Opinion

A cancer center in Jordan treats kids from Gaza, but only a few dozen have arrived

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Middle East   来源:Business  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:and other products, highlighted in a Substack post how Kennedy had raised safety concerns.

and other products, highlighted in a Substack post how Kennedy had raised safety concerns.

AP Sports Writer Jerome Pugmire contributed.Howard Fendrich has been the AP’s tennis writer since 2002. Find his stories here:

A cancer center in Jordan treats kids from Gaza, but only a few dozen have arrived

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Aaron Ekblad shrugged it off. Paul Maurice called it “somebody else’s problem,” while casually taking a drink from a cup.Roughly 12 hours had passed since Florida’s Brad Marchand and Carolina’s Shayne Gostisbehereduring the Panthers’ Game 1 win in the Eastern Conference final, ending with Marchand being escorted to the locker room tunnel while barking back toward center ice.

A cancer center in Jordan treats kids from Gaza, but only a few dozen have arrived

It was part of a testy third-period sequence in which Marchand made a run at Gostisbehere along the boards and Gostisbehere retaliated by firing a puck directly into Marchand from his own blue line.The reigning Stanley Cup champion Panthers said all the right things Wednesday in turning down the temperature from that scrap.

A cancer center in Jordan treats kids from Gaza, but only a few dozen have arrived

“I mean, it happens, it is what it is,” said Ekblad, the defenseman who scored the second of Florida’s two tone-setting first-period goals.

It’s unclear if that mood will last through the puck drop for Thursday’s Game 2 of the best-of-seven series, though.Getting an organ transplant today is a long shot. More than 100,000 people are on the national waiting list, most who need a kidney. Thousands die waiting. Thousands more who could benefit aren’t even added to the list.

“I had seven cardiac arrests before I even was sick enough” to qualify for a new heart, said Dr. Robert Montgomery, chief of NYU Langone’s transplant institute. He’s a kidney transplant surgeon — and was lucky enough to get his own heart transplant in 2018.Filling the gap, he’s convinced, will require using animal organs.

Mary Miller-Duffy speaks with Dr. Robert Montgomery in the NYU Langone Health medical center in New York on Aug. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Shelby Lum)Mary Miller-Duffy speaks with Dr. Robert Montgomery in the NYU Langone Health medical center in New York on Aug. 10, 2023. (AP Photo/Shelby Lum)

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