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 From tornadoes to high winds, hail to snowstorms, weather radars allow us to see into the clouds,  stanley water bottle and see where a storm will strike. But across Wisconsin, not all communities have the same access to these important tools.Radar coverage across Southeast Wisconsin is great. Our area is covered well by the National Weather Service  NWS  radar in Sullivan. Other radars that serve the  stanley tumblers state include Green Bay, La Crosse, and one in Duluth, Minnesota which covers part of northwest Wisconsin. But the places in between those sites, like southwest Wisconsin, parts of central Wisconsin, and much of northern Wisconsin, aren t served well by the existing radar network.Geoff Weller, Chief Meteorologist at Newswatch 12 in Rhinelander, knows all too well. To viewers, it looks like the storms falling apart on radar when it actually is not. It actually could be growing, but the radar can t see it,  Weller explained.In the summer, severe storms become hard to track, and in winter stanley cup , snow events sometimes aren t even detected by radar.Weller recalls a recent event where the radar wasn t providing clear, low-level coverage. We had to rely on ground truth reports, law enforcement, weather watchers, and camera networks. In 2022, that s kind of prehistoric. But that will soon change. We re going to know that there s a tornado on the ground sooner than we have before,  explained Tad Maguire, Vice President of Global Sales for Climavision. Climavision is a private company that is working to install hund Jnud Here are the most-Googled Super Bowl foods in every state
 PHOENIX, Ariz. 鈥?An Arizona State University researcher is working with two others to design smell tests that could be used to help identify cases of COVID-19.One is a  stanley us simple scratch-and-sniff test. We know it won t be as accurate as a viral nasal swab or saliva test. We just want something that is pretty good but is much cheaper, much faster, much easier to deploy all over the world,  says ASU researcher Rick Gerkin.The study is being funded by the National Insti stanley termosy tutes of Health. On this kind of test, there are four spots with four different odors on them. If you scratch them, you can respon stanley becher d,  says Gerkin.There is also a test that focuses on the amount of odor that is detected.Thousands of participants will be asked to take these smell tests and a viral test as well. Then, researchers will compare the results. A kind of test that you can take out of your pocket or a stack and do in a minute. Do it every day at the cost of a dollar for a week,  says Gerkin.The second part of the study aims to see how the tests help in larger settings, like identifying outbreaks. For example, you would want to do this at schools. If the kids show up in the morning and take the test, you immediately know if there was a change in the level of smell loss at the school level. Then, maybe you would know there was a COVID outbreak,  says Gerkin.Dr. Franklyn Gergits sees patients with loss of smell on a daily basis. The loss of smell is often temporary, lasting a few weeks. It s the inflammation comi