Auteur Sujet: lgoy Beavers are back on the Milwaukee River 鈥?and that s a good thing  (Lu 47 fois)

MethrenRaf

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    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
Vvlb Kenosha  s LGBTQ+ community hopes to make Pride Month an everyday celebration
 Kids these days are no strangers to technology. It s been a part of their lives since they were born. So why not use that technology as an advantage in learning That s exactly what staff at Nicklaus Children s Hospital in Miami are doing.Dr. Christina Potter is the hospital s supervisor of IT digital technologies. She and her team are using research grants to study the potential benefits of virtual reality for patients with autism spectrum disorder. There are a lot of different things that virtual reality and immersive technologies can do, and we re just st stanley cup arting to hit the tip of the iceberg with what we can really see happening there within that clinical space,  Potter said.  We ve been measuring patient anxiety, their perceived levels of pain, we ve also been measuring parent anxiety as well. Across the board, we ve seen between a 30% and 60% reduction in our patients just in their levels of anxiety and in their perceived levels of pain. Th stanley cups eir newest program is DRIVE, which stands forDriving Improvements Through Virtual Real stanley cup ity Experience. Natalia Guerra is currently a student in the program. I m 21 right now. I m currently in college,  Guerra told Scripps News.She s watched her friends and family get their licenses, and now she s ready for her turn. I could drive to stores or places I kind of want to go to and I could go to people s houses without having to depend on my parents or someone else to drive me,  she said.  Hopefully, I can pull through. They start inside the c Wipa Biden expected to tackle student loan debt crisis, what the impact would be
 MILWAUKEE 鈥?Christmastime brings Shannon Allen so much grief. Her son, Deandre Allen, was shot and killed the day after Christmas four years ago. Allen tried to hol stanley mug d back tears as a couple dozen family, friends and strangers gathered to memorialize her son Saturday afternoon. They lit candles,  stanley trinkflaschen laid out signs, prayed and sang. Milwaukee Police say Deandre Allen was shot and killed near 39th and Michigan Streets on Dec. 26, 2016. Allen says she was on the phone with her son at 1:25 p.m. that day. Nineteen minutes later, someone called 911 about hearing gunshots, and Deandre was found shot in the head. He was 27 years old.  He did not seem like he was hurting,  Shannon Allen said.  He did not seem like he was in harms way.  The case remains unsolved. Allen says she calls on the 26th day of every month to check on the status, and she claims she hasn t heard from investigators in five months. Milwaukee Police had not yet responded to our request for comment at the time this article was published.  You all told me that my child was killed for what he knew and nothing he did,  Shannon Allen said.  I deserve that much as a mother, I deserve th stanley thermobecher at much. Deandre was a father and leaves behind six kids. Some of them stood by their grandmother as she released balloons not only in her son s honor, but in honor of all homicide victims in Milwaukee. Allen said she isn t giving up until she gets justice.  What did he know that cost him his life   Allen said.  And if you can tell me he was kil