Maryland-College Park Announces Weeklong Sequester The University of Maryland's main campus in College Park on Saturday announced that all on-campus students would sequester in place for at least a week and that all instruction would move online beginning Monday. University officials cited a sharp rise in COVID-19 cases: Maryland's pandemic dashboard shows a total of 74 cases
Noemi Bolivar, a 21-year-old college graduate and Hollywood resident, went for a walk in the Ann Kolb Nature Center on Thursday evening. Her parents say she hasn’t been seen or heard from since.
Utah medical examiner on Wednesday completed an autopsy on Tammy Daybell
The results are not being released to the public, authorities said
Fremont County Sheriff Len Humphries said the report is being used as evidence in an open and ongoing investigation
The Idaho Attorney General is investigating Tammy s ex-husband Chad Daybell and his new wife Lori Vallow in connection with her death
Tammy was initially said to have died of natural causes in October 2019 after Chad refused an autopsy
Two weeks later, he married Vallow, whose husband also died months before
An investigation was launched into both deaths after Vallow s children JJ and Tylee were reported missing later that year
UMass Issues Stay-at-Home Order for 2 Weeks Feb. 8, 6:24 a.m. The University of Massachusetts at Amherst ordered all students to "self-sequester" for two weeks. "Self-sequestration means that students must stay in their residences, both on and off campus, except to get meals, undergo twice-weekly COVID testing, or to attend medical appointments. In addition, to minimize
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BOISE A bill promoting youth-run businesses passed the Idaho House of Representatives on Monday.
The “lemonade stand,” or “youth small business freedom” bill, would allow children to run businesses making $10,000 or less to not need permits required by many local municipalities. The bill, introduced by Rep. Ron Nate, R-Rexburg, would also make it so kids do not need to collect sales taxes that go to the state.
Nate told House members he remembers running a punch stand as a child outside of his home with a friend. He’s also seen young neighbors running their own successful business and the joys and skills it brings. Other times, government agencies have shut down such business like a lemonade stand, leaving unpleasant memories.