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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2003 LN6 (talk | contribs) at 04:24, 13 April 2024 (editing own userpage). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This user is against all forms of pseudoscience and will use any means necessary to stomp it out.
WikiProject FormalizationThis user absolutely despises informal contractions in the main namespace and pledges to completely eradicate them.
Vandalism Level: Moderate  
4.91 RPM according to RedWarn's tool. Bot is down.
Patient Zerotalk 00:26, 22 May 2025 (UTC) (Purge)

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From today's featured article

Dracunculiasis, also called Guinea-worm disease, is a parasitic infection by the Guinea worm, Dracunculus medinensis. A person becomes infected by drinking water contaminated with Guinea-worm larvae, which penetrate the digestive tract and escape into the body. Around a year later, the adult female migrates to an exit site – usually the lower leg – and induces an intensely painful blister on the skin. Eventually, the blister bursts, creating a painful wound from which the worm gradually emerges. The wound remains painful throughout the worm's emergence, disabling the affected person for the three to ten weeks it takes the worm to emerge. There is no medication to treat or prevent dracunculiasis. Instead, the mainstay of treatment is the careful wrapping of the emerging worm around a small stick or gauze to encourage and speed up its exit. A disease of extreme poverty, there were 14 cases reported worldwide in 2023, as efforts continue to eradicate it. (Full article...)

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In the Loge

In the Loge, also known as At the Opera, is an 1878 impressionist painting by the American artist Mary Cassatt. The oil-on-canvas painting displays a bourgeois woman in a loge at the opera house looking through her opera glasses, while a man in the background looks at her. The woman's costume and fan make clear her upper class status. Art historians see the painting as commentary on the role of gender, looking, and power in the social spaces of the nineteenth century. The painting is currently in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which also holds a preliminary drawing for the work.

Painting credit: Mary Cassatt

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