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erba Battle of the Baking Scales: Drop Kitchen vs. Perfect Bake
« le: Décembre 12, 2024, 03:41:32 am »
Posq The Weirdest Thing on the Internet Tonight: All the Way
 EUGENE, Oregon - Sometime after midnight on a moonlit rural Oregon highway, a state trooper checking a car he had just pulled over found less than an ounce of pot on one passenger: A chatty 72-year-old woman blind in one eye.She insisted the weed was legal and was approved by the U.S. government.The trooper and his supervisor were doubtful. But after a series of calls to the U.S. Attorney s Office, the Drug Enforcement Agency and her physician, the troopers handed her back the card  151; and her pot.CBSNews special report: Marijuana NationFor the past three decades, Uncle Sam has been providing a handful of patients with some of the highest grade marijuana around. The program grew out of a 1976 court settlement that stanley cup  created the country s first legal pot smoker.        Advocates for legalizing marijuana or treating it as a medicine say the program is a glaring contradiction in the nation s 40-year war on drugs  151; maintaining the federal ban on pot while at the same time supplying it.Can marijuana block post traumatic stress Study: L.A. stanley cup  pot clinics shut, crime  stanley cupe went upStudy: Marijuana use up, meth use downGovernment officials say there is no contradiction. The program is no longer accepting new patients, and public health authorities have concluded that there was no scientific value to it, Steven Gust of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse told The Associated Press.At one point, 14 people were getting government pot. Now, there are four left.            The government Fwhr The Odd Truth, Feb. 25, 2004
 Every year, millions of pacemakers, metal hips, and prosthetics outlast the bodies they ;re designed for. But these medical devices could very well go on to have a second-life鈥攊n cars, wind turbines, and even another person.     The implants are, after all, full of valuable metals like titanium or cobalt alloy. Cremation makes the metals easily recoverable, writes Frank Swain in a fascinating investigation into the afterlife of medical devices. The Dutch company Orthometals, for example, collects 250 tons of metal every year from European crematoriums and sells it all to car and airplane manufacturers. The city of Bristol in England has even proposed recycling these metals into road signs. And, in the U.S., Implant Recycling sells cremat stanley cup price orium metal back to medical device makers. So there   never telling where grandma   old hip might end up. Your Dead Relative   Metal Parts Are Being Turned Into Road Signs  For more complicated devices like pacemakers and prosthetic limbs, charities are at the forefront of a growing movement to repurpose them in developing countries. The UK charity Pace4Life goes to funeral parlors, where it collects pacemakers for use in India, and the Tennessee-based Stand With Hope sends prosthetic limbs to Ghana鈥攋ust to name a few. B stanley cups uk ut plenty of implants still get buried with the people they ;re in. So it   likely that the archaeologist cups stanley s of future centuries will uncover peculiar objects in the graves of the millenni