Features a to do list, calendar, and recommended sites for health, shopping, and recipes.
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Features a to do list, calendar, and recommended sites for health, shopping, and recipes.
Offers cleaning articles, how-to's, and product reviews. Includes a newsletter and message board.
Features homemaking help, organizational tips, recipes, beauty advice, and decorating ideas.
Includes articles on gardening, recipes, health, beauty, nutrition, decorating, cooking, and parenting.
Offers advice on topics including seasonal issues and disaster preparedness. Features a virtual tour and measurement calculators.
Offers advice on topics such as health and safety, household organization, cleaning and laundry. Includes subscription information.
Offers recipes, cooking tips, household hints, cookbook collecting, crafts and herbal remedies. Features a newsletter.
Offers advice that used to be passed down from generation to generation. Features competitions and a newsletter.
Includes features on home decorating, gardening, and organizing, with ideas to simplify, organize, beautify and inspire life.
Offers articles from the late 19th century. Topics include agriculture, recipes, crafts and making paints and dyes.
Offers a program that teaches how to safely and efficiently manage waste, and particularly hazardous waste, in the home. Produced by the US Environmental Protection Agency.
Offers little-known uses for well-known products. Includes histories and facts behind the products.
Offers articles on uncluttering the house, cutting mealtime chaos, streamlining storage and finding more time. Includes a newsletter.
Offers food, gardening, crafts and financial advice. Includes discussion boards and a newsletter.
Offers discussion groups for home organizing and recipes. Includes articles.
Features tips shared on Bob Allison's Ask your Neighbor radio program. Includes instructions for making cleaning products.
Offers articles on topics such as cooking, cleaning, organizing, and parenting. Includes forums.
Offers information on storing recyclable items. Includes tips on selecting storage containers.[PDF] [PDF]
Creates shopping lists sorted by store and price. Features a message board. Requires free registration.
Offers discussion forums on topics such as the house, cooking, crafts and hobbies and the family. Includes information on meetings.
Offers home tips, recipes, crafts and parenting articles. Includes forums, chat and a newsletter.
Offers interactive guides for decorating, cleaning, entertaining and organizing. Features checklists.
Offers an article from a 19th-century newspaper that promises to teach readers not only how to dress well but how to keep a chimney from smoking or a child from dying.
Discusses how to teach children lessons in house cleaning and responsibility. By Monica Resinger.
Offers advice on topics such as household cleaners and uses for Alka-Seltzer. Includes first aid information.
Offers advice on topics such as food storage, removing pet hair from clothing and preventing dust build-up on television screens. Includes author's profile.
Article discusses ideas to help make a yard sale successful. By Gary Foreman.
Offers advice and resources on topics including parenting, thriftiness, kitchen, family health, crafts, decorating, and organization. Features news and chat.
Presents old-fashioned traditions for the modern family. Features a newsletter and discussion forum.
Address issues such as buying bread, Christmas trees, dishwasher efficiency and making soap. Includes earth-safe tips.
Offers tips for cleaning, cooking, laundry, and home remedies. Features a message board.
Offers articles about cooking, home finance and the holidays. Topics include gifts from the kitchen, how to take a financial inventory and how to choose the right cookware.
Offers a collection of housekeeping tips, including cleaning, gardening, organization, pets, and money saving. Accepts ideas from visitors.
Offers suggestions on topics including cleaning tools, getting rid of an upset stomach and laundry care.
Offers household hints and tips on cooking and cleaning. Includes archives.
Center of the Vintage Homemakers Circle, a support group and idea center for traditional wives who keep a perfect home.
Offers articles on topics such as removing sap from clothing and temporarily frosting windows. Includes visitor questions and answers and checklists.
Offers organization, decorating, crafts, frugal living and parenting hints. Includes holiday ideas, recipes and a newsletter.
Offers tips for the home and garden. Features news and articles.
Full-length article covers the process of organizing the items in a closet.
Offers information on topics such as removing crayon marks from walls, finding the best hangover cure and alternative uses for cola. Includes awards and information about trigminal neuralgia.
Offers tips for the home, garden and travel. Requires free registration.
Offers advice on topics such as getting whites white and removing hard water marks on polished marble. Includes reactions from readers.
Offers articles about cooking, do-it-yourself and gardening. Includes daily tips, a discussion forum and polls.
Israel harvested organs in ’90s without consent |
| Date Added: 2009-12-21 06:11:48 |
| Author: teddy |
| Category: World: Middle East : Israel |
Sun., Dec . 20, 2009 JERUSALEM - Israel has admitted that in the 1990s, its forensic pathologists harvested organs from dead bodies, including Palestinians, without permission of their families. The issue emerged with publication of an interview with the then-head of Israel's Abu Kabir forensic institute, Dr. Jehuda Hiss. The interview was conducted in 2000 by an American academic, who released it because of a huge controversy last summer over an allegation by a Swedish newspaper that Israel was killing Palestinians in order to harvest their organs. Israel hotly denied the charge. Parts of the interview were broadcast on Israel's Channel 2 TV over the weekend. In it, Hiss said, "We started to harvest corneas ... Whatever was done was highly informal. No permission was asked from the family." The Channel 2 report said that in the 1990s, forensic specialists at Abu Kabir harvested skin, corneas, heart valves and bones from the bodies of Israeli soldiers, Israeli citizens, Palestinians and foreign workers, often without permission from relatives. In a response to the TV report, the Israeli military confirmed that the practice took place. "This activity ended a decade ago and does not happen any longer," the military said in a statement quoted by Channel 2. Read More from MSNBC.com |
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