Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Is Handcream Good Lub For Masterbait

A meeting with the AIDO

03/18/2009 22:26
On 7 March, as part of the School Project and Volunteer in Tuscany from 2008 to 2009, was held the second meeting of class II A and III A of 'address for social services with AIDO - Italian Association for Organ Donation tissues and cells Onlus. At the headquarters of Via Partisan Brigades, Dr Paola Barabesi presented to the boys dr. Roberto Madonna, Director of the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care 's Hospital of Grosseto, who, in answer to the doubts and questions raised by boys, has investigated a number of issues in medical and science, focusing on the meaning of death and concepts of brain death and cardiac death or permanent brain death. The determination of the latter, by a team of doctors, is attested and certified only if the cessation of all brain activity is irreversible for a total observation period of not less than six hours. Only in this case, and in the presence of an explicit declaration of intention to donate, you can perform organ transplants. "Donors of organs - said to the boys dr. Madonna - may be people of any age who die in hospital in intensive care units due to irreversible injury to the brain and organs which, after careful and thorough assessment of doctors, are considered suitable for transplantation. "Unlike organs, tissues, such as the horny, may be harvested after cardiac death of the subject. 's interesting but challenging discussion on the terms and concepts of Cardiocentro encefalocentrismo and was, therefore, the focus of which is then followed by an account of some personal experiences of children and the same Paola Barabesi. At the end of the lecture-discussions, the students and teachers and Oliver Rose Aldo Maiorano, were offered some gadgets AIDO and give some operational guidelines to two students about to perform an internship at the Association.


A Edited by Aldo Maiorano

How Long Does It Takes For A Check To Clear

The "Bottequa" of fair trade

01/22/2009 19:27


Under the School Project and Volunteer in Tuscany 2008-2009, sponsored by the National Center for Voluntary Service, in collaboration with the Regional Education Office and Cesvot , the class III to address social services, participated in an activity chosen for "Stop and go." The objective was to raise awareness of the guys on the problem of economic and social imbalances between North and South and bring them to a more sober and responsible consumption, which respects the rights of others. On 12 January the students met in class one of the volunteers of the "ex aequo" who runs a shop World in Grosseto, where they practice fair trade. The principles and criteria of fair trade - united as a form of exchange with the production realities of the Third World, except that of the traditional market, were presented to children not in the abstract and verbal, but through a role-playing game and a simulation of a 'economic activity, in order to involve more active participation. The meeting in the school has had its natural continuation in the visit to "The Bottequa", where an operator 's association has rebuilt a brief history of fair trade in Tuscany (by far the marketing of coffee at birth in 1990 of the first central import CTM - Cooperation Third World, to the more than twenty active today in fair trade shops) and brought the boys in marketing products in the store. During the visit, the boys have got to realize not only the now great diversity of products (baskets, bamboo furniture, textiles, colored and unusually shaped objects, fragrant spices, chocolate, coffee, sugar, toys, tools music, jeans ...) but also to receive information on countries of origin of goods and the transparency of prices of goods (transport costs, import, taxes ...). After the tour, after a tasting of chocolates kindly offered by managers of "Bottequa", and after a little shopping, the boys were given some information materials and a summary on the principles of fair trade: fair price, full dignity of labor, democracy, trade union minimum wage, no child labor, environmental sustainability, social solidarity and transparency of products and their prices. Edited by Aldo Maiorano