Порно Онлайн Mom Com

Порно Онлайн Mom Com




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Порно Онлайн Mom Com
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Hines's grandfather once taught at the school. (photo courtesy Milton Hershey School)
An astronaut with ties to central Pennsylvania got a lovely surprise the other day.
The astronaut was talking to students at the Milton Hershey School from space when his mom stood up to ask him a question.
According to his NASA biography page , Bob Hines—who was born in Fayetteville, N.C. before his family moved to Mountain Top, Pa.—served in the U.S. Air Force for over 21 years before getting selected by the space agency in 2017. He’s currently serving as a pilot for NASA’s SpaceX Crew-4 mission to the International Space Station (ISS).
But Hines’s ties to Pennsylvania don’t end with Mountain Top: An official from Milton Hershey School informed PennLive via email that the astronaut’s grandfather once taught at the school, making his presentation on Monday even more special.
That, as well as the moment Hines’s mother, Lynne Swider, stood up to ask her son a question.
Hines's mother, Lynne Swider, watchers her son's presentation. (photo courtesy Milton Hershey School)
“Hello there,” says Swider on a video of the presentation. “I’m not sure if you remember me because it’s been so long since I’ve seen you in person.
“And my question isn’t very technical, so I think that you can handle it.”
Swider—who lives in Harrisburg with her husband—proceeds to ask whether her son brushed his teeth, combed his hair, and washed his hands that day.
“Did you do all three of those things?” continues Swider to her laughing son. “Okay, you don’t have to answer that. Because maybe you didn’t, being up there!”
Hines eventually confirmed he did, indeed, do all three of those things, and even ate his vegetables to boot.
You can catch the full presentation Hines gave to the Milton Hershey School below (his mom asks the question around the nine minute mark):
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Authorities discovered the child was missing last October. He was later found dead and had suffered from injuries and malnourishment.
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NASHUA, N.H. — The boyfriend of a slain 5-year-old boy’s mother was sentenced in New Hampshire on Thursday to 22 to 45 years in prison for manslaughter and other charges that he pleaded guilty to, nearly a year after the child’s body was found in a Massachusetts park.
Joseph Stapf, 31, had filed an intent to plead guilty earlier this month. He also admitted to second-degree assault, falsifying physical evidence and witness tampering in connection with Elijah Lewis’ death.
Joseph Stapf, 31, is escorted into a courtroom for a plea hearing in Hillsborough County Court, Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022, in Nashua, N.H. Charles Krupa/Associated Press
The child was discovered missing and found dead last October. An autopsy showed he suffered facial and scalp injuries, acute fentanyl intoxication, malnourishment and pressure ulcers.
“I never wanted any of this to happen to Elijah,” Stapf said in court as he broke into tears. “I wish I could go back and change everything.”
He added, “I loved that boy. I’m so sorry for everybody who has to deal with this.”
Elijah’s father, who lives in Arizona, brought Elijah to live with Stapf and the child’s mother, Danielle Dauphinais, in Merrimack, New Hampshire, in May 2020.
Prosecutors said Elijah was starved, neglected and physically abused. They read a series of texts between Stapf and Dauphinais that expressed hostility toward Elijah and frustration if he didn’t behave according to their wishes.
Some of the texts from Stapf to Dauphinais told her to give Elijah more food to “fatten him up.”
When Elijah died and child welfare workers started to investigate his disappearance, the couple put his body in a container and brought him to Ames Nowell State Park in Abington, Massachusetts, where Stapf dug a hole and buried him, prosecutors said.
Prosecutors said that when Elijah was found last October, he was 36 inches tall and weighed 19 pounds, while an average 5-year-old boy would be 43 inches tall and closer to 40 pounds.
Elijah’s father, Timothy Lewis, who was watching the hearing online, thanked law enforcement for helping to pursue justice for his son. A number of Merrimack officers and state police were in the courtroom.
“You could have stepped up to stop this at any point, had you been man enough,” Lewis said to Stapf. “You could have brought him home to us at any point. You could have rushed him to the hospital at any point. He could still be there.”
When Elijah was still missing, Stapf and Dauphinais were arrested in New York on charges of witness tampering and child endangerment. Days after their arrest, Elijah’s remains were found.
Dauphinais, 36, was indicted earlier this year on one count of first-degree murder alleging that she purposely caused her son’s death, one count of second-degree murder alleging she acted recklessly in causing his death, and three counts of witness tampering. She pleaded not guilty.
Stapf could receive several years’ credit if he completes a degree and another program. It’s possible he could testify against Dauphinais, although that was not brought up in court Thursday.
“We look forward to confronting Mr. Stapf at the appropriate time,” Dauphinais’ attorney, Jaye Rancourt, said in an email.
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Carlson: Thunder big man Mike Muscala mourns mom's death while celebrating her spirit
Carlson: Thunder big man Mike Muscala mourns mom's death while celebrating her spirit
Mike Muscala speaks at Thunder Media Day
Thunder player Mike Muscala discusses the draw of Oklahoma City, as well as the team's young roster during Thunder Media Day.
Mike Muscala has rarely gone into games during his three seasons with the Thunder knowing how his night would go.
Would he start? Would he play significant minutes? Would he play at all? 
But amid his uncertainties on the court was at least one certainty off it ― he was always going to get a pre-game good-luck text message from his mom.
“She didn’t miss a game,” Muscala said.
The veteran big man will miss that this season.
On Friday, Muscala’s mom died after a nearly two-year battle with cancer. Mary Maida fought it every step of the way, taking chemo and undergoing surgeries, spending time in the hospital and participating in a drug trial when other means faltered. 
But through it all, she never failed to tell her only son how much she loved watching him play in Oklahoma City .
“I know she really liked our team in specific,” Muscala told The Oklahoman earlier this week. “She’d cheer for all the teams and love every team I’ve been on. 
“But something about the Thunder, she just loved to follow and be a part of.”
Even with his changing role and diminishing minutes, Muscala has repeatedly professed his desire to remain with the Thunder as long as possible, then he has repeatedly followed through on those sentiments. 
Soon after he chose the Thunder as a free agent in the summer of 2019, the team went from contender to tear down. Front-office brass gave him a chance to back out of his two-year deal ― he had picked OKC expecting to play with Russell Westbrook and Paul George ― but Muscala opted to stay. Two years later, he signed a multi-year deal with the team, then this past offseason when the Thunder declined Muscala’s team option and made him an unrestricted free agent, he chose to sign again with Oklahoma City.
The franchise and the city are the main reasons why, but knowing that his mom saw something special in the Thunder was no small thing for Muscala.
“Definitely played a big role,” he said.
Mary Maida demonstrated gratitude throughout her life but never was it stronger than the past few years.
Growing up in Minnesota, Muscala remembers his mom, who remarried after she and his dad divorced, being hard working, music loving and ever curious.
“She was always reading something,” he said. “I feel like I get my curiosity from her.”
Even though Maida was tall ― almost 6-foot ― she didn’t play sports much growing up. There weren’t a ton of options for girls to play when she was young, but even if there had been, she was more interested in singing.
Still, when Mike got into basketball, his mom drove him all over the Minneapolis-St. Paul area to practices and games.
She came to love basketball as much as he did.
“Because she was competitive,” he said with a smile.
But more than anything, Maida was kind.
“Even when she was in the hospital towards the end, the nurse kept saying, ‘She’s been so nice to me. We don’t really get that a lot,’” Muscala said. 
Maida was first diagnosed with ovarian cancer in November 2020.
She did chemo, then surgery, then more surgery, then more chemo.
Maida chronicled her journey on a Caring Bridge page, and after nine months, she shared a joyous update.
“No cancer remains,” she wrote on July 7, 2021.
A month later, she wrote about her ongoing immunotherapy treatments, about regaining her appetite and her strength and about planning to beat the odds on her cancer relapsing. But at the same time, she was trying to live with what was instead of what might be.
“Right now, I’m determined to enjoy each day as a true gift,” she wrote. “I met with my therapist this past week, and we talked about learning to trust this time I’m living in now.”
Less than two months later, Maida would post again.
“Every day, every moment is a treasure and a gift to be alive,” she wrote. “I continue to be positive and hope and pray for time on my side. I find peace in being prayerful as well as using my mind and body in combinations with God’s will to be strong.
“I talk to my good cells to work together and be strong and endure.”
Since that day last October, Maida had successes; chemo decreased the tumors that had spread to her spleen, bladder, liver and abdominal areas. Then, she had disappointments; the chemo stopped being successful.
An immunotherapy trial worked wonders for a month or so, but then the tumors started growing again in July.
Muscala was able to be in Minnesota a lot this past year. An ankle injury sidelined him in February, and he had surgery in March. He did as much of his rehabilitation as possible at home.
Even recently, as the Thunder started preparing for the start of training camp and Muscala was in Oklahoma City more, he went back to Minnesota every weekend. He was awed by his mom’s spirit.
“She fought super hard,” he said. “Then towards the end, it became tough for her, but she fought so hard.”
Last Wednesday, Maida entered hospice care at home.
Friday, Mike and his sister, Maddi, were sitting at her bedside, holding her hands when she took her final breath.
Muscala hopes he can keep her memory alive by replicating the kindness she always showed.
“I just feel like it came from a genuine place,” he said. “She just really valued everybody, and she just wanted to learn from everybody and be kind to people. That just meant a lot of people around her.”
Mike Muscala knows he will miss those pre-game texts from his mom. Her post-game ones were pretty great, too; she would get excited about the smallest triumphs, whether her son’s or someone else’s.
“But I’ve already felt her presence in ways that I hadn’t before,” Muscala said. “I know it’ll feel different, but I know she’ll still be with us.”
Jenni Carlson: Jenni can be reached at 405-475-4125 or jcarlson@oklahoman.com. Like her at facebook.com/JenniCarlsonOK, follow her at twitter.com/jennicarlson_ok, and support her work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today .






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