Zzla Suspect arrested in Colo. mall pipe bomb case
CBS News TULSA, Okla. - A Tulsa woman missing since Saturday was found alive inside a freezer in her home Wednesday, CBS Tulsa affiliate KOTV-TV reports.Police said the 59-year-old woman got into the freezer and got stuck.The family said the woman had a small chest-type freezer in a closet, and even though they had searched the house once, they didn t look in there.They believe she was worried about a possible storm, and once she got in, she couldn t get out.William Andy and his family spent Tuesday night and Wednesday morning looking for his sister. He said no one had talked to her since Saturday night. On Tuesday night, concerned family members got the apartment manager to let them inside. Went through the apartment, called out her name; she didn t respond or anything, Andy said.On Wednesday morning, after a night of worrying and searching nearby neighborhoods and a river, they went back inside. I was walking thr
stanley cups ough the living room and I heard her say, Help me, help me, like that, sai
stanley cups uk d the woman s son, Jermal Stewart. And I opened up the door and she was sitting
stanley cup in there, and that s how I found her. Family members said the woman was seated in the freezer with the lid cracked, but it was on, and her legs were extremely cold.She was taken to St. John Hospital, where police say she was unable to tell them why she was in the freezer or how long she had been in there. It was plugged in and functioning, said Tulsa police Cpl. Daisy Vallely. We re not Icev Cherokee Nation Ousts Slaves Descendants
The World Health Organization has published a report today which argues for stiff regulation of electronic cigarettes鈥攁nd calls for a ban on their use indoors. The report also demands that restrictions be placed on adv
stanley cup ertising and the sale of e-cigarettes to minors, as well as highlighting the need for regulations on their contents. The news will upset those in the industry and, ironically, the major tobacco companies鈥攚hich are already taking advantage of the burgeoning $3 billion market. It not the first negative reaction to be garnered by e-cigarettes. We ;ve already reported on the fact that e-cigarettes seems to alter cells a lot like tobacco does, and that those arguing that they ;re perfectly safe are on potentially sticky ground鈥攂ut there yet to be a firm consensus reached. Indeed, the new report comes just days after the American Heart Association said that e-cigarettes could be used to help people quit smoking.
https://gizmodo/why-e-cigar stanley hrnek ettes-might-not-be-as-safe-as-you-think-1589485508 That doesn ;t bother the World Health Organization. It calling for a ban
stanley cup of fruit and candy flavored e-cigarettes, pointing out that they may appeal to minors, and for stringent regulation of the liquid used in e-cigarettes, in order to minimize content and emissions of toxicants. It also argues that governments need to regulate health claims made by manufacturers鈥攅specially given the current lack of empirical evidence about