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kjumper

Cherokee girl's dad fights order in custody case - 0 views

shared by kjumper on 06 Sep 13 - No Cached
    • kjumper
       
      this is sad
  • Brown won custody under the Indian Child Welfare Act
  • South Carolina couple who adopted the now 3-year-old girl.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • SALLISAW, Okla. (AP) — The father of a Cherokee girl at the center of an adoption dispute is fighting the Oklahoma governor's
  • Baby Veronica
  •  
    lol
hunter brinkley

roblox - 0 views

hunter brinkley

Healthy Lifestyles: Health and Wellness News that Matters to You - Muscle - 0 views

  • NEW YORK (Healthy Lifestyles) A  new dietary supplement containing an extract from a rare African plant is currently the hottest thing going in amateur athletics — but not without controversy.  Critics say the compound — called Cis9-T11 — gives athletes an "unfair advantage" and should be banned. Proponents argue that research shows the nutrient to be both safe and effective and that banning the natural compound would be akin to banning vitamins.
  • controversial, new supplement works. According to a recent study published in the journal Medicine & Science & Sports and Medicine, novice weight trainers who took Cis9-T11 for seven weeks experienced a 600% increase in lean muscle growth, including a 9-fold increase in biceps girth. Another study published in the same journal found that in weight-training athletes, Cis9-T11 increased overall muscle strength by 202 percent within just 6 weeks — with zero side effects. In fact, not only were there not any side effects, but men using the supplement actually experienced improved health measures across the board, including reductions in b
  • ad LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood sugar.
hunter brinkley

Japan's robo-astronaut takes 'one small step...' - 0 views

    • hunter brinkley
       
      YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, Calif. (AP) - There was no evidence of an illegal marijuana grow near the spot where a raging wildfire started near Yosemite National Park, a federal forestry official said Wednesday. Investigators have ruled out the illicit activity as a potential cause, ending speculation by a local fire chief that the gardens that plague federal land could be to blame. Jerry Snyder of the U.S. Forest Service said that the steep and inaccessible canyon where the Rim Fire started Aug. 17 in the Stanislaus National Forest doesn't have a water source that growers look for when they set up remote gardens. "The lead investigator says there's no evidence of any type of grow in the area where the fire started," Snyder said. Snyder also said lightning isn't to blame. It could take months for investigators to determine what ignited the blaze that has consumed more than 370 square miles of Sierra Nevada forests. "They'll be able to tell whether there was an illegal campfire in there," he said. "Another thing to consider is that this area is very steep, and if there was a rockslide two rocks hitting together could make a spark to ignite dry brush." The fire is 80% contained, and crews don't expect full containment before Sept. 20. The far-off date is because the portion of the fire burning in Yosemite National Park is headed toward granite outcroppings that will act as a natural firebreak but won't be classified as technical containment. Letting geological formations help will allow firefighters to focus some efforts inside the fire's footprint. Snyder said they have begun to cut breaks and start backfires in an effort to save grazing land, wildlife habitat and historic buildings left over from early timber camps.
hunter brinkley

hi - 0 views

hi dud

started by hunter brinkley on 05 Sep 13 no follow-up yet
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