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Le chaos à la sortie de Val Thorens ??#TDF2019 #TDF #veloRTBF pic.twitter.com/l4F5SkJ1F2— Wanty-Gobert Cycling Team (@TeamWantyGobert) July 26, 2019 160
JOHNSTOWN, Colo. – After leaving a negative online review, a customer says she was threatened with a lawsuit.Liz Griswold paid for a ghost tour in Denver, but bad weather prevented her from feeling comfortable making the 50-minute drive from Johnstown. She tried to cancel her booking hours before the event, but when she was unable to cancel or receive a refund, she left a review.“My friend and I signed up to go on this tour tonight and could not make it because of the icy roads, snow, 20-degree weather. When they say no refund they mean it. We wasted a total of dollars to sit at home because they refused to cancel the tour,” a screenshot of her review showed. 683
Lawrence County, Indiana, prosecutors filed criminal charges Thursday against a Mitchell Community Schools nurse for stealing students' medication and ingesting it herself.Carol Sanders is charged with felony official misconduct, felony neglect of a dependent and five counts of misdemeanor theft.Police arrested Sanders Thursday and she was booked into the Lawrence County Jail.A staff member at Burris Elementary launched an investigation earlier this month after medication belonging to students went missing.Sanders admitted to stealing amphetamines, Ritalin, Zyrtec and other medications from students at Burris Elementary and Hatfield Elementary.The school nurse also admitted to replacing some of the students’ medications with baby aspirin.Sanders said she stole the medications between February 25 and March 7 of 2019, court records show.“Carol stated she stole the medication because she is an addict,” read the probable cause affidavit. “Carol admitted to needing help with her addiction.”Carol Sanders also admitted that this is not the first time she’s been terminated from a nursing job for stealing and ingesting medication.Sanders said she omitted that information to the school district during the hiring process.Superintendent Dr. Mike Wilcox said the district performed an expanded criminal history check and no prior history was reported.Wilcox provided the following statement. “The Mitchell Community School Family is deeply concerned about this event. This, or any other, issue that forces us to question the safety of any Mitchell student immediately becomes our top priority. Our outstanding school administrators and school resource officer responded firmly, fairly, and in a timely manner. The parents of our students effected by this event, who were contacted immediately and have shown remarkable support. Mrs. Sanders is no longer employed by Mitchell Community Schools. She has submitted her letter of resignation, The Mitchell team of students, families, community members, and educators will continue to analyze current practices and collaborate on best solutions in regard to all Mitchell students."Sanders is scheduled for an initial hearing in Lawrence County on March 25. No attorney is listed for her. 2251
In the last several days, dozens of major universities have decided to cancel in-person classes as coronavirus fears spread nationwide. The number of cases have jumped in recent days as testing is becoming available across the US. Universities are opting to conduct classes online. Some have said that in-person classes will continue on an indefinite basis, while other universities are planning on shutting down classrooms for several weeks. This is due to health officials recommending that the public avoid close social contact as they try to get a handle on the virus spreading nationally. Here is a list of Division I universities canceling in-person classes:Arizona:Arizona State UniversityCalifornia:University of California-BerkeleyUniversity of California – San DiegoLoyola Marymount UniversitySan Jose UniversitySanta Clara UniversityStanford UniversityUCLAUSCColorado:University of Colorado - BoulderConnecticut:Quinnipiac UniversitySacred Heart UniversityD.C.: American UniversityGeorgetown UniversityFlorida:Florida State UniversityUniversity of FloridaUniversity of North FloridaUniversity of South FloridaUniversity of West FloridaUniversity of Central FloridaFlorida Agricultural and Mechanical UniversityFlorida Atlantic UniversityNew College of FloridaIndiana: Ball State UniversityIndiana UniversityUniversity of Notre DamePurdue UniversityIowa: University of Iowa Iowa State UniversityUniversity of Northern IowaKentucky:University of KentuckyUniversity of LouisvilleMaryland:Coppin State UniversityUniversity of MarylandTowson UnviersityMassachusetts:Boston UniversityHarvardUniversity of Massachusetts AmherstNortheastern University Michigan: Central Michigan UniversityUniversity of MichiganMissouri:Saint Louis UniversityNebraska:University of NebraskaNew Jersey:Monmouth UniversityNJITPrinceton UniversityRutgers UniversitySeton HallNew York: Columbia UniversityCornell UniversityFordham UniversityHofstra UniversityIona CollegeManhattan CollegeSt. John’s UniversitySyracuse UniversityNorth Carolina:Duke UniversityOhio: Bowling Green State UniversityUniversity of CincinnatiKent State UniversityMiami UniversityOhio UniversityOhio State UniversityUniversity of ToledoWright State UniversityXavier UniversityYoungstown State UniversityTennessee:Vanderbilt UniversityTexas:Rice UniversityVermont: University of VermontVirginia:University of VirginiaWashington:Seattle UniversityUniversity of Washington Wisconsin:University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison 2513
In like a lion, out like a lion?Don't let this weather April Fool you, after a warm weekend in many parts of the US, temperatures are dipping dramatically.From St. Louis to New York, millions of Americans enjoyed barbecues, beaches and parks with temperatures reaching into the 60s and 70s. Even parts of Alaska reached 70 degrees on Saturday -- the earliest in the year anywhere in the state has hit that high.But here's hoping the tulips and the sprinkler systems haven't yet made their way back into your yard as temperatures will be falling rapidly across large swaths of the country.By Monday morning temperatures are expected to drop so dramatically that over 20 million people from Arkansas to North Carolina will be under a freeze warning.Northeast likely to experience most dramatic changeCNN meteorologist Michael Guy expects a stunning reversal of temperatures for April 1 -- ranging from 10-20 degrees below average for this time of year.Guy says the most extreme drops are forecast to be in the Northeast, with New York City dropping from Sunday's 65 degree high to a forecast 46 degrees, Boston falling from 70 to 45 degrees and Washington DC from 64 to 45 degrees.The cold snap is due to a strong cold front moving in and the battle between warm versus cold air this time of year, he says.Most people in the Northeast, mid-South and Midwest will see highs in the 40s and the 50s.That means a city like Pittsburgh, after reveling in a high of 67 Saturday, will fall back to earth with temperatures in the upper 30s on Sunday.As the United States wakes up Monday, many of us will be trading out our flip flops for a closed toe and pulling our winter jackets back out of the storage closet.This is only temporary, however, as some part of the South are expected to bounce back to spring by Wednesday with Atlanta seeing temperatures of nearly 80 by next weekend. 1886