Jkbz Downtown Appreciation Week underway in Milwaukee
Firefighters in Adams County, Colorado, were called on to solve quite the puppy predicament Monday night.A 9-week-old blue nose pitbull pup had to be rescued from the inside of a reclining couch. Paulie Johnston was one of the firefighters involved in cracking the canine couch conundrum. As he tells said, the call came in as whats called a citizen assist, a common non-emergency request. Think cats in trees and the like.This one, though, was different. Four firefighters from South Adams County Fire Department Engine 26 鈥?Johnston, Matt Wood, Ryan Applegate and Chris Groetzinger 鈥?responded to the home where the puppy, name
stanley cups d Nina, was stuck inside a sectional sofa. Puppy rescued from inside a couch All four of us are big dog lovers. A lot of us have more than one, Johnston said. We got to the house and the family was a little upset, and rightfully so. So we got there a
stanley quencher nd [my fellow firefighters] grabbed their tools and Matt and I got behind the couch. I just comforted the little puppy, told her she w
stanley cup as a good girl, gave her some scratches and [Matt] pretty much took apart the couch. Nina had apparently climbed underneath the couch from behind and got stuck inside. To make matters worse, she was being choked by one of the interior bars and was having trouble breathing.For that reason, taking the couch apart was the only way to get her out. Once the puppy was out, thousands of puppy kisses to [Matt]. Wood, apparently a jack of all trades Gixk Edith s Bill: Lawmakers push for bill named after local woman in next COVID-19 relief package
A lot of things are changing for schools this year. Some classes may be online and some may be partially on campus. Regardless of where they re taking place, teachers are still spending money on supplies.According to a survey by AdoptAClassroom.org, many teachers have spent about a third of their school supply expenses on distance
stanley us learning materials. They re actually spending more, said Ann Pifer, Executive Director at AdoptAClassroom. 70% of the teachers we surveyed said that they have delivered supplies to students homes, either by bringing them personally or by mailing assignments with supplies. Nearly every three out of four teachers have spent money on printers, ink and paper to make work packets for students who may not have access
stanley cup to computers and internet.Nearly half have spent money on postage and mailing supplies, so they can send learning materials to students.Even in schools where classes are being held in person, AdoptAClassroom still expects teach
caneca stanley ers to spend more money on supplies. In a normal elementary classroom, there s a basket of pens and papers and crayons and scissors on a table, said Pifer. And groups of students share those supplies to do projects. They re not going to be able to do that this year. Through AdoptAClassroom.org, people can donate to teachers and those educators can use that money to spend in an online marketplace.