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RACINE, Wis. 鈥?City of Racine Police Officers had to shoot a dog that had attacked its 70-year-old owner on Saturday, police said.According to a police dept. spokesperson, officers responded to the 1800 block of Lathrop Ave. just before 12 p.m. for a report of a woman being attacked by her own dog. When o
stanley cup fficers arrived, they found the 70-year-old on
stanley flasche the ground, bleeding excessively. The officers pried the door open because it was locked and then shot and killed the dog. The victim was air-lifted to a hospital in Milwaukee, due to the severity of her injuries, according to police.Full statement from police: On Saturday, November 11, 2023 at approximately 11:50 am officers responded to the 1800
stanley cup block of Lathrop Ave. regarding a woman who called in to report that her dog attacked her. When officers arrived they could see the 70 year old female on the ground bleeding excessively. Due to the doors being locked, officers pried their way into the house. The dog was shot and the female was transported to a local hospital. Due to the severity of the females injuries she was air lifted to Milwaukee. Its about time to watch on your time. Stream local news and weather 24/7 by searching for TMJ4 on your device.Available for download on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and more.Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip Peuz Olympic triathletes swim in Seine River after days of concerns about water quality
The Department of Energy recently awarded $39 million in grant funding to 18 universities and labs across the United States that are working to cut down the carbon footprint of various construction materials. The labs are trying to create replacements for things like concrete, wood, insulation, and paneling.Cement production, the base material used to create concrete when mixed with other materials like water, sand, and other cohesives, accounts for 7% of
stanley cup global carbon emissions, in large part due to the burning of quarried limestone.It is created when limestone is burned at extremely hot temperatures. That combustion process creates a large amount of CO2 that is then released into the at
stanley us mosphere.Wil Srubar, an associate professor of civil and architectural engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder, received one of the highest grant amounts, $3.2 million, for his work to create a greener alternative to quarried limestone. Were tryi
stanley tazas ng to make a cement that stores and sequesters more CO2 than is emitted during its manufacture, he said.Srubar hypothesized that microalgae could create limestone in a way that was healthier for the Earths atmosphere. Through a $500,000 grant a year ago, he tested his theory on a microalgae known as coccolithophores, which, through photosynthesis, sequesters carbon out of the atmosphere. The algae creates an armor, as Srubar describes it, that greatly resembles the same compounds as limestone. Through a process that separates the armor