Dear Dr Boscoe,
I am contacting you in regards to the *email sent to you yesterday which implied you had previously published in BioMed Central’s Journal of Translational Medicine. Please disregard this email and accept my apologies for any confusion and inconvenience this may have caused you.
This email was sent in error and was due to a fault in our operating systems which has since been resolved.
If you have any further questions regarding this email, or BioMed Central in general, please do not hesitate to contact me.
With all best wishes,
Deborah Kahn
Publishing Director
*If you did not receive an email regarding the Journal of Translational Medicine from BioMed Central please disregard this email.
**And if you did not receive either this email or the one that preceded it, then presumably we need not say anything regarding their disregarding. That would be incorrect. You may be reading someone else’s mail, for example, which is not something I condone, but it does happen. Or maybe you’re reading this reposted on a blog somewhere. Why that would be true, I have no idea, but stranger things have happened. One thing I can be confident about is that you are not reading this as a tweet, because it is way over 140 characters.
My sister-in-law comments:
“You know what’s interesting is that they (BioMed Central) sent me some email saying I had requested slides from some study. I’d been doing so much research this semester, I figured that I might have requested something. When I looked at it, it was the most horrible photos of immunocompromised nares I had ever seen. I am positive I did not request that!
Maybe I should send them an email saying that, and if they had in fact received an earlier email saying that I was requesting it, to then disregard said email?”
The disregard they show you!
You got to push it?this essenatil info that is!