Feob Mike Tyson tweets about voting in 2020 for first time; Nevada law change made it possible
Hollis Davist was barbecuing on the Detroit Riverfront with family Wednesday evening when he noticed something out of the ordinary.Davist showed Scripps News Detroit a video on his cellphone where he and about a dozen other people spotted a man who had fallen about 150 feet from the Ambassador Bridge into the Detroit River. Once he hi
stanley deutschland t the water, everyone was just yelling that he fell in the water, Davist said.The group then noticed that the J.W. Westcott Co. mail office was just feet away. We ran over there and banged on the door, Davist said. These guys jumped on their boat and was out there within a minute and 20 seconds. Sam Buchanan is the afternoon boat captain at J.W. Westcott Co., and one of the people who answered the door. Some folks started banging on our door yelling, saying somebody had fallen into
stanley cup the river. We raced out and we found a man in the water, Buchanan said.SEE MORE: Police rescue missing woman stuck in the mud for daysDavist and the group on shore yelled and pointed, directing Buchanan to where the man was.Finally, Buchanan and his team got to the man, who was bruised by the impact. Barely treading water, they pulled him onto their boat. Then, when he pulled him on the boat and I saw the gentleman pick his head up, I was like, Jesus, hes alive, Davist said. The man just said that he was working on the bridge and he didnt know what happened to him, Buchanan said. We told him, You fell from the bridge and were here and we pulled you out of th
stanley cup e Frhg 90-year-old woman in England is the first to receive initial dose of Pfizer s COVID-19 vaccine
LOS ANGELES 鈥?In early April of 2020, more than 5,000 Americans were reported to have died from COVID-19. Today, it s over 500,000 people. While the statistics are black and white, a California teenager is reminding the world each person is more than a number. Because when you make it a number or a statistic, it kind of takes away the fact that these were human beings that existed and lived and had lives, said 14-year-old Madeleine Fugate.Fugate wanted to remember each person by how they lived, not by how they died. For a 7th
stanley thermoskannen grade project at The Buckley School, she wanted to make a quilt honoring each person. What I get from this, I feel these people are no longer being thought of as being numbers, but more so as real people and faces, said Fugate.People around the world started sending her memorial squares, often accompanied with a letter about the person they lost. I fought in Nazi Germany, I was a teacher, I was somebodys soulmate. Just the amount of soulmates, that word, I lost my s
stanley quencher oulmate, said Madeleine s mother, Katherine.Madeleine s teacher, Wendy Wells, is helping her piece the quilt together. This was someones handkerchief, which we will trim and make into a square. This one says, please remember the love of my li
stanley mug fe for 59 years, my soulmate who passed away on Dec. 12, 2020, said Wells. We are finding a release for ourselves and our own losses and pain in making this and helping other people. The patchwork of stories share a common thread that s more than a