Front Page
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In the mid-2030s, every U.S. coast will experience rapidly increasing high-tide floods, when a lunar cycle will amplify rising sea levels caused by climate change.
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Alonzo “Daddy” John Wemple was born on October 1, 1833, to Phoebe Chadsey and John Bunyon Wemple in Schenectady, NY. When he was 17 years old in 1851, Alonzo joined a career in the railroad industry in New York. He watched the industry change, from burning wood to coal and from trains having names to numbers. In 1865, he piloted the train carrying former President Abraham Lincoln’s body from Schenectady to Troy, NY.
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Winter is the perfect time for garden tool preventative maintenance. This includes cleaning and sanitizing tools, sharpening blades, and maintenance of power tools.
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Texoma Medical Center is pleased to announce the birth of the first baby born at the hospital in 2026! (L-R) Pat Emery – President, TMC Volunteers; Maria Lopez (mother) Angel Luis (baby); Hannah McMakin, BSN, RN (TMC nurse); Braulio Cruz (father)
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The iconic sounds and visuals of Pink Floyd’s legendary opera The Wall will echo through Austin College on Saturday, January 17, 2026, as regional alt-rock band The Trainwreck and their talented friends present a full-length performance of the groundbreaking rock masterpiece. For the Wall Project, The Trainwreck will be joined by Oliver White (Guitar, Vocals), Atticus Neff (Percussion), and RJ Wright (Keyboards).
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2004 – Stardust successfully flies past Comet Wild 2, collecting samples that are returned to Earth. Stardust was a 385-kilogram robotic space probe launched by NASA on 7 February 1999. Its primary mission was to collect dust samples from the coma of comet Wild 2, as well as samples of cosmic dust, and return them to Earth for analysis. It was the first sample return mission of its kind. En route to Comet Wild 2, it also flew by and studied the asteroid 5535 Annefrank. The primary mission was successfully completed on 15 January 2006 when the sample return capsule returned to Earth. A mission extension, codenamed NExT, culminated in February 2011 with Stardust intercepting Comet Tempel 1, a small Solar System body previously visited by Deep Impact in 2005. Stardust ceased operations in March 2011. On 14 August 2014, scientists announced the identification of possible interstellar dust particles from the Stardust capsule returned to Earth in 2006.




















