Four faculty members chosen for MAC’s Academic Leadership Development Program Published: May 21, 2021 Author: Isaac Miller
Four Ohio University faculty members have been chosen as the 2021-2022 Mid-American Conference (MAC) Academic Leadership Development Program (ADLP) Fellows.
The chosen faculty members are: Mick Andzulis, associate professor and chair of the marketing department in the College of Business; Char Miller, associate professor of nursing in the College of Health Sciences and Professions; Dwan Robinson, associate professor and department chair of educational studies in the Patton College of Education; and Alycia Stigall, professor of geological sciences in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Couple arrested on drug charges during traffic stop near Dubois
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The following is a news release from Clark County Sheriff’s Office.
DUBOIS – On May 8 at approximately 1:15 p.m., Clark County deputies made a traffic stop on Interstate 15 at mile marker 178 for a speed violation. During the course of the traffic stop, the deputies recognized indications of criminal behavior and observed a pipe used to smoke marijuana inside the vehicle.
During a search of the vehicle, the deputies found 2.77 pounds of marijuana and 3.63 ounces of methamphetamine along with multiple items of drug paraphernalia used to package, distribute, and use marijuana and methamphetamine.
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MALIBU, Calif. When longtime Malibu resident Carey Peck first heard about the Woolsey fire in early November of 2018, he was out celebrating his 30th anniversary with his wife, Lita Albuquerque. The flames were about 15 miles away near the 101 freeway.
“We weren’t concerned,” he said. “We’ve lived up here for years, and we’ve had fire inside of the house and we’ve had to defend friend’s houses.”
What You Need To Know
Longtime Malibu resident Carey Peck is still rebuilding 2.5 years after Woolsey fire destroyed his home
Peck says he was diligent in clearing brush around his home, but fire still made its way through his property, propelled by 70 mph winds
SAN DIEGO
Robert Garant proudly showed off a collection of chain saws he’s used to maintain the nearly 2 acres he and his wife, Gladys, have lived on for 47 years in San Diego County’s bucolic mountain hamlet of Julian.
The retired school bus driver said pruning the oak trees and dense shrubbery around their home isn’t just an aesthetic endeavor. Maintaining what’s commonly known as defensible space, he explained, can be a matter of life and death.
“We actually saved our house by clearing that whole perimeter,” said Garant, recalling the ferocious Cedar fire in 2003 that burned down over 2,800 buildings but spared their home. “The only thing I lost was a hose.”