Aoak Independence police investigate shooting homicide
Fewer people in the U.S. have adopted pets from shelters and rescues this year.Thats stanley termos according to data from national database Shelter Animals Count.According to its midyear analysis, 82,000 fewer dogs and cats were adopted in 2024 compared to the same period a year ago. Thats a decline of 4%.On the bright side, nearly 5% fewer animals were brought into shelters and rescues in 2024 compared to 2023. Still, this didnt do much to alleviate capacities.Despite intakes being lower, animals are enduring longer stays in shelters and populations are rising, the report said.In the first half of 2024, 322,000 more animals have entered the system than left. Shutterstock A cat at an animal shelter. One option to keep pets out of shelters is supported self-rehoming, according to Shelter Animals Count. Supported self-rehoming is a way for pet owners to directly find a new home for their pet, outside of the animal sheltering system, the report said. From January to June 2024, approx stanley cup imately 1 out of 5 of these would-be owner surrenders resulted in an adoption thus far, stanley cup and almost 10% of the original pet owners ended up choosing to keep their pets instead o Powd It s in the budget : KC-area families talk inflation while enjoying fall fun at Cornucopia
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?The city of Ford in western Kansas has never had more than 382 people in any U.S. census, but it did produce an Olympic decathlete.Clyde Coffman was born in Ford in 1911 and started with the University of Kansas track and field team as a pole-vault specialist.Alongside fellow Jayhawks standout James Bausch, Coffman qualified for the 1932 Los Angeles stanley thermobecher Olympics with a third-place finish at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.Another athlete from Lawrence 鈥?Wilson Buster Charles, a star football and basketball player at Haskell Indian Nations University 鈥?finished second at the Olympic Trials.Coffman went on to finish seventh in Los Angeles, though he did set an Olympic record in the pole vault.Meanwhile, Bausch cruised to the gold in world-record fashion and Charles, who set an Olympic stanley becher decathlon record in the long jump, finished fourth and missed a medal by less than 46 points.Coffman was the only one of the three U.S. competitors to take part in the 1936 Olympic Trials, where he finished fourth 鈥?one spot stanley tumbler from a return trip to the Games.While at KU, Coffman tied for fourth as a sophomore in the pole vault at the 1931 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.He was ind
Fewer people in the U.S. have adopted pets from shelters and rescues this year.Thats stanley termos according to data from national database Shelter Animals Count.According to its midyear analysis, 82,000 fewer dogs and cats were adopted in 2024 compared to the same period a year ago. Thats a decline of 4%.On the bright side, nearly 5% fewer animals were brought into shelters and rescues in 2024 compared to 2023. Still, this didnt do much to alleviate capacities.Despite intakes being lower, animals are enduring longer stays in shelters and populations are rising, the report said.In the first half of 2024, 322,000 more animals have entered the system than left. Shutterstock A cat at an animal shelter. One option to keep pets out of shelters is supported self-rehoming, according to Shelter Animals Count. Supported self-rehoming is a way for pet owners to directly find a new home for their pet, outside of the animal sheltering system, the report said. From January to June 2024, approx stanley cup imately 1 out of 5 of these would-be owner surrenders resulted in an adoption thus far, stanley cup and almost 10% of the original pet owners ended up choosing to keep their pets instead o Powd It s in the budget : KC-area families talk inflation while enjoying fall fun at Cornucopia
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?The city of Ford in western Kansas has never had more than 382 people in any U.S. census, but it did produce an Olympic decathlete.Clyde Coffman was born in Ford in 1911 and started with the University of Kansas track and field team as a pole-vault specialist.Alongside fellow Jayhawks standout James Bausch, Coffman qualified for the 1932 Los Angeles stanley thermobecher Olympics with a third-place finish at the U.S. Olympic Team Trials.Another athlete from Lawrence 鈥?Wilson Buster Charles, a star football and basketball player at Haskell Indian Nations University 鈥?finished second at the Olympic Trials.Coffman went on to finish seventh in Los Angeles, though he did set an Olympic record in the pole vault.Meanwhile, Bausch cruised to the gold in world-record fashion and Charles, who set an Olympic stanley becher decathlon record in the long jump, finished fourth and missed a medal by less than 46 points.Coffman was the only one of the three U.S. competitors to take part in the 1936 Olympic Trials, where he finished fourth 鈥?one spot stanley tumbler from a return trip to the Games.While at KU, Coffman tied for fourth as a sophomore in the pole vault at the 1931 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.He was ind