St. Louis Union Station's 'Selfie Express' exhibit opens today
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
ST. LOUIS -- If you're looking for ways to beat the heat with the family then Union Station has a new exhibit highlighting the former train station's history. Guests enter a train ticket lobby and move into a series of themed rooms. Rooms range from a mirrored infinity view, and a train caboose that turns users into giant and small figures, to a room that transports visitors from real-life color to old-time black and white. Scenes filled with giant passenger luggage, optically fascinating clocks and even the Gateway Arch are part of the experience.If you plan on coming down the exhibit opens at 9 a.m. and runs until 8 p.m. Tickets are ten dollars.Stray Rescue of St. Louis Hosts PoocHella Adoption Festival
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
ST. LOUIS -- Stray Rescue of St. Louis has exciting news for all animal lovers in the area. They will be shutting down Pine Street to host their highly anticipated PoocHella Adoption Festival. Families are invited to come and meet the adorable dogs and cats that are currently available for adoption.If you choose to adopt a furry friend who is older than six months, Delmar Gardens will cover the adoption fee. This incredible offer includes essential services such as spaying or neutering, vaccines, and microchipping for your new companion. This Missouri home for sale comes with an underground cave Aside from the opportunity to find a new furry family member, the PoocHella Adoption Festival will offer even more attractions. Live music, delicious food trucks, splash zones to beat the summer heat, and fun photo booths will all be part of the event. The festival is taking place today from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Stray Rescue's facility located in Downtown St. Louis.You can fill out an earl...Free St. Louis dental clinic for veterans Saturday
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
The St. Louis Dental Center will be hosting a free screening clinic for veterans. It's through a partnership between the Missouri School of Dentistry and Affinia Healthcare. The clinic runs Saturday from 7:30 a.m. 11 a.m.No appointment is needed but people will be seen on a first-come first-serve basis. You must bring a photo ID and either your veteran certification form or your VA card.Free dental screening & examSaturday, July 8, 2023Registration, 7:30-11:00 a.m.St. Louis Dental Center1500 Park Ave.St. Louis, Mo. 63104Scattered showers Saturday and dry Sunday near St. Louis
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
ST. LOUIS -- Expect scattered showers Saturday morning ahead of a cold front that will move through the area this afternoon. Lots of clouds today and highs in the low 80s. The scattered rain wraps up this evening and the remainder of the weekend will be dry. St. Louis radar: See a map of current weather here Sunday is looking beautiful with highs in the mid-80s, low humidity, and partly cloudy skies. Seasonably hot Monday into Tuesday, and storm chances return for the second half of the work week.Man accused of lude act near children at Collinsville water park
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
MADISON COUNTY, Ill. - A 32-year-old faces criminal charges after being accused of masturbating near children at a Collinsville water park. The Madison County State’s Attorney's Office has charged Chad A. Green, 32, with sexual exploitation of a child and disorderly conduct over alleged actions at the Collinsville Aqua Park.Investigators say Green was engaged in an act of masturbation Thursday while in the presence of children. Suspect found beaten and bloody in field, police involvement investigated Green is jailed in Madison County as of Friday afternoon on a $50,000. A judge also granted a prosecution request that, in the event Green is released on bond, he would be prohibited from having contact with anyone younger than 18The Madison County State’s Attorney's Office asks anyone with additional information relevant to this case contact Collinsville Police at 618-344-2131.Avalanche Journal: NHL free agency winners and losers … so far
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
The bulk of NHL free agency movement occurs within 24 hours of the market opening, so now that we’re a week removed from July 1, it’s safe to start casting judgment on what went down across the league.With a weak UFA class, this hasn’t been the splashiest offseason for anybody, but here are a few standout winners and losers (so far) of the offseason.Winner: Carolina HurricanesThe East was Carolina’s to win this spring after Boston sputtered, but the Canes couldn’t quite learn from the Bruins’ slip-up against Matthew Tkachuk. So what did Carolina do? Land the top defenseman available from Boston, naturally. Dmitry Orlov joins Brent Burns and Jaccob Slavin on the blueline at two years, $7.75 million AAV, and forward Michael Bunting bolsters the scoring depth of a team that couldn’t find a timely goal in the ECF. If Vladimir Tarasenko ends up in Raleigh, as has been rumored, then the storm might finally surge back to the Cup Final.Loser: Detroi...Rockies 2023 MLB Draft preview: Colorado’s options at No. 9 overall as pitching-needy club enters critical weekend
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
For a draft-and-build organization, the Rockies have proven they know how to identify a bat that can slug at 20th and Blake, from Helton and Tulowitzki, to Arenado, Story and Blackmon.But when it comes to selecting and developing starting pitchers, success has been much more elusive for Colorado, especially during the tenures of ex-general manager Jeff Bridich and current GM Bill Schmidt, who has long overseen the draft for the franchise.Hence the importance of this year’s draft, which begins Sunday at 5 p.m. Operating from their spring training headquarters at Salt River Fields in Scottsdale, Ariz., the Rockies select at No. 9 overall in the first round of a draft critical to addressing the club’s dearth of starting pitching prospects. “The Rockies have drafted hitters well, speaking generally, for the better part of 20 years and beyond,” observed Baseball America senior writer Kyle Glaser. “And they’ve had times when they’ve drafted pitchi...Mathews: How to give people a bigger voice in government
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
In this time of rising polarization, authoritarian populism, and maddening big-money politics, leaders often say that it’s up to we the people to save democracy.But democracy costs money. And democracy — unlike the governments and special interests that seek to control it—has no budget. So how are you and I supposed to pay for all thatdemocracy-saving?There’s a new and practical answer to that question — called “Democratic Action Funds.” I first heard a proposal for these from Marjan Ehsassi, a non-resident future of democracyfellow with the Los Angeles-based Berggruen Institute, at a democracy conference I ran in Mexico City.Ehsassi has studied some of the world’s least democratic places — Iran, Cuba, and North Korea. But in recent years she has turned her attention to backsliding democratic societies, including the United States, where big majorities of people tell pollsters that they have no real voice or power in government. As a result of feeling powerless, more of us are disen...Rubin: As we celebrated our independence, Ukrainians fought to keep theirs
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
As we celebrated the Fourth of July with hot dogs and fireworks, mourners gathered at Kyiv’s famous St. Michael’s Golden-Domed Cathedral. They were paying last respects to one of Ukraine’s most noted young writers.Victoria Amelina, 37, was fatally wounded by a Russian missile strike on July 1 on a large, well-known pizza restaurant in Kramatorsk, Ukraine. At the time, it was filled with journalists, humanitarian aid workers, local families, and probably some soldiers taking time out from the front lines. How like the Russians to bomb a pizza place.I didn’t know Amelina, but have several Ukrainian friends who did, including one who was at her hospital bedside as she lay in an irreversible coma.I’m writing about her, not to guilt-trip those who enjoyed their backyard barbecue this week, but because she inspired such admiration from her peers. She had paused her successful literary career to investigate and document war crimes in areas liberated by Ukrainian forces from Russian occupat...Opinion: Looking for the next California tech boom. You’ll find it in farmlands
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 02:02:53 GMT
The world may see California largely as home to Silicon Valley and Hollywood, but it’s agriculture technology where we can most clearly outshine our competitors. In a new study, “Nurturing California Industries,” we identified it as among the six industries most critical to the state’s economic future.In many ways, advances in agricultural technology will have as much to do for California’s future as AI, streaming movies and electric vehicles. Agriculture is, by far, California’s strongest sector in terms of employment. In the latest 2022 Census of Wages and Employment, agriculture employs 419,582 people in this state, more than four times the number in the next-largest state, Washington.While tech businesses and corporate headquarters head elsewhere, California’s agricultural supremacy remains unchallenged. The agricultural industry provides more than a third of the country’s vegetables and three-quarters of the country’s fruits and nuts. In 2021, the state’s farms and ranches earn...Latest news
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