THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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Did you ever find out who/where this is? I received a call from this number today. Thanx! |
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Thanks |
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-Rick |
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you dorks are getting your rocks off with nerd word play over there, but totally over look this timely slice of humor. GET IT? It was headline news Alaska had a 6.2 quake yesterday? C'mon...... |
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213-380-0776 |
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We also just got a call from that wierd number 720-587-9978 It was a friend who was using a calling card I guess, but he had to leave a message because we don't answer calls from numbers we don't recognize. People who don't want to be forced to leave a message should only call from their home number. Duh! JO |
http://www.fertilebeltramireunion.com/70.htm http://www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7 |
http://www.fertilebeltramireunion.com/70.htm http://www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7 |
http://www.fertilebeltramireunion.com/70.htm http://www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7 |
http://www.fertilebeltramireunion.com/70.htm http://www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7 |
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hours... <http://ares.penguinhosting.net/~leftreveggplant/ calltranscript.html> and the article: <http://ares.penguinhosting.net/~leftreveggplant/> |
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calling card is an inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), the general name for diseases that cause inflammation in the intestines. calling card can be difficult to diagnose because its symptoms are similar to other intestinal disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome and to another type of IBD called ulcerative colitis. Ulcerative colitis causes inflammation and ulcers in the top layer of the lining of the large intestine. calling card affects men and women equally and seems to run in some families. About 20 percent of people with calling card have a blood relative with some form of IBD, most often a brother or sister and sometimes a parent or child. calling card may also be called ileitis or enteritis. What Causes calling card? Theories about what causes calling card abound, but none has been proven. The most popular theory is that the body's immune system reacts to a virus or a bacterium by causing ongoing inflammation in the intestine. People with calling card tend to have abnormalities of the immune system, but doctors do not know whether these abnormalities are a cause or result of the disease. calling card is not caused by emotional distress. What Are the Symptoms? The most common symptoms of calling card are abdominal pain, often in the lower right area, and diarrhea. Rectal bleeding, weight loss, and fever may also occur. Bleeding may be serious and persistent, leading to anemia. Children with calling card may suffer delayed development and stunted growth. How Is calling card Diagnosed? A thorough physical exam and a series of tests may be required to diagnose calling card . Blood tests may be done to check for anemia, which could indicate bleeding in the intestines. Blood tests may also uncover a high white blood cell count, which is a sign of inflammation somewhere in the body. By testing a stool sample, the doctor can tell if there is bleeding or infection in the intestines. The doctor may do an upper gastrointestinal (GI) series to look at the small intestine. For this test, the patient drinks barium, a chalky solution that coats the lining of the small intestine, before x-rays are taken. The barium shows up white on x-ray film, revealing inflammation or other abnormalities in the intestine. The doctor may also do a colonoscopy. For this test, the doctor inserts an endoscope--a long, flexible, lighted tube linked to a computer and TV monitor--into the anus to see the inside of the large intestine. The doctor will be able to see any inflammation or bleeding. During the exam, the doctor may do a biopsy, which involves taking a sample of tissue from the lining of the intestine to view with a microscope. If these tests show calling card , more x-rays of both the upper and lower digestive tract may be necessary to see how much is affected by the disease. What Are the Complications of calling card? The most common complication is blockage of the intestine. Blockage occurs because the disease tends to thicken the intestinal wall with swelling and scar tissue, narrowing the passage. calling card may also cause sores, or ulcers, that tunnel through the affected area into surrounding tissues such as the bladder, vagina, or skin. The areas around the anus and rectum are often involved. The tunnels, called fistulas, are a common complication and often become infected. Sometimes fistulas can be treated with medicine, but in some cases they may require surgery. Nutritional complications are common in calling card. Deficiencies of proteins, calories, and vitamins are well documented in calling card. These deficiencies may be caused by inadequate dietary intake, intestinal loss of protein, or poor absorption (malabsorption). Other complications associated with calling card include arthritis, skin problems, inflammation in the eyes or mouth, kidney stones, gallstones, or other diseases of the liver and biliary system. Some of these problems resolve during treatment for disease in the digestive system, but some must be treated separately. What Is the Treatment for calling card? Treatment for calling card depends on the location and severity of disease, complications, and response to previous treatment. The goals of treatment are to control inflammation, correct nutritional deficiencies, and relieve symptoms like abdominal pain, diarrhea, and rectal bleeding. Treatment may include drugs, nutrition supplements, surgery, or a combination of these options. At this time, treatment can help control the disease, but there is no cure. Some people have long periods of remission, sometimes years, when they are free of symptoms. However, the disease usually recurs at various times over a person's lifetime. This changing pattern of the disease means one cannot always tell when a treatment has helped. Predicting when a remission may occur or when symptoms will return is not possible. Someone with calling card may need medical care for a long time, with regular doctor visits to monitor the condition. Drug Therapy Most people are first treated with drugs containing mesalamine, a substance that helps control inflammation. Sulfasalazine is the most commonly used of these drugs. Patients who do not benefit from it or who cannot tolerate it may be put on other mesalamine-containing drugs, generally known as 5-ASA agents, such as Asacol, Dipentum, or Pentasa. Possible side effects of mesalamine preparations include nausea, vomiting, heartburn, diarrhea, and headache. Some patients take corticosteroids to control inflammation. These drugs are the most effective for active calling card, but they can cause serious side effects, including greater susceptibility to infection. Drugs that suppress the immune system are also used to treat calling card. Most commonly prescribed are 6-mercaptopurine and a related drug, azathioprine. Immunosuppressive agents work by blocking the immune reaction that contributes to inflammation. These drugs may cause side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea and may lower a person's resistance to infection. When patients are treated with a combination of corticosteroids and immunosuppressive drugs, the dose of corticosteriods can eventually be lowered. Some studies suggest that immunosuppressive drugs may enhance the effectiveness of corticosteroids. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved the drug infliximab (brand name, Remicade) for the treatment of moderate to severe calling card that does not respond to standard therapies (mesalamine substances, corticosteroids, immunosuppressive agents) and for the treatment of open, draining fistulas. Infliximab, the first treatment approved specifically for calling card, is an anti-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) substance. TNF is a protein produced by the immune system that may cause the inflammation associated with calling card. Anti-TNF removes TNF from the bloodstream before it reaches the intestines, thereby preventing inflammation. Investigators will continue to study patients taking infliximab to determine its long-term safety and efficacy. Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial overgrowth in the small intestine caused by stricture, fistulas, or prior surgery. For this common problem, the doctor may prescribe one or more of the following antibiotics: ampicillin, sulfonamide, cephalosporin, tetracycline, or metronidazole. Diarrhea and crampy abdominal pain are often relieved when the inflammation subsides, but additional medication may also be necessary. Several antidiarrheal agents could be used, including diphenoxylate, loperamide, and codeine. Patients who are dehydrated because of diarrhea will be treated with fluids and electrolytes. The U.S. Government does not endorse or favor any specific commercial product or company. Brand names appearing in this publication are used only because they are considered essential in the context of the information reported herein. Nutrition Supplementation The doctor may recommend nutritional supplements, especially for children whose growth has been slowed. Special high-calorie liquid formulas are sometimes used for this purpose. A small number of patients may need periods of feeding by vein. This can help patients who need extra nutrition temporarily, those whose intestines need to rest, or those whose intestines cannot absorb enough nutrition from food. Surgery Surgery to remove part of the intestine can help calling card but cannot cure it. The inflammation tends to return next to the area of intestine that has been removed. Many calling card patients require surgery, either to relieve symptoms that do not respond to medical therapy or to correct complications such as blockage, perforation, abscess, or bleeding in the intestine. Some people who have calling card in the large intestine need to have their entire colon removed in an operation called colectomy. A small opening is made in the front of the abdominal wall, and the tip of the ileum is brought to the skin's surface. This opening, called a stoma, is where waste exits the body. The stoma is about the size of a quarter and is usually located in the right lower part of the abdomen near the beltline. A pouch is worn over the opening to collect waste, and the patient empties the pouch as needed. The majority of colectomy patients go on to live normal, active lives. Sometimes only the diseased section of intestine is removed and no stoma is needed. In this operation, the intestine is cut above and below the diseased area and reconnected. Because calling card often recurs after surgery, people considering it should carefully weigh its benefits and risks compared with other treatments. Surgery may not be appropriate for everyone. People faced with this decision should get as much information as possible from doctors, nurses who work with colon surgery patients (enterostomal therapists), and other patients. Patient advocacy organizations can suggest support groups and other information resources. (See Resources for the names of such organizations.) People with calling card may feel well and be free of symptoms for substantial spans of time when their disease is not active. Despite the need to take medication for long periods of time and occasional hospitalizations, most people with calling card are able to hold jobs, raise families, and function successfully at home and in society. Research Researchers continue to look for more effective treatments. Examples of investigational treatments include Anti-TNF. Research has shown that cells affected by calling card contain a cytokine, a protein produced by the immune system, called tumor necrosis factor (TNF). TNF may be responsible for the inflammation of calling card. Anti-TNF is a substance that finds TNF in the bloodstream, binds to it, and removes it before it can reach the intestines and cause inflammation. In studies, anti-TNF seems particularly helpful in closing fistulas. Interleukin 10. Interleukin 10 (IL-10) is a cytokine that suppresses inflammation. Researchers are now studying the effectiveness of synthetic IL-10 in treating calling card. Antibiotics. Antibiotics are now used to treat the bacterial infections that often accompany calling card, but some research suggests that they might also be useful as a primary treatment for active calling card. Budesonide. Researchers recently identified a new corticosteroid called budesonide that appears to be as effective as other corticosteroids but causes fewer side effects. Methotrexate and cyclosporine. These are immunosuppressive drugs that may be useful in treating calling card. One potential benefit of methotrexate and cyclosporine is that they appear to work faster than traditional immunosuppressive drugs. Zinc. Free radicals--molecules produced during fat metabolism, stress, and infection, among other things--may contribute to inflammation in calling card. Free radicals sometimes cause cell damage when they interact with other molecules in the body. The mineral zinc removes free radicals from the bloodstream. Studies are under way to determine whether zinc supplementation might reduce inflammation. Can Diet Control calling card? No special diet has been proven effective for preventing or treating this disease. Some people find their symptoms are made worse by milk, alcohol, hot spices, or fiber. People are encouraged to follow a nutritious diet and avoid any foods that seem to worsen symptoms. But there are no consistent rules. People should take vitamin supplements only on their doctor's advice. Is Pregnancy Safe for Women With calling card? Research has shown that the course of pregnancy and delivery is usually not impaired in women with calling card. Even so, women with calling card should discuss the matter with their doctors before pregnancy. Most children born to women with calling card are unaffected. Children who do get the disease are sometimes more severely affected than adults, with slowed growth and delayed sexual development in some cases. |
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i think mary ann put him up to it. she was probably laughing in the background. |
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http://www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7 How can a Colorado number be for someone in Nebraska???? |
Look here: http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache:55NHTh1Eu8oC:www.newsnetnebraska.org/vnews/display.v/ART/2002/11/01/3dc2fa4cb84b7+720-587-9978&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 |
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Maybe its time I get my Linuxbox Voicemail software working... :) |
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So... this is just a calling card, and nothing more? |
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They are generally different companies calling, and I do request being taken off their call list(s), but what an intrusion on my time when there are that many! BTW, I have Internic to thank for it as they are the main place spammers got my phone number & email address to begin with. Since I own several com/net/org domains, and the info you submit to registrars when registering a domain is 'public record', all someone has to do is download the registar's user database, put that info on CD, and sell that CD to others....(we have all probably seen the ads in our email from people selling such a CD of "millions of email addresses and phone contacts"). I wish I knew my user info was going to be passed around like that years ago when I registered my first domains. Giving fake phone number/email info is now a common practice with people registering domains, however, when I started, you HAD to give real info as internic would (and often did)call you if there was a problem registering a domain name. Sort of makes it pointless to be paying the $2.50 per month charge for having my number unlisted and non-published, eh??? Ok...now a question for anyone who may be 'in the know' on specific phone related stuff.... I would think, with today's technology, that there must be a way to block 'specific' numbers. I know about, and utilize, 'anonymous call rejection', but is there anything out there for *specific number* call rejection, either telco or 3rd party hardware/software available that any of you know of?? |
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Okay, here's my story. The # (720) 587-9978 showed up on my caller ID yesterday. First this guy called my cell. I assumed he was a telemarketer from the way he was talking. He said he was taking a survey and if I participated in the survey I would be mailed a check for $50.00. Yeah, right, but I thought I would give it a shot. I just told him to call me back at my other phone since I was burning minutes on my cell. So in a couple of minutes he calls back, he asks a few questions (not about my SS# or anything like that) and then wants me to try a "relaxation technique". Eventually it was obvious he was looking for somebody to have phone sex with. I said I had to be somewhere and he hung up. I went so far as to report this to the cops before I finally found out that he used a calling card and I guess there's no way to track the guy down. Oh well....... |
The other day I had a call from a good friend in Ohio, who called from her home, using a prepaid AT&T calling card. After we hung up, I did *69 and the recording said my last call came from (720) 587-9978. A few months ago, after talking with this SAME Ohio friend, who at that time ALSO called from her home using a prepaid AT&T calling card, I did *69 and the recording said my last call came from (402) 517-9978...which, according to my Google search just now, is a Nebraska area code that's provoking similar responses from people who say they don't know anyone in Nebraska. By the way, I don't know if it's significant that both of the above numbers end in "9978." Maybe the calling card company (presumably AT&T) has multiple phone numbers, in different states, associated with its cards, and for consistency's sake has acquired phone numbers for itself which have some of the same groups of digits. But the POINT is (as "Arizona" and precious few others seem to comprehend), absolutely ANYBODY can buy a prepaid calling card, which is always gonna have SOME originating number attached to it, whether it's (720) 587-9978 or WHATEVER. From what I'm reading in other people's messages, apparently the cards associated with (720) 587-9978 are sold at Sam's Club (maybe other places, too?), and come with an excellent per-minute rate. Then, whenever the purchaser uses the card to make calls to WHOEVER they call (friends, relatives, total strangers), THAT'S the number that will be announced if the receiver of the call does *69 after the call has been made. I notice most of the people posting messages about experiences with the (720) number are doing so specifically because the calls they received were peculiar for some reason, which is why they *69-ed the call to BEGIN with (some mention the caller having a disguised voice, or the call coming in the middle of the night, or a threatening message being left, or a whole BUNCH of calls coming from the (720) number). This simply means that if someone "bad" wants to call you without their number being able to be traced through *69, ONE way to do it (besides calling from a blocked number) is through using a prepaid calling card (which also gives them a great rate!). However, it's obvious to me that (720) 587-9978 is a perfectly "innocent" number that's also being used by plenty of perfectly NORMAL people who just want to make long distance calls at a good low rate - not, as some writers have been suggesting, the exclusive work of one or more pranksters, malicious telemarketers, etc. If someone gets a call from a friend or relative who (whether unbeknownst to them or not) happens to use a prepaid card, typically they're not likely to *69 the call afterward, so will never even REALIZE that their friend/relative (who was NOT in Colorado) somehow mysteriously managed to reach them from a number with a Colorado area code. That in turn means they're not gonna do an Internet search on the number, and find their way to sites such as this one, and write all about a bizarre call they received. So, to put it all in perspective: when you read all the messages on a site like this one, it APPEARS that the (720) number is affiliated with some malevolent individual(s) or organization(s), because nearly 100% of the people who choose to WRITE about getting calls from that number are those whose calls were of a suspicious nature (in some cases, suspicious ONLY because they don't KNOW anyone in Colorado, and came home to discover through *69 that "someone from Colorado" called them but didn't leave a message). However, the people reporting these experiences on the Internet represent only a SMALL PERCENTAGE of the presumably MILLIONS of calls received from people who happen to use prepaid cards that are associated with the (720) number! END OF DISCUSSION already!!! |
where someone describes receiving a call from the same 770 number, then a call from the 720 an hour and 20 minutes later. Maybe it IS nothing, but it seems strange the same thing should happen to me. Although, unlike the person who put the page up, I had no messages. |
and it said that it is a calling card number of some sort.. I am wondering who is calling me? |
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The mystery is finally solved, Gilligan and he Professor are up to no good, probably going to try and boink Ginger,,, seriously, this number has been driving me nuts! Glad to know it's a calling card :) |
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I just got a call from 720-587-9978 too, and I googled it and got here. It was this man demanding to know who "EYE" was. I'm like, if you don't know who you called, I'm not going to be the one to enlighten you. He was irate sounding. He said that my number was on his phone bill. So I very firmly told him that it was his problem that somebody in his house called me and to leave ME alone. I didn't dial him up, after all. Now my cell phone is less than two months old. If it was on his bill, that could be from January or early February--it wasn't me. Reverse phone lookups say this number is in Denver, Colorado, and it's held by ATT. You're right, it could be a phone card. The man actually said he was in my town, Collegeville. Too, too weird! The next time someone calls to demand to know who I am I'm going to say "Honey, don't your remember me? I was your one-night stand a few weeks back. Didn't I mention I had a bad disease? Ooops!" TooUnfazed@yahoo.com |
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I received calls from all of the above numbers on my caller ID within a couple hours of each other, on the same day. I bought an AT&T phone card at a Walmart in Madison, WI just before my daughter went on spring break in South Carolina. She called me several times from their campsite using a payphone with the calling card. Mystery Solved. Relax, Its just a pre-paid phone card. |
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jeez, sucks to be you. |
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Lt. Governor-Designate, Div. 15 Lloyd T. Brown Spouse: Cathy. 730 Gholson Road Paducah, KY 42001. 270-488-3363 (Home) 404-461-9978 (Cell) ltbrown@bigrivertel.net lol...according to http://www.ktkiwanis.info/Leadership.html that page...toodles woodles! |
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http://www.monluusa.com/agents.htm |
YAHOO |
At this moment used by Charles Blankenship or fiancee Karin Adair while working in Iraq for Halliburton (KBR). Another love affair overseas while both were still married to people here in the US. Out of sight out of mind. |
402-517-9978 - Nebraska 720-587-9978 - Colorado 404-461-9978 - Georgia They were from my boyfriend, he keep saying he was calling from Oklahoma at payphones, A lot of bs was going on so I wanted to make sure he wasn't lieing so I found this site...So thanks for the site atleast I know it is a calling card. |
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did my friend |
Go GO Google |
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Cheers |
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Hey, I think that I'll have to get me one of those cards to use for requesting to be taken off various lists, i.e. fax spams etc. |
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Just reassuring all of you that have been Googling the number that you just got your answer to where the number came from - a calling card used in Whoknowswhere. |
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the number came up on my cell, I answered it and there was no one on the other end, when I tried to call it back, I got the same message that everyone else has! Interesting stuff! I wonder what compnay provides the calling cards and obviously uses the same base number for all of their callers... |
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outgoing calls from the dorms. every room has it's own incomming number, but they all go out on that number |
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Thanx! |
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we chatted for just a couple of minutes and I asked him is it okay if I keep his # on my cell....he said "what my # came up on your cell?". he thought he blocked it, but it showed up..lol...and then he got scared and said "I'm a married man and no one cam know that we chatted" bla, bla bla.. then he said a quick goodbye...I never heard from him again..lol... \but whats funny is that right before he hung up the phone...(he thought I did, but I didnt) and I listened as he thought he answered the other line and he said, "Classic Collections, how may I help you?". He thought I was a customer calling!!!!..lol. so...people..I looked up where this # comes from and its Denver Colorado. an antiques business..lol.and the guys name is "Rick"..maybe...lol Oh one more thing folks....I think maybe this guy is like calling all yall..because there just cant be two of the same #....right?...anyway hasta la bye,bye... |
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Why can't someone invent a way for a person to climb through the phone line and choke the living shit out of people.. like telemarketers, sales persons, spammers, junk mailers.. and others that are worthless? |
The numbers refered to in this forum are calling card numbers for AT&T, the cards used may or may not have AT&T written on them. Also since AT&T routes calling card calls as they see fit, the numbers ARE NOT permanently linked to certain cards, in other words I can use my Sam's/Walmart card to call you and it may show up as (720)587-9978. I may call you back 5 minutes later using the SAME CARD and it may show up as (404)461-9978 or any other number AT&T uses for this purpose. Thank You for reading this episode of, "What I Know" |
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posts here or it this site shows up in Google and they go right to post another message. People, the answer to what these numbers are exist in the messages above! Hello? Are you that stupid that you don't look for the answer on a site that shows up when you search? I say this for the benefit and entertainment of the people who feel the same way, because those to whom this message is addressing aren't going to read it anyway. |
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Smoke signals are fantastic though, really, look at them - each puff of smoke is individual and so you really won't have the problem of not knowing who the "caller" or "puffer" is...just don't inhale |
One person can use the same card two times in a day, and call from the same phone and the number can show up differently each time? The first time it can be 720 587 9978 and the second time it can be 404 461 9978? Thanks! Trinity |
I just don't get why after almost 2 yrs, people are still asking the same question when, in multiple posts, the question has been answered. READ, PEOPLE. READ! |