UK industry group calls for rules to calculate embodied carbon emissions dezeen.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dezeen.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sat, 04/24/2021 - 5:00am
Louis Buller Gohmert was born in Cameron, Texas on January 17, 1926 to parents Louis F. Gohmert and Carrie Buller Gohmert. He grew up in Cameron and graduated from Cameron Yoe High School. He attended Texas A&M University and was a member of the Corps of Cadets, played on the Texas A&M Baseball team, and majored in Architecture. While squaring to bunt during a baseball game, an inside pitch broke his finger. With his finger in a cast, Louis was summoned by the Dean of the Architecture Department where he was offered a choice: he could play baseball or he could pursue architecture, but he could NOT do both. Seeing a brighter future for himself in Architecture, he wisely chose to spend his career designing buildings that came to life as he dreamed them.
Year 8 students and mascots at the launch of March Miles A FUNDRAISING fitness challenge aims to clock up 8,000 miles by motivating students and staff to walk, cycle or run throughout March. Richmond School and Sixth Form College has launched March Miles and hopes to raise cash for the Great North Air Ambulance and to help refurbish the school s fitness room with inclusive equipment. The initiative, organised by PE teachers Jack Moore and Helen Southgate, is in memory of Dave Clark, the school’s former deputy headteacher who was a keen sportsman and lover of the great outdoors. With dwindling levels of motivation for regular exercise reported in the media, it is vitally important that students are keeping active and the March Miles challenge will provide a new incentive and drive to get the school community moving again.
Shares
BRAVO, BRAVO… While I would certainly like to take all the credit for remedying the awful, late-night train car noise situation that’s plagued North Davis the last few weeks, I’ll admit my grouchiness about it in a recent column was likely not the lone factor that led to the actual change.
So, bravo to city council members Lucas Frerichs and Will Arnold, as well as county supervisor Don Saylor, who worked together to reach a resolution with the California Northern Railroad, which has agreed to cease its night operations, including the deafening 2 a.m. rail car switches along F Street.