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US man charged with one murder says he killed 15 others, including ex-wife
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US man charged with one murder says he killed 15 others, including ex-wife
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In Blog by Abhi
Day 14 – July 5th, 2019 – Boston, Massachusetts to Brooklyn, New York?: ~250 miles
BRAAAAAAAINS.
Before Vy and I bid adieu to my sister, the three of us I walked to a local sandwich shop called Mike & Patty’s for breakfast. En route we were treated to an unexpected sight – a gorgeous street-parked Bugeye.
I let the girls go ahead so I could stare at this for a while. What a beauty!
We got back on the road, but our first stop was close by. Welcome to “The Tiny Museum,” which claims to be the world’s smallest of its kind. Unfortunately, it had been tagged and was temporarily closed. If you look closely, you’ll see that it actually says “Μμseum”, as in the greek letter Mu for micro.
finally a woman came in and we said is she gone, and she said, yes. he just dropped down to his knees and was just balling and sobbing, went to the chair. sarah whitman, 24 years old, the bride of less than four months was dead. her husband ryan told the emergency services people he thought she d fallen asleep in the bathroom and drowned. but those emts doing cpr didn t understand one crucial observation they made at the home that night. there s something here that doesn t look right. coming up a drowning in a dry bathroom? i expected something to be wet. there s a towel on the floor, a mat on the floor but everything s perfectly dry. the question deepens. when the bathtub mystery continues. n deepens. when the bathtub mystery continues. there s no place like home
the time. so it s nice to be here. so i m going to talk briefly about the book itself over all and then read two passages and then hopefully we will have some good discussion in answer questions. so two questions i ve been getting a lot lately are why this book, and why now. quite simply we can t afford to ignore chronic illness. an estimate of 133 million patients, as you desert, live with chronic illness. by 2025 that number is expected to reach 154 million. chronic illness is responsible for seven out of every 10 deaths, as well as three quarters of all health care spending. but it s so much more than that. so much more than statistics and economics. chronic illness is not something chronic illness is not something that happens to other people. the numbers tell us it will happen to most of us, or people that we love, and there is still underling assumptions and misconceptions about it that are problematic. for example, there is to this idea that people who are sick or si
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