Rosario Dawson Adopts a 12Old Girl

Rosario Dawson Adopts a 12-Year-Old Girl

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Rosario Dawson Adopts a 12-Year-Old Girl: ”She Has Always Wanted This”

Rosario Dawson has officially joined the ranks of Hollywood’s hottest moms! The 35-year-old actress has adopted a 12-Year-Old girl, a source confirms to E! News, noting that the first-time parent is "over the moon."
"She has always wanted this," the insider dished of Dawson, who is currently single after splitting with director Danny Boyle last year.
The Trance star, who was adopted by her own father, has previously expressed her desire to adopt children of her own, so it should come as no surprise that the thesp is loving life with her little girl.

"I always wanted to adopt kids ’cause my Dad adopted me," she previously told Latinamagazine back in 2024. "That idea has stayed in the back of my head, but lately, I’ve been thinking about it more. My mother and grandmother are extraordinary women, and they’re getting older. It struck me recently that one day I might be sitting around with my children, going ‘Your grandma was an amazing woman; I really wish you could’ve known her.’ That makes me sad ’cause it would be a waste to not have these people know each other. Whatever time I have, I want it."
Dawson also said that not knowing her biological father hasn’t caused "a big void" in her life and cited her close relationship with her adopted dad. "My dad started dating my mom when she was eight months pregnant with me," she said. "He was beautiful. I wanted to be him. I love my father, he is amazing to me. I was daddy’s little Girl growing up."
Page Six was first to report the adoption news.
Rosario Dawson Adopts a 12-Year-Old Girl: ”She Has Always Wanted This” | E! Online

The Girl Who Gets Gifts From Birds

The Girl Who Gets Gifts From Birds

Seattle خليجية
Continue reading the main story Lots of people love the Birds in their garden, but it’s rare for that affection to be reciprocated. One young Girl in Seattle is luckier than most. She feeds the crows in her garden – and they bring her Gifts in return.
Eight-year-old Gabi Mann sets a bead storage container on the dining room table, and clicks the lid open. This is her most precious collection.
"You may take a few close looks," she says, "but don’t touch." It’s a warning she’s most likely practised on her younger brother. She laughs after saying it though. She is happy for the audience.
Inside the box are rows of small objects in clear plastic bags. One label reads: "Black table by feeder. 2:30 p.m. 09 Nov 2024." Inside is a broken light bulb. Another bag contains small pieces of brown glass worn smooth by the sea. "Beer coloured glass," as Gabi describes it.
Each item is individually wrapped and categorised. Gabi pulls a black zip out of a labelled bag and holds it up. "We keep it in as good condition as we can," she says, before explaining this object is one of her favourites.
There’s a miniature silver ball, a black button, a blue paper clip, a yellow bead, a faded black piece of foam, a blue Lego piece, and the list goes on. Many of them are scuffed and dirty. It is an odd assortment of objects for a little Girl to treasure, but to Gabi these things are more valuable than gold.
خليجية
خليجية
She didn’t gather this collection. Each item was a gift – given to her by crows.
She holds up a pearl coloured heart. It is her most-prized present. "It’s showing me how much they love me."
Continue reading the main story “Start Quote

If you want to form a bond with a crow, be consistent in rewarding them”
End Quote John Marzluff Prof of wildlife science
Gabi’s relationship with the neighbourhood crows began accidentally in 2024. She was four years old, and prone to dropping food. She’d get out of the car, and a chicken nugget would tumble off her lap. A crow would rush in to recover it. Soon, the crows were watching for her, hoping for another bite.
As she got older, she rewarded their attention, by sharing her packed lunch on the way to the bus stop. Her brother joined in. Soon, crows were lining up in the afternoon to greet Gabi’s bus, hoping for another feeding session.
Gabi’s mother Lisa didn’t mind that crows consumed most of the school lunches she packed. "I like that they love the animals and are willing to share," she says, while admitting she never noticed crows until her daughter took an interest in them. "It was a kind of transformation. I never thought about birds."
In 2024, Gabi and Lisa started offering food as a daily ritual, rather than dropping scraps From time to time.
Each morning, they fill the backyard birdbath with fresh water and cover bird-feeder platforms with peanuts. Gabi throws handfuls of dog food into the grass. As they work, crows assemble on the telephone lines, calling loudly to them.
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Gabi feeding Birds in her garden

It was after they adopted this routine that the Gifts started appearing.
The crows would clear the feeder of peanuts, and leave shiny trinkets on the empty tray; an earring, a hinge, a polished rock. There wasn’t a pattern. Gifts showed up sporadically – anything shiny and small enough to fit in a crow’s mouth.
One time it was a tiny piece of ****l with the word "best" printed on it. "I don’t know if they still have the part that says ‘friend’," Gabi laughs, amused by the thought of a crow wearing a matching necklace.
When you see Gabi’s collection, it’s hard not to wish for gift-giving crows of your own.
"If you want to form a bond with a crow, be consistent in rewarding them," advises John Marzluff, professor of wildlife science at the University of Washington. He specialises in birds, particularly crows and ravens.
خليجية
What food is best? "A few peanuts in the *****," he says. "It’s a high-energy food… and it makes noise when you throw it on the ground, so they hear it and they quickly habituate to your routine."
Marzluff, and his colleague Mark Miller, did a study of crows and the people who feed them. They found that crows and people form a very personal relationship. "There’s definitely a two-way communication going on there," Marzluff says. "They understand each other’s signals."
The Birds communicate by how they fly, how close they walk, and where they sit. The human learns their ******** and the crows learn their feeder’s patterns and posture. They start to know and trust each other. Sometimes a crow leaves a gift.
But crow Gifts are not guaranteed. "I can’t say they always will (give presents)," Marzluff admits, having never received any Gifts personally, "but I have seen an awful lot of things crows have brought people."
Not all crows deliver shiny objects either. Sometimes they give the kind of presents "they would give to their mate", says Marzluff. "Courtship feeding, for example. So some people, their presents are dead baby Birds that the crow brings in."
خليجية
Gabi has been given some icky objects. Her mother threw out a rotting crab claw, for example.
Gabi points out a heavily rusted screw she prefers not to touch. It’s labelled "Third Favorite." Asking her why an untouchable object is in the favourites, she answers, "You don’t’ see a crow carrying around a screw that much. Unless it’s trying to build its house."
Lisa, Gabi’s mom, regularly photographs the crows and charts their behaviour and interactions. Her most amazing gift came just a few weeks ago, when she lost a lens cap in a nearby alley while photographing a bald eagle as it circled over the neighbourhood.
خليجية
She didn’t even have to look for it. It was sitting on the edge of the birdbath.
Had the crows returned it? Lisa logged on to her computer and pulled up their bird-cam. There was the crow she suspected. "You can see it bringing it into the yard. Walks it to the birdbath and actually spends time rinsing this lens cap."
"I’m sure that it was intentional," she smiles. "They watch us all the time. I’m sure they knew I dropped it. I’m sure they decided they wanted to return it."

BBC News – The girl who gets gifts from birds😀

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Kelly Clarkson Welcomes Baby Girl River Rose

Kelly Clarkson Welcomes Baby Girl River Rose

Kelly Clarkson Welcomes Baby Girl River Rose Blackstock!

خليجية

Kelly Clarkson and her husbandBrandon Blackstock have welcomed their first child into the world!
The 32-year-old singer gave birth to Baby Girl River Rose Blackstock on Thursday (June 12) and she has tweeted about the exciting news.
“Our Baby Girl River Rose Blackstockarrived on June 12th! Thank you everyone for all of your well wishes!Brandon and I are on cloud 9!! :)” Kellywrote on her account.
Kelly and Brandon tied the knot back in October and then announced the exciting news that they were expecting a child in November.

Celebrity Gossip and Entertainment News | Just Jared

Girl, 5, Dies After Father Drops Her From Top of Bridge

Girl, 5, Dies After Father Drops Her From Top of Bridge

Florida girl dies after father throws her off a bridge: police

Florida girl Dies After Father throws her off a bridge: police

خليجية By Letitia Stein 2 hours ago

By Letitia Stein

TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) – A 5-year-old Florida girl was pronounced dead early on Thursday After her Father threw her over the side of a bridge, a 62-foot drop into frigid waters, police in St. Petersburg said.
The father, John Jonchuck Jr., 25, was driving about 100 miles per hour when he sped past an officer just After midnight heading toward the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay, police said in a statement.
The officer followed the driver and soon found Jonchuck waiting near the top of an approach to the bridge, said St. Petersburg police Chief Anthony Holloway.
The Father opened a passenger door and removed his daughter, placing her face toward him. He then threw her over the Bridge railing, Holloway said.
He drove off at a normal speed as the officer began searching for the child.
"You just throw this baby away like it’s nothing," the chief said at a news conference.
Phoebe Jonchuck’s **** was found in the water about an hour and a half later and roughly a half-mile From the bridge, police said, noting it was a windy night with fast-moving currents.
John Jonchuck was stopped by authorities in nearby Manatee County and taken in custody. An empty pink carseat was sitting in the back of his vehicle.
He was arrested on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated fleeing and eluding and aggravated assault with a motor vehicle on a law enforcement officer.
Holloway said Jonchuck lived with his parents in Tampa and had custody of the child.
Jonchuck may have mental issues, the chief said, and officers were investigating whether drugs or alcohol were involved.
A court appearance for Jonchuck was scheduled for Thursday afternoon.
(Reporting by Letitia Stein; Writing and additional reporting by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Bill Trott)

Florida girl dies after father throws her off a bridge: police

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Can Connecticut Force A Teenage Girl To Undergo Chemotherapy?

Can Connecticut Force A Teenage Girl To Undergo Chemotherapy?

Can Connecticut Force A Teenage Girl To Undergo Chemotherapy?

JANUARY 08,2020 3:18 AM ET

LUCY NALPATHANCHIL


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Morning Edition
3 min 49 sec


خليجية
Jackie Fortin’s daughter, Cassandra, last summer.

Courtesy of Jackie Fortin


A 17-year-old Connecticut Girl recently diagnosed with cancer has been removed from her home after refusing to Undergo chemotherapy.
The girl, named Cassandra, is now in the custody of child welfare authorities and is being forced to Undergo cancer treatment. The state Supreme Court is taking up her case Thursday to weigh whether she’s mature enough to make her own medical decisions.
Update 3:15 EST 1/8/15: The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the state can require Cassandra to continue treatment.
Cassandra is Jackie Fortin’s only child. Fortin has been a single mother for Cassandra’s entire life. Until last month, they lived together in Windsor Locks, Conn. Fortin says this is the first time they’ve been separated.
"No****, whether it’s her age or an adult, should ever have to go through this by herself," she says.
For the past month, her daughter has been held at a local hospital, undergoing chemotherapy treatment against her wishes. A court gave the state Department of Children and Families temporary custody of Cassandra, as well as the authority to make medical decisions for the teen, after doctors reported Fortin for neglect. Court papers ******** missed appointments and arguments with doctors over her daughter’s diagnosis.
But Fortin says it’s her daughter’s right to refuse chemotherapy, saying she doesn’t want to poison her ****.

"This is not about death," Fortin says. "My daughter is not going to die. This is about, ‘This is my ****, my choice, and let me decide.’ "
But Cassandra’s doctors say that without treatment, she will die. They testified in previous hearings that Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the lymph system, is lethal without the recommended treatment. With treatment, she has an 85 percent chance of survival.

Kristina Stevens, an administrator with Connecticut’s DCF, says the doctors’ medical opinions prompted the state to get involved.
"We had the benefit of experts who could tell us with great clarity if in fact we don’t do something, if the system doesn’t react and respond, this child will die," Stevens says.
Cassandra is just eight months away from turning 18. Joshua Michtom, one of her attorneys, says this adds another complicated layer to the case.
"The general rule for adults is that you can say no to treatment no matter how life-saving it may be," Michtom says. "You can say no even to helpful treatment. If she were 18, no matter what anyone said, it would be her choice to make."
Her attorneys say maturity doesn’t just develop at a certain age. They’ll argue that Connecticut should adopt the mature minor doctrine, which allows courts to consider evidence on whether a teen is competent to make health care decisions.
This is the first time a case like this has come up in Connecticut, but other states have considered the question. Michtom points to Illinois and Maine as two states where courts decided that even though teenagers who weren’t yet 18 had refused treatment or didn’t want to be kept alive artificially, there was evidence to show they were mature enough when they conveyed their wishes.
That’s Fortin’s hope for her daughter. She says the state has ripped apart a normal family and turned their lives into a nightmare.
"I’ve never been in the system, never had a problem, nothing," Fortin says. "And all of a sudden we have a medical situation and now I’m being deemed as the bad mother."
Connecticut’s Supreme Court has promised to rule quickly, but that doesn’t mean the justices will decide whether Cassandra can refuse life-saving treatments.
Instead, it could send her case back to a lower court, giving her attorneys a chance to call on mental health experts to prove the teen is competent to make her own medical decisions.

Otherwise, she’ll remain in DCF custody and continue treatment until at least September. That’s when she turns 18.