日照治疗医院羊癫疯专病哪里好-【济南癫痫病医院】,NFauFwHg,江苏全国权威癫痫病医院,淄博有没有医院羊癫疯专病,山东小儿羊羔疯能根治吗,江苏癫痫病医院中医治疗癫痫,日照癫痫医院哪家好,青岛好的中医癫痫病医院
日照治疗医院羊癫疯专病哪里好济南怎么样才能治好癫痫,东营治羊癫疯病要花多少钱,济南癫痫用什么方法治疗,江苏治疗癫痫的费用是多少,滨州好治羊癫疯病医院,泰安哪家医院看羊癫疯病较好,河南儿童癫痫病的常见治疗方法
What do you do with your leftovers? For many Americans, it ends up in the trash; the average American wastes a pound a day of food per USDA figures. But an organization in Indiana is taking leftovers to fulfill a need in the community. The organization is called Cultivate, and it is based in South Bend, Indiana. Cultivate, a nonprofit organization, takes food left from event centers, convention centers and banquets. The leftovers are then repackaged and repurposed. “We get great food that’s been donated that’s made by really great chefs that had been going into the trash can,” Jim Conklin of Cultivate said. Food such as prime rib, lobster bisque and fresh vegetables sometimes make it to Cultivate's kitchen. The food then ends up in the stomachs of children, many of whom were not receiving meals outside of their school breakfasts and lunches. Principal of Madison Steam Academy Deb Martin said she has seen first-hand the effects of poverty in her school. Martin said that 93 percent of her students live in poverty. “When you have a limited amount of funds sometimes the first thing to go is your food source, especially if you have a larger family,” Martin said. In the past, Martin noticed that students came to school extra hungry on Monday mornings after going the weekend without being fed.“On Monday’s, our kids run to breakfast,” Martin said, “and when you have that, you know you have food deprived children.”On Fridays, the students are sent home with up to six prepackaged meals prepared by Cultivate. “We believe giving a child meals over the weekend will help their education,” Conklin said. “Which is truly the only way out of poverty.”Martin is thankful for the program. “It’s a unique way to take something that was going to be waste, and now make it into doing what it’s doing for our kids filling in those gaps, feeding those kids nutritious healthy meals that they may not get,” she said. 1931
WARNING: The video above contains profanity.DETROIT, Mich. -- Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden told a worker he was "full of s***" 154
Whatever it takes. Watch the brand new trailer for Marvel Studios’ #AvengersEndgame, in theaters April 26. pic.twitter.com/0sOetnYzPu— The Avengers (@Avengers) March 14, 2019 186
When first responders arrived at Lisa Snyder's home in Pennsylvania on September 23, they found a horrific scene.Snyder's 8-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter were in the basement, hanging by their necks from a support beam, a probable cause affidavit filed with the court said. The children were in cardiac arrest and died a few days later, the affidavit said.Snyder told investigators that she thought the children killed themselves, the affidavit said. Her son was bullied at school and had talked about taking his life, his mother told troopers, and he told her he didn't want to die alone.But that story was a lie, prosecutors say. Investigators found no evidence that the boy was being bullied.On Monday, more than two months after the children died, Snyder, 36, was arrested and charged with murdering Conner and Brinley.Snyder's attorney, Dennis Charles, declined to comment when reached Monday on the phone. "My policy has always been not to discuss active cases with the media," he said.Berks County District Attorney John Adams said at a news conference Monday that Snyder continues to maintain the children killed themselves.He described investigators' findings but offered no motive."I don't know that there's any explanation for her behavior at all. I don't think that I can stand up here nor can anyone explain the horrific loss of two innocent children's lives," Adams said.Snyder was charged with two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of endangering the welfare of children, two counts of third-degree murder, tampering with/fabricating physical evidence, cruelty to animals and sexual intercourse with an animal.She's being held without bond in the Berks County Prison.'He tells me he hates school'Snyder and her children lived in Albany Township, about 75 miles northwest of Philadelphia. She told investigators that children made fun of Conner "because he is fat," and he was starving himself, the affidavit said."He tells me he hates school, every day he tells me he doesn't want to talk about school," Snyder told investigators.She told investigators that she sat down with her son the week before his body was found and encouraged him to come to her, "if you ever feel hurting yourself.""He did say to me when we were talking, I woulda killed myself already but I am scared to go by myself," Snyder said, according to the affidavit.Adams, the prosecutor, said Snyder ordered the dog lead the children were hanging from September 22 and picked it up from a store the morning of September 23.On that day, Snyder told investigators, Conner asked to build a fort in the basement when he got home from school.She told investigators that her son took two dining room chairs downstairs, along with the dog lead, and asked his sister to come play with him, the affidavit said.While the kids were in the basement, Snyder said, she put away laundry, went outside to play with the dog and smoke a cigarette, and then went downstairs to ask if the children wanted frozen pizza or Chef Boyardee for dinner, the affidavit said.First responders found the children hanging from the beam, about three feet apart, the affidavit said. The two bar-height dining room chairs were knocked onto their sides, the affidavit said.Snyder told investigators she tried to lift, Brinley, who weighed 40 pounds, but she couldn't work the "latch" on the dog lead, the affidavit said. She said she couldn't lift the 151-pound Conner either, the affidavit said."She then went upstairs and called 911 and never returned back to the basement," the affidavit said.The children died three days later.Early suspicionsAdams said investigators had questions right away."Eight year-olds, generally, that I am aware, do not commit suicide," Adams said.School officials and family members said Conner never mentioned he was suicidal or being bullied, the affidavit said. Others, including a witness who lived in Snyder's home, said Conner never told them he was a victim of bullying, the document said. A security video of Conner getting off the bus on the day his body was discovered showed no signs of distress, it said."In fact from the video, he was appeared to be a happy child," Adams said.Adams did not identify the witness who lived in the home, but said that Snyder's 17-year-old son lived there. The witness said the younger children rarely played in the basement, Adams said.Adams said the Berks County Children and Youth Services had previously been involved with the family.Adams said children were removed from the home in 2014, but he didn't specify which children. They were returned to her care in February 2015, Adams said. He did not say why the children were removed.The agency was involved with the family until November 2015, he said."As far as we can tell, from the evidence that we have reviewed, they made what appeared to be the proper decisions at the time," Adams said.CNN is reaching out to the agency for comment.'Hits us in the heart'The affidavit said three weeks before her children died, Snyder told a witness she was depressed and couldn't get out of bed.She also "made a statement that she does not care anymore about her kids," the affidavit said.In the days before her children's deaths, Snyder's gmail account made several online searches that drew investigators' interest.In one instance, her account looked up "carbon monoxide in a car how long to die," the affidavit said.Google searches on her account showed a search on a website that described an effective way to hang someone with using a simple suspension, the affidavit said.The district attorney said the case has been an emotional one for investigators."Anytime that any of us have to investigate, prosecute cases that involve the abuse or death of an innocent child, it all hits us in the heart," he said.Conner and Brinley's deaths have made authorities "appreciate the quality of life and the value of human life," Adams said."It's just not right, and it's not fair," he said. 5980
Wannabe vampires, beware: The US Food and Drug Administration warned Tuesday against using plasma infusions from young blood donors to ward off the effects of normal aging as well as other more serious conditions. Plasma, the liquid portion of the blood, contains proteins that help clot blood.The infusions are promoted to treat a variety of conditions, including normal aging and memory loss as well as serious conditions such as dementia, multiple sclerosis, heart disease and post-traumatic stress disorder."There is no proven clinical benefit of infusion of plasma from young donors to cure, mitigate, treat, or prevent these conditions, and there are risks associated with the use of any plasma product," FDA Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb wrote in a 770