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National Grid Renewables Pledges to Donate $720,000 to Illinois School District apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
National Grid Renewables : Pledges to Donate $720,000 to Illinois School District marketscreener.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from marketscreener.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print subscribers If you re a print subscriber, but do not yet have an online account, click here to create one. Digital-only subscribers If you re a digital-only subscriber, but do not yet have an online account, click here to create one. Kansas to participate in summer lunch program Posted By GARY HENRY [email protected] KANSAS Students in the Kansas Community Unit School District #3 will continue receiving a daily lunch over the summer break. Principal Cindy Spencer told board of education members Wednesday, May 19, Kansas is participating with the Douglas County Health Department for a summer lunch program. The health department received a grant to operate a summer feeding program for students in Douglas and Edgar counties. ....
To the editor: The âwokeâ part of the radical left has decided that Dr. Seuss was a racist. As many as eight of Dr. Seuss books are banned on Amazon, eBay and others. Even the decedentâs publisher is no longer printing copies. Think about this. Dr. Seuss has been published since 1937 with over 60 books and sold 700 million globally. Banning sales by retailers that represent a vast majority of all books sales is worse than burning books. The public never has a chance to see what is being banned and make up their own minds if they want to burn the books. ....
Residents, Business Owners Clean Up After Kentucky Flood By Bill Estep and Morgan Eads | March 8, 2021 BEATTYVILLE, Ky. (AP) Standing in the gooey, dank-smelling muck coating the floor of her mobile home in Beattyville, Cindy Spencer considered how she would describe the experience of being flooded out, of losing keepsakes her kids made in school, of having to dig through the soggy debris of her life to salvage some clothes. “Only words I can come up with is heartbreaking and devastating,” said Spencer, 43. “You’re hopeless. You don’t even know where to turn.” Spencer was among dozens of people displaced from their homes in Lee County early Monday when heavy rains swelled the Kentucky River to levels not seen in decades and sent brown water surging into downtown Beattyville. ....