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CSU makes changes to Around the Horn schedule 25 Jan, 2021
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic continues to affect people’s schedules as many CSU students and employees continue to learn and work primarily from home, leading to less activity on campus and an 85% drop in ridership for the on-campus Around the Horn bus route. As a result, Around the Horn is reducing services effective Jan. 25, to adjust to the decreased ridership demand and to protect Transfort drivers and the public from COVID-19.
Horn buses will move to a modified schedule, including going from 10-minute frequency to 20-minute frequency. A reduction in the number of buses transporting per hour will increase wait times, but also decreases face-to-face interactions and potential spread of COVID-19.
Credit: Amanda Cowie
Seleta Nothnagel takes her pet chicken with her to run errands, bringing the bird into places like Home Depot or Joann Fabric. The 2-year-old Blue Maran chicken regularly dresses up for the outings, often sporting a heart-covered dress and matching diaper.
Nothnagel, 37, bought Blue at a feed store for about $12, but she doesn t treat the chicken like some simple farm bird. Blue lives with Nothnagel inside her Wellington, Colo. home, and has a place to sleep on Nothnagel s bedside table. The 5-pound bird loves cheese, Pop Tart crusts, strawberries, and watermelon. Get push notifications with news, features and more.
Blue, a Blue Splash Marans, accompanies her owners on hikes in the mountains.
There’s still a solid layer of snow on the ground when I meet Seleta and Mike Nothnagel at their Wellington home. Wiping my boots on a mat that says “Welcome to the Farm” doesn’t seem to help much and I ask if they’d like me to take them off before coming in.
“Oh lord, no,” Seleta Nothnagel said. “We
require shoes in this house.”
That’s because in addition to three dogs and two cats, the Nothnagel residence is also home to a half dozen chickens. Right off the kitchen, in what usually would be the dining room, sit two indoor coops for the birds, who are roaming around the living room wearing cloth diapers.
PEI animal hospital adds first-ever MRI scanner
The machine will enhance offerings in internal medicine, surgery, neurology, and more at UPEI’s Atlantic Veterinary College
January 7, 2021
Animals in Atlantic Canada will soon benefit from enhanced veterinary care, thanks to a new high-tech upgrade.
The Atlantic Veterinary College (AVC) at University of Prince Edward Island (UPEI) is set to expand its diagnostic imaging capacity with the addition of a magnetic resonance imagining (MRI) scanner.
The machine, which is being installed with financial support from the Rathlyn Foundation, is the first MRI to be added to a veterinary hospital in Atlantic Canada, says AVC’s dean, Greg Keefe, DVM, M.Sc., MBA.