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urvr New Shield of Islam Sniper Video
« le: Décembre 28, 2024, 04:49:04 am »
Chpc Mass. school cancels concert over  God Bless the USA  lyrics change
 The sister of an Oklahoma boy who says his mother locked him in apartment closets over four years said Thursday she would bring her brother food, but would tell him not to chew because their mother would check his teeth to see whether he had eaten.Jaleasa McCall, 18, told The Associated Press that her mother beat, whipped, choked and tied up her 14-year-old brother, often locking him away for days at a time.She said she would bring her brother food and sympathy, but couldn t summon the courage to call police. He was losing a lot of weight. Some days he would be pale from being in there so long,  McCall said.  He would really start to smell and stuff. It looked to me like he was losing hope. The mother, LaRhonda McCall, 37, and a friend, Steven Hamilton, 38, are jailed on 20 complaints each of child abuse and child neglect after the boy, malnourished and covered in bruises and scars, sought help from a security guard at a National Guard armory last Friday. A police affidavit says  stanley cups uk both acknowledged beating the boy and that he often was locked in a closet. Jail officials do not know of an attorney for either.        LaRhonda McCall was convicted of second-degree man stanley tumblers slaughter in New York in 1996 in the death of her 2-year-old daughter and served six months jail time. Prosecu stanley us tors in that case alleged McCall, who then went by LaRhonda Presley, essentially starved the toddler who died in February 1995, according to a New York grand jury indictment obtained by the AP.Jaleasa McCall w Skbo New Orleans  Repeat Nightmare
 What if the sweat produced by your body could power your gadgets  And what if the connection between the two could be made by a temporary tattoo, the more you sweat, the more power the tattoo generates   That   exactly what researchers at UC San Diego have developed鈥攁nd one day, it could power your wearables.     Interestingly, the prototype presented at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society yesterday didn ;t start out as a biobattery. No, rather, the team of engineers from UC San Diego actually went looking for a better way to measure lactate鈥攖he stuff your body makes when you ;re working out hard, and a marker of fitness, among other things.  According to PhysOrg, right now gauging lactate levels requires a bl stanley website ood test. The UC San Diego t stanley mug eam went looking for a way to measure it: Sweat. So they did what any tween would do. They tried out a temporary tattoo. By embedding a lactate sensor in the patch, they were able to monitor how much lactate each wearer was generating at any given moment鈥攚ithout any blood tests whatsoever. So here   the really neat part: The process of measuring lactate involves removing electrons from it鈥攚hich made the research team realize that they had created one half of a battery cell.   stanley taza 8220;We came up with this idea of harvesting energy from the body in a non-invasive manner, says UC nanoengineering professor Dr. Joseph Wang in a new video about the research. All they needed to do was add a ca