Myers is no stranger to Linsley who signed a free agent contract this off-season with the Los Angeles Chargers after earning first team All-Pro Honors with the Packers. Josh said he followed Corey’s career and they spoke on occasion when Linsley would return to campus in Columbus. They even chatted just a couple of weeks before the draft.
Myers is also no stranger to Green Bay. In the Big Ten Championship game last year he suffered a toe injury but played in the national semifinal game against Clemson. Myers said it got much worse after that but he was not about to let his teammates down, gutting it out for one more game, the national championship loss to Alabama. Following that game, Myers had to undergo surgery to repair the injury and the operation was performed by Dr. Robert Anderson, the noted foot surgeon at the Titletown Sports Medicine clinic across the street from Lambeau Field. Myers said the operation was a success and he had an inkling he
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Chemicals known as PFAS were, until a few years ago, commonly used in carpets, clothing, Teflon and water-resistant items they also contaminated local water supplies in some places and can now be found in the blood of nearly all people, the EPA says. While some exposure to PFAS can leave people relatively unscathed, concentrated levels of it can cause serious health problems. That s why the University of Cincinnati is delving into the issue at its inaugural Environmental Justice and Advocacy Symposium this week.
Associate Professor Bob Hyland is among people on UC s Interdisciplinary Faculty Team for Development of Environmental Justice and Advocacy. He and others are hosting the free online symposium that s open to the public and taking place from 3-5 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 5.
By MARK STEWART and MIKE SHERRYDecember 15, 2020 GMT
Hunter Wohler accepted the challenge of leadership this season.
“I’m not a super-outspoken guy so for me it was stepping into that leader role being a senior this year,” he said. “I feel like I had to grow into a new part of me.”
The senior safety from Muskego continued to lead by example but made a point of becoming more vocal and providing positive energy during a high school football season played under the cloud of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Those intangibles helped produce another banner season for Warriors football team.
Muskego finished 9-0 for its third straight undefeated season. Wohler earned first-team all-state distinction from the Associated Press for the third straight year and for the second season in a row was the unanimous pick as the state player of the year by a vote of statewide media.