
Eleanor Lindenmayer
News InternEleanor Lindenmayer is a journalism major at Knox College.
She grew up in Seattle, Washington, and has listened to her local NPR station – KUOW – all her life.
Eleanor is the editor-in-chief of Knox College’s award-winning student newspaper, The Knox Student.
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While there is more overall rainfall, temperatures are rising too, increasing evaporation rates. That puts Illinois in a cycle of too much water, then not enough water.
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Marybeth Brey, a research fish biologist with the Geological Survey and Christa Woodley, a research biologist with the Army Corps of Engineers, co-lead the project.They designed and installed a 16-speaker soundbar at Lock 19 in the Mississippi, a section of the river between Keokuk and Hamilton.
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Knox Students for Palestine staged a walkout and teach-in on the south lawn of Old Main.
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Calvary Assembly Church runs the initiative with the support of Convoy of Hope, an international humanitarian organization.
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Though the cicadas will be loud and abundant, the chair of biological science at Western Illinois University says there’s nothing to worry about.
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Spectators in the path of totality could see the sun's corona, Jupiter and Venus, shadow snakes, and the diamond ring effect.
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The course focuses on the themes of water treatment, stormwater management, waste management, energy, and transportation.
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Over the past 20 years, the number of people applying for and testing to be firefighters in Galesburg has dropped dramatically.
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Winter is always the viral season, but medical professionals say the public has been so focused on reducing the spread of COVID-19 over the past few years that prevention of other viruses has fallen by the wayside.
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Family Planning Services has been in Galesburg since 1976 and is looking to provide more services to the local LGBTQ+ community.