Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 4, 2018

Waching daily Apr 24 2018

Hi guys, I hope your having an amazing day So in this video we will look at the mighty

queen azshara once again because they updated the model and added some voice overs as well

that I thought you guys would enjoy.

Also Make sure to join my discord channel because that will be the main place where

I do giveaway and answer questions if you have any, the link will be down in the description

below.

I like the voiceovers and I

cant wait to hear more, they also did an amazing job with her model and her face expression

when she talks, I love the fact that her hands and even the tenticals moves when she talks,

which makes it a lot more engaging.

So that's it for queen azshara, if you enjoyed the video make sure to leave a like and subscribe

to the channel if you want to get notified whenever I upload a new video.

Thank you for watching and remember to always stay positive.

Cya next time.

For more infomation >> Queen Azshara Voice Over & Model | In-Game Preview | Battle for Azeroth! - Duration: 2:01.

-------------------------------------------

Mouk The Great Crossing Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 12:05.

Thank you so much for watching!

For more infomation >> Mouk The Great Crossing Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 12:05.

-------------------------------------------

Mouk Whoops, We Missed The Bus Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 12:51.

Thank you so much for watching!

For more infomation >> Mouk Whoops, We Missed The Bus Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 12:51.

-------------------------------------------

Mouk Above The Trees Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 13:02.

Thank you so much for watching!

For more infomation >> Mouk Above The Trees Best Cartoon For Kids & Children - Tyler Cunning - Duration: 13:02.

-------------------------------------------

Weight distribution - New minimum weight rules for F1 2019 explained - Duration: 8:21.

For more infomation >> Weight distribution - New minimum weight rules for F1 2019 explained - Duration: 8:21.

-------------------------------------------

Pig English Episodes - Rainbow YUMMY Ice Cream for Kids to Learn Colors | Cartoons for Children #32 - Duration: 10:22.

Do you like an Ice Cream? ◕‿◕ Come and watch Pig English Episodes

as we playing with Rainbow Ice Cream for Kids to Learn Colors...

Best Cartoons for Children with Nursery Rhymes Kids Songs ❤️🎁🐷

For more infomation >> Pig English Episodes - Rainbow YUMMY Ice Cream for Kids to Learn Colors | Cartoons for Children #32 - Duration: 10:22.

-------------------------------------------

Our fight for disability rights -- and why we're not done yet | Judith Heumann - Duration: 17:11.

I was born in 1947, a long time ago,

and when I was 18 months old, I had polio.

I was in an iron lung for three months

and in and out of the hospital for three years.

Now, we had lots of neighbors in our Brooklyn neighborhood,

and some of them were really very helpful for my parents.

Some of them were really afraid of contagion,

and they wouldn't even walk in front of our house.

They would literally walk across the street.

I think this was a time when my family really began to realize

what disability meant to some people:

fear.

And it wasn't even a sure thing that I would live at home,

although I didn't learn about this until I was 36 years old.

I was having a discussion with my father one night,

and he said, "You know, when you were two years old,

one of the doctors suggested to your mom and I

that you live in an institution,

that they could just go ahead with their lives

and raise their kids

and kind of be done with having to deal with all the disability-related things.

I didn't believe my father, not because he was a liar,

but I'd never heard this story,

and my mother in fact validated that.

She never wanted to tell me.

But in reality, I don't know why I was really surprised by this story,

because when I was five years old,

and my mother, like mothers and fathers all across the United States,

was taking me to school to enroll,

she pushed my wheelchair to the school in walking distance to our house,

pulled the wheelchair up the steps into the school,

and we were greeted by the principal.

Not really greeted.

But the principal said, no, I couldn't come to that school

because it wasn't accessible.

But he told us not to worry,

because the Board of Education in fact would send a teacher to my house.

And they did

for a total of two and a half hours

a week.

(Audience murmurs)

But for good behavior,

they threw in an occupational therapist

who taught me that very essential skill

of cross-stitching.

(Laughter)

I don't cross-stitch today.

(Laughter)

I didn't actually get to go to school in a real building

until I was nine years old,

and then I was in classes only with disabled children

in a school that had mainly nondisabled children.

And in my classes,

there were students up to the age of 21.

And then, after 21,

they went to something called sheltered workshops

with menial work

and earning either nothing or below minimum wage.

So I understood discrimination.

My parents understood discrimination.

My parents came from Germany.

They were German Jews who left in the 1930s,

escaping the Holocaust.

My parents lost family and they lost parents.

Both my parents lost their parents in the Holocaust.

And so they realized

that they could not be silent

as things were going wrong for me in my life.

Not me personally,

but what was going on around me.

They learned that because I used a wheelchair,

none of the high schools in New York City, in the entire city,

were wheelchair accessible,

so what was supposed to happen

is I was supposed to go back onto home instruction

along with many other students.

So my parents banded together with other parents.

They went to the Board of Education

and they demanded that the Board of Ed make some of the high schools accessible.

And they did.

And so I and many others

were finally able to go to high school, a regular high school,

and take regular classes.

So what happened next?

I was learning more and more about what discrimination was,

and equally important, I was learning that I needed to become my own advocate.

I was entering college, Long Island University,

and I had always wanted to be a teacher,

and so I minored in education and I took all the appropriate courses,

and then when it was time for me to go for my license,

I had to take a written exam,

an oral exam

and a medical exam.

At that time, all three of those exams

were given in completely inaccessible buildings,

so I had friends who carried me up and down the steps

for these exams,

not in a motorized wheelchair.

(Laughter)

In a manual wheelchair.

But I passed my oral exam.

I passed my written exam.

My medical exam was something completely different.

One of the first questions the doctor asked me

was, could I please show her how I went to the bathroom.

I was 22 years old

and you know when you go for any kind of an interview,

you think about all the kinds of questions that people could ask you?

(Laughter)

That was not one of them.

And I was freaked out in the first place

because I had heard

that there were actually no disabled people using wheelchairs

who were teachers in New York,

so each step along the way I was expecting something bad.

So I said to her,

is it a requirement that teachers show their students

how to go to the bathroom?

If it is, I can do that.

So no surprise,

I was failed

because I didn't pass the medical.

The official reason that I was denied my job

was paralysis of poliomyelitis sequelae of -- I'm sorry.

Paralysis of both lower limbs, sequelae of poliomyelitis.

Honestly, I didn't know what the word "sequelae" meant,

so I went to the dictionary, and it meant "because of."

So I'd been denied my license because I couldn't walk.

So what was I going to do?

This is a really important time in my life,

because it would be the first time

that I really would be challenging the system, me,

and although I was working with a lot of other friends who had disabilities

who were encouraging me to move forward with this,

it was nonetheless quite frightening.

But I was really very lucky.

I had a friend who was a disabled student at Long Island University

and was also a stringer at the "New York Times,"

and he was able to get a reporter

to write a really good piece about what had happened

and why he thought what had happened was wrong.

The next day there was an editorial in the "New York Times"

with the title of "Heumann v. The Board of Education"

and the "New York Times" came out in support

of my getting my teaching license.

(Applause)

And then the same day,

I got a call from an attorney who was writing a book about civil rights.

And he was calling me to interview me,

and I was interviewing him.

He didn't know that.

And at the end of our discussion, I said,

"Would you be willing to represent me? I want to sue the Board of Education."

And he said yes.

Now, sometimes I say that the stars were aligned around this court case,

because we had an amazing judge:

the first African American female federal judge --

(Laughter)

Constance Baker Motley.

(Applause)

And she knew discrimination when she saw it.

(Laughter)

So she strongly encouraged the Board of Ed

to give me another medical exam,

which they did.

And then I got my license,

and while it took a number of months

for me to actually get a principal to offer me a job,

I finally did get a job and I started teaching that fall

in the same school that I had gone to,

second grade.

So --

(Applause)

That's a whole other TED Talk.

(Laughter)

But I was learning as my friends were,

and people I didn't know around the country,

that we had to be our own advocates,

that we needed to fight back people's view

that if you had a disability, you needed to be cured,

that equality was not part of the equation.

And we were learning from the Civil Rights Movement

and from the Women's Rights Movement.

We were learning from them about their activism

and their ability to come together,

not only to discuss problems

but to discuss solutions.

And what was born is what we call today the Disability Rights Movement.

So I'd like to tell you a couple of riddles.

How many people do you think it takes

to stop traffic on Madison Avenue

during rush hour in New York City?

Do you have a guess? How many?

(Audience members shout out answers)

Fifty.

One would be too little.

Fifty people.

And there were no accessible paddy wagons,

so they had to just kind of deal with us.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

But let me tell you another riddle.

How many people does it take to stop a bus in New York City

when they refuse to let you on because you're in a wheelchair?

One. That is the right answer.

So what you have to do though

is take your wheelchair --

(Laughter)

Sidle in the right place right in front of the steps

and give it a little push underneath,

and then their bus can't move.

(Laughter)

Any of you who want to learn how to do that,

talk to me after this.

(Laughter)

In 1972, President Nixon vetoed the Rehabilitation Act.

We protested. He signed it.

Then the regulations that needed to be promulgated to implement that law

had not in fact been signed.

We demonstrated. They were signed.

And when the Americans With Disabilities Act, the ADA,

our Emancipation Proclamation Act,

looked as though it might not in fact be passed in the House or Senate,

disabled people from all across the United States came together

and they crawled up the Capitol steps.

That was an amazing day,

and the House and Senate passed the ADA.

And then President Bush signed the ADA.

It's a great picture.

President Bush signed the ADA on the lawn of the White House.

It was an amazing day,

and there are about 2,000 people there.

It was July 26, 1990.

And one of the most famous statements he had in his speech

was, "Let the shameful walls of exclusion finally come tumbling down."

For any of you in the room

who are 50 or older, or maybe or even 40 or older,

you remember a time when there were no ramps on the streets,

when buses were not accessible,

when trains were not accessible,

where there were no wheelchair-accessible bathrooms in shopping malls,

where you certainly did not have a sign language interpreter,

or captioning, or braille or other kinds of supports.

These things have changed,

and they have inspired the world.

And disabled people around the world want laws like we have,

and they want those laws enforced.

And so what we've seen is something called

the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

It is a treaty that was adopted in 2006.

It's celebrating is 10-year anniversary.

More than 165 countries have joined this treaty.

It is the first international human rights treaty

fully focused on disabled people.

But I am sad to say that our US Senate

has failed to recommend to our president that we ratify the treaty.

We signed it in 2009,

but it doesn't come into force until ratification,

and the president -- no president can ratify a treaty

without the consent of the Senate.

So we feel really strongly

that our US Senate needs to do its job,

that our Senate needs to enable us as Americans

not only to be able to assist disabled people and governments around the world

to learn about the good work that we've been doing,

but it's equally important

that disabled people have the same opportunities

to travel, study and work abroad

as anyone else in our country.

And as long as many countries don't have the same laws as we do

and don't enforce them if they have them,

opportunities for disabled people are more limited.

When I travel abroad,

I am always meeting with disabled women,

and those women tell me stories

about how they experience violence and rape

and how in many cases these forms of violence

occur from family members and people that they know,

who in fact may be working for them.

And frequently these cases are not adjudicated.

I meet disabled people

who have been offered jobs by businesses

because they live in a country where there's a quota system,

and in order to avoid a fine,

they will hire you

and then tell you,

"You don't need to come to work

because we really don't need you in the facility."

I have visited institutions

where the stench of urine is so strong

that before you open the door of your vehicle,

you're kind of pushed back,

and then gone into those institutions

where people should be living in the community with appropriate supports

and seen people almost naked,

people who are chemically drugged

and people who are living lives of despair.

These are some of the things that the US needs to be doing more to correct.

We know discrimination when we see it,

and we need to be fighting it together.

So what is it that we can be doing together?

I encourage you all to recognize

that disability is a family you can join at any point in your life.

I'd like to see by a show of hands how many of you have ever broken a bone?

And then, when you leave today, I'd like you to maybe write a couple of sentences

about what that period of time has been like for you,

because frequently I hear from people,

"You know, I couldn't do this, I couldn't do that.

People talked to me differently. They acted differently towards me."

And that's what I see and other disabled people see

in flashing letters.

But we -- you in this room,

people listening and watching this TED Talk --

together we can make a difference.

Together we can speak up for justice.

Together we can help change the world.

Thank you. I have to go catch my bus.

(Applause)

For more infomation >> Our fight for disability rights -- and why we're not done yet | Judith Heumann - Duration: 17:11.

-------------------------------------------

Trend Report: Easy To Wear Accessories For Spring - Duration: 5:31.

For more infomation >> Trend Report: Easy To Wear Accessories For Spring - Duration: 5:31.

-------------------------------------------

Buy Short Casual Dresses | Brand New Summer Dresses Collection For Women 2018 - Duration: 3:21.

prom dresses

cheap short casual dresses

wedding dresses

For more infomation >> Buy Short Casual Dresses | Brand New Summer Dresses Collection For Women 2018 - Duration: 3:21.

-------------------------------------------

Homework response for Quantum Mechanics 1 - Duration: 9:37.

For more infomation >> Homework response for Quantum Mechanics 1 - Duration: 9:37.

-------------------------------------------

Learn Drawing Roses 🎈 Coloring Pages Roses For Kids - Duration: 4:02.

Learn Drawing Roses 🎈 Coloring Pages Roses For Kids

Watch me draw and color the Roses, Coloring Pages Flowers For Children, Babies and Toddlers, Learn Drawing

For more infomation >> Learn Drawing Roses 🎈 Coloring Pages Roses For Kids - Duration: 4:02.

-------------------------------------------

Get Ready For More Kim Kardashian Lingerie! | TMZ TV - Duration: 1:26.

SO AFTER 12 YEARS, THE

KARDASHIAN SISTERS ARE CLOSING

THEIR DASH STORES, BUT NEVER

FEAR FOR KIM, BECAUSE SHE'S

ABOUT TO ROLL OUT HER OWN LINE

OF CLOTHING, INCLUDING LINGERIE,

SLEEP WEAR AND SHAPEWEAR TOO.

WHAT IS SHAPEWEAR?

SHAPEWEAR IS ANYTHING THAT

MAYBE SUCKS IN THE WAIST.

SPANX IS CALLED SHAPEWEAR?

YEAH.

DOES IT MATTER IF WHEN SHE

TAKES OFF HER CLOTHING AND HAS

SHAPEWEAR?

IT DEPENDS HOW FAR INTO THE

PROCESS YOU'VE GOTTEN.

NO WAY, IF YOU HAVE A GIRL

BACK AT YOUR ROOM AND SHE'S

GOT SPANX ON, YOU'RE NOT KICKING

HER OUT.

NO WAY.

THAT ONE IMPERFECTION YOU

CAN'T REALLY CHANGE, SAD, SAD

THING --

PERSONALITY?

SMALL PENIS.

IF A WOMAN GOES HOME WITH YOU

AND WE DON'T HAVE ANY IDEA WHO'S

BEEN DOWNSTAIRS AND WE DON'T

KNOW ANYBODY WHO'S BEEN IN THAT

SITUATION AND WE GO, I'M OUT OF

HERE.

YOU'VE NEVER DONE THAT?

I HAD ONE GUY, THAT WAS TOO

BIG!

[LAUGHTER]

For more infomation >> Get Ready For More Kim Kardashian Lingerie! | TMZ TV - Duration: 1:26.

-------------------------------------------

Tony Lantz for Sheriff - Vote Lantz for Sheriff - Radio Spot - Duration: 0:39.

Hello, I'm Tony Lantz and I'm a Republican Candidate for White County

Sheriff. As a Veteran, I am proud to have served

my Country. It taught me about Loyalty, Commitment, and Sacrifice - but most

importantly it taught me about serving others. For almost 30 years, I have

dedicated my Law Enforcement career to White County and its citizens. My

experiences in Leadership, Case Management, County Government, and

Community Service have prepared me to be your next Sheriff. I would be honored to

have your support and I ask for your Vote on May 8th. Vote Tony Lantz for

White County Sheriff. Paid for by the Committee to Elect

Tony Lantz for White County Sheriff

For more infomation >> Tony Lantz for Sheriff - Vote Lantz for Sheriff - Radio Spot - Duration: 0:39.

-------------------------------------------

Need For Speed Carbon Final Boss Razor vs Darius HD YouTube - Duration: 7:39.

For more infomation >> Need For Speed Carbon Final Boss Razor vs Darius HD YouTube - Duration: 7:39.

-------------------------------------------

2019 Launch Party | Join Us April 25th From 6 to 9pm for Chance to Win Great Prizes - Duration: 1:00.

Hey guys

Check this truck out!

2019 Ram 1500 redesigned

Now, we are going to have a Launch Party!

So what I want you to do is

come on down here April 25th

from 6 to 9pm

You could have a chance to win an iPad

a Jersey

West Ed gift cards

also, you are going to get to see a new

2019 redesigned Cherokee

Two new 2019 redesigned Ram 1500

a redesigned 2018 JL

We are going to have them all parked out here

You guys can come in

There is going to be no obligation for you to buy

You don't have to do anything to win the prizes

except for be at my dealership

April 25th 6 to 9pm

Comment below, let us know you're coming

We've got food

We've got prizes

and we've got some all new vehicles!

Again

Doug Caldwell, Sherwood Park Dodge

2019 Ram

Come out here real quick!

Right here

2018 redesigned JL Wrangler

April 25th

Thanks guys!

For more infomation >> 2019 Launch Party | Join Us April 25th From 6 to 9pm for Chance to Win Great Prizes - Duration: 1:00.

-------------------------------------------

A Pardon For Jack Johnson? - Duration: 5:22.

>>> AT THE HEIGHT OF THE JIM

CROW ERA BOXING LENGTH END JACK

JOHNSON WAS THE FIRST

HEAVYWEIGHT BOXING CHAMPION AND

HIS SUCCESS IN THE RING CAME TO

A HALT WHEN JOHNSON WAS

CONVICTED OF VIOLATING THE MAN

ACT.

ACCUSED OF TRANSPORTING A WHITE

WOMAN ACROSS STATE LINES FOR

IMMORALE PURPOSES.

HE SPENT TIME BEHIND BARS AND WE

HAVE DELVED DEEPLY IN THE CASE

AND THE RENEWED EFFORTS TO

DELIVER JUSTICE FOR JACK

JOHNSON.

TAKE A LOOK.

>> THIS IS COMMON SENSE IS,

THERE SHOULD NOT BE A REASON TO

HESITATE TO PARDON JACK JOHNSON.

>> THROUGHOUT OUR SERIES OF

REPORTS THIS WEEK, WE HAVE HEARD

FROM A VARIETY OF VOICES.

WEIGHING IN ON WHAT IS

UNIVERSALLY VIEWED AS A GREAT

INJUSTICE IN OUR NATION'S

HISTORY.

>> THE FACT IS, THAT THERE WAS A

RACIALLY MOTIVATED CRIME

COMMITTED AND IT'S CRIMINAL WHEN

YOU PUT AN INNOCENT PERSON IN

JAIL, AND THAT NEEDS TO BE

RECTIFIED.

>> THAT INCLUDES U.S. SENATOR

JOHN McCAIN FROM ARIZONA AND

PETER KING OF LONG ISLAND, WHO

DID NOT PULL ANY PUNCHES WITH US

IN CATEGORIZING JACK JOHNSON'S

LIFE.

>> FIRST BLACK HEAVYWEIGHT

CHAMPION AND BLACKBALLED.

>> HIS STORY, THE AUTHOR OF AN

AWARD-WINNING BOOK ON JOHNSON,

SUMMED UP THE FEDERAL

PROSECUTION IN THE SIMPLEST OF

TERMS.

>> HE WAS WRONGLY CONVICTED FOR

SOMETHING THAT HE DID NOT

ACTUALLY DO.

>> WE EVEN HEARD A VOICES FROM

BEYOND THE GRAVE.

>> LET ME TELL YOU, MAN, I FEEL

STRONGLY ABOUT THIS.

>> THE LATE KEN THOMPSON.

FORMER BROOKLYN DISTRICT

ATTORNEY, WHO OVER-TURNED AN

UNPRECEDENTED 21 WRONGFUL

CONVICTIONS IN LESS THAN THREE

YEARS IN OFFICE.

HE WENT ON THE RECORD WITH US

THREE MONTHS BEFORE HIS

UNEXACTED DEATH, SHARING HIS

INTENTIONS TO HELP JOHNSON

RECEIVE A PARDON.

>> SO, I'M DETERMINED TO DO MY

PART AS A BROOKLYN DA, SOMEBODY

WHO BELIEVES IN FUNDAMENTAL

FAIRNESS.

>> AND THE WPIX INVESTIGATION

HAS OPINION LE-- HAS BEEN LED BA

REPORTING TEAM.

AND I'M PLEASED TO WELCOME THEM

BACK TO THE PROGRAM.

GOOD TO SEE YOU GUYS.

>> GOOD TO SEE YOU.

>> WHAT WAS IT ABOUT THE STORY

THAT SAID TO ALL OF YOU HAVE TO

TAKE A LOOK AT IT?

>> I FIRST LEARNED ABOUT HIM AS

A 7TH GRADER, LEARNING ABOUT

TEXAS HISTORY IN MIDDLE SCHOOL

AND I WAS A BIG BOXING FAN.

ALWAYS BEEN.

IT'S BEEN SOMETHING THAT I

FOLLOWED THROUGH ANY JOURNALISM

CAREER, WHEN I DECIDED TO SAY WE

NEED TO REVISIT IT, REALLY

REVISIT IT.

I WANTED TO GET MY COLLEAGUES

INVOLVED, JAMES AND JAY, I

FIGURED WOULD BE THE PERFECT

TYPE OF TEAM.

THIS IS NOT A SIMPLE STORY FOR

ONE PERSON TO TACKLE.

>> JAMES, HOW MUCH DID YOU KNOW

ABOUT IT AND WHAT DID YOU LEARN

ABOUT IT THAT YOU DID NOT KNOW?

>> WHAT I LEARNED IS, AND EVEN

THOUGH YOU ARE ASKING ME, I

WOULD LOVE ON FOR JAY TO JUMP

IN.

WHAT I DID NOT REALIZE WAS THAT

THE FAMILY OF JACK JOHNSON HAD

NEVER REALLY BEEN FULLY BROUGHT

IN ON THE EFFORT TO CLEAR THEIR

LOVED ONE'S NAME, AND HERE WE

ARE, MORE THAN A CENTURY LATER

AND THE BLEMISH IS STILL ON

THEM.

I WAS AMAZED TO FIND TEST-- TO

IT WAS A CASE, AND JAY DID A

GOOD JOB LOOPING THEM IN.

>> YOU WOULD THINK THAT THE

FIRST PLACE WOULD BE TO GO TO

THE FAMILIAR.

>> WE SPOKE WITH THE GREAT,

GREAT NIECE OF JACK JOHNSON AND

SHE SHOWED US A LETTER FROM ONE

OF THE LEAD PRODUCERS FROM THE

PRODUCING TEAM OF THE FILM

MAKER.

FLAT OUT APOLOGIZING FOR FAILING

TO FIND LIVING DECE NDANTS OF

JACK JOHNSON, AND THEY HAVE FELT

LEFT IN THE COLD.

THERE'S BEEN EFFORTS TO GET A

PARDON FOR JACK JOHNSON, HERE WE

HAVE LIVING FLESH AND BLOOD THAT

WOULD MAKE A STRONGER CASE FOR A

PARDON AND THEY WERE LEFT OUT OF

THE PROCESS.

?

IS IT THAT SIMPLE?

LET ME ASK YOU THIS --

>> IT NOT.

HOW MANY TOPICS TODAY IN OUR

NATION'S CAPITOL HAVE BIPAUY--

BIPARTISAN SUPPORT?

A HANDFUL.

THEY WERE FIGHTING ON THIS.

IT'S NOT BEEN AN EASY FIGHT.

AND AS HE WITH FOUND OUT, WE

TRAVELED TO FIVE STATES, SPOKE

TO EVERYONE WE COULD FIND THAT

HAS TIES TO THIS.

WHEN ERIC HOLDER TOLD US AT THE

DNC CONVENTION IN AN INTERVIEW

THAT HE WAS UNFAIRLY CONVICTED,

THAT WAS A KEY PART OF THE

SERIES FOR US, AND WE REALIZED

THAT IT'S A TOUGH FIGHT, BUT

THAT'S A NUGGET THAT WE CAN HANG

OUR HAT ON HERE, BECAUSE, FORMER

ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED

STATES IS STATING THAT THIS MAN

WAS UNFAIRLY CONVICTED AND HE

ADDED MORE TO IT.

>> AND ANOTHER CHALLENGE HAS

BEEN BRIDGING THE FAMILY WITH

THE OVAL OFFICE AND THE BRIDGE

HAS COME IN THE FORM OF THE

HARVARDER LAW PROFESSOR, RONALD

SULLIVAN WHO IS AN EXPERT ON

POSTUMOUS PARDONS AND HAS THE

KNOWLEDGE.

>> JUST A FASCINATING STORY, HAS

BEEN FOR SO LONG, DELIGHTED TO 168 00:05:16,315 GET YOU IN HERE.

For more infomation >> A Pardon For Jack Johnson? - Duration: 5:22.

-------------------------------------------

Healthy Moment: The Right Care for You - Duration: 3:07.

Most injuries, illnesses and other emergencies are unplanned.

Knowing where to go and planning ahead can help you get the right care, at the right

time, at the right place.

Knowing when to visit your primary care provider, urgent care clinic or the emergency room can

be beneficial.

The type of care you choose depends on your symptoms.

Primary care visits; including wellness exams, acute care, vaccinations, and chronic condition

management, help you develop a relationship with your primary care provider.

It is important to have a primary care provider to help you manage your health.

Did you know that most health care provider offices offer same day appointments for immediate,

sick visits?

Check with your health care provider to learn their appointment policy.

If you become ill, have an injury, or help with something that needs immediate attention

in the evenings or on the weekend, an urgent care clinic may be right for you.

These conditions are non-life-threatening.

Remember, urgent care clinics should NOT be used for routine care that can be

scheduled with your primary care provider.

Save the Emergency Room for serious medical issues.

These issues result in permanent harm or death if not treated immediately.

Here are some of the reasons to go to the Emergency Room.

If you have a true medical emergency, the ER is the best place to get care.

Not only is it important to get the appropriate care while saving you time,

you can also get the care you need for the right price.

Use the cost breakdown listed to think about your options and cost associated with them.

If you are unsure where to go for care, call your health care provider or

call the nurse line number on the back of your insurance ID card.

Don't forget about the convenience of the Strive for Wellness® Health Center

located on the 4th floor of the Harry S Truman Building in Jefferson City.

The health center offers routine care for common illnesses and basic preventive care

at hours designed to fit into a hectic workday.

Not intended to replace your primary health care provider, the health center is your

next option if you're unable to get an appointment with your regular provider.

The Strive for Wellness® Health Center is only available to active state employees

who are enrolled in an MCHCP medical plan.

Whether you're going to urgent care, the ER or your primary care providers' office,

it's a good idea to keep a list of all the medications you take with you including dosages

and any over-the-counter medications and vitamins.

Many medications can interact with the treatment options your provider plans to use.

Understanding the distinction between primary care, urgent care and

emergency medicine before you get sick can alleviate frustration and inconvenience.

In some cases, it can prevent wasting important time when you or your loved one

is in a life-threatening situation.

Remember the right care, at the right time, at the right place

will help you make an informed decision about your care.

For more infomation >> Healthy Moment: The Right Care for You - Duration: 3:07.

-------------------------------------------

Watch: MAMAMOO's Solar Tenderly Sings "Nada Sou Sou" In Second MV For Solo Single(News) - Duration: 1:02.

Watch: MAMAMOO's Solar Tenderly Sings "Nada Sou Sou" In Second MV For Solo Single

MAMAMOOs Solar has dropped her second music video for the sixth part of her Solars Emotion series!.

Her title track Nada Sou Sou, literally translated to tears are falling, is an adaptation of the Japanese song Nada Sōsō by Japanese band Begin and singer Ryoko Moriyama. Soompi. Display. News. English. 300x250. Mobile. English. 300x250. ATF.

Solars latest single album contains a total of four tracks. As previously announced, Solar will reveal four music videos, with the first one Where the Wind Blows already released.

For more infomation >> Watch: MAMAMOO's Solar Tenderly Sings "Nada Sou Sou" In Second MV For Solo Single(News) - Duration: 1:02.

-------------------------------------------

Budget 2018 Investments for SSC - Duration: 1:42.

As you know, the Minister of Finance recently tabled Budget

2018, which includes a significant investment in

Shared Services Canada.

This investment is a reaffirmation of the

Government's commitment to our mandate and the work we do in

improving services for our customers and Canadians.

We are now in an excellent position to deliver on our

commitments and priorities.

This includes bringing in the qualified people

we need to build on the excellent momentum

of the past few months.

Another priority is the roll out of cloud solutions,

which bring in an exciting new era in how services

and programs are delivered to Canadians.

We will also reduce risks associated with legacy

data centres through migration to

new, state of the art enterprise facilities.

Those are just some of our priorities.

This is an exciting time for our organization.

We are making real progress in balancing a

transformation of unprecedented magnitude and complexity

with the need to maintain existing operations.

There is still a lot of work to do.

But I am confident and excited about what

lies ahead for us.

Thank you for your contribution and the commitment

and passion all of which you bring to the office every day.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét