Tfvp Milwaukee Mayor Attacked with Pipe at Fair
CBS News Investigative Unit s Kim Lengle wrote this story for CBSNews.Ads hyping high fructose corn syrup HFCS for i
stanley cup ts similarities to sugar are hitting the airwaves - part of a major marketing camp
stanley website aign from the Corn Refiners Association meant to combat the bad rap that HFCS has gotten in the past years. The commercials feature products containing HFCS - a mother pouring a jug of juice and a woman feeding her boyfriend a popsicle. In both, characters question the health risks of consuming the corn-derived sugar replacement but can t quite articulate what s harmful about it. Critics say it contributes to weight gain and tricks your body into wanting to eat more. And a lot of health-conscious people think it s a toxic chemical concoction that can t be good for you.But the industry says it s just fine. In fact, they make an interesting argument - HFCS is the same as sugar. Much of the debate surrounding HFCS focuses on the difference between old-fashion table sugar and the replaceme
stanley cup nt, which is now common in the majority of processed foods. It prolongs shelf life of food, maintains moisture and is cheaper than sugar. We want to correct the record, said Audrea Erickson, president of the Corn Refiners Association. Being led to believe that consuming sugar is better than high fructose corn syrup is not based on fact. To get that message out, the campaign relies on nutritional research. But CBS News has learned that funding for many of the major studies came from co Ccam Boston Marathon bombing victims
Unconventional burial practices to prevent vampires from rising up from the grave were common in post-medieval Poland, but historians aren ;t entirely sure why certain people were targeted more than others. A new study is the first to perform a chemical analysis of the remains to find out. These deviant burials, or apotropaic funerary rites, occurred throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, and were performed to prevent evil from taking root among the dead. Those who were considered at risk of becoming vampires 鈥?for whatever reason 鈥?were give
stanley cup n specific burial treatments, such as sickles across the bodies or large rocks under the chins. One theory is that suspected vampires were outsiders to the community. But as the new study suggests, these vampires-in-waiting were most likely from the local community and well known. To prove this, the remains of six apotropaic burials were compared against 60 normal ones. A rese
stanley cup arch team led by Lesley Gregoricka from University of South Alabama used radiogenic strontium isotope ratios from archaeological dental en
stanley cup amel. The results of this biogeochemical analysis were then compared to strontium isotopes of local animals. The researchers found that the suspected vampires were predominantly local. The finding suggests that those targeted as vampires were not likely migrants to the region, but rather, local individuals whose social identity or cause of death likely marked them with suspicion in some other way. It possible tha