LEARN MORE

Teacher Proves Important, Disgusting Point To Students With Three Pieces Of Bread

Getting kids, teenagers, and even some adults to understand the importance of cleanliness can be a difficult job.
Because we can't see microscopic germs or the immediate effects they have on our health, it's easy for many of us to assume they can't hurt us or make us sick. Often times, seeing is believing. That's why Donna Gill Allen, a health occupation teacher at Cape Fear High School in Fayetteville, North Carolina, came up with a fun experiment to show her students exactly what happens when they don't wash their hands.




Allen placed three slices of bread inside plastic bags, using gloves for the first, freshly washed hands for the second, and for the third, she passed it around the class and let everyone touch it before bagging it. A few days later, the differences spoke for themselves.

Your Annotated Guide To The Questionable Facts And Figures In Trump's Document Axing The Clean Power Plan


Here’s a look under the fuming hood of EPA’s bid to kill climate regulations on power plants.
Jeff Swensen / Getty Images
The Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday submitted a proposed repeal of the Clean Power Plan, Obama’s signature rule to limit greenhouse gas emissions from power plants.



The proposed rule was submitted to the Federal Register, which tracks proposed rule changes from federal agencies. It is a revealing document, largely devoted to legal arguments over just how much the EPA can regulate — only smokestacks, or entire energy systems — to cut pollution.

The first 10 pages or so are a preamble largely laying out the background of the rule, and taking up EPA chief Scott Pruitt’s central beef with the plan: It forces states to make pollution cuts above and beyond improvements at individual power plants.

Here’s your guide to reading the most interesting parts of the text.