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Licx The Mediterranean diet doesn  t benefit everyone, study says
 APPLETON 鈥?One Appleton salon owner is suing Governor Tony Evers after his Safer at Home order forced her to close her business.  Jessica Netzel, owner if Kingdom Kuts in Appleton, filed the lawsuit against Governor Evers, Appleton Police Chief Todd Thomas, and Wisconsin Department of Health Services Secretary Andrea Palm. Coronavirus in Wisconsin: Live Updates From Across the StateThe Rebound Milwaukee: Resources For Getting Back To NormalWe re Open: These Restaurants Are Still Offering Carryout And DeliveryThe lawsuit comes after the Appleton Police Department issued a cease and desist against her business. The document stated that if she continues to operate her business as normal, she could face up to 30 days in prison, up to a $500 fine, or loss of her license. According to the lawsuit, the letter states  the Wisconsin Department of Health Services issued emergency Orders limiting human contact and closing non-essential businesses.  Her remaining open breaks the rules of this order. Two days after police stanley cup  issued the cease and desist to Netzel, officers went back to her business and informed her that she was being referred to Outagamie County District Attorney for criminal prosecution.According to the lawsuit, there are scripture references within Netzel s business, and Kingdom Kuts is a ministry of hers. She believes she is to share her faith within her work at Kingdom Kuts, and the  stanley cup Safer at Home  stanley becher order is preventing her from doing so. Additionally, Netzel is a registered  Bola Soccer-crazed Brazil finally wins Olympic gold
 HARROLD, Texas  AP  鈥?An unlikely battleground over whether public schools must allow transgender students to use the bathroom of their choice is taking shape in two tiny towns in Texas and Arizona, neither of which currently enrolls anyone who is transgender.Eleven states suing the Obama administration claim that a new federal directive about transgender students thrusts  seismic changes  upon 100,000 schools nationwide. But only two districts joined the lawsuit 鈥?Harrold, a Texas farming town with 100 students and a 2016 stanley fr  graduating class of four, and the Heber-Overgaard Unified School District northeast of Phoenix, a conservative region where summer homes are popular.The directive handed down this month says transgender students must be allowed to use bathrooms and locker rooms that match their gender identity. It is a theoretical scenario at best for Harrold and Heber-Overgaard, which together have roughly 550 students.Kindergarteners a termo stanley nd high school students in Harrold share 10 bathrooms in a single brick schoolhouse that is shorter than the football field, where the Harrold Hornets play six-man football because there are not enough players for 11. A few times a day, a train rumbles past the schoolhouse. Superintendent David Thweatt says  hobos  sometimes jump off and wander toward campus. Once, he said, a drifter holed up in a school bus and left a smell that took days to air out.It s those sorts of strangers, Thweatt says, who could take advantage of  stanley usa bathroom rights for