Connections
Puzzle #742
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FoxyFerengi
You're right. Broken neck during delivery, caused by excessive force from the doctor.
Absolutely horrifying
Zone, soil type, and sun would help narrow things down.
Lemongrass did well for me, but that won't survive most winters. Unless you're okay with keeping things in pots and wintering indoors
Wait, who was the third person he murdered? I thought one couple survived and the wife was released from hospital today?
To be fair, I am also a millennial, but most of my friends were surprised when I told them about that correction I received from the younger generation. I guess that says more about my friends than millennials overall lol
I haven't worked in retail for over a decade, but that was the biggest fight I kept having with district managers/corporate. They kept telling me to hire more associates for one shift a week, when I already had keyholders and associates who were begging for more hours.
Shit, sometimes I "called out sick" just to give them more hours without letting anyone else know ahead of time. That lack of financial security is not good for morale or productivity, and I hate that the bosses refuse to acknowledge that
I've heard from Gen Z that ending a text response with a period is passive aggressive. So "cool" may have seemed glib on its own, but the punctuation might be giving an additional, if unintentional, tone
Add that any products grown for trade are sitting unwanted in fields, or for aid rotting in warehouses because the government canceled the contracts for them. Food is often held in special warehouses where the oxygen is pumped out, but there aren't enough of those to hold all the excess that was expected to be sent elsewhere
It's a colossal mess, with an incredible amount of waste
I hate to be a jerk, but that's not an atlas moth. I'm my opinion, cecropia moths are much, much prettier than atlas moths. And this one is gorgeous!
But thereβs a tradeoff. The patients, however, require immune-suppressing drugs for life, so that the immune system doesnβt destroy the cells.
That was my question on reading the headline. Type 1 diabetes is an immune disorder, what they did here is replace the cells that had been killed by the immune system.
A second patient, according to the study, died of severe dementia.
Also, wtf. Why did they allow a patient with severe dementia into the study? If it's only a one or two year long study that person would have been displaying dementia already and likely couldn't actually consent to it

I lost a lot of cute erasers to the back of these desks