Hey hun. Look at all this extra room i have on this king size ikea bed. Are you wearing a. Duvet cover . Why yes. Yes i am. Wheres mom . We finally redid our bedroom and shes prettttttttttty into it. Whats your dream . At ikea, we help you live it. Make the dream yours. At ikea, we help you live it. Action news, dell wire valleys leading news program, with jim gardner. We are suffering from one of the worst and longest flu seasons in years. Here is a sobering statistic. One out of ten deaths in america since the start of february has been caused by the flu. It is monday night. The big story on action news tonight is a medical crisis throughout the tristate area and the rest of the country and the peak of the flu season could be wakes away. Dann cuellar is at hanneman hospital. Its historically bad and getting historically worse. Thats right, jim. The number of flu cases across the area is exploding. Many more cases reported by this time last year and last week was a bad week for people
One out of ten deaths in america since the start of february has been caused by the flu. It is monday night. The big story on action news tonight is a medical crisis throughout the tristate area and the rest of the country and the peak of the flu season could be wakes away. Dann cuellar is at hanneman hospital. Its historically bad and getting historically worse. Thats right, jim. The number of flu cases across the area is exploding. Many more cases reported by this time last year and last week was a bad week for people getting the flu. Doctors across the region are reporting a huge strike in the flu known as type a. Its packing a punch. Chills, coughing, nausea and diarrhea. There have been 26 influenza deaths alone. These are the numbers being reported since october 1st with Montgomery County reporting highest, 2100 cases. New jersey doubled the number of flu cases last week with 2,000. That compares with the 4,709 cases it saw the previous week. You can get the flu with the previous
Tuesday, May 25: How to build a better grid
In each instance, lawmakers left
the state’s lightly regulated energy markets alone, choosing cheap electricity over a more stable system. As a result, experts say, the power grid that Texans depend on to heat and cool their homes and run their businesses has become less and less reliable and more susceptible to weather-related emergencies.
“Everyone has been in denial,” said Alison Silverstein, a consultant who works with the U.S. Department of Energy and formerly served as a senior adviser at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. “They treat each individual extreme event as a one-off, a high-impact, low-frequency event, which means, ‘I hope it doesn’t happen again.’”