Qhof Women do better on math tests when they fake their names
A Long Island school board has voted to end a high school football team s season amid allegations that some players were sexually assaulted by older teammates at a training camp.The Bellmore-Merrick school board decided at a Wednesday night closed-door meeting to cancel all of the Mepham High School football team s games, Newsday reported in Thursday editions.Three varsity players, ages 15, 16 and 17, allegedly sodomized three junior varsity players with a broomstick, pine cones and golf balls while other players watched, the newspaper reported.The alleged assaults took place at Camp Wayne in Preston Park, Pa., where about 60 Mepham High School players and five coaches spent a week last month.Newsday said Pennsylvania state police were investigating the allegations. No charges have been filed. The three accused players have been suspended from the team, but not from school, pending the outcome of a district investigation. School officials and players have said the coaches did not know
stanley becher about the incidents until one of the victims parents reported it to the school principal several days after the team had returned.The school board found that many of the team s
stanley cup players violated the district s code of conduct by not reporting the alleged abuse, Newsday said. ponent--type-recirculation .item:nth-child 5 { display: none; } inline-
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Frank Reese is a farmer in Kansas who raises breeds of chicken that are dying out, despite
stanley quencher their hardiness and tastiness 鈥?becaus
stanley thermos e they ;re of no interest to the poultry industry. But he says that we ;re going to need these breeds in the future, partly because they may be able to cope better with climate change. In this video by famed science journalist Maryn McKenna, author of Superbug: The Fatal Menace of MRSA, we meet Reese and his birds, many of whom are the last of their kind. Writes McKenna in a companion article on National Geographic: It not just the business structure that becomes industrialized through the decades: The raw material, chicken, does too. That wide variety of genetics, represented by all those breeds raised by different farmers, gets progressively narrowed down and improved upon. Generation by generation, birds were redesigned to fit the evolving model of poultry production: stocky, fast-growing, indolent, and
cups stanley efficient at converting feed to flesh. Today, most of the chickens we eat belong to only a few proprietary breeds produced by only a few companies. Compared to what it was, the gene pool of chicken is shallow. Here and there, though, stubborn holdouts are attempting to preserve that almost-lost variety. The 6-minute video below comes from a trip I took to meet one such holdout: Frank Reese, proprietor of Good Shepherd Poultry Ranch in tiny Lindsborg, Kansas. Reese raises only birds that were rejected by the poultry industry