How Nameless, Texas, found its name

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

How Nameless, Texas, found its name LEANDER, Texas (KXAN) -- Off FM 1431 in Leander lies Nameless Road. About 1.5 miles down on the left resides the Nameless School, a one-room schoolhouse that, alongside the road and a corresponding cemetery, are some of the last remnants of a northwest Travis County community.Residents first began settling in the stretch of land around 1860, said Genny Kercheville, vice president of the nonprofit Friends of Nameless School. Around 1880, Kercheville said residents decided they wanted to construct a post office so carriers on horseback wouldn't have to travel as far to deliver mail.Residents sent in a request to dub the area Fairview due to its beautiful Hill Country views. However, the U.S. postal system wrote back and denied the request, saying the name was taken.Residents sent in several more name requests, all of which were already in use. "So finally they just said, 'well then, let it be nameless and be damned," Kercheville said, laughing. "So that's how it became Nameless."Off N...

Maureen Downey: Growing up in public with zero privacy and constant judgment

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Maureen Downey: Growing up in public with zero privacy and constant judgment ATLANTA — Over the last few weeks, I’ve seen dozens of first day-of-school photos posted on social media by proud parents. No longer are pictures limited to beatific kindergartners with unicorn backpacks. Parents are badgering college students to text them first-day photos, leading to shots like the one I saw of a sour-faced University of Georgia senior holding a sign that explained, “My mother made me do this.”Children today lead well-documented lives, starting in their cribs with enthusiastic picture-taking and posting by their parents and then, as adolescents, revealing themselves on TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat.As a result, children now have major benchmarks shared in public: first steps, first words and first days of school. But lives played out on social media hold risks as kids get older, from being canceled or even denied college admission because of their online missteps, and that increasingly worries parents.U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. ...

Crash in north St. Louis harms two officers

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Crash in north St. Louis harms two officers ST. LOUIS -- A developing story unfolds in North St. Louis County, where two police officers sustained injuries in a crash on I-70 near Jennings Station Road. The Missouri State Highway Patrol reports that the officers had exited their police vehicle to attend to an abandoned car on the shoulder of I-70 east.Allegedly, a 2003 Honda Accord driver lost control, colliding with a guardrail and striking both officers. Identified as Benjamin Santoyo and Andrew Hapgood, both officers are 27 years old. The crash report indicates serious and moderate injuries. They were subsequently transported to a hospital, while a 64-year-old car driver was apprehended by troopers on suspicion of DWI, after allegedly causing the collision. The incident occurred shortly before 8:30 p.m. yesterday.

St. Louis man fatally shot over the weekend

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

St. Louis man fatally shot over the weekend ST. LOUIS -- A 30-year-old man suffered a gunshot wound to the head during an incident that occurred over the course of a violent weekend in St. Louis. He was discovered in south St. Louis on California Ave., near Potomac St. Law enforcement officers responded to the scene shortly after 9:30 a.m. on Saturday morning, August 26. Tragically, the man succumbed to his injuries following the ride to the hospital by ambulance. Homicide detectives from the St. Louis Metropolitan Police have taken charge of this investigation.

Joseph Sebastian Sinisi, longtime Denver Post reporter, dies at 80

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Joseph Sebastian Sinisi, longtime Denver Post reporter, dies at 80 The Dodgers left Brooklyn, but Joseph Sebastian Sinisi never did. Well, sort of.Sinisi, a Denver Post reporter and staff writer for 25 years, died suddenly Monday in his Denver home. He was 80.Known to Denver Post readers by the name in his byline, J. Sebastian Sinisi, the Brooklyn-born Sinisi was familiar to colleagues and friends as Joe. Sinisi began his long career with the Post in 1979, and through the years he never lost his heavy, characteristic Brooklyn accent.Frank Scandale, a former Denver Post city editor who also served as Sinisi’s editor at times during the 1990s and into the 2000s, hails from New York. He recalled the first time they met, in 1990.” ‘Ey, I heer yoor froom da neighbahood,’ ” Scandal recalled of Sinisi’s Brooklyn-laced greeting.“I look at him, I think he’s giving me the business, busting my chops,” said Scandale, who has a New York accent, although not as pronounced. “I said, ‘Hey, what the ...

Can there be too many drive-thrus? One Colorado city is considering whether to impose a limit

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Can there be too many drive-thrus? One Colorado city is considering whether to impose a limit The venerable American ritual of palming a burger while gripping the steering wheel, as grease and ketchup drip onto shirt and lap, could soon face resistance as thick as honey mustard sauce in Golden.Last week, city leaders launched a monthslong effort to explore whether this city of 20,000 should limit — or even outlaw — new drive-thru operations in the name of cleaner air and better mobility for pedestrians and cyclists.“Drive-thrus can have such impacts not just on sustainability aspirations but on the safety of people and drivers,” said Golden Councilman Casey Brown, who brought the issue up at the council meeting Tuesday. “And they can be difficult to manage once they’re there.”The city found that out the hard way a couple of years back during the pandemic when the drive-thru at a Starbucks on South Golden Road was overwhelmed after government-ordered restaurant closures. Long lines of cars spilled onto the road, gumming up the nearby ...

Bay Area high school football: Weekend scoreboard, how Top 25 fared

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Bay Area high school football: Weekend scoreboard, how Top 25 fared Saturday, Aug. 26EAST BAYNon-leagueAlameda 34, Ygnacio Valley 6Marin Catholic 52, Freedom 0Novato 14, Irvington 13St. Mary’s-Berkeley 20, Moreau Catholic 2St. Vincent 58, De Anza 20Salesian 42, Williams 7Tamalpais 27, Bishop O’Dowd 21SOUTH BAY/PENINSULANon-leagueMonte Vista Christian 20, Los Altos 13, OTYerba Buena 26, Lynbrook 13INTERSECTIONALMenlo 15, American Canyon 14Pittsburg 49, Sacred Heart Cathedral 13San Juan Hills-San Juan Capistrano 39, California 14Serra 21, Folsom 14Friday, Aug. 25EAST BAYNon-leagueDublin 40, Washington-Fremont 0El Cerrito 14, Amador Valley 7Encinal 20, Hercules 6Las Lomas 34, Vintage 22San Marin 27, Acalanes 20Pinole Valley 34, American-Fremont 3Antioch 41, Arroyo 8Miramonte 28, Berkeley 12Newark Memorial 41, Concord 0Heritage 28, Foothill 25, overtimeNapa 42, Kennedy-Richmond 14Monte Vista 42, Granada 3Redwood 17, San Leandro 15San Lorenzo 15, Richmond 7Alhambra 27, Sonoma Valley 26Willits 40, Berean Christian 20Hayward 36, Bethel 0Mt. Diablo 39...

‘Consequences across the board’: Criminal case dismissals mount amid Antioch police scandals

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

‘Consequences across the board’: Criminal case dismissals mount amid Antioch police scandals ANTIOCH – A week after eight Antioch police officers were indicted on federal and state charges, Contra Costa County’s criminal justice system is buckling under the weight of alleged racism and corruption within the police force on an unprecedented scale: dozens of criminal cases tainted by rogue officers have already been dismissed, and thousands more are under review.The vast stain on East Contra Costa law enforcement has led to the unraveling of murder and other serious cases, while people imprisoned on the word of officers accused of harboring racist views and violating civil rights are being freed or seeing charges dropped.Already, there are shocking examples: Two men accused of stuffing 25-year-old Mykaella Sharlman into a garbage can and setting her body on fire last October were freed earlier this year amid growing concerns about the integrity of Antioch police officers. Prosecutors may refile felony arson and mutilation of a corpse charges, but doing so may require them to ...

Across sprawling West, only Western Oregon and Central Washington still offer D-II college football

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Across sprawling West, only Western Oregon and Central Washington still offer D-II college football MONMOUTH, Ore. (AP) — When Arne Ferguson started as an assistant coach at Western Oregon in 1989, road games meant bus trips. Sometimes a few hours to schools in Washington. Sometimes just a few minutes up the road to Oregon towns like Salem, Forest Grove and McMinnville.All on the bus and neatly contained inside the Pacific Northwest.Now entering his 18th year as the head coach, those bus days are long gone. Ferguson and his team are frequent flyers as one of only two NCAA Division II programs remaining on the West Coast.During this upcoming season, the Wolves will fly six times. They will play non-conference games in South Dakota and Minnesota, and play league games in Texas and New Mexico.It’s a massive undertaking, financially and logistically. It requires 3 a.m. wakeup calls on Fridays, followed by buses to the airport, four-hour commercial flights, Saturday games and doing it all in reverse on Sundays. There will be more than 160 programs in the country playing football at the...

Stewart scores 38 points in 3 quarters, Liberty top Lynx 111-76. Vandersloot reaches 4,000 points

Published Fri, 01 Nov 2024 04:25:09 GMT

Stewart scores 38 points in 3 quarters, Liberty top Lynx 111-76. Vandersloot reaches 4,000 points MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Breanna Stewart scored 38 points and grabbed 11 rebounds, Courtney Vandersloot reached 4,000 points for her career and the New York Liberty coasted to a 111-76 win over the Minnesota Lynx on Saturday night.Despite not playing in the fourth quarter, Stewart became the sixth WNBA player to score at least 35 points four times in a season. Seattle’s Jewell Loyd also has four this season, the only time two players accomplished the feat in the same season. Stewart scored the most points by a player playing less than 27 minutes, the previous best was Seattle’s Lauren Jackson with 36 points in a 2006 game.Sabrina Ionescu scored 19 points for the Liberty (27-7), hitting three 3-pointers to move into second on the single season WNBA list with 114. Diana Taurasi had 121 for Phoenix in 2006 and Kelsey Plum had 113 last season for Las Vegas. Vandersloot and Betnijah Laney both had 15 points.Vandersloot joined Sue Bird as the only players with 4,000 points, 2,500 as...