Our Lord and Savior called our Husband, Dad, and Grandpa home on Monday May 17, 2021.
The Lord brought Janz into the world on January 7, 1943 in Vallejo, CA with his birth to parents Irvan and ZeitaRose Mynderup (Green).
Janz grew up in the Hanford- Armona area, and attended College of the Sequoias, and CSUF.
He served his nation, attending the Naval Post Graduate School in Monterey, Ca, becoming a Photo Intelligence/Navigator Officer, in the U.S. Navy during the Vietnam War.
He served the Boy Scouts of America and was awarded and honored as an Eagle Scout and a Silver Beaver. He served as Wood Badge Instructor, Camp Director - Mirimichi, Huntington Lake, and VP Mt. Whitney and Sequoia Councils.
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Tulare County continues to see its COVID-19 metrics plateau, making it unlikely the local economy will move to a less restrictive tier until June 15 when it s expected California will entirely lift the Blueprint for a Safer Economy.
Tulare County s case rate has hovered between 2.6 and 3.3 cases per 100,000 for the past several weeks. To move from the orange tier to the even less restrictive yellow tier, the county s COVID-19 case rate must drop below 2. It s challenging to tell if we will get out of the orange tier, said Tim Lutz, director of Tulare County Health and Human Service s Agency. It s frustrating because we are so close.
Tulare County recorded 423 new COVID-19 infections and 23 virus-related deaths in April, the lowest number in both categories since the pandemic began 13 months ago.
The record lows in new infections and deaths are in contrast to the 23,000 new COVID-19 infections and nearly 300 deaths the county saw in December and January.
Tulare County s COVID-19 current daily case rate is 2.6 per 100,000 population, and the positivity rate is 1.2%. The county scored 1.2% in the state s Healthy Place Index.
Tulare County s case rate has hovered between 2.6 and 3.3 cases per 100,000 for the past several weeks. To move from the orange tier to the even less restrictive yellow tier, the county s COVID-19 case rate must drop below 2.
At Pasadena City College, college algebra for STEM majors is labeled Math 003. At Cypress College, it’s Math 141 C and at Napa Valley, it’s Math
106. For anyone hoping to enroll in the same course at Oxnard College, look for Math R115. At Cuyamaca College, try Math 175. And at College of the Sequoias, it’s Math 035.
On and on across California’s public community colleges, courses that basically cover the same material and are recognized as being interchangeable in fulfilling requirements for majors and transfers are assigned different course numbers. That process confuses community college students trying to transfer to a four-year university, critics say. Students may not know whether they are taking the right courses and may inadvertently repeat some if they take classes at more than one community college, either in person or online.