AuSABLE FORKS Nine students sat in an AuSable Forks Elementary School classroom after school Monday, Oct. 23, facing a smart board where teacher Liz Dona
Most testing sites in the River Valley require that you have an appointment before you get tested. Author: Kathryn Gilker Updated: 7:35 PM CST January 12, 2021
FORT SMITH, Ark. With 11 locations from Mountainburg to Waldron, River Valley Primary Care is offering PCR and rapid COVID-19 testing.
You do not have to be a patient and all they ask is that you call any of the locations to make an appointment. If they have enough staff and supplies you could get tested the same day.
“No symptoms are required. We did that from the very beginning because there were so many asymptomatic patients who were testing positive that did not have any known exposures or symptoms, so we wanted to make sure it was available for everybody,” said Liz Donahue with River Valley Primary Care.
they would be. nightly news begins now. captions paid for by nbc-universal television good evening. there is some, i guess we have to call it progress, to report from the gulf tonight. an awful lot of oil pouring into that water. as we look at the grim and relentless underwater television view, the cap is on that well. the problem is it s just not taking up much of this oil. the map shows the sheen in the area, but remember it s all spreading and moving. the president went back to louisiana today where he took a swing at bp, among other things. now those iconic photos begin. sickening, hard to look at images of helpless oil-covered animals who did nothing wrong but will die, many of them, nonetheless. they are suffering along with everyone else in the gulf. let s begin here tonight with the effort to stop it. nbc s anne thompson with us from venice, louisiana, with the latest. anne, good evening. good evening, brian. bp says it s going to take a couple of days before it
good evening. there is some, i guess we have to call it progress, to report from the gulf tonight. an awful lot of oil pouring into that water. as we look at the grim and relentless underwater television view, the cap is on that well. the problem is it s just not taking up much of this oil. the map shows the sheen in the area, but remember it s all spreading and moving. the president went back to louisiana today where he took a swing at bp, among other things. now those iconic photos begin. sickening, hard to look at images of helpless oil-covered animals who did nothing wrong but will die, many of them, nonetheless. they are suffering along with everyone else in the gulf. let s begin here tonight with the effort to stop it. nbc s anne thompson with us from venice, louisiana, with the latest. anne, good evening. good evening, brian. bp says it s going to take a couple of days before it knows how well that containment cap is working. it is collecting oil at a rate of 1,000 b