Ghxi US measles cases reach highest number in nearly three decades, CDC says
An Ohio woman accused of murdering a young child in a random attack outsi
stanley cup de of a grocery appeared in court on Monday, where her arraignment was forced to restart multiple times due to her behavior.Bionca Ellis is accused of fatally stabbing 3-year-old Julian Wood in the par
stanley cups king lot of a Giant Eagle grocery store in North Olmsted, Ohio, last week. According to authorities, Ellis allegedly stole two knives from the Volunteers of America store and then walked next door to the grocery store where she spotted Margot Wood pushing her 3-year-old son, Julian, in a cart.Investigators say Wood was returning to her car when Ellis ran at them with a knife and stabbed the child. When Margot tried to pull the child to safety, Ellis allegedly stabbed her as well. Margot was injured but survived the attack. Authorities have said they believe the victims were randomly targeted.After her appearance in court last week, Bionca Ellis case was moved to Cuyahoga County, where it twice ground to a halt during her arraignment on Monday.The first time Judge Na
stanley cup ncy Russo spoke to Ellis, she refused to acknowledge the judge and answer questions. In a second video appearance before the judge, she said she did not know if her indictment had been read to her.Russo said, based on the indictment, this case could become a death penalty case. An attorney attempted to waive the right to arraignment, but the judge responded and said, This could be a capital murder case, I dont think thats appropriate. For Elli Fkhl Arkansas father arrested after piercing son s ear
DENVER -- You may want to hold off before sending a handwritten note to your grandchild. That s because a growing number of young people can no longer read cursive. Since the U.S. adopted Common Core standards in public schools back in 2010, cursive has declined and even disappeared entirely in some school districts.But, is erasing cursive to the detriment of future generations Let s begin with keeping cursive alive - in the home studio of Srujana Nimmagadda, owner of Menakshee Designs. Learning to write well is something that you re never going to regret, said Srujana Nimmagadda, owner of Menakshee Designs. During the day, she works at Bel Aerospa
stanley becher ce as an engineer. But she also practices the art of calligraphy.For her, it s not a cloudy issue at all; good handwriting has value. I think there s just a different sort of connection that you have receiving a hand-written letter, Nimmagadda said.And she argues there s a quiet confidence projected when communicating in cursive. If there s a way to keep it in schools, I think they s
stanley cup hould, she said.But according to Dr. Krista Griffin, a literacy professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver, there isn
stanley kubek t a lot of research that suggests keeping 鈥?or dropping 鈥?cursive in schools. There isn t a lot of research supporting cursive one way or another, Griffin said.She has 25 years of experience teaching future teachers. There s no one-size-fits-all anything in education, Gri