RefBan

Referral Banners

Yashi

Monday, June 6, 2011

Reviews: ITM 18=?UTF-8?B?4oCzIA==?=X 26=?UTF-8?B?4oCzIA==?=PAPER DRAPE ACSRY TO: STERILE DISPOSABLE DRAPE – 18=?UTF-8?B?4oCz?= X 26=?UTF-8?B?4oCzIA==?=PAPER DRAPE

ITM 18″ X 26″ PAPER DRAPE ACSRY TO: STERILE DISPOSABLE DRAPE – 18″ X 26″ PAPER DRAPE

Itm 18
Item: 18″ x 26″ Paper Drape Additional Info: . Sterile fields are paper drapes with a repellent inner layer that assist avert moisture strike by means of.

  • 18″ x 26″ Paper Drape
  • Sterile Disposable Drape
  • Qty Is: 1 EA Which consists of: 1 Each single / Each Product Weight = .1
  • NOTE: Item might be an accessory to the image displayed above. For much more item info contact U.S. Family, Inc.

Rating:

SALE Price: $ 1.29

USERS REVIEWS:

Popularity: unranked

Today in Slate: Are Helicopters Really Safer Than Cars? Plus, Nathan Heller Assesses Pie

Slate
 
Briefing News & Politics Arts Life Business & Tech Science Podcasts & Video Blogs
 
 

Today: June 6, 2011

Slate's Hollywood Career-O-Matic

Slate's Hollywood Career-O-Matic

What Rotten Tomatoes data tell us about the best, worst, and most bizarre Hollywood trajectories.

By Christopher Beam

READ FULL STORY | More Arts

Pie

Pie

It's gloppy, it's soggy, it's un-American.

By Nathan Heller

READ FULL STORY | More News and Politics

If GOP Candidates Aren't Sure How To Tackle Medicare, the Tea Party Has a Few Ideas ...

If GOP Candidates Aren't Sure How To Tackle Medicare, the Tea Party Has a Few Ideas ...

Shafer: Great Kiss-Offs From Journalists to the Bosses Who Fired Them

Shafer: Great Kiss-Offs From Journalists to the Bosses Who Fired Them

The Railroad Boom Was a Moral and Environmental Catastrophe for America

The Railroad Boom Was a Moral and Environmental Catastrophe for America

Are Helicopters Really Safer Than Cars?

Are Helicopters Really Safer Than Cars?

Advertisement
The New Writer of the James Bond Novels Has Given 007 an Amazing Smartphone

The New Writer of the James Bond Novels Has Given 007 an Amazing Smartphone

 

Briefing

News & Politics

Arts

Life

Business & Tech

Science

Podcasts & Video

Manage your newsletters on Slate Unsubscribe | Forward to a Friend | Advertising Information

Please do not reply to this message since this is an unmonitored e-mail address.

Ideas on how to make something better? Send an e-mail to slatenewsletter@nl.slate.com.

Copyright 2011 The Slate Group | Privacy Policy
The Slate Group | c/o E-mail Customer Care | 1350 Connecticut Avenue NW Suite 410 | Washington, D.C. 20036

Culturebox: Slate's Hollywood Career-O-Matic

Slate Magazine
Now playing: Slate V, a video-only site from the world's leading online magazine. Visit Slate V at www.slatev.com.
culturebox
Slate's Hollywood Career-O-Matic
What Rotten Tomatoes data tell us about the best, worst, and most bizarre Hollywood trajectories.
By Christopher Beam and Jeremy Singer-Vine
Updated Monday, June 6, 2011, at 7:04 AM ET

When M. Night Shyamalan's The Last Airbender came out in July 2010, critics competed to see who could muster the most scorn. Shyamalan's seventh film was "dull, boring, poorly acted, limply written, and thoroughly unappealing" (San Francisco Chronicle), and "[s]tiff, fuzzy-looking, cloddish and disastrous in nearly every way" (Detroit News). In the Wall Street Journal, Joe Morgenstern called it "a form of Chinese water torture in which tin-ear line-readings take the place of drips." "The current national priorities should be as follows," wrote Cliff Doerksen in the Chicago Reader. "Reduce carbon emissions and stop funding the films of M. Night Shyamalan."

Perhaps the most devastating critique--of not just the movie but of Shyamalan himself--was a simple graph plotting the Rotten Tomatoes scores of the director's movies over time, posted by Alex Tabarrok at the economics blog Marginal Revolution:

To continue reading, click here.

Christopher Beam is a staff writer for Slate. Follow him on Twitter. You can e-mail him at jcbeam@gmail.com.
Jeremy Singer-Vine is an assistant editor for Slate.

Join the Fray: our reader discussion forum
What did you think of this article?
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES

Also In Slate

If GOP Candidates Aren't Sure How To Tackle Medicare, the Tea Party Has a Few Ideas ...


Shafer: Great Kiss-Offs From Journalists to the Bosses Who Fired Them


The Railroad Boom Was a Moral and Environmental Catastrophe for America

Advertisement


Manage your newsletters subscription: Unsubscribe | Forward to a Friend | Advertising Information


Ideas on how to make something better? Send an e-mail to slatenewsletter@nl.slate.com.

Copyright 2011 The Slate Group | Privacy Policy
The Slate Group | c/o E-mail Customer Care | 1350 Connecticut Ave NW Suite 410 | Washington, D.C. 20036


Today's Cartoon: Checking...

Slate Magazine
Now playing: Slate V, a video-only site from the world's leading online magazine. Visit Slate V at www.slatev.com.
cartoon index
Cartoons

Updated Monday, April 13, 2009, at 2:48 PM ET

Cartoon by Walt Handelsman.

More cartoons on Anthony Weiner here.

To continue reading, click here.


Join the Fray: our reader discussion forum
What did you think of this article?
POST A MESSAGE | READ MESSAGES

Also In Slate

If GOP Candidates Aren't Sure How To Tackle Medicare, the Tea Party Has a Few Ideas ...


Shafer: Great Kiss-Offs From Journalists to the Bosses Who Fired Them


The Railroad Boom Was a Moral and Environmental Catastrophe for America

Advertisement


Manage your newsletters subscription: Unsubscribe | Forward to a Friend | Advertising Information


Ideas on how to make something better? Send an e-mail to slatenewsletter@nl.slate.com.

Copyright 2011 The Slate Group | Privacy Policy
The Slate Group | c/o E-mail Customer Care | 1350 Connecticut Ave NW Suite 410 | Washington, D.C. 20036


Apple: See, We're Not Getting Clobbered By Android!


View this email online | Add newsletter@businessinsider.com to your address book
SAI: Silicon Alley Insider Share this Email
Tech Media Wall Street Markets Strategy Sports Lifestyle Travel Politics Latest Video

Monday, June 6, 2011
Find Us on Facebook Follow US on Twitter


Apple: See, We're Not Getting Clobbered By Android!

Despite evidence to the contrary, Apple wants the world to believe it is not getting clobbered by Android in the mobile world.

To prove its point, it threw up this slide during WWDC which shows iOS with 44% of the mobile installed base. iOS counts towards iPads, iPod Touches, and iPhones. And Apple is including all iOS devices ever sold in the image above.

"To date we have sold -- wait for it -- 200 million iOS devices. And that makes iOS the number one mobile operating system with more than 44% of the market," said Apple SVP of iOS software Scott Forstall.

Uh, no, it doesn't. It shows all the devices purchased, not the devices in use today. We've bought multiple iPhones, but only use one right now. This stat doesn't mean anything, really.

The more relevant data looks at who is buying smartphones and using them now. By those measures, Apple is not dominating, at least not on smartphones. Read »


Also On SAI Today:
Advertisement

chart of the day groupon

CHART OF THE DAY: How Many People Actually Buy Groupons
chart of the day, groupon revenue, loss, ipo, june 2011

CHART OF THE DAY: Groupon's Massive Revenue And Massive Losses
chart of the day facebook google

CHART OF THE DAY: Google Is Much More Important Than Facebook For Purchasing Decisions
Share this: Buzz Buzz Facebook Facebook Twitter Twitter Digg Digg Reddit Reddit StumbleUpon StumbleUpon StumbleUpon LinkedIn
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter
The email address for your subscription is: dwyld.kwu.careers@blogger.com

Change Your Email Address | Unsubscribe | Subscribe | Subscribe to the SAI RSS Feed

Business Insider. 257 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10010

Terms of Service | Privacy Policy


If you believe this has been sent to you in error, please safely unsubscribe.

Yashi

Chitika