Tag Archives: lunch-at-school

9-Year-Old Twins Survive Alone For Four Months — Abandoned By Babysitting Uncle While Parents Traveled Internationally

Abandoned Twins Survive Alone For Four Months SMH! Via DailyMail : Twin 9-year-old boys were left mostly alone in their New Hampshire apartment for four months after their parents took three siblings to Nigeria and left an uncle to care for them, authorities said Thursday. Manchester police said the uncle, 25-year-old Giobari Atura, told them he would stop by every couple of days to drop off food, but when police got involved in November, they found no edible food in the refrigerator and only ramen noodles in a cabinet. Atura was charged in December with one count of endangering the welfare of a child and was freed on $500 bail. Atura’s older brother, Jerusalem Monday, left for Nigeria with his wife and three of their children in July, intending to return in August. They told police they were delayed by illness and passport problems. The case came to light in November when officials at the boys’ school told the state Division of Children, Youth and Families that the twins had been living on their own for months. The kids were getting themselves up and on the bus, then eating breakfast and lunch at school. In a police affidavit, Atura said he’d stop by the apartment on days that he went to work, but that didn’t happen every day. He said he checked on the boys three days a week and told them to call him if they needed anything. “It should be noted that no operable phone was located within the apartment,” the affidavit says. Those poor little boys! Who do you think is most to blame — the uncle for pretty much ignoring his babysitting duties, or the parents for being oblivious to the fact that their sons weren’t being properly cared for?

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9-Year-Old Twins Survive Alone For Four Months — Abandoned By Babysitting Uncle While Parents Traveled Internationally

CBS: Robert Byrd ‘One of the Hardest Working Senators in Modern History’

On Monday’s CBS Early Show, correspondent Whit Johnson reported breaking news of the death of West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd and proclaimed: “By all accounts, he was one of the hardest working senators in modern history.” Johnson touted Byrd’s “four volume history of the Senate” and described him as the “unequaled master of the Senate rules.” Part of the “hard work” Johnson cited was the massive number of pork barrel projects Byrd secured funding for over his long career: “Byrd said he owed his success to the long suffering people of West Virginia and he returned the favor by steering billions of dollars in federal government projects to the state, dozens of them, named for him.” Johnson noted how “Byrd reveled in his success at bringing home the bacon….His critics called him the king of pork. He called that hog wash.” Another aspect of Byrd’s career that Johnson highlighted was the West Virginia Democrat’s opposition to the Iraq war: “A harsh critic of the war in Iraq, Byrd said opposing the war in 2003 was his most important vote ever.” It was not until the end of his report that Johnson mentioned Byrd’s controversial past on race relations: “His life was not without mistakes. He deeply regretted joining the Ku Klux Klan as a young man and participating in a filibuster against the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964. Later in life, though, he became an advocate of civil rights.” Later, in a news brief in the 8AM ET hour, fill-in news reader Betty Nguyen declared that Byrd was “a master politician, an expert on Senate rules, and unrelenting lobbyist for his home state and a powerful force on Capitol Hill.” Here is a full transcript of Johnson’s June 28 report: 7:00AM TEASE ERICA HILL: Breaking news. The longest serving member of Congress, Senator Robert Byrd, has died. We’ll look back at his remarkable career and tell you how this could impact the balance of power in the Senate. 7:01AM SEGMENT ERICA HILL: First, though, we do want to get to the breaking news, of course, out of Washington this morning. The passing of Senator Robert Byrd early this morning. CBS News correspondent Whit Johnson is on Capitol Hill with the very latest. Whit, good morning. WHIT JOHNSON: Erica, good morning. Senator Robert Byrd checked into a hospital late last week. Originally, he was thought to be suffering from heat exhaustion, but doctors found further complications. The longest serving senator in U.S. history passed away this morning at the age of 92. ROBERT BYRD: The United States Senate, the greatest deliberative body in the whole world. JOHNSON: Robert Byrd won nine elections to the U.S. Senate. He was the longest serving senator in American history. He grew up in poverty in the hardscrabble coal fields of West Virginia, where he learned to play the fiddle. For decades he used it to entertain audiences on the campaign trail and even performed at the Grand Ole Opry. By all accounts, he was one of the hardest working senators in modern history. He went to law school at night, receiving his degree at age 45 from President Kennedy. He wrote a four volume history of the Senate, became the unequaled master of the Senate rules and climbed to the top of the ladder, spending 12 years as Democratic leader. Byrd said he owed his success to the long suffering people of West Virginia and he returned the favor by steering billions of dollars in federal government projects to the state, dozens of them, named for him. Byrd reveled in his success at bringing home the bacon. BYRD: Man, you’re looking at big daddy. Big daddy! Rolled up my sleeves, man. JOHNSON: His critics called him the king of pork. He called that hog wash. BYRD: This notion that earmark spending is inherently wasteful spending is flat out wrong. W-r-o-n-g. JOHNSON: A harsh critic of the war in Iraq, Byrd said opposing the war in 2003 was his most important vote ever. BYRD: How long must the best of our nation’s military men and women be taken from their homes to fight this unnecessary war? JOHNSON: His life was not without mistakes. He deeply regretted joining the Ku Klux Klan as a young man and participating in a filibuster against the historic Civil Rights Act of 1964. Later in life, though, he became an advocate of civil rights. His great loves included his children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren, a Senate, which he so revered he called ‘the temple,’ and the Constitution, a copy of which he always carried in his breast pocket. But above everything else, there was Erma, Byrd’s high school sweetheart and wife of 68 years. She passed away in 2006. Byrd said she was his greatest love of all. Washington is already reacting this morning to Senator Byrd’s death. He’s being remembered for his fighter spirit. Erica. HILL: Whit, thanks. Whit Johnson in Washington this morning.

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CBS: Robert Byrd ‘One of the Hardest Working Senators in Modern History’

CBS’s Couric Dutifully Parrots Left-wing Center for American Progress Study

“The last day of school shouldn’t mean last call for lunch.” That’s how CBS’s Katie Couric melodramatically concluded her June 25 “Notebook” item on her CBSNews.com Couric & Co. blog. The “Evening News” anchor pointed to a report by the liberal Center for American Progress — without, of course, noting the group’s leftward bent — that found “that nearly 20 million children get free or reduced-price lunch at school. But only one in six of them will receive subsidized meals this summer.” Couric concluded from this that “[n]early one in four children is at risk for hunger” over the summer and called “essential” a bill before Congress to “improve access to summer meals.” Of course nowhere in her Notebook item did Couric weigh whether this might be a matter better left to state and local governments — especially when the federal government is drowning in red ink — or better yet, to parents themselves. After all, schools provide lunches and breakfasts during the school year for the sake of convenience of students and their parents, not because government has the moral responsibility to feed children. That’s obviously the job of parents and their failure to adequately do so is grounds for the involvement of local child protective services. Parental responsibility and restrained spending of taxpayer dollars are not high on Couric’s list of concerns, apparently. That’s a page from my notebook. 

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CBS’s Couric Dutifully Parrots Left-wing Center for American Progress Study