sure there are many who would be. I hope the politics of your situation do not get you down and that you are able to progress with your work. You have my heartfelt admiration and gratitude.

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Sunday, February 26, 2006

Words Just Don't Suffice: allow me instead to say, "wheeeee!"

Mrs. and Mr. Brian ElkinsI am extremely tired after the goings-on yesterday. I love more people and told more people I'd never met before how glad I was to see them, and it was true.

I was very happy to have help getting dressed and would like to thank the bridesmaids for being there. I think everybody looked great in their impractical dresses requiring complicated underwear, and think that anybody who agrees to such a duty deserves every amount of kudo possible. I'd like to thank Maria, particularly for marshalling people and getting everyone there in good order and for holding the bouquet at a crucial moment in the ceremony. I'd like to thank Wendy for helping me with the scary elevator; I was afraid the metal accordion-style door thing was going to crush her. I'd like to thank Melissa for being the photographer and helping to organize the group pictures. And I'd like to thank Sarah, who went on with the show despite not being able to attend the rehearsal and for being my witness (sorry I didn't tell you about this blog sooner).

I'd also like to thank the flower girl, Olivia, for doing a great job walking down the aisle, and who provided no small amount of entertainment value afterwards. I hope you like your flower-wreath headpiece.

It's Brian's job to thank the groomsmen, but I'd like to thank them too, especially my brother John, who doesn't know Brian very well but who agreed to participate. You are the best big brother anyone could ever ask for.

I'd like to thank Brian's brother Todd for delivering a very lovely, and mercifully brief ceremony, despite making me cry with the "in sickness and in health" part. If I could go back in time and change anything, I'd have stuffed a handkerchief somewhere about my person.

Thank you, Dad, for walking me down the aisle. I did not imagine I would ever have occasion to do such a thing, and am extremely grateful that you could be here to walk with me.

The table favors were perfect and included two pieces of Brian's favorite candy, Ferrero Rochet, and a small box of my favorite candy, the best candy in the world, hee hee. Brian's mom put them together, and I'd like to thank her not only for making sure they were sweet-tasting, but that they looked very sweet as well.

Finally, I'd like to thank my mom for arranging the whole event with perhaps less input from me than was helpful. I confess disinterest in invitation ink color and I am fearful of calling places for prices. Much of the planning went on while I was hospitalized, and the thought of planning tended to shoot my anxiety level to nausea-indusing heights. Through events yesterday my mom remained calm. I think what touched me most, however, is that when I got home from the rehearsal the other night, I came home and found my walker decorated with shiny irridescent fabric and beaded ribbon. It was funny and touching and kind of puts me in mind of what I must have been like in my own dress--I'm a little bit gimpy and broken, but anything can look pretty when dressed up for a wedding.

Also, the mashed potato bar and baby roast beef sandwiches at the reception were a big hit; I believe my enthusiasm regarding the food was vindicated. (Whenever I went on and got excited about the mashed potato bar that was going to be at the reception--you got your choice of regular or sweet potato with whatever fixins' you wanted--people would tell me, "uh, ok.".)

The cutting of the cake did not involve smashing pastry into any bodily orifices other than the mouth. I'm sure it was an accident that some icing fell into my extremely prominent cleavage.

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