Fort Lewis College Cycling presents its men's and women's road national championship teams, gearing up to compete at the highest level in the upcoming championship event in Albuquerque from May 3-5. T.
The Fort Lewis College cycling team returned from the 2023 Collegiate Road National Championships last week in Albuquerque with two national titles and a third-place team omnium award.
“We were all pr.
Hall County students to see where their food comes from at this planned facility gainesvilletimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gainesvilletimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Vladimir A. Petrushevsky (1891-1961) was a Hussar (light cavalry) for the Russian Tsar during World War I, a colonel for the Kolchak Army during Russia’s Civil War, a poet, a talented sketch artist, and most notably the first Russian volcanologist. Yet, Petrushevsky never stepped foot on a Russian volcano and he was also essentially unknown to the Soviet history of science. This was because in 1920 he emigrated from his native Russia as a White Army (anti-Bolshevik) officer, never to return.
When Petrushevsky left Russia on a steamship headed for Java (then a Dutch colony; present day Indonesia), it just so happened that he landed in one of the most volatile volcanic regions of the world. Though he had no training in geology, his experience with camp life and instruments made him well suited for a job at the Dutch Volcanological Services. Between 1921 and 1950, Petrushevsky went on nearly 300 expeditions and was responsible for monitoring 130 volcanoes, his main jobs being to
Why Hall County Schools now has active honey bee hives East Hall Middle School agriculture teacher Zach Free leads a group of students to a hillside in North Hall Thursday, April 15, 2021, where they move 20 boxes of bees into hives for Hall County Schools first working bee farm. - photo by Scott Rogers
Donning their protective suits Thursday afternoon, seven Hall County middle school students trekked up Honey Bee Hill on the district’s new agribusiness property to help their hundreds of new buzzing friends settle into their new homes.
With the guidance of Zach Free, East Hall Middle agriculture teacher, they each pulled groups of honey bees from boxes and placed them into 20 hives.