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Acrj Florida deputy suspended after Captain Boobs comment
With the revolving-door slate of deals making it tough to keep track of what s coming and going to Netflix each month, we re here to help you catch some movies and shows you may have had on your list before they leave the service and become a lot harder to find.After Aug. 1, you ll need a time machine to check out the Back to the Future trilogy on Netflix, because they are vanishing like Marty McFly s family does in his photo. There are several other beloved movies leaving, including the coming-of-age dramedy Can t Hardly Wait, the sci-fi classic E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and the seminal romantic comedy Hitch. Here are the shows and films leaving Netflix in A stanley cup ugust, courtes stanley cup y of What s on Netflix:August 1Back to the FutureBack to the Future Part IIBack to the Future Part IIIBlack Heart Season 1 Cant Hardly WaitCare Bears: Welcome to Care-a-Lot Season 1 CasperCharlie and the Chocolate FactoryChernobyl DiariesComedy Bang! Bang! 5 Seasons E.T. the Extra-TerrestrialFreedom WritersGodzillaGuess WhoHancockHitchHogie the Globehopper Season 1 JarheadJarhead 2: Field of FireJarhead 3: The SiegeOpen SeasonQB1: Beyond the Lights Season 1 Ramayan Season 1 Resident E stanley cups vil: ExtinctionRomeo Must DieSaltScary Movie 2Searching for Sugar ManSex and the City 2Stuart LittleThe Edge of SeventeenThe InterviewThe PianistThe Pursuit of HappynessTwisterWilly Wonka the Chocolate FactoryVroomiz Season 1 August 2Skins Season 1-7 August 4Dino Hunt Season 1 Paranormal Survivor Season 1 Zvnu Complaint: Beloit man bathes dog in boiling water
MADISON, Wis. AP -- The Wisconsin Senate passed nine bills designed to fight opioid abuse on Tuesday. They now head to Gov. Scott Walker, who is expected to sign them all into law.The Wisconsin based non-profit Stop Heroin Now has been doing everything they can to bring awareness to the opioid and heroin epidemic. They re thankful to hear help is on the way on a state level.Jason Fritz with Stop Heroin Now called the legislation a big step in the stanley travel mug right direction. To actually see the state dedicating time and resources and money to specifically heading that off or trying to head that off or at least screen them so that they know what to look for is just really important, Fritz said.The opioid epidemic is personal for Fritz since he lost his younger brother Terry to a heroin overdose in 2014.Proposal Would Tighten Carjacking Penatlies As a family we knew he was using, but we didn t know where to go. We didn t know who to talk to. We didn t think we could talk about it. It was kind of taboo, he said.He hopes the new laws will help other families. A lot o stanley tumbler f times it starts when they re in high school, sometimes middle school. Something as simple as grabbing avicodinoroxycontinfro stanley usa m mom or dad s medicine cabinet, Fritz said.The bills passed Tuesday will:-- make $2 million a year available to counties to use for treating people with drug and alcohol offenses rather than sending them to jail.-- hire four new special agents at the Department of Justice, at a cost of $420,000 annua
With the revolving-door slate of deals making it tough to keep track of what s coming and going to Netflix each month, we re here to help you catch some movies and shows you may have had on your list before they leave the service and become a lot harder to find.After Aug. 1, you ll need a time machine to check out the Back to the Future trilogy on Netflix, because they are vanishing like Marty McFly s family does in his photo. There are several other beloved movies leaving, including the coming-of-age dramedy Can t Hardly Wait, the sci-fi classic E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and the seminal romantic comedy Hitch. Here are the shows and films leaving Netflix in A stanley cup ugust, courtes stanley cup y of What s on Netflix:August 1Back to the FutureBack to the Future Part IIBack to the Future Part IIIBlack Heart Season 1 Cant Hardly WaitCare Bears: Welcome to Care-a-Lot Season 1 CasperCharlie and the Chocolate FactoryChernobyl DiariesComedy Bang! Bang! 5 Seasons E.T. the Extra-TerrestrialFreedom WritersGodzillaGuess WhoHancockHitchHogie the Globehopper Season 1 JarheadJarhead 2: Field of FireJarhead 3: The SiegeOpen SeasonQB1: Beyond the Lights Season 1 Ramayan Season 1 Resident E stanley cups vil: ExtinctionRomeo Must DieSaltScary Movie 2Searching for Sugar ManSex and the City 2Stuart LittleThe Edge of SeventeenThe InterviewThe PianistThe Pursuit of HappynessTwisterWilly Wonka the Chocolate FactoryVroomiz Season 1 August 2Skins Season 1-7 August 4Dino Hunt Season 1 Paranormal Survivor Season 1 Zvnu Complaint: Beloit man bathes dog in boiling water
MADISON, Wis. AP -- The Wisconsin Senate passed nine bills designed to fight opioid abuse on Tuesday. They now head to Gov. Scott Walker, who is expected to sign them all into law.The Wisconsin based non-profit Stop Heroin Now has been doing everything they can to bring awareness to the opioid and heroin epidemic. They re thankful to hear help is on the way on a state level.Jason Fritz with Stop Heroin Now called the legislation a big step in the stanley travel mug right direction. To actually see the state dedicating time and resources and money to specifically heading that off or trying to head that off or at least screen them so that they know what to look for is just really important, Fritz said.The opioid epidemic is personal for Fritz since he lost his younger brother Terry to a heroin overdose in 2014.Proposal Would Tighten Carjacking Penatlies As a family we knew he was using, but we didn t know where to go. We didn t know who to talk to. We didn t think we could talk about it. It was kind of taboo, he said.He hopes the new laws will help other families. A lot o stanley tumbler f times it starts when they re in high school, sometimes middle school. Something as simple as grabbing avicodinoroxycontinfro stanley usa m mom or dad s medicine cabinet, Fritz said.The bills passed Tuesday will:-- make $2 million a year available to counties to use for treating people with drug and alcohol offenses rather than sending them to jail.-- hire four new special agents at the Department of Justice, at a cost of $420,000 annua

