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ST. LOUIS, Mo. — A St. Louis Man made a gruesome discovery while cleaning out his mother's apartment after she died. Adam Smith says he found a dead baby in her freezer, and it's apparently been there for several years. Smith said he has been living in the apartment and taking care of his mother, who passed away from cancer just a few days ago. He said his mother had kept the box, wrapped up tight, in their freezer for decades and always told him to stay away from it. After she passed away, he decided to open it. "There was a pink blanket, baby blanket, and when I reached down and touched it I could feel a foot," Smith told CNN. I could see the baby's head with hair, hair that was still attached to it, smooth."Police were called to the building early Sunday morning. They call the infant's death "suspicious."Smith told police that he never looked inside the box his mother kept wrapped in the freezer. He always thought it was a frozen wedding cake. Smith says his mother once told him that she lost a child at birth and that family members have told him that his mother had twins at one point, but lost one of the babies at birth. The second twin was allegedly given up for adoption. "Who absolutely keeps their own child in a box for this long and never talks about it and never, I just have so many thoughts and it's just insane," Smith said. Smith said he's distraught thinking about the possibility that the child may have been his sister and what his mother may have done to her. "I have to wait for the autopsy to see if that baby ever took a breath and I cannot help it, to think she might have done something to it. I just can't help it," Smith said. And now that his mother is gone, Smith said he wonders if he'll ever know the truth. "I wanted some kind of closure and I feel like I may never get any closure because my mom's gone," Smith said. The child's death remains under investigation. 1927
Registration for the 2019 Scripps National Spelling Bee is more than just a chance to sign-in for the competition.It’s a chance to make friends, with the nearly 600 people gearing up for a once-in-a-lifetime experience.“I've dreamed of being here. I never thought I’d make it,” says 7th-grader Frank Salzeider, who is from Detroit, Michigan. “Felt like it's crazy. It's like, I can’t explain. I can’t explain. No one can explain.”Salzeider and other contestants signed each other’s “Beekeepers” books, which are similar to a yearbook. They also make plans to stay in touch.“Once you meet people here, you can help each other study for next year, and you have something in common: spelling bee,” he says.For Colette Giezentanner, of St. Louis, making it to the Scripps National Spelling Bee is surreal. “I watched it on tv a lot since I was 7 and 8, and so, it's just weird to be in this place that I’ve seen on television so many times,” the 12-year-old says.Giezentanner says she’s excited to be around other people who share her same interests.“They've been doing it for the same, the same things as you to prepare,” she explains. “It's kind of like a community.”But with all the excitement, the competition is still in the back of everyone’s minds. “I’ve been really excited and a little bit nervous, but like, if you have been studying and you know you can get it right,” says 14-year-old Gabriella Agunanne of El Paso, Texas.Meanwhile, these spellers are finding time for friendship and fun, while gearing up for a great competition.“You'd be surprised that, oh it is all about winning, but you actually make a lot of friends here,” says Salzeider. 1666

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Parents desperate to get their children with dyslexia the daily instruction they needed went out on their own to solve the problem. These changemakers, along with advocates and elected leaders, helped to create a 247
Scammers are offering "free child safety kits" to parents in order to obtain sensitive information that can be used to steals kids' identities, the 160
Sex tech is now putting their place on the technology map at CES 2020 in Las Vegas. One of the companies appearing at CES 2020 was created by Lora Haddock DiCarlo, who developed her own line of sex toys. Her inspiration was an intense experience with a partner. “It knocked me off the bed and I laid on the floor wondering oh my god how can I do that again,” says DiCarlo.The company, called Lora DiCarlo, started in 2017, and its success was quick. In 2019, the company was given an Innovation Award in Robotics for its sex toys at CES, but the award was later taken away.“It was taken away on the basis that they [CES] felt it was profane or obscene,” says DiCarlo. That promoted both the host of the show, the Consumer Technology Association, and DiCarlo to talk. That conversation brought not only the Lora DiCarlo brand back to CES, but gave the platform for others in the industry too.“We were able to be the agents of change that were able to bring sex tech to the show in a very respectful kind of manner,” said DiCarlo. DiCarlo believes robotic pleasure is a means of human wellness. “We’re here to have a healthy open conversation about sexual health and wellness and CES is the stage for innovation and that’s exactly what we do,” says DiCarlo.This article was written by Austin Carter for 1313
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