Brewers Sign Three Draft Picks, Including First-Round Selection Sal Frelick urbanmilwaukee.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from urbanmilwaukee.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Volunteers partner with UofL Police Chief and Councilman for graffiti removal project Share Updated: 7:39 PM EDT Jul 18, 2021 WLKY Digital Team Share Updated: 7:39 PM EDT Jul 18, 2021
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Show Transcript University of Louisville students stepped off campus to help clean up the surrounding neighborhood. Today, volunteers of A says rolled up their sleeves, removing graffiti from buildings, picking up trash and beautifying areas near the campus. Today s clean Up was a part of a says global campaign to reduce crime based off the broken window theory. When you see a lot of crime in an area litter graffiti, it incites more crime. But if we do the opposite, if we clean up the graffiti, if we pick up the letter, it actually will decrease crime and this this theory was tested in new york city and proven to be true. So we re hopeful to do the same thing here in our own community in Louisville. The group works on community projects tha
25 years ago: The 1996 Olympic Torch Relays light up Louisville
WHAS11 News crews were on the ground and in the air taking in the historic torch’s trail. Author: Shay McAlister Updated: 7:04 PM EDT July 18, 2021
LOUISVILLE, Ky. On its way to Atlanta, the Olympic Torch Relay was in full swing, moving from coast to coast, passing through Kentuckiana on its way.
The flame was first spotted 70-miles north of Louisville in Columbus, Indiana.
WHAS11 News crews were on the ground and in the air taking in the historic torch’s trail.
A large crowd gathered in downtown Columbus for a celebration. There was a fire truck along the route, giving great views. Spectators waved American flags while cheering wildly.
Researchers synthesize peptoids at Berkeley Lab to combat viruses
Researchers Annelise E. Barron and Gill Diamond discovered peptoids, biomimetic molecules that could be used to fight viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2.
A team of researchers discovered that molecules called peptoids, which they synthesized at the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, or the Berkeley Lab, can be used to fight a variety of viruses.
Peptoids are biomimetic molecules, meaning that they mimic the body’s natural proteins but are themselves not natural, according to Annelise E. Barron, researcher and Stanford University bioengineering professor. Barron called the Molecular Foundry, a research facility of the Berkeley Lab where the peptoids were synthesized, “a really fantastic facility.”
Economic Impact Of Turfway Renovation Will Reverberate Across Cincinnati Metro Area - Horse Racing News paulickreport.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from paulickreport.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.