Agiz I got lost in another dimension while watching these kids shuffle cards
On the outskirts of Baton Rouge, La., nearly 800 FEMA trailers packed with families stretch into the distance, CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen Keteyian reports. It s a mud-soa
stanley cup ked outpost where 17 long months after Hurricane Katrina, 2,000 lives feel very much like they ve reached the end of the road.A new, in-depth study obtained exclusively by CBS News illustrates the real mental health strain of living long-term in what some have called a permanent state of limbo. The most startling finding: the devastating impact on children.The study, done by Columbia University and the Children s Health Fund, found as many as 10,000 displaced child
stanley cup ren across the Gulf are now suffering from clinically diagnosed depression - a 400 percent increase from before the storm. The loss of hope is a very powerful factor here, says Dr. Irwin Redlener, who supervised the study. What we have is starkness - grim, uncomfortable overcrowded camps basically - and that s really hurting these kids. Latoya Watts, a mother of three of those kids in a sad, muddy camp, says she s been there since March. Her 200-square-foot trailer is home to her family of four. Without a car, she can t find work. She has been keeping her children warm this winter with a hairdryer. I m tired of living like a charity case, Watts says. Kids who get very,
stanley polska very angry and out of control and other kids who get incredibly quiet. All sorts of signs that these kids are dealing with things they can t really u Mjuz The New Mommy Track
When you get up in the morning, take a moment to curse the ancient Greeks. One of them, Plato, invented the thing that torments you. Lea
gourde stanley rn the story of the earliest alarm clocks. Despite their love of logical rigor, people weren ;t always exact in the ancient world. Without easy access to precise time-keeping, it was difficult to be exact. But even back then, some people weren ;t fans of waiting around for a crowd to show up, and Plato was one of those people. He needed to find a way to get himself, and his students, up at a certain time. And so he invented one. Possibly the oldest clocks in history are water clocks. Water drips from one vessel into an
stanley cup other via a small hole. As long as that hole stays the same size, and the vessels stay the same size, the clock counts down for a set amount of time. But it doesn ;t wake people up. Plato had to add some bells and whistles. He ended up adding only the whistles. He added a tube to the filling vessel. It formed a siphon. When the water got high enough to fill the tube and start spilling over, all of it at once was siphoned off into yet another vessel. This last vessel was mostly enclosed, but it had thin openings, making it whistle like a tea kettle when it filled up quickly. That woke people up, and got them to their lectures on time. There have been quite a few othe
stanley website r low-tech alarm clocks since then. One filled a vessel until it became so heavy it dropped, activating a catapult that chucked a