I need Jason & Med school, one user wrote. Just leave it alone. We didn’t ask for this, another person said. The whole damn bottom row… who dey?, a reader reacted. Say what now? In the words of Tasha Mac. Where s Med School, a reader asked. We asked for Girlfriends, not this, another wrote.
According to Deadline, the reboot will relocate from San Diego to Las Vegas and it will see new players offer a modern-day examination of Black culture through the prism of pro football. It s reported the new series will tackle racism, sexism, and more as they fight for fame, fortune, respect and love.
Baylor in the News – June 20-26, 2021 baylor.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from baylor.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
June 22, 2021 // Posted In Academics, Research
Mosquitoes are a fact of life each summer, and they’re far more than an annual annoyance. Globally, they’re a leading source of the spread of diseases like Zika, West Nile Virus and malaria, claiming nearly a million lives each year.
We all fight them but these four Baylor professors have taken the fight to the next level, focusing their research efforts on distinct approaches to combatting mosquitoes:
Dr. Cheolho Sim, associate professor of biology, is searching for the genetic “on-and-off switch” that tells mosquitoes to prepare for dormancy in the winter. He is part of a team that recently earned a $532,000 grant from the National Science Foundation to, essentially, learn how to trick mosquitoes; the grant will support research into the genes that impact a mosquito’s circadian rhythm, seeking to find the trigger that tells a mosquito to get ready for a cold season. If they discover this, Sim says, they could “control
Next fiscal year’s funding for budgeted expenses, which begins July 1, from the Florida Education Finance Program, along with transfers to this year’s general fund and a balance the district is required to carry, is $959.3 million. The 2020-2021 total budgeted expenses were $933 million.
For the first time in more than a decade and after several years of begging by School Board member Lynn Wilson and school district lobbyist Wendy Dodge the Florida Legislature did not roll back the millage tax rate amount Polk County Public Schools is required to contribute. This year, taxpayers will provide $166.2 million, compared to last year’s $158.5 million.