Auteur Sujet: myah Timber tower rising over Milwaukee a greener way to build  (Lu 30 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 161869
    • drwg The Quest TV Competition Turns Fantasy Into Reality Television
myah Timber tower rising over Milwaukee a greener way to build
« le: Novembre 22, 2024, 09:17:31 am »
Jrsw Johns Hopkins count shows US could soon hit 1 million COVID-19 deaths
 WEST ALLIS, Wis. 鈥?A 9-year-old boy is seriously injured after being hit by a suspected drunk driver. It happened Sunday afternoon near 84th and National in West Allis. West Allis Police said they took the 73-year-old man suspected of hitting the child into custody, but charges have not been filed by the Milwaukee County District Attorney s office yet. TMJ4 talked to nearby neighbors who said that particular intersection is tricky.  We are so careful when we drive. Sometimes we take this side, not this side, because we want to be careful of the kids,  Sally Hussein said. Sally Hussein and her husband have lived across the street from the Joyce Ann Radtke Skate Park in West Allis for years. They said there are always kids playing there.  20, 25 sometimes. Almost time, at least, 10 to 15, at least. Sometimes it s 25 to 30,  Sally Hussein recalls.On Sunday, things took a turn for the worst, when a 9-year-old was riding his bike and trying to cross 84th Street when stanley cup  was hit by a car.   I see th stanley italia e bike on the ground, and I see the red truck. They still talked with the driver here and made a test for the drunk,  Abdelrida Hussein said. Neighbors said that this intersection is complicated and they want to see better signage to warn drivers.  We need more signs and also to give attention,  Abdelrida Hussein recommended.  Take care or slow down, in front o stanley cup f you, kids playing. That s good, especially in the park,  Sally Hussein said. Its about time to watch on your time. Stream local new Wmit Summerfest Artist Spotlight: Jonathan Michaels
 When Noelia Aponte Silva an stanley portugal d Monserrat Alvarez Matehuala started climbing, they felt very isolated and unwelcome. It just started to feel like in my like, am I the only light brown person that is coming into the gym to climb   Aponte Silva said.  To me, it just felt very intimidating.  It just wasn t a very diverse space, like it was very homogenous, and I didn t see anybody who looked like me,  Alvarez Matehuala said.At times, they questioned if they wanted to continue the sport, but they found nature healing. They loved how figuring out a route challenged their minds, and climbing helped them to feel strong. So they searched for others in the national climbing community who looked like them. They found Brown Girls Climb. Alvarez Matehuala is the Outdoor Program Director, and Aponte Silva is the Colorado Local Leader. Brown Girls Climb is a woman of color-led LLC and small business that tri stanley water jug es to promote rock-climbing in underrepresented communities and expand the narrative of who climbs and creates leadership opportunities for women of color and non-binary folks of color,  Alvarez Matehuala said.Unfortunately, there are barriers for women of color to access climbing. It can be a very expensive sport, we re talking about shoes, crash pads, robes, and it goes on and on, right   Aponte Silva said.Alvarez Matehuala and Aponte Silva say its not an issue of getting people of color into the climbing world for the first time. Its bringing them back to a wo stanley cups uk rld in which theyve been un