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TERRACE PARK, Ohio -- Fourth graders at Terrace Park Elementary School will receive national recognition this week for their efforts to help students in hurricane-affected Puerto Rico.Charlotte Buccholz's class is working with Destination Imagination, a nonprofit that challenges young people to explore their talents in fields including tech, science, engineering and community service. "We had a bunch of different ideas on how to do things and then we had to all agree on something," 9-year-old Buccholz said. They ultimately decided they wanted to focus on service -- specifically service to the people affected by Hurricane Maria."We were thinking about people who weren't getting much attention, and so we thought about Puerto Rico because it wasn't getting much help," student Tyler Graham said.Graham, Buccholz and their classmates created and sold clay 'Te Amo' ornaments to benefit The Juanita Garcia Peraza School in San Juan, eventually raising nearly ,500. They used the money to buy school supplies and other essential items for third-graders on the island.It's a simple idea with a big impact, and it caught the attention of Destination Imagination organizers. The fourth-graders will present their project at the nonprofit's global finals this week."We wanted to help the kids because we wouldn't want to be in that position," student Saura Patel said. 1398

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Swiss authorities are investigating a series of bizarre deposits.Investigators in Geneva are trying to understand why two Spanish women flushed roughly €100,000 (0,000) down toilets at a UBS bank branch and three nearby restaurants.Vincent Derouand of the Geneva Prosecutors' Office said the first incident involving cut-up €500 bills occurred in May.Security camera footage led investigators to the two Spanish women. Derouand said that a lawyer for the women confirmed the cash belonged to them."It may be illegal [cash] and they tried to get rid of it," Derouand said. "We have to check where the money is coming from."Derouand declined to identify the women."This is a strange story," he said. "It does not happen often."UBS declined to comment on the cash found at the Geneva branch, citing the ongoing investigation.The European Central Bank plans to kill off the €500 note next year because of concerns that it "could facilitate illicit activities."Europe's top law enforcement agency says the note (worth about 0) is often used by money launderers because of its unusually large denomination and portability. Plus, using cash helps criminals keep transactions and savings anonymous.In a 2015 report, Europol said cash was still the "instrument of choice" for terrorists and €500 bills were in high demand.Switzerland was long known for banking privacy laws that made it possible for banks to refuse to hand over their customers' data to authorities.But in recent years the country has agreed to start sharing financial information with outsiders, including the European Union and the U.S. 1610

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Sun Valley Foods is recalling ready-to-eat beef and chicken taquitos and chimichangas products containing diced green chilies due to concerns that the products may be contaminated with extraneous materials, specifically hard plastic.The hard plastic may pose a choking hazard or cause damage to teeth or gums.The frozen RTE meat and poultry taquitos and chimichangas items were produced by Ajinomoto Foods North America, Inc., and are sold under brand names including Great Value, Casa Mamita and Jos¨¦ Ol¨¦.The FDA said the following products, sold nationwide, were recalled:19.2-oz. carton containing 16 pieces labeled as ¡°Great Value Flour Chicken Taquitos Tortillas Stuffed with All White Chicken Meat & Monterey Jack Cheese¡± with a best if used by date of ¡°11 JUL 2021¡± and ¡°P5590¡± printed on the side panel.20-oz carton containing 20 pieces labeled as ¡°CASA MAMITA BEEF TAQUITOS ROLLED IN CORN TORTILLAS¡± with a best by date of ¡°26 JUN 2021¡± and ¡°EST 5590¡± printed on the side panel.22.5-oz carton containing 15 pieces labeled as ¡°CASA MAMITA CHICKEN AND CHEESE TAQUITOS ROLLED IN FLOUR TORTILLAS¡± with a best by date of ¡°26 JUN 2021¡± and ¡°P5590¡± printed on the side panel15-oz. carton containing 15 taquitos labeled as ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ TAQUITOS CHICKEN AND CHEESE POLLO Y QUESO IN FLOUR TORTILLAS¡± with a best by date of ¡°08 JUL 2021¡± or ¡°18 JUL 2021,¡± and ¡°P5590¡± printed on the side panel.20-oz. carton containing 20 taquitos labeled as ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ TAQUITOS BEEF CARNE DE RES IN CORN TORTILLAS¡± with a best by date of ¡°08 JUL 2021¡± and ¡°EST 5590¡± printed on the side panel.22.5-oz carton containing 15 taquitos labeled as ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ TAQUITOS CHICKEN AND CHEESE POLLO Y QUESO IN FLOUR TORTILLAS¡± with a best by date of ¡°09 JUL 2021,¡± ¡°14 JUL 2021¡± or ¡°17 JUL 2021¡± and ¡°P5590¡± printed on the side panel.55.5-oz carton containing 37 taquitos labeled as ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ VALUE PACK TAQUITOS CHICKEN AND CHEESE POLLO Y QUESO IN FLOUR TORTILLAS¡± with a best if used by date of ¡°15 JUL 2021¡± and ¡°P5590¡± printed on the side panel.60-oz. carton containing 60 taquitos labeled as ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ TAQUITOS BEEF CARNE DE RES IN CORN TORTILLAS¡± with a best if used by date of ¡°9 JUL 2021¡± or ¡°10 JUL 2021,¡± and ¡°EST 5590¡± printed on the side panel.5-oz. individual plastic bag containing ¡°JOS¨¦ OL¨¦ CHIMICHANGAS LOADED BEEF NACHO¡± with a best by date of ¡°15 JUL 2021¡± and ¡°EST. 17417¡± printed on the label.The products bear the establishment number ¡°EST 5590,¡± ¡°P5590¡± or ¡°EST. 17417¡± printed on the packaging above the expiration date.Ajinomoto Foods North America, Inc. identified pieces of hard plastic in their production process and in a barrel of diced green chilies that was received from their ingredients supplier, Sun Valley Foods. Sun Valley Foods initiated a recall of the green chilies with the FDA.There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a health care provider.FSIS is concerned that some product may be in consumers¡¯ freezers. Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.To learn more about the recall, click here.This story was originally published by staff at WTKR. 3276

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SYRACUSE, New York ¡ª It¡¯s training many teachers have never seen, and it¡¯s designed to let staff feel what it might be like to have a school shooter attacking.These teachers are physically learning to team up and do battle with a shooter, and they are being taught to focus on a shooter's hands.Teacher¡¯s aid Melissa Demjanenko used tennis balls to train in place of staplers, tape dispensers or chairs she would really use to defend her classroom."I think of myself as not a powerful person. ... What can I do to stop something? Now I know I can do something. Now I know everyone in this room can do something," Demjanenko said.The training considers the idea that when people are in the most stressful situation of their lives, and they think they're just going to react a certain way ... they recognize they won't, Sheriff¡¯s Deputy Tom Czyz said.People need muscle memory, and to get that, a person needs to have gone through similar stress, he said.Czyz started the training company Armored One.He says running to safety is your best bet, then hide if you can¡¯t run.Along with other current and former law enforcement he teaches teachers lessons that go beyond the classroom and beyond the school lessons we can all use if running or hiding aren¡¯t an option.¡°Your game plan of what you will do in case something happens: I hear gunshots behind me in front of me next to me. Which way am I going? What am I doing if I have to fight back.? What am I going to use for weapons? ... Literally in a few seconds."Everywhere you go you can have these plans already and it could save your life," Czyz said.We asked if he does that in every building he goes into. ¡°Absolutely.¡±Police officers regularly train at the gun range; flight attendants on the airplane train for weeks to help people get out alive. This is why some school districts have decided teachers also need to train physically ¡ª to protect students.Before this training, in a mock active shooter drill ¡ª teachers reacted painfully slow, taking more than 30 seconds to exit the room.Czyz was brutally honest.¡°If my own kids were in here, I would be disgusted with you. Pretend like your own kids are in here, right?" he said.Czyz's team demonstrated how to barricade a door and use other things around to block and protect one's self. The taechers then tried again.There was a huge difference after the training ¡ª teachers cleared the room in around 10 seconds.The sheriff's department says it works hard to make sure the teachers are in their space, so training is done in the school where the teachers actually work. They get first-hand experience in their building.Planning ahead and practicing is what these teachers say now gives them the confidence to wage war against an attacker if they have no other choice. 2858

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. ¡ª On Friday, a judge ruled that patients approved to use medical marijuana will be allowed to smoke it.Florida voters legalized medical marijuana in 2016. The only mention of smoking in the amendment¡¯s language and in an intent document during the 2016 campaign was that the Legislature and local governments could restrict it in public places.The Legislature last year passed enacting laws that banned the sale of smoking products, saying that it poses a health risk.Orlando lawyer and medical-marijuana advocate John Morgan filed a lawsuit that brought the case in front of a Tallahassee judge who ruled that Florida's current smokable weed prohibition is unconstitutional. On Friday, Circuit Judge Karen Gievers ruled Florida's medical cannabis patients have the right to smoke weed in private places. 835

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