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Lego Iron Man Filmpjes

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Klassieke Avond van L1 De Klassieke Avond is iedere zondag op L1 Radio te beluisteren, van 18:00 tot 21:00 uur. De avond begint met een goed gesprek met een muzikale gast, gevolgd door L1-concertopnames. L1SPRT L1SPRT maakt dagelijks een rubriek aan het einde van het nieuwsprogramma op tv. Op zaterdag met samenvattingen Jupiler League. Op zondag om 17:40 uur is er een lang sportprogramma. Blaaskracht TV-programma Blaaskracht gaat over harmonieën en fanfares. Ieder laatste weekeinde van de maand worden verhalen verteld over het muziekleven. Óngerwaeg Óngerwaeg zoekt naar bijzondere verhalen van gewone mensen. Presentator Bas van der Zwaan en 'zijn mannen' reizen door de hele provincie. Dagelijks op L1 TV: 17:00, 19:00, 22:00 uur. biedt iedere zondag podium aan jong talent uit de wereld van harmonie en fanfare. Een samenwerking van L1 en LBM. Postbus 31 Postbus 31 is het best beluisterde programma van L1 Radio, zondag van 09:00 tot 11:00 uur. Via presentator Pieter Kiewied feliciteren Limburgers Limburgers.




En Tips voor de zondag. Limburg Doc Limburg Doc is dé plek op L1 voor tv-documentaires over onderwerpen uit eigen regio. Tevens een platfom voor jonge makers. Op zaterdag om 18:00 uur en zondag 11:00, 13:00 en 15:00 uur. Natuurlijk Limburg Met Edmond Staal van Het Limburgs Landschap maakt programmamaker Maurice Nijsten wandelingen door een Limburgs natuurgebied. Met altijd oog voor details. De nieuwe serie begint in september 2017. VastelaovendGaste Het gezelligste vastelaovescafé van Limburg is weer open! Met presentatoren Frans Pollux en Jolien Linssen, elke werkdag om 17:55, 20:55 en 22:55 uur op L1 TV. De Stemming Interview- en discussieprogramma van L1 Radio met politiek, cultuur, economie, wetenschap en media. Verder debat, een column en altijd live-muziek. Iedere zondag van 11:00 tot 13:00 uur.. Muziekfabriek Optreden in de Muziekfabriek op L1 TV staat bij veel Limburgse bands hoog op het verlanglijstje. Roemruchte namen kwamen er al voorbij: Rowwen Hèze, Volumia!, De Heideroosje en Neet oèt Lottum.




L1 Cultuurcafé Iedere zaterdag op L1 Radio (10:00-14:00 uur) een programma vol kunstzinnige en minder zinnige cultuur. Met o.a. wekelijkse rubrieken De Vereniging en Emil en de Muziek. Plat-eweg Plat-eweg is het dialect-muziekprogramma van Limburg, samengesteld en gepresenteerd door Henk Hover. Op donderdag komen er gasten langs. Met maandelijks de L1 Limbo Top 10. Limburgs Land Ger Houben is een vaste waarde op L1 Radio met Limburgs Land, iedere zaterdagochtend van 08:00 tot 10:00 uur. Over natuur en milieu in onze provincie en natuurlijk nuttige tuintips. Wunderbar Voor de vele liefhebbers in Limburg: Duitse schlagers, blaaskapellen en volkstümliche muziek in Wunderbar, iedere zaterdag van 14:00 tot 16:00 uur op L1 Radio. L1NWS De eerste tv-uitzending van L1NWS is om 17:30 uur, zeven dagen per week. Op ieder half uur wordt deze uitzending herhaald en bij grote actualiteiten is er een 'verse' nieuwsuitzending.There’s a new drug in town called flakka. It’s popping up in a handful of states across the country and, in particular, sweeping the streets of Florida.




Based on the evidence gathered by Florida police, use of the drug there is skyrocketing. Submissions for flakka testing to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement’s crime labs have grown from 38 in 2013 to 228 in 2014, the Associated Press reports. “It’s definitely something we are watching. It’s an emerging drug,” Chad Brown, an FDLE supervisory special agent, told the AP. Authorities in South Florida are cracking down. Recently, 22-year-old Palm Beach resident Jaime Nicole Lewis was arrested and charged with conspiracy to distribute the drug, according to the AP. In a hearing held on Monday, April 27, Lewis was sentenced to remain behind bars until her next hearing on May 6. During the Monday hearing assistant US Attorney Lothrop Morris said to his knowledge the case is one of the first in the Southern District of Florida to target the importation of flakka. While many reports say this new designer drug is sweeping the state of Florida, the mind-altering substance has also been popping up in a few other states across the country, including Ohio and Texas.




There, it goes by the name “gravel” because it looks like the colorful gravel pebbles you’d use to decorate the bottom of an aquarium. Use of the drug, which can be snorted, smoked, injected, and swallowed, has been linked with serious — and sometimes deadly — behavioral problems: If these behaviors remind you of the ones that made headlines a few years ago with the appearance of drugs called “bath salts” — it isn’t a coincidence. The two drugs are closely related. Flakka is made from a compound called alpha-PVP, a chemical cousin of cathinone, the amphetamine-like drug found in bath salts. Here’s the worst part: While the active ingredient in bath salts was officially banned in 2011, its newer relative, alpha-PVP, was not. That means it is legal in any state without its own ban. Like cathinone, alpha-PVP is a type of stimulant, colloquially called an “upper.” Uppers are linked with feelings of euphoria, enhanced alertness and wakefulness, and increased movement — all symptoms that are similar to those experienced by people on other drugs like amphetamines or cocaine.




Since flakka is so new, researchers aren’t sure exactly how it affects the brain, or how addictive it is. For now, they can only guess by looking at how its chemical cousins, like cocaine and amphetamines, work. These drugs cause a surge in two chemicals: the feel-good chemical dopamine (responsible for the euphoric sensations) and norepineprhine (which raises heart rate and blood pressure and can make us more alert). Like cocaine and meth, flakka comes with a comedown, the period when the drug leaves the body and the person is left feeling fatigued or depressed. This sensation often results in users returning to the drug to get rid of the negative comedown feeling, jump-starting a cycle of use that can lead to abuse. Also like cocaine and meth, the drug may alter brain chemistry in a way that makes users require a larger and larger dose to get the same high. Excessive use has been linked with feelings of extreme anxiety, paranoia, and hallucinations. Like with bath salts, people have also reported dozens of episodes of violent behavior in people on flakka.




At high doses, flakka may also cause the body to reach high temperatures (bath salts have been linked with the same symptom). This excessive temperature can lead to severe physical complications like kidney damage and muscle breakdown. Still, flakka use is on the rise. According to Forbes contributor Robert Glatter, the US Drug Enforcement Administration has seen a nearly 780% increase in the number of reported cases in the last three years. Back in 2010, not a single case of the drug had been reported in the US. Suddenly in 2012 there were 85 cases, and in 2014 there were 670. Not surprisingly, one of the main reasons for this increase may be the price: flakka can cost as little as $5 a pop according to Dispatch Times, and is easy to buy in bulk. That’s why some are calling it the ‘$5 insanity’. “The cost is what really alarmed us … a lot more people can get their hands on it, and that’s always a problem,” Fort Lauderdale police Sergeant Nick Coffin told Dispatch Times.

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