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Thomas married Carol Schmidt on September 23
Ace Hardware and Federal Mogul until he retired
He also Loved doing volunteer work and church activities as well
Thomas especially enjoyed spending time with his family and friends and will be truly missed by all that knew him.
Thomas is survived by his wife Carol Anklam
(2) Great-Grandchildren: Rowan and Quinton
He was preceded in death by his Parents
Funeral Services will be held on Wednesday July 17
2024 at 11:00 AM at Covenant Community Presbyterian Church (1806 Weston Ave Schofield WI 54476)
Visitation will be held on Wednesday July 17
2024 from 9:00 AM until the hour of service at the church
Entombment will be held at Restlawn Memorial Park at 2:00 PM.
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TPD says Daleyza has been found and is reunited with family
Tucson Police are actively searching for a 12-year-old girl they say has been reported missing from her westside K-8 school since about 3 p.m
According to a social media post by TPD
Daleyza Guerrero was last seen near Morgan Maxwell Middle K-8 School on Anklam Road near Greasewood Road
The post says she was wearing a black and white jacket and blue jeans
She is 5'6" and about 150 pounds with brown hair and glasses
Report a typo
Anklam of Waukesha passed away unexpectedly surrounded by the love of his family on Monday
1960 the son of Larry and Kay (nee Schoemann) Anklam
Guy’s greatest joy in life was his son Joe and together they were able to share many meaningful times over the years
and attending his son’s and grandchildren’s school and sports events
Guy will always be remembered for his gift to gab
He will be sadly missed by his wife of 25 years
He is further survived by his brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law John “Jack” (Susie) Ribbens
Mary (John) Egan and Kevin (Diana) Ribbens
He was preceded in death by his father Larry
memorial service at UNITY Lutheran Church – Cross of Life Campus
memorials in Guy’s name are appreciated to the American Heart Association or to the charity of your choice
UNITY Lutheran Church - Cross of Life Campus
passed away unexpectedly at his home with his wife at his side on April 1
son of the late Gilbert and Marie (Christianson) Anklam
Lynn retired from the plastics packaging industry in 2018
He enjoyed fishing with his brother Marv on Lake Winnebago and together they also did some beekeeping
Lynn loved to golf and follow all of the Wisconsin sports teams
Together they loved to travel and see the world
Lynn would scuba dive and they enjoyed spending time on the beaches
Time spent with his family was his favorite pastime
Lynn was a generous man and donated blood on a regular basis
he was able to also donate organs to help other people live
Lynn is survived by his loving wife of almost 46 years
Christopher Anklam; siblings: Patti (Joe Hutchinson) Anklam
(Veronica) Anklam and Tim (Mica) Anklam; brothers and sisters-in-law: Kathie Anklam
Tom (Joan) Zierler and Lisa (Paul) Behrendt; numerous nieces
Gilbert and Marie Anklam and Joan’s parents
Memorial services will be held at 12:00 noon on Saturday
at the Verkuilen-Van Deurzen Family Funeral Home Little Chute Location
101 Canal Street; Pastor John Strasman officiating
Visitation will be at the funeral home from 10:00 a.m
The Anklam family would like to express a special thank you to the Kaukauna first responders for your life saving efforts
Also thanks to the ThedaCare Appleton ER for their compassionate care
“…And I’d choose you; In a hundred lifetimes
I’d find you and I’d choose you.”
the daughter of the late Ernest and Lulu (Seidler) Graveen
Irma was a 1942 graduate of the former Wausau High School. On August 27
Irma was united in marriage to Roland Anklam
They enjoyed 38 happy years together. They were faithful members of the Christian Assembly/Thrive Church
Irma worked as a secretary in Wausau and enjoyed volunteering for a variety of local non-profit organizations. After her mother’s death
Irma kept current the Graveen and Seidler family tree albums
which dated back to their roots in Pomerania
she enjoyed gardening and growing pretty lilies.
Jonathan and Andrew (Jessica); her three adorable great-grandchildren
Judy Anklam and Nancy (Larry) Kopplin all of Wausau; as well as many other relatives and friends.
Irma was preceded in death by her parents; her husband Roland who died on February 23
1987 during surgery for a heart condition; her son
who was killed in a 1994 auto accident; her sister
Bernice Graveen of Wausau; and her brothers
Connecticut and Clifford Graveen of Green Bay
Irma spent the last years of her life at Mountain Terrace Assisted Living Center
from whom she received excellent care.
The funeral service will be held at 11:00 a.m
Wausau with Pastor Dennis Romine officiating. Visitation will be from 10:00 a.m
until time of services at the funeral home
Burial will be in Pine Grove Cemetery
Online condolences may be expressed at www.petersonkraemer.com
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Jackie Anklam realized that Donald Trump was failing the American people when her father died of complications of COVID-19 in a Michigan hospital that ran short of personal protective equipment (PPE) for its workers
Trump not only refuses to learn from his early blunders but blithely flouts the safety measures critical to slowing the virus
Trump downplays the pandemic for personal political gain and divides Americans when they most need to pull together
“The president is supposed to put the American people first
He has put every American at risk,” said Anklam
president of United Steelworkers (USW) Local 9899
who believes her father contracted pneumonia and died because of PPE shortages and infection-control problems in the hospital treating him for COVID-19
Nearly 10 months after the pandemic hit the U.S., hospitals and other health care facilities continue to struggle with chronic, drastic shortages of respirators
Trump never worked to repair broken supply chains
He never used emergency powers that would have forced factories to retool and produce critical supplies
And he failed to deliver a comprehensive plan for reinvigorating America’s manufacturing base and averting future shortages of essential goods
Anklam represents hundreds of workers at Ascension St
two miles from the facility where her father died
After fighting to get more respirators and cleaning supplies earlier in the pandemic
her colleagues now need more gowns to care for growing numbers of COVID-19 patients
While the Trump administration fails to implement scientifically sound plans for safely reopening schools, restaurants and other businesses, infection rates in 25 states, including Michigan
They’re exhausted,” Anklam said of her co-workers
“They just pray every day that they don’t get it.”
Health care facilities and laboratories face severe shortages of the chemicals essential for analyzing patient samples
That forces health care officials to limit the number of people who can be tested even as they desperately attempt to track and contain the virus
the closing of community testing centers prompts some potentially contagious people to seek help in crowded emergency rooms
Despite the urgent need, Trump refuses to use his influence with Senate Republicans to push through a stimulus bill that would deliver $75 billion for testing and contact tracing
already approved by the Democratic-controlled House
also would extend federal unemployment benefits
health insurance and renters’ assistance to millions of workers thrown out of work because of the recession
Among those needing help is Anklam’s brother
who lost his job at a bus company months ago
His health care vanished along with his income
Although Trump’s own illness underscored the vulnerability of COVID-19 victims
including their need for affordable health care
he won’t lift a finger to help Americans less fortunate than himself
He told Senate Republicans to delay work on a stimulus package because he wanted them to focus on ramming through Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation to the Supreme Court instead
Packing the court with corporate-friendly justices matters more to him than providing the assistance ordinary people need to survive
Trump continues to trivialize the virus in a pathetic ploy to shore up his sagging image before the Nov
Just days before he revealed his own infection, Trump declared that the virus “affects virtually nobody” even though U.S. deaths already exceeded 200,000
some Americans also underestimate the threat the virus poses
Others emulate Trump’s cavalier refusal to wear masks or practice social distancing
putting their neighbors and communities at risk
Anklam frequently crosses paths with people ignoring safety measures
Although businesses post signs requiring face coverings
the owners say nothing to scofflaws for fear of risking a confrontation
he would demand strict compliance with safety guidelines while uniting Americans in a campaign to eradicate the virus and restore the economy
“But he’s a con man,” Anklam said
“He’s been conning his whole life
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USW Political Action Fund - 60 Boulevard of the Allies - Pittsburgh
after getting “pooled” at the Old Main fountain at the UA in the 1950s
James Richard “Dick” Anklam — a spirited man who was well known in the mining
industrial and building communities — died Monday
Anklam died at Northwest Medical Center where he was surrounded by family for several weeks
“He is at peace,” said Markie Anklam who was married to Dick for 61 years
“The qualities he passed on to me were that family matters
He put God first and he put others ahead of himself,” said James Anklam
attended sporting events when he and his brother and sister were young
“He taught us not to take anything for granted
He taught us that the time you spend with people and your family is the most important,” said James Anklam
His family reminisced about Dick’s adventurous life
and his love for the University of Arizona where four generations of Anklams graduated
Dick was born at the Stork’s Nest — Tucson’s first maternity ward — on July 26
He grew up with his parents on his family’s homestead that included hundreds of acres on Tucson’s west side where the JW Marriott Starr Pass Resort & Spa sits in the Tucson Mountains
Anklam Road is named after Dick’s great uncle and great aunt
Dick and his brother grew up free-spirited on the land and hunted for the family’s meals
was a “tough broad” who rarely was rattled
when the boys managed to shake their mother
when they killed rattlesnakes and skinned them
the snakes stood up in the sink,” said Benedict
Another instance was when Dick and his brother captured two bats and put them in the refrigerator
The boys experienced more adventures when they tagged along with their father
a foreman of the Civilian Conservation Corps
The elder Anklam’s work included construction of shelters on Gates Pass
outhouses and picnic tables in Sabino Canyon
he received “impeccable grades,” was editor of the school’s newspaper and lettered in track and cross country
He was awarded the Baird Scholarship to attend the UA
met their junior year at a Sabino Canyon picnic
They soon became sweethearts — marrying in 1955
He was a mining engineer and she was a teacher
The newlyweds found jobs on the Navajo Nation and lived in Bloomfield
Dick worked for Shell Oil coring oil samples and Markie taught high school students for several years before they moved to Danville
California after Dick took a job working in sales for Johns-Manville
an industrial corporation that supplied materials to manufacturers and the construction industry
He worked in California until 1985 when the Anklams returned to Tucson
Dick worked for contractors before joining the Arizona Builders Alliance
which represents companies that service the commercial and industrial construction industry
he formed an education program through Pima Community College and established an electrical apprenticeship training program
“He worked with instructors and had a series of safety classes in the construction trades,” said Markie Anklam
explaining that his curriculum affected hundreds of students
“Dick always had time for others and gave of himself,” said his wife
adding that he founded a prison ministry in the late 1980s and a halfway house for inmates to help them transition into society
A celebration of Anklam’s life will be 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 4 at Catalina Foothills Church, 2150 E. Orange Grove Road. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the church or Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Contact reporter Carmen Duarte at cduarte@tucson.com or 573-4104
This feature chronicles the lives of Tucsonans
Others have an impact on a smaller sphere of friends
Many lead interesting — and sometimes extraordinary — lives with little or no fanfare
Anyone who would like to submit names for consideration for a life story
please send to cduarte@tucson.com or call 573-4104
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The stories of Southern Arizona residents who made an impact on Tucson
He grew up with his parents on his family's homestead that included hundreds of acr…
Lee's family will operate the Iron Horse Neighborhood market
She taught at Amphi Public Schools and University of Arizona
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Jackie Anklam of Local Union 9899 was chosen as District 2’s USW Jefferson Award winner for her heroic work bringing safe drinking water to the people in Flint
when a state of emergency was declared due to water contamination
Anklam is an environmental technician at Saint Maries Hospital in the city of Saginaw
“When the Flint water deal happened here
I sat back and analyzed the situation and thought to myself: nobody in America should turn their faucet on and have contaminated water come out
the people of Flint couldn’t drink tap water
wash their clothes or brush their teeth for fear of further harm from the lead-contaminated water
Anklam contacted District 2 Women of Steel Coordinator Linda Lucas and asked if there were any lead-detection kits left over from the USW’s “Get the Lead Out” campaign in 2008
The two women took the leftover kits and got to work coordinating a water drop-off at Local 12075 in Flint
She then appealed to her own county’s health department for help
and they agreed to provide faucet filters for the homes of Steelworkers affected by lead-contaminated water
clothes and baby wipes from USW locals and other unions in her area
“Locals from all over poured in money
We used it to purchase Brita water filters
paper plates… Anything we could think of that they [Flint residents] were living without because using faucet water wasn’t an option.”
45 Women of Steel and their families along with Saginaw County Health Department staff gathered at Local 12075’s hall in Flint for a membership meeting where Anklam gave a “Get the Lead Out” presentation
the health department explained how to install and use the water filters and the local was treated to pizza and cookies
Volunteers made a total of three drop-offs to Flint
and United Food & Commercial Workers Union locals in the area not only helped by donating but by storing water
arranging for trucks to transport it and loading it into members’ and residents’ cars
Due to the generosity of unions in the Western Michigan area
the project overflowed with water and filters
so Anklam was able to extend aid to the broader community of Flint
“It was hard-working union members going door to door to get safe water to these people
We loaded their cars with as much water as they wanted and still had pallets left over that we took to the Michigan Eastern Food Bank where we gave lines of cars as many cases as they could hold.”
Anklam inherited her love and loyalty for the union from her father
“When I left my house for the first day of my first job
‘You’re going to a non-union shop
because you don’t have a voice there.’”
Anklam was very active in organizing Saint Maries in 2003 and serves as the president of her local
She still carries the sentiment her dad gave her a long time ago: “Without a union you don’t have a voice
the working class wouldn’t be where they are today
and I couldn’t imagine my life without my union.”
Mich.’s water crisis is just one example of the impressive work hundreds of USW members do to give back to their communities
If you know a Steelworker who is doing something amazing in their community, we want to know about it! Use the #USWCares hashtag and give a shout-out to @Steelworkers when you post on social media. To nominate a fellow member or local for the 2018 USW Jefferson Awards, visit http://usw.to/rq
See how the USW is making a real difference in our communities and our workplaces
Ole Miss alumni Jake and Liz Raulston share their experience of meeting at Ole Miss
getting married and opening a brewery together in Chattanooga TN
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Pen Argyl's Chase Anklam has Council Rock North's Dillon Sheehy on his back during the 160-pound final Friday at the Bethlehem Holiday Wrestling Classic at Liberty
In a Bethlehem Holiday Wrestling Classic without Sammy Sasso
Chase Anklam might have gone home with the Outstanding Wrestler award
After all, the Pen Argyl senior put on a really outstanding show in his run to the 160-pound championship he won Friday afternoon at Liberty's Memorial Gym
Anklam demolished Council Rock North’s Dillon Sheehy 17-4 in the final
His semifinal rout of Northwestern Lehigh’s Jackson Bernhard went to a 15-4 tune
the same score he pummeled Nazareth’s Connor Herceg by in his opening bout
In between came a technical fall in 5:23 (16-0) over Easton’s Gaven Krazer
“I’m hoping to give it my all every match I wrestle,” Anklam said
I want to push myself to go and get points
That’s precisely what Anklam did at Liberty and if he continues to wrestle that way he will be one tough out in the postseason
“I have the memories spurring me on,” he said
Anklam referred to the bad memories of the end of his junior season
when he had to forfeit the PIAA 2A medal he had earned when he was disqualified from the state tournament for flagrant misconduct after his medal match
“It took me a while to get over that,” he said
Everybody makes mistakes and I made a stupid decision
Jason Grim here and my club coaches at Dark Knights
When the misconduct occurred in Hershey it struck many District 11 fans and observers as odd
because Anklam enjoyed a well-earned reputation as a thoughtful
Given that he has just committed to wrestle at West Point
it seems likely that the incident in Hershey was a regrettable one-off
“It’s going to drive me all this season,” Anklam said
It was almost like you need some downs in life to come back from.”
If Anklam struggled a bit with a mental comeback from March in Hershey his physical side looks in fine fettle
His energy never faded on the mat and he was relentless in his attacks
“Working with wrestlers like Sammy Sasso I see they never stop
I am aiming for their non-stop mentality.”
Chase Anklam has developed that mindset pretty well
Brad Wilson may be reached at bwilson@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter @bradwsports. Find Lehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook
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wrestles Saucon Valley's Ty Druckenmiller in the District 11 Class AA tournament
As Chase Anklam grew up as a young wrestler in Wind Gap
he found an athlete whose example he wanted to follow
"Jordan Oliver is a great role model," said the Pen Argyl 126-pound freshman of the two-time NCAA champion at Oklahoma State and three-time PIAA champ from Easton
"I went to his matches and always watched him on television
after Anklam won the District 11 Class AA championship last weekend at Freedom
he’s in position to follow in Oliver’s footsteps: be a four-time D-11 champ
“I didn’t think about being a district champion at the start of the season
who will try to reach Hershey with a top-six finish at the Class AA Southeast Regional at Wilson-West Lawn that kicks off Friday at 4:45 p.m
“I just was just trying to get a lot of wins
defeating Tri-Valley junior Sam Hepler 3-2 in the final; Hepler was ranked No
5 in Class AA by Off the Mat entering the district tournament and was a returning state place-winner (seventh in 2014)
Such triumphs in the singlet of the Green Knights bring to mind another possible role model for Anklam
“I used to watch Mike Racciato (Pen Argyl’s three-time PIAA champion now wrestling at Pittsburgh) all the time,” Anklam said
Anklam has worked hard enough to compile a 24-4 record on the season
After a first-round bye at regionals he’ll face the winner of the first-round bout between Bristol’s Ricky Patterson and Schuylkill Valley’s Jethro Solomon
“Chase is in a good spot,” Pen Argyl coach Jason Grim said
“He’s excited; the first thing he said when he won the district was that he can’t wait until Friday
But after who Anklam sees in his club practices at Dark Knight in Stroudsburg
Anklam’s toughest opponent this season might have been himself
“Chase struggled with making weight,” Grim said
“Sometimes it’s hard to tell a young kid not to go home and eat
Chase is pretty consistent in the way he works out.”
Anklam chuckled when told of his coach’s comment
but I don’t think (Coach Grim) thinks I do,” Anklam said
“I have a diet I am supposed to stick to but sometimes I slip up.”
a former Pleasant Valley and East Stroudsburg University wrestler
with helping Anklam improve and “bringing him along.”
“Chase is really good on top and he has a really good cradle,” Grim said
Anklam said he’s been working on his skills on top for a long time
“From when I was little kid until now tilting on top gets drilled into me,” he said
then another tilt and it’s 6-0 or 8-0 and you have a comfortable lead.”
Anklam is getting more comfortable on his feet as well
“That’s something I have been working on in practice,” he said
“When I got into overtime in the district semifinals (against Tamaqua’s Tanner McHugh) I felt like I could get a takedown that I needed
Grim likes what he sees of Anklam in neutral
“He’s good on his feet,” the Pen Argyl coach said
“We might wish he was a little more offensive on his feet.”
who was a D-11 junior high champ at 115 pounds
has benefited from his meetings with Sasso and others
“Chase gets around in his wrestling,” Grim said
that helps him get battle-tested and it helps with the mental aspects of wrestling.”
Anklam’s poise has stood out as a ninth-grader
and he keeps his focus on the matter at hand with confidence
“In any tournament I expect to take first place
I don’t care who’s in front of me,” he said
“I think when I am at my best I can beat anybody.”
That’s a good attitude to take into the Southeast Regional
there’s Grant Bond of Class AA team champion Boiling Springs
“Chase has always had the talent,” Grim said
“But in the last six weeks he has really come on.”
Enough so to perhaps extend his season another week -- all the way to Hershey
Brad Wilson may be reached at bwilson@express-times.com. Follow him on Twitter @bradwsports
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LaDale Williams-Nelson is led into court while Assistant Kent County Prosecutor Kevin Bramble prepares for hearing
.st1{fill-rule:evenodd;clip-rule:evenodd;fill:#2a2a2a}By John Agar | jagar@mlive.comWYOMING
MI - A man who allegedly shot his girlfriend
was ordered to stand trial on multiple charges
is accused of killing Leticia "Letii" Vela
1 in their home in the 2100 block of Lee Street SW
based on gunfire soot found around the victim's eye
He said the injury - along with bruises and scrapes on the victim's body - was consistent with witness reports that Williams-Nelson and Vela were fighting before he held Vela against the wall
Wyoming District Judge Pablo Cortes ordered Williams-Nelson bound over for trial in Kent County Circuit Court on charges of charges of open murder
and interfering with electronic communications
testified earlier that friends had celebrated New Year's Eve at the house they shared on Lee Street
She said she went downstairs with her children to sleep while others left to continue partying
They returned around early the next morning
she went upstairs after she heard "a big ol' commotion."
Williams-Nelson had pinned Vela to the ground and was choking and punching her
She asked if he was going to kill her and take her away from her children
Anklam said she separated the two but they kept fighting
Williams-Nelson tucked two guns into his pants and tried to leave with Vela's cigarettes
She grabbed his hood and said he wasn't taking her things
"'Oh my God,'" before he fled
said tests showed the victim had ingested cocaine and marijuana at some point
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small hometown bowling alleys are being preserved for future generations
The nostalgia of the hardwood lanes in many of the alleys dates back to the 1940s and 1950s at the start of the bowling craze
“It’s a fun place to be,” said Dorie Anklam owner of D’s Burger and Bowl in Prentice
“It’s still the old wooden lanes with a little nostalgia from the older alleys.”
D’s Burger and Bowl had several owners and numerous name changes before going out of business prior to Anklam and her sister Darlene Teele purchasing the alley in 2008
“I grew up a mile from the bowling alley,” Anklam said
“The business was closed for about two years before we bought it
the business caters to local bowlers and tourists serving up burgers
Located one mile north of Prentice on County Road A
the four-lane alley features league and open bowling six days a week from 3 p.m
“It’s old-time bowling; we still use paper and pencil to score,” Anklam said
stripping off the old wax with a mop and reapplying oil with a machine
the lanes are sanded down and professionally resurfaced
Anklam's brother Dennis Hartmann helps maintain the alleys and equipment
He said he remembers growing up near the bowling alley and worked as a pin setter before automation took over in 1968
Hartmann updated the bar area of the bowling alley to make it more accessible to the bowlers
A small living area in the building was removed to enlarge the restaurant and bar
Several of the alley's original wooden Brunswick benches have been preserved in the locker room and the shoe changing area
and the rest remain in storage to be refurbished
Memory Lanes in Athens is a six-lane bowling alley and bar
the building constructed in the early 1900s formerly housed a barbershop and a mercantile
Owner Randy Walters bought the business in 2008 from Tony and Dennis Kraft of Athens and renamed it Memory Lanes in honor of its rich history
who lives in an apartment above the bowling alley with his son
replaced the bar and some of the windows in the building but retained the alley's benches and wooden lanes
they are the same as they use to be,” Walters said
“They are well-maintained for being almost 60 years old.”
Sponsoring a men’s and a women’s league and a mixed fun league
The bar serves pizza and sub sandwiches and is available for parties and special occasions
in the off season Walters is hoping to organize an Air Soft Pistol League on the lanes for the first time this summer
“You have to rethink your business,” Walters said
there isn’t any bowling; there are so many other activities going on.”
said he has been participating in league bowling at the Gleason Bowling Center for 29 years
His team is one of the oldest remaining teams in the league
we bowled with her folks; that’s how we got started,” he said
“Originally we had a family bowl on Friday nights.”
who owned JME General Store in Gleason until the late 1990s
also sponsored bowling teams for the store
It’s pretty much the same as it’s always been.”
the Gleason Bowling is now owned by Todd Schram
The six-lane alley sponsors a men’s and a woman’s league
a family league and a special youth league on Wednesday evenings as well as open bowling
Schram completed an electronic scoring system
which had been installed by the previous owner
the full bar and restaurant serves up daily specials including Mexican food
“It’s a fun place to hang out,” Schram said
Phone 715-873-4588 or check out Gleason Bowling Center on Facebook
Phone 715-257-7151 or check out Memory Lanes of Athens on Facebook
Birnamwood ElementaryFor Daily Herald MediaWVLHS
Students named to Wisconsin Valley Lutheran High School's 2015-16 first quarter honor roll are: High Honors: 3.8 to 4.0 GPA: Garrett Anklam
Honorable Mention: 3.0–3.39 GPA: Cassie Bieneck
Merrill and Wisconsin Rapids were inducted into the Wisconsin Valley Lutheran High School chapter of the National Honor Society
The ceremony took place in front of a crowd of parents
friends and family members at Wisconsin Valley Lutheran High School in Mosinee
Those selected for this prestigious honor took part in the ceremonial lighting of candles of scholarship
The ceremony brings the total number of students inducted from the school
are the nation's premier organizations established to recognize outstanding high school and middle level students
these two societies serve to honor those students who have demonstrated excellence in key areas
it is estimated that more than 1 million students participate in National Honor Society and National Junior Honor Society activities
Students named to the A Honor Roll for the first quarter are: Eighth grade: Lauren E
Students named to the B Honor Roll for the first quarter are: Eighth grade: Sierra M
is creating a research facility in Germany to investigate the use of rubber extracted from dandelions
An eventual switch to the material would mean less environmental impact
The “green pet project” of Continental
a giant automotive manufacturer with almost €40Bn yearly revenues
consists of replacing conventional natural rubber with dandelion rubber
The project is well underway after the launch in 2014 of a premium winter tire using taraxagum
and will now progress to the next phase with a brand-new €35M research facility
The new Taraxagum Lab Anklam
will scale up the production of dandelion rubber
Continental plans to hire over 20 employees and expand the dandelion fields to 800 acres
which could produce the rubber at a scale of tons
This new material is more environmentally-friendly not because it replaces a synthetic source
This would mean much shorter transportation routes
not to mention the advantage of better control of the supply
Taraxagum is the result of a collaboration between Continental and several partners, including the Fraunhofer Institute for Molecular Biology and Applied Ecology (IME) and the Julius Kühn Institute
to cultivate a robust and high-yield dandelion breed
Russian dandelion
the species on which the new breed is based
It was originally discovered and cultivated in the Soviet Union as a domestic source of rubber
and it was used in Europe and the US too as an emergency rubber source during World War II
With a stabler international trade and bigger yields
rubber trees beat dandelion rubber despite the high quality of the latter
In a trajectory somewhat similar to the use of bacteriophages as antibiotics
dandelion rubber is now back under the European microscope
While classifying the project as a “major entrepreneurial risk”, Continental has reasons to be enthusiastic. Taraxagum project has received three different awards:, from the automotive trade fair Automechanika, the prestigious Joseph Fraunhofer prize for research and the GreenTec Awards
is that the first taraxagum tires perform really well
This dandelion rubber definitely looks like a side investment on green projects gone right. Increasingly, big consumer brands are investing in such initiatives, like Adidas and its spider silk sneakers or Lego and its sustainable toys
Images by Seqoya/Shutterstock; Continental
As Europe’s top biotech website for over a decade
Labiotech.eu offers trusted insights and updates for the global life sciences community
This custom repaint provides the Lufthansa “Anklam” livery for the payware PMDG Boeing 737-600 NGX
It is designed for those who enjoy replicating short-haul European operations in Microsoft Flight Simulator X with precise attention to authentic airline details
the package only includes texture files and requires the separate
commercially available PMDG 737-600 NGX base product
widely recognized as Germany’s primary carrier
has a longstanding custom of naming aircraft after hometowns and cities
the Boeing 737-600 bears the name “Anklam” on its fuselage
The real-world 737-600 series is well suited for various routes within Europe
and this livery reflects the airline’s sleek
The smaller-scale 737-600—part of the Next Generation family—incorporates advanced cockpit instrumentation
making it a favorite among flight simulation enthusiasts who appreciate realistic systems
Screenshot showcasing the Boeing 737-600 with Lufthansa’s “Anklam” markings
The included .ptp livery file is compatible with the PMDG Livery Manager
Follow these steps to integrate the repaint:
All reasonable steps have been taken to ensure this repaint matches the actual Lufthansa liveries
neither the author nor any involved parties can be held liable for any unintended consequences
can be reported to Corina Meyer for further assistance
This repaint does not include the original PMDG Boeing 737-600 NGX payware model
the base package must be acquired separately
have an excellent time operating this recognizable jet in your virtual skies
View important Copyright © information related to freeware files here
The archive pmdg737-600_lufthansa_d-abir.zip has 9 files and directories contained within it
This list displays the first 500 files in the package
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.st1{fill-rule:evenodd;clip-rule:evenodd;fill:#2a2a2a}By Brad Devereaux | bdeverea@mlive.comBrad Devereaux | The Saginaw NewsThe Schwinn moped was damaged in a crash with an SUV today in Saginaw
A Saginaw man driving a moped crashed into a Chevrolet Suburban at the intersection of Meade and Michigan about 6:45 p.m
was driving his Schwinn moped northbound on Michigan when a Chevrolet Suburban being driven by Joaquin Garcia
westbound on Meade failed to yield at a stop sign and pulled out in front of the moped
Mark Garabelli of the Saginaw County Sheriff's Office said
Anklam was not wearing a helmet during the crash
Anklam was at fault because he was driving with a suspended license
Traffic was partially blocked for about a half hour after the accident
Both drivers are Saginaw residents and refused medical treatment at the scene
Ocala-News.com
Two women were arrested by the Marion County Sheriff’s Office after they attempted to leave a Walmart in Ocala with nearly $2,300 in unpaid merchandise
an MCSO deputy responded to the Walmart located at 34 Bahia Avenue in Ocala in reference to a retail theft incident
the deputy made contact with an employee who advised that two women had attempted to leave the store with two shopping carts filled with numerous unpaid items
The deputy noted that the store’s video surveillance footage showed the two female theft suspects pushing shopping carts past the registers without attempting to pay for the items
The women then proceeded to head for the exit when an employee confronted them
The two women left the shopping carts and quickly exited the store
The MCSO report stated that the first female suspect’s shopping cart had 72 items that were valued at $898.52
and the second female suspect’s shopping cart had 120 items valued at $1,391.01
and the first female suspect was eventually identified as 28-year-old Elizabeth Ann Anklam
A warrant was obtained for Anklam’s arrest
and two deputies responded to a residence located in the 10300 block of SE 131st Lane in Marion County on Sunday
The MCSO report stated that the deputies knocked on the front door of the home and made contact with a woman identified as 23-year-old Estrella Oquendo
A tattoo of a lion’s head was visible on her left hand
which matched a tattoo that was seen on the second female suspect’s hand in photographs that were taken from Walmart’s video surveillance footage
Oquendo refused to discuss the theft incident
The deputies also made contact with Anklam at the residence
she admitted that she had been at the Walmart with Oquendo at the time of the incident
She also advised that they had both left the store without purchasing the items that were in their carts
Anklam and Oquendo were arrested and transported to Marion County Jail where they are currently being held on $2,000 bond
They are both being charged with retail theft of $750 or more
Both suspects are scheduled to appear in court at 9 a.m
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