Hmdn MPD: Woman shot and killed near 38th and Galena early Saturday
MILWAUKEE 鈥?A 27-year-old Milwaukee woman died after she was hit by two different cars while crossing the street Saturday night, according to police.The medical examiner identified the woman as Storm Maria Rumpf. According to a statement from Milwaukee police, the incident happened near 23nd and Greenfield around 10:20 p.m. Saturday, July 15. Police said Rumpf was crossing Greenfield when the first driver heading eastbound on Greenfield hit her. The driver continued down the road and is still at large. Then, police said, a second driver ran over Rumpf but stayed at the scene. That driver was ide
stanley cup ntified by police as a 52-year-old Plymouth man.Surveillance video viewed by TMJ4 News clearly shows Rumpf walking within the crosswalk when sh
vaso stanley e was hit. Rumpf was brought to the hospital where she died, according to police. Police said the second driver was taken into custody and criminal charges are pending.Omar Bravo, the community liaison for Christ-St. Peter Lutheran School, said day or night, it s a dangerous intersection. How dangerous it can be here at times speeding. [Drivers] know there s a church, school here. And they keep going, said Bravo. He said he s seen a number of accidents just outside the church, which sits at the intersection where Rumpf was hit. Bravo was working at Christ-St. Peter, he said, when another pedestrian
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June Bacon-Bercey passed away on July 3, 2019 at the age of 90, but her legacy on breaking down barriers in meteorology, TV, and science lives on forever. That was mom, you don t do something halfway. That was the lesson I took with me for the rest of my life. Dail St. Claire could talk about her mom for hours. She always said love what you do. Family and community is first and she always figured out a way to make it all work, says St. Claire.Her mom, June Bacon-Bercey was a pioneer in the male-dominated fields of meteorology and science in the 50s, 60, and 70s. And an inspiration to many, including her daughter. She always said chance favors the prepared mind and thats how she approached everything. June was a trailblazer becoming the first female and African American to earn a degree in meteorology and the first female meteorologist in the U.S. to do weather on TV back in 1971. In 1972, she became the first female and African American to be awarded the AMS Seal of Approval for excellence in on-air meteorology. It was Junes way o
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stanley cup usa She took her job and career very seriously, which is why when she became chief meteor
stanley cups uk ologist she doggedly pursued getting the Seal of Approval because she thought that was essential given the TV weather girl persona of the day, says St. Claire of her mother.After four years on Buffalo TV, she left to get her Doctorate in Science and went back to work for the National Oceanic and At