|
发表于 2025-2-24 08:18:59
|
显示全部楼层
wfso The Mirage offering new perks for locals
Wddk Multiple fatalities confirmed amid tornado damage in Iowa
The UNLV COVID-19 vaccination clinic inside the Student Union Building is currently accepting walk-ins for COVID-19 vaccinations from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday 鈥?Friday.The clinic says it s a stanley vaso lso accepting next-day appointments.Currently, UNLV administers the Moderna vaccine, which is for individuals 18 and older. UNLV representatives say those 16 and 17-year-olds wishing to be vaccinated should make an appointment at a site that offers the Pfizer vaccine. Also, note that second doses of the vaccine remain by appointment, according to UNLV, to ensure proper timing between doses.RELATED: COVID-19 Vaccines and What You Need To KnowUNLV says its decision to accept walk-in appointments is to encourage more Southern Nevadans to get vaccinated at their earliest convenience. As of April 14, UNLV had administered more than 100,000 doses and says it s prepared to handle more than 2,000 patients a day. Getting a vaccine at UNLV typically takes no more than an hour, from check- stanley mugs in to departure. I encourage everyone whos eligible to get vaccinated as soon as possible, said UNLV Medicine CEO Dr. Michael Gardner. Were making the process seamless and well be happy to take care of you. Those wishing to be vaccinated are asked to arrive with a gove stanley cup website rnment-issued photo ID and insurance card if available, although insurance is not required to receive a no-cost vaccine.For walk-in COVID vaccinations:UNLV Student Union Building4505 S. Maryland Pkwy.Las Vegas, NV 89154Free parki Qrko New York AG threatens to seize Trump properties if fines aren t paid
With the continuous threat of drought in the western U.S., more farmers are picking up sustainable practices to keep their soil and their crops alive.Todd Olanders family has owned a patch of farmland for generations. They grow barley for beer and call their operation Root Shoot Malting. Farming is a gamble every year, Olander said. So we are lucky in this area in the front range that we actually have irrigat stanley thermos ion water and usually that comes from the snowpack. As the years pass, Olander says access to irrigation water has declined. He says this year is looking bleak as the western U.S. faces severe drought. Usually they ll issue about eight-acre feet per share, Olander said. And this year we re looking at like one and a half or two-acre feet. So that s a pretty major decrease. I guess it s only a quarter of the water that we normally get. U stanley shop niversity of Oklahoma Economics professor Jonathan McFadden studies how farmers can adapt to climate change. If you think about places like western Texas, western Oklahoma and western Kansas that are situated above the Ogallala Aquifer and into western Nebraska as well, you know, many parts of that we have dwindling recharge rates, McFadden said. So farmers are using more of the aquifer water than essentially the natural rainfall can replenish. Olander has been implementing regenerative farming practices to conserve water. He says hes no longer tilling. So you re just leaving the residue from the stanley cup previous crop, you know, on the surface |
|