Thunder drops three
ALLEN, Texas – The Wichita Thunder dropped its last three games in ECHL play. Thursday at home, Wichita fell to the Toledo Walleye 6-2.
ALLEN, Texas – The Wichita Thunder dropped its last three games in ECHL play. Thursday at home, Wichita fell to the Toledo Walleye 6-2.
Top seeds Gonzaga, Kansas and Arizona are in. So is little Saint Peter’s, the giant killer and only the third No.
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Lexie Hull ran onto the floor for her final game at Maples Pavilion determined to do everything in her power to ensure her reigning NCAA champion Stanford teammates a trip to another special home court: back in her native Spokane, Washington.
Dear Doctors: I had the omicron variant of COVID-19, and even though it was mild, I’m not back to normal. I am tired all the time, my joints ache and my sense of smell is still gone. I’ve been told that this could be long COVID-19. I thought that only happened if you got really sick. Why did I get long COVID-19? When will we see a cure?
Thursa Jarvis, Age 47 died in Wesley Medical Center Wichita, Kansas. http://www.petersenfamilyfuneralhome.com .
Carolyn Delores Harrington, 80, died, March 14, 2022 at Halstead, KS. She was born April 26, 1941 at McCune, KS to Roy Harold and Delcie (Foiles) Buckle.
For roughly 35 years, we were in a recycling business. The last three years we were in business, we were recycling over 3 million pounds of material a year, with roughly 65% of that being recyclable PET Plastic.
This should make Americans ask the fundamental question: what is the difference between what a public non-profit utility company provides and what a private for-profit oil company provides? After all they both sell energy to all United States citizens. The difference is that natural gas and electricity are sold in the form of a public good whereas oil is sold in the form of a private good.
By Sharon Hartin Iorio Once again, another unfunded mandate is working its way through the Kansas Legislature--HB2662. If passed, this bill would establish a Parents’ Bill of Rights and Academic Transparency law.
On March 8, 2022, the CDC released a highly rigorous comparison study of a set of schools with universal mask requirements versus districts without mask requirements. The results were clear. The districts with mask requirements “...had a 23% lower incidence of COVID-19 among staff members and students compared with districts without mask requirements.”