Bought for $3.99 from a Virginia thrift store, this vase just sold for over $100,000

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Bought for $3.99 from a Virginia thrift store, this vase just sold for over $100,000 (CNN) — Jessica Vincent fondly remembers embarking on frequent thrifting trips — at secondhand stores, yard sales, flea markets — with her mother as a child. It’s a habit she retained into adulthood, and one that on Wednesday turned into a six-figure windfall for the Richmond, Virginia native (and the art and design auction house Wright), when a glass vase she purchased for $3.99 sold for over $107,000.Vincent told CNN she and her partner were regular shoppers at the Goodwill store in question — ”probably two or three times a week,” she said, adding that thrifting was “just a funny thing to do, or a different thing to do on the way home to decompress.”On the day of her lucrative purchase in June, Vincent noticed the vase immediately. “People tell me I have a good eye,” she said in a phone interview. “You can put me in an aisle with a whole bunch of dollar store stuff and I can pick out the one item with a little bit of value. I feel like I’ve trained myself — I’ve watched ...

Food sovereignty movement sprouts as bison return to indigenous communities

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Food sovereignty movement sprouts as bison return to indigenous communities Jim Robbins | (TNS) KFF Health NewsBOZEMAN, Mont. — Behind American Indian Hall on the Montana State University campus, ancient life is growing.Six-foot-tall corn plants tower over large green squash and black-and-yellow sunflowers. Around the perimeter, stalks of sweetgrass grow.The seeds for some of these plants grew for millennia in Native Americans’ gardens along the upper Missouri River. It’s one of several Native American ancestral gardens growing in the Bozeman area, totaling about an acre. Though small, the garden is part of a larger, multifaceted effort around the country to promote “food sovereignty” for reservations and tribal members off reservation, and to reclaim aspects of Native American food and culture that flourished in North America for thousands of years before the arrival of European settlers. Restoring bison to reservations, developing community food gardens with ancestral seeds, understanding and collecting wild fruits and vegetables, and learning how to cook...

Lamar Stevens’ surprise appearance continues important theme for Celtics

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Lamar Stevens’ surprise appearance continues important theme for Celtics Lamar Stevens had an idea, but he didn’t know when the moment was going to come.When Luke Kornet was ruled a late scratch from the Celtics’ lineup in Thursday’s win over the Cavaliers, Stevens thought there was a chance he could play his first minutes since Nov. 28. But he didn’t know until Joe Mazzulla called him from the bench to substitute for Kristaps Porzingis with four minutes, 20 seconds remaining in the first quarter to face his former team.“That’s when I found out,” Stevens – who played his first three seasons with Cleveland before signing a partially guaranteed deal with Boston this season – said afterward with a laugh.Stevens’ nine minutes in Thursday’s win was overall, unspectacular in the box score. The big forward was whistled for a defensive three seconds violation and three personal fouls in his first three-minute stint, but returned to produce good minutes late. He scored four points, and contributed a block and steal in the fourth quarter that helped the C’s close ...

From flush to faucet: More places look to turn sewage into tap water

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

From flush to faucet: More places look to turn sewage into tap water Matt Vasilogambros And Kevin Hardy | Stateline.org (TNS)FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif. — After an Orange County resident flushes her toilet, the water flows through the Southern California community’s sewer system, meanders its way to the sanitation plant, has its solids removed, is piped to a wastewater recycling facility next door and undergoes three different purification processes until it is clean enough to drink.“It tastes like water,” said Mehul Patel, executive director of operations for the Orange County Water District’s project, after taking a gulp from a clear plastic cup at the sampling station, as he stood outside the final purification process facility on a warm afternoon earlier this month.“It’s just like any other water, but it’s gone through a lot,” he said. “People shouldn’t judge where it came from, but where it is now.”Mehul Patel, executive director of operations for Orange County’s wastewater recycling plant, shows the reverse osmosis membrane sheets used in the secon...

Biology, anatomy, and finance? More med students want business degrees too

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Biology, anatomy, and finance? More med students want business degrees too Samantha Liss | (TNS) KFF Health NewsJasen Gundersen never considered a career in business when he entered medical school nearly three decades ago to become a rural primary care doctor.But, today, he isn’t working in rural America and he doesn’t do primary care. In fact, he no longer practices medicine at all.As CEO of CardioOne, which provides back-office support to cardiologists, Gundersen is part of a growing trend: physicians and medical school students earning advanced business degrees to work the business side of the booming health care industry.Just over 60% of medical schools now offer dual MD-MBA programs, more than twice the number two decades ago, a recent study shows. And researchers estimate the number of dual-degree graduates has nearly tripled. Still, it’s difficult to know exactly how many physicians now have business degrees. While the medical school students who simultaneously earned both a medical and business degree represent almost 1% of the roughly 28,000 medic...

Doctors on (video) call: Rural medics get long-distance help in treating man gored by bison

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Doctors on (video) call: Rural medics get long-distance help in treating man gored by bison Arielle Zionts | KFF Health News (TNS)GANN VALLEY, S.D. — Rural medics who rescued rancher Jim Lutter after he was gored by a bison didn’t have much experience handling such severe wounds.But the medics did have a doctor looking over their shoulders inside the ambulance as they rushed Lutter to a hospital.The emergency medicine physician sat 140 miles away in a Sioux Falls, South Dakota, office building. She participated in the treatment via a video system recently installed in the ambulance.“I firmly believe that Jim had the best care anyone has ever received in the back of a basic life support ambulance,” said Ed Konechne, a volunteer emergency medical technician with the Kimball Ambulance District.A bison on Jim Lutter’s ranch in central South Dakota. (Arielle Zionts/KFF Health News/TNS)The ambulance service received its video system through an initiative from the South Dakota Department of Health. The project, Telemedicine in Motion, helps medics across the state, especial...

States strive to get opioid overdose drug to more people

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

States strive to get opioid overdose drug to more people Anna Claire Vollers | (TNS) Stateline.orgPosing as shoppers, a team of researchers from the University of Mississippi called nearly 600 pharmacies across the state and asked a simple, yes-or-no question: “Do you have naloxone that I can pick up today?”Mississippi enacted a law authorizing pharmacists to sell the opioid overdose reversal drug naloxone— often sold under the brand name Narcan — in 2017. The drug, which can be administered via nasal spray or injection, can prevent death from overdose by blocking the effect of opioids in the body.The results of the survey, conducted last year, were disheartening: Despite the Mississippi law, 41% of the pharmacies the researchers called refused to dispense naloxone. Only 37% had naloxone available for same-day pickup. Most of the pharmacies saying they could not immediately provide naloxone said it required a prescription, which was false.“It seems like that refusal might have been driven by a lack of education about the state’s naloxone ...

Gallery: Waltham police officer laid to rest

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Gallery:  Waltham police officer laid to rest Hundreds took part in the funeral for fallen police officer Paul Tracey at Our Lady’s Comforter of the Afflicted Church in Waltham.

After 40 witnesses and 43 days of testimony, here’s what we learned at Trump’s civil fraud trial

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

After 40 witnesses and 43 days of testimony, here’s what we learned at Trump’s civil fraud trial NEW YORK (AP) — After hearing from 40 witnesses over 2 1/2 months, Judge Arthur Engoron sounded almost wistful as he presided over the last day of testimony in Donald Trump’s civil business fraud trial. “In a strange way, I’m gonna miss this trial,” he said Wednesday.Things aren’t over yet in the case, in which New York Attorney General Letitia James has accused Trump of inflating his wealth on financial statements used to secure loans and make deals.Closing arguments are scheduled for early January. The judge has already ruled that Trump is liable for making fraudulent statements, but other claims and a potential final penalty still need to be decided. Trump denies any wrongdoing. He says the financial documents actually understated his net worth and came with caveats that should shield him from liability. The trial has offered fresh insight into Trump’s finances, his dealings with lenders, his aspiration to be an NFL owner, and some of the fuzzy math — mistaken or intentiona...

Mexico closes melon-packing plant implicated in cantaloupe Salmonella outbreak that killed 8 people

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 04:19:02 GMT

Mexico closes melon-packing plant implicated in cantaloupe Salmonella outbreak that killed 8 people MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico’s Health Department on Friday ordered the temporary closure of a melon-packing plant implicated in salmonella infections that killed five people in Canada and three in the United States. The department did not name the company involved, but Canada’s Public Health Agency linked the outbreak to Malichita and Rudy brand cantaloupes. Mexico did not say what violations were found at the plant in the northern border state of Sonora, and said testing was being done to find the source of the contamination.Inspectors took samples of water and swiped surfaces at the plant to look for traces of salmonella bacteria. Since October, at least 230 people in the U.S. and 129 in Canada have been sickened in this outbreak.The cantaloupes implicated in this outbreak include two brands, Malichita and Rudy, that are grown in the Sonora area. The fruit was imported by Sofia Produce LLC, of Nogales, Arizona, which does business as TruFresh, and Pacific Trellis Fruit LLC, of ...