Resolution In Support Of 2020 Election In Green Bay Passes, Barely By Robert Kennedy
May 5, 2021 3:43 AM
GREEN BAY, WI (WTAQ-WLUK) – Green Bay’s city council passed a resolution Tuesday night expressing confidence in how the city conducted the November election. However, almost half the council sat out the vote.
Conservatives, including Republican state lawmakers, have alleged Mayor Eric Genrich’s office illegally let outside groups take over decision making from the city clerk for the election. City officials have strongly denied the accusations.
At the virtual meeting, seven Green Bay area residents told city council members it’s time to put allegations of wrong doing with the November election to bed.
Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC
This image taken by a Nasa satellite in 2016 shows oceanic nonlinear internal solitary waves in the Lombok Strait. In commentary accompanying a 2016 satellite picture of internal waves in the strait, which allows the flow of water from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean, Nasa said the bottom of the strait was complex and rough. “Because of the variation in water movement due to the complexity of the channels and ocean interface, the tides in the strait have a complex rhythm but tend to combine about every 14 days to create an exceptionally strong tidal flow,” Nasa said.
SHREWSBURY – The former Bonnie Dell Farm, a six-bed, six-bath Colonial at 945 Main St., is on the market for $1 million.
The farmstead was built in 1749 as the home of settler Ross Wyman, who had been born in Woburn.
Wyman is known for having made a gun for his near neighbor and New England militia commander Artemas Ward, who requested a firearm that could “pitch an Englishman over his head.”
Ward eventually became George Washington’s second-in-command. Wyman marched from Shrewsbury as the captain of its 16-man artillery unit that did its part at Lexington and Concord along with more than a hundred others from Shrewsbury.
New Delhi: Professor Martha Savage from Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington ‘s School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences (SGEES) has been awarded the 2020 Marsden Medal by the New Zealand Association of Scientists (NZAS) for her pathbreaking research in the fields of seismology, plate tectonics, and volcanology.
The medal was presented at the University’s Staff Excellence Awards by Dr Craig Stevens (pictured left with Professor Savage), a past president of the NZAS, and the University’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Grant Guilford (pictured right).
Professor Savage was surprised and delighted to hear she had been awarded the medal. “It’s a great honour to be recognised by the New Zealand Association of Scientists and to know the work I’ve been doing over the past 35 years has been valuable. I would not be where I am today without the hard work of the many mentors and colleagues I’ve had over the years,” she said.