Goevry Uk

Top Menu

  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contacts
  • US
  • DE

Main Menu

  • Travel & Lifestyle
  • Fashion
  • Health & Beauty
  • Science & Tech
  • Gift Guides
  • Buying Guides
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contacts
  • US
  • DE

logo

Header Banner

Goevry Uk

  • Travel & Lifestyle
    • Andsafe: Ihr zuverlässiger Partner für umfassenden Schutz und Seelenfrieden

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Travel Insurance Explained: The Key to Safe, Protected, and Enjoyable Trips

      November 27, 2024
      0
    • Begeben Sie sich auf ein literarisches Abenteuer: Erschwingliche Romane aus zweiter Hand ...

      November 27, 2024
      0
    • Nolo: Simplifying Legal and Business Challenges with Practical Books

      November 27, 2024
      0
    • Entriegeln Sie Ihre Reise: Eine Welt des nahtlosen Reisens mit Premium-Autovermietung

      November 25, 2024
      0
    • GSF Car Parts: Driving Excellence with Premium Parts for Every Vehicle

      November 24, 2024
      0
    • Entdecke die Zukunft des Heimzugangs mit Nuki: Wo Intelligenz auf Sicherheit trifft

      November 1, 2024
      0
    • Ribble Cycles: Revolutionierung des Radsports durch Präzisionstechnik und Innovation

      October 25, 2024
      0
    • Discover the Vibrant Culture of New Orleans from Vue Orleans’ Heights

      October 15, 2024
      0
  • Fashion
    • Meshki Cotton Dresses: The Ultimate in Comfort and Fashion

      November 29, 2024
      0
    • Black Friday Sale Alert: Up to 80% OFF on Fashion at Hello ...

      November 29, 2024
      0
    • Black Friday Fashion Frenzy: Unbeatable Deals on Dresses at Meshki

      November 29, 2024
      0
    • Unlock Incredible Savings: Up to 60% Off at Farah’s Black Friday Extravaganza!

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Your Dream Wardrobe Awaits: Shop Club L London’s Black Friday Extravaganza

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Heben Sie sich stilvoll ab mit der ultimativen T-Shirt-Kollektion von Impericon

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Elevate Your Wardrobe with the Season’s Hottest Dress Trends

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Unmissable Black Friday Deals: Up to 70% Off on Premium Footwear!

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Upgrade Your Wardrobe with WAT THE BRAND’s Premium Knitwear Collection

      November 28, 2024
      0
  • Health & Beauty
    • Transform Your Beauty Routine with Rodial’s Innovative Makeup Line

      November 29, 2024
      0
    • Achieve Glowing Skin with Rodial's Premium Face Serums and Oils

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Mühelose Gesundheit und Ernährung: Entdecken Sie die Bequemlichkeit von Ration1 und sparen ...

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Eyes That Speak Volumes: Discover Sisley-Paris’s Luxurious Eye Make-Up Range

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Fuel Your Fitness Goals for Less: Bulk™ Friday Sale Unveiled

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Améliorez votre routine de soins de la peau avec les produits haut ...

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Entfesseln Sie strahlende Haut: Die besten Produkte von Kiehl's für jeden Hauttyp ...

      November 28, 2024
      0
    • Transform Your Curls with Curlsmith: Embrace Natural Beauty with Confidence

      November 27, 2024
      0
    • A Pet Lover's Choice: TALES & TAILS für gesunde und glückliche Hunde

      November 25, 2024
      0
  • Science & Tech
    • Verwandeln Sie Ihre alte Elektronik in eine nachhaltige Lösung

      November 25, 2024
      0
    • GSF Car Parts Black Friday Bonanza: Major Discounts on Premium Car Parts

      November 23, 2024
      0
    • Verstärken Sie Ihre Reise mit den Hochleistungs-E-Scootern von Egret

      November 12, 2024
      0
    • EffectXMed par le Dr Margrit Lettko : Redéfinir les soins de la ...

      November 1, 2024
      0
    • Is the US military learning enough from Ukraine?

      September 29, 2024
      0
    • The Air Force wants to expand cloud-based comms, official says

      September 23, 2024
      0
    • What menaces November's elections? Threats of violence driven by misinformation, officials say

      September 16, 2024
      0
    • Could an easy radio fix have prevented the Trump assassination attempt?

      September 6, 2024
      0
    • ‘Moneyball’ for gun crews: Surprising data have Army division reshaping its gunnery ...

      September 1, 2024
      0
  • Gift Guides
    • Discover, Read, and Indulge: The MagazinesDirect Experience

      November 24, 2024
      0
    • Stand with the Champions: Discover AC Milan's Newest Gear

      September 30, 2024
      0
    • Feel Confident, Look Beautiful: Chi Chi Clothing’s Fashion for Every Occasion

      September 29, 2024
      0
    • Bold, Chic, and Unapologetic: Public Desire’s Fashion for Every Occasion

      September 28, 2024
      0
    • Gigi Hadid is shipping fashion to new heights as she sports mini ...

      September 27, 2024
      0
    • Maya Jama puts on a busty display in a plunging white top ...

      September 23, 2024
      0
    • Kylie Minogue fans issue same desperate plea as she announces new Tension ...

      September 19, 2024
      0
    • Embrace the Legacy: Join the AC Milan Family Today!

      September 19, 2024
      0
    • Eco-Friendly Style: Discover Alohas Vests Today!

      September 17, 2024
      0
  • Buying Guides
    • Big Adventures on Small Wheels: Discover KIDLY’s Scooters for Kids

      November 3, 2024
      0
    • Stand with the Champions: Discover AC Milan's Newest Gear

      September 30, 2024
      0
    • Feel Confident, Look Beautiful: Chi Chi Clothing’s Fashion for Every Occasion

      September 29, 2024
      0
    • Bold, Chic, and Unapologetic: Public Desire’s Fashion for Every Occasion

      September 28, 2024
      0
    • Gigi Hadid is shipping fashion to new heights as she sports mini ...

      September 27, 2024
      0
    • Maya Jama puts on a busty display in a plunging white top ...

      September 23, 2024
      0
    • Kylie Minogue fans issue same desperate plea as she announces new Tension ...

      September 19, 2024
      0
    • Embrace the Legacy: Join the AC Milan Family Today!

      September 19, 2024
      0
    • Eco-Friendly Style: Discover Alohas Vests Today!

      September 17, 2024
      0
  • Meshki Cotton Dresses: The Ultimate in Comfort and Fashion

  • FUNNYFUZZY Sofa Covers: Comfort, Style, and Waterproof Durability

  • Black Friday Sale Alert: Up to 80% OFF on Fashion at Hello Molly

  • Black Friday Fashion Frenzy: Unbeatable Deals on Dresses at Meshki

  • Transform Your Beauty Routine with Rodial’s Innovative Makeup Line

  • Die hochmodernen Geräte von Ninja Kitchen bringen den Koch in Ihnen zum Vorschein.

  • Die aufregende Welt der Jackpots: Wo jeder Dreh der Richtige sein könnte!

  • Achieve Glowing Skin with Rodial’s Premium Face Serums and Oils

Science & Tech
Home›Science & Tech›For Joe Paulauskis, Viterbo launched an impactful life of science | Local News

For Joe Paulauskis, Viterbo launched an impactful life of science | Local News

By admin1
September 4, 2022
260
0
Share:

[ad_1]


Randy Erickson
Special to the Tribune

Since graduating from Viterbo with a biology degree in 1978, Joe Paulauskis, a self-described “kid from a dairy farm,” has led a remarkable life of science as a researcher, teacher and innovative leader in both industry and academia.

Paulauskis has been at the forefront of efforts to harness the power of genetic sequencing to ensure that patients get medications that will help them the most (and harm them the least). Paulauskis also played a major part in streamlining the overseas approval process for U.S. made pharmaceuticals, and he was a leading player in establishing a tissue bank system that saves time and money for cancer researchers.

For 16 years, Paulauskis taught and did research at Harvard University, 11 of those years as a professor of molecular biology. After leaving Harvard he was tapped as global head of pharmacogenomics for pharmaceutical giant Pfizer, helped the National Institutes of Health construct the world’s most comprehensive cancer tissue biobank (The Cancer Genome Atlas), and served as chief operating officer for Paradigm, a groundbreaking company that used next-generation DNA sequencing of tumors to ensure cancer patients were getting the drugs that would work best for them.

People are also reading…

Then his career path turned back to academia and laboratory science, taking him to the University of Michigan, where he had earlier taught as an adjunct pathology professor and established and run the Genomic Pathology Laboratory and Molecular Toxicology and Pharmacogenomics Laboratories for Pfizer. Paulauskis recently retired as associate director of the University of Michigan Medical School’s Central Biorepository.

Reflecting on his life of science and innovation (which is far more expansive and impressive than the preceding summary indicates), Paulauskis said perhaps his most important contribution to society has been training and mentoring countless researchers contributing to progress in the fight against disease and the human suffering it causes.

Paulauskis knows well the difference a great teacher and mentor can make. His own life and career path would have been a lot different, if not for a creative nudge from an influential Viterbo professor.

The path to Viterbo

The eldest of five children in his family (and the only son), Paulauskis spent the first part of his childhood in the Chicago area. But after his parents divorced and his mother remarried, the family moved to a dairy farm near Viola. He was 13 when they moved to Wisconsin.

All the children took on the last name of their stepfather, Gauss, and that’s how Paulauskis was known until his stepfather died and he reverted to his surname at birth.

Neither of his parents had college degrees, and Paulauskis didn’t really have an idea of how to pick a school or what higher education would involve. But he knew about Viterbo because of its sponsorship of the high school quiz show that he would watch on television. The quiz bowl team from his school, Kickapoo High School, won during its appearance on the show, procuring a scholarship for somebody at the school to attend Viterbo.

“I was never a great student, but I always felt like biology and chemistry were easy for me, and physics and math, too,” Paulauskis said. “I figured I’ll either go to Harvard or Viterbo.”

He applied to Harvard but withdrew his application, deciding to go to Viterbo after a campus visit during which he met with a biology professor and department chair, Joe Kawatski. “He promised me I could start doing research on day one,” recalled Paulauskis. That had a strong appeal.

When Paulauskis came to Viterbo in 1974, it had only been co-ed for a few years. The male students living on campus were in houses, which took on the names of their first resident advisors. Paulauskis, who later became an RA himself, first lived in “Schoonover House,” named for Dave Schoonover, ’76, with whom Paulauskis formed a tight friendship.

Early in his first year, Paulauskis recalled all the male students meeting as a group with the president. There were nine female students for every male student, the president said, admonishing the men to be on their best behavior. At that point, Paulauskis recalled, someone in the back of the room said loud enough for others to hear, “Are the girls assigned to us or do we get to choose them ourselves?”

Diving into science

True to his word, Kawatski gave Paulauskis the chance to get involved in research right away. Kawatski’s research focused on aquatic toxicology, in particular trying to ascertain whether pesticides used to control the sea lamprey population in the Great Lakes also killed other creatures. Paulauskis and other students were awarded paid positions in the summer to perform research.

“You couldn’t not fall in love with limnology and toxicology working with him,” Paulauskis said of Kawatski. “He could make it so fascinating.”

The first of many, many research papers that Paulauskis has had published was co-authored with Kawatski and Dr. Carl Hansen, ’76. The paper detailed the results of research to see if the kidney-like structures of aquatic midge larvae could process a pesticide. Paulauskis had to remove the tiny kidneys from midges and keep the organs alive long enough to bathe them in radio-labeled pesticide and to determine if there was movement of the pesticide through the kidney.

Thousands of small scintillation vials were used in the research, and halfway through Paulauskis’s senior year Kawatski gave him the painstaking task of cleaning them. By the time he got done, Paulauskis was feeling aggravated and aggrieved, and he asked Kawatski why he had made him clean all those vials.

“He said, ‘You should get used to it. If you’re going to be a lab technician, you have to do that kind of thing,’” Paulauskis recalled.

The vial cleaning, Paulauskis discovered, was Kawatski’s way of getting him to rethink his decision not to go to grad school, and it worked. With Kawatski’s help, Paulauskis won admission to multiple graduate school programs, settling on Miami University in Ohio. He tied his mattress to the roof of his 1968 Mustang and headed east.

Onward and upward

Seven years (and a lot of aquatic toxicology research) later, Paulaskis had earned master’s and doctoral degrees in zoology, and he was ready to follow in the footsteps of Professor Kawatski. After a couple interviews at colleges, though, he discovered he would likely be so loaded down with teaching duties that he wouldn’t have time to do the research that he loved.

With his innate curiosity, that wasn’t the life for him, so he set his sights on becoming an expert in an emerging field: molecular biology. “This field of study was brand new and hot, very exciting,” Paulauskis said. “It was quite a jump for me.”

Think midge larvae kidneys are small? Paulauskis would soon be working at the subcellular level, snipping and cloning fragments of DNA, the genetic material at the heart of all living things. As a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University for five years, Paulauskis delved into how inhaled metal particles effect the lungs, how the immune system knows the particles are there, and why immune systems sometimes mount an overzealous response to the particles that is more hazardous to a person’s health than the metal itself would be.

“I think I pushed the field forward with everybody else at Harvard. I helped do a few things,” Paulauskis said, perhaps with a bit too much Midwestern modesty.

After his postdoctoral work was complete, Paulauskis stayed on at Harvard for 11 more years as a professor of molecular biology. “Harvard is such a great place to work. It’s a lot of fun,” Paulauskis said. “Leaving Harvard is a hard thing to do. It’s a great place, but it’s actually an even better place to be from.”

While at Harvard, he was asked to come to Pfizer’s facility in Connecticut to give a tutorial on molecular biology, and his presentation made an impression on some influential people at the company. “They said, ‘Why are you playing around in academia? Come to Pfizer, and we’ll give you an unlimited budget to build a pharmacogenomics lab,’” Paulauskis said.

Pfizer’s offer was impossible to resist, and Paulauskis was thrust into the first of many leadership roles he held in both industry and academia over the past 20 years.

He made the wrenching decision to retire earlier this year and move from Ann Arbor, Mich., to coastal Massachusetts because he needed time and space to deal with health issues. He’s feeling great these days and looking for a house with his wife, Lisa, a Boston native he met while he was at Harvard.

Moving back to the East Coast was a big attraction for them, too, because it would bring them closer to their daughter, Carly, who works in fashion in New York City (she has held several roles with shoe design companies, including one started by Sarah Jessica Parker).

Paulauskis still has the urge to teach and mentor budding researchers, and one path forward he is contemplating is to find a house near a small college like Viterbo where he could get back in the classroom. “Doing something like that would be poetic somehow, like coming full circle,” he said.

COLLECTION: Good morning photos of the day

Saturday … in the park, definitely not the 4th of July





Saturday ... in the park, definitely not the 4th of July

A mated pair of swans fly overhead March 5 in Riverside Park.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Ashley Quinn Knutson, Quinn Photography


Strolling swans





Strolling swans

Tundra swans take a walk Monday, March 7, in a cornfield near Buffalo City.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Don Gruhlke of Cochrane


Eagle watch





Eagle watch

A mature bald eagle sits peacefully in a tree at the eagle watch Saturday morning.



Ashley Quinn Knutson, Quinn Photography


First robin of spring?





First robin of spring?

A March 3 visitor chirps “good morning” in our backyard.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


Opossum passing by





Opossum passing by

Playing ‘possum? Not this little guy on Goose Island Park, south of La Crosse. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Eagles at sundset





Eagles at sundset

Eagles watch the sunset March 4 from a tree on Nakomis Avenue on the west side of La Crosse.  Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Patti McCormick Kupinski


Saturday … in the park, definitely not the 4th of July





Saturday ... in the park, definitely not the 4th of July

A mated pair of swans fly overhead March 5 in Riverside Park in La Crosse.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Ashley Quinn Knutson, Quinn Photography


Snowy skyline

Snowy skyline

Goose Island Park in La Crosse earlier this month. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Contributed by Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Towering





Towering

Trees loom overhead on Goose Island. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Spring rain drop





Spring rain drop

This spring rain drop will soon become a new tree bud. Picture taken in backyard on March 18, 2022.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


The end of ice fishing season





The end of ice fishing season

Ice anglers enjoy the last week for their hobby on Lake Onalaska before spring as temperatures rose and the ice on waterways became unsafe to fish on.



Steve Kiedrowski, LaCrosse


Arcadia flyer





Arcadia flyer

A bald eagle glides through the air near Arcadia, Wis.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Jerry Dekan of Arcadia, Wis.


Bridge sunset





Bridge sunset

The bridges south of Riverside Park are offset by a beautiful March 15 sunset.



Valerie Glotfelty, La Crosse


A foggy morning hello





A foggy morning hello

Some horses enjoy a fresh morning in the yard.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



BECKY BROCKMAN HOLMEN


Spring rain drop





Spring rain drop

This spring rain drop will soon become a new tree bud. Picture taken in backyard on March 18, 2022.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


End of ice fishing is a drag





End of ice fishing is a drag

An ice fisherman heads home after a day of fishing on the Black River by French Island last week. Local experts say the time for ice fishing is over as the thickness of ice is no longer consistently safe. 



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Spring snow





Spring snow

March ended with some snow, as seen on this backyard fall foliage on Thursday.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


HARBORMASTER CAPPED





HARBORMASTER CAPPED

Pictured is Fred Benning with Rachel Evagelisto, Miss Winona, and past Winona Steamboat Days harbormasters. Benning was capped as the 2022 Winona Steamboat Days Harbormaster. The Steamboat Days Festival will celebrate its 75th anniversary this year and will run June 15-19.



Jerome Christenson


Hitting the open water





Hitting the open water

Some of the first anglers of spring fish along French Island, along the Black River. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Bikes for everyone





Bikes for everyone

Katie Boarini, programming and community outreach intern with Drift Cycle Bike Share, applies QR code stickers to a fleet of over fifty bicycles Tuesday while preparing for the program’s season at Landmark by the Rivers in La Crosse.



Peter Thomson, La Crosse Tribune


Helping our neighbors





Helping our neighbors

Steak Shop Catering presents a check to Habitat for Humanity to support safe, affordable housing here in Winona. Pictured is Anita Kamrowski of Steak Shop Catering, left, and Jen Tepovich, Habitat ReStore Manager.



SUBMITTED PHOTO


HyVee work continues





HyVee work continues

Work on the Hy-Vee supermarket continues at the former Sears location at Valley View Mall. The store is expected to open in the latter part of 2022.



Al Swift, La Crosse Tribune


PICTURE OF THE DAY





PICTURE OF THE DAY

Low-flying geese above Goose Island Park inspired this artwork. 



Gary Kessel, La Crosse


PICTURE OF THE DAY: Spring migration





PICTURE OF THE DAY: Spring migration

Green Head Mallards stop over at Goose Island on their way north.



Gary Kessel, La Crosse


A tradition unlike any other…





A tradition unlike any other...

A bee lands on the petal of an azalea overlooking the seventh hole during a practice round for the Masters on Monday in Augusta, Ga. The Masters, a professional golf tournament often called “a tradition unlike any other,” begins Thursday. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Matt Slocum, Associated Press


Feeling squirrelly





Feeling squirrelly

While a squirrel eats on Goose Island, a woodpecker watches and a cardinal flies away on April 2.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


Elm tree flowers





Elm tree flowers

Some of the trees are blooming and producing pollen, as these elm tree flowers are doing on April 2.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Jerry Davis, Town of Brigham


Sitting on the dock of the bay





Sitting on the dock of the bay

Girlfriend and boyfriend mallards spend some quality duck dock time soaking in the sun by Richmond Bay on French Island.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


A holiday hunt





A holiday hunt

Three- and four-year-olds take part in Altra’s annual easter egg hunt at the Omni Center on Onalaska. In addition to egg hunts for different age groups, the event also offered pictures with the Easter bunny and door prizes including Easter baskets and bikes. A fire truck and police car were also present, and kids could meet firemen and officers and have their photos taken with the vehicles.



Bill Harnden photo


Colorful sunset





Colorful sunset

The Mississippi River behind the Weber Center for the  Performing Arts in La Crosse mirrors a colorful sky April 8.



Kai Clark photo


A nice day for a walk





A nice day for a walk

The La Crosse River and the marsh trail behind Copeland Avenue on April 8.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Jon Ellefson photo


A beautiful sunset





A beautiful sunset

A beautiful sunset on French Island.



Tex Kakuska photo


Tulip blooms





Tulip blooms

A tulip blooms inside my house on April 11.



Lin Scott photo


Sunrise in the neighborhood





Sunrise in the neighborhood

The sun rises April 21 in La Crosse, peeking through some branches in the neighborhood.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


A great day for reflection





A great day for reflection

A great blue heron does some reflecting in the waters around French Island in late April. 



Ashley Q. Knutson, Quinn Photography


Enjoying the breeze





Enjoying the breeze

An egret relaxes while perched in a tree.



Ruby Schultz, Stoddard


Right on the river





Right on the river

Looking down on Trempealeau along the Mississippi River.



Steve Kiedrowki, La Crosse


Morning visitor





Morning visitor

This cedar waxwing was hiding in a nearby tree in April.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


Beautiful blossoms





Beautiful blossoms

Cherry blossoms are seen in full bloom on May 9 at Lake Park in Winona. Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Maureen Harding, Winona


A patriotic pair





A patriotic pair

A male and female mallard take a patriotic stroll on French Island.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


A trip to the Capitol





A trip to the Capitol

State Rep. Greg Davids, R-Preston, is pictured with sixth- and seventh-grade students from Mabel-Canton Schools. The group visited with Rep. Davids recently while touring the state Capitol in St. Paul.



Photo courtesy Rep. Greg Davids


Misty Mississippi





Misty Mississippi

Fog along the Mississippi in Winona reduces visibility May 9.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Joyce McConville, Winona


Mallard on the march





Mallard on the march

A mallard looks for a meal in the La Crosse marsh last Friday.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


A balancing act





A balancing act

Balance Rock on First Peak overlooks the village of Trempealeau.  



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Apple blossoms





Apple blossoms

Apple blossom time on French Island last week.



Steve Kiedrowski photo


Flowering Crab trees





Flowering Crab trees

Flowering Crab trees on French Island last week.  

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski photo


River overflow





River overflow

La Crosse River meanders through the La Crosse marsh this past week.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Flag Day next week





Flag Day next week

Tuesday, June 14, is Flag Day. Pictured is a memorial in Lake Park in Winona.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Ready to go for a spin





Ready to go for a spin

This little guy found shelter inside the tire of his grandpa’s tractor.



Cynthia Wolfe photo


Riverside sunset





Riverside sunset

The sun sets behind the Riverside Park fountain on June 8.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


Doggone beautiful





Doggone beautiful

A local dog makes a day of chasing muskrats and enjoying a sunset on Lake Onalaska along Brice Prairie.



Marissa Pederson photo


The cat-bird seat





The cat-bird seat

Our cats this spring had a front row seat to watch a baby cardinal and its parents in a nest in front of our house.



Liz Huber photo


La Crosse River at Veterans Memorial Park





La Crosse River at Veterans Memorial Park

La Crosse River from Veteran Memorial Park taken July 16



Jon Ellefson photo


bike bridge in Riverside Park





bike bridge in Riverside Park

This is the bridge crossing the La Crosse River on the bike trail as your heading north from Riverside Park.



Jon Ellefson photo


French Island fiery sunset





French Island fiery sunset

RIGHT: A weekend sunset on French Island.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Cass Street Bridge from Riverside Park





Cass Street Bridge from Riverside Park

A look at the Cass Street Bridge from Riverside Park in La Crosse on Sunday. 



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


End of the Day





End of the Day

ABOVE: A sunset viewed from the north end of French Island on July 9 this year.



Jackie Joday photo


Holding it together





Holding it together

Dew collects overnight on a spider web on Pammel Creek Bridge.



Ardelle Tuxen – 1900 Victory St. #8, La Crosse,


A flower named Sue





A flower named Sue

Black-Eyed Susans show off their beauty at the Trempealeau Hotel during Catfish Fish Days.



Steve Kiedrowski,, La Crosse


Hanging out at Goose Island





Hanging out at Goose Island

A redwing blackbird at Goose Island Park.



Al Wehrenberg photo


Beautiful day





Beautiful day

Tranquil country day in early July in La Crosse County.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


Riding in style





Riding in style

A 1960 Chrysler LeBaron is proudly owned by Mark Kenny of St. Paul. He was in Trempealeau for Catfish Days. The car was once owned by Texas Gov. John Connally.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


On parade at Catfish Days





On parade at Catfish Days

The Trempealeau Queen and her court ride Sunday, July 10, in the Trempealeau Catfish Days Parade. 



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


A sun-dappled cemetery lane





A sun-dappled cemetery lane

The late June sun peeks through the trees lining a path in Oak Grove Cemetery in La Crosse.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Pecking away





Pecking away

Gomer, our resident female pileated woodpecker, does what he does best to an apple tree in Caledonia.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Craig and Cheryl Olson, Caledonia


Bunny meets world





Bunny meets world

“My first day out of my nest, I’m scared.” This bunny was venturing out around our backyard in La Crosse on July 28.



Terry Knutson, La Crosse


Cranes by the creek





Cranes by the creek

This photo was taken on July 15 near Pine Creek in La Crescent.



Marilyn Wicka Ezdon, La Crescent


River at Veterans Memorial Park





River at Veterans Memorial Park

The La Crosse River is seen from Veteran Memorial Park on July 16.



Jon Ellefson photo


The cat-bird seat





The cat-bird seat

Our cats this spring had a front row seat to watch a baby cardinal and its parents in a nest in front of our house.



Liz Huber photo


Fingers in the fog





Fingers in the fog

An aerial view July 17 over West Salem area as fog settles into many of the valleys.



Jack Haase, La Crescent


Dragonfly on the line





Dragonfly on the line

This male Twelve-Spotted Skimmer dragonfly is helping hang out clothes today!



Becky Brockman, Holmen


Breakfast at the birdhouse





Breakfast at the birdhouse

A busy mom feeds her babies last week in Onalaska.



Chris Barlow, Onalaska


Spreading her wings





Spreading her wings

A beautiful female monarch dries her wings on Friday in Tomah.



Nicole Crego photo


Relaxing in the park





Relaxing in the park

The La Crosse area’s Shufflin Duprees perform at Holmen Halfway Creek Band Shell Concert on Sunday afternoon. 



Steve Kiedrowski, LaCrosse


A view from the stage





A view from the stage

View from the trombone section of La Crosse Concert Band in Riverside park on July 31, 2019. Conducted by Ryan Waldhart, this concert was the last of the band’s 2019 season.



Bob Roth, La Crosse


The Quenten Brown Band





The Quenten Brown Band

The Quenten Brown Band plays at Moxie’s Tiki Bar on the North Side of La Crosse on Wednesday evening.

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Rocking out in Arcadia





Rocking out in Arcadia

Pat Monahan, lead singer of Train, performs Friday, Aug. 12, at Ashley for the Arts in Arcada.



CRAIG JOHNSON, Winona Daily News


Viceroy butterfly





Viceroy butterfly

A viceroy butterfly enjoys a Joe-pye weed in the meadow at Whitewater State Park on Wednesday, Aug. 10.



Maureen Harding photo


Dog or lion?





Dog or lion?

Performers, officials, students and various animals walked in the Pure Water Days Parade on Saturday in Chippewa Falls. Here we see a dog dressed as a lion.


Audrey Korte



Pure Water Days, Chippewa Falls





Pure Water Days, Chippewa Falls

A range of floats and vehicles make their way through downtown Chippewa Falls in Saturday’s 45th Annual Pure Water Days Parade.


Audrey Korte



Visiting in style





Visiting in style

The American Splendor steamboat docks Thursday in Winona.



Chris Barlow, Onalaska


Pedaling is for the birds





Pedaling is for the birds

Kimberly and Peyton hang out with their pets Cory and Arise on Eighth Street in La Crosse on Monday, Aug. 1. 



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Working on the new Fire House





Working on the new Fire House

Work being done on the new Fire House on La Crosse Street near UW-La Crosse earlier this month. 

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Dockwork





Dockwork

Work continues Aug. 12 along the Mississippi River in Riverside Park. The construction is being done to accommodate the docking of larger boats.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Hurling in the park





Hurling in the park

Irish family band The Byrne Brothers take a break from playing a game of hurling in Riverside Park in La Crosse. Hurling is a national game in Ireland.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse.


Swimming swans





Swimming swans

A family of trumpeter swans floats across the still water in Warrens, Wis.



Landon Crego photo


Hibiscus bloom





Hibiscus bloom

The inner beauty of the hibiscus bloom reveals itself Aug. 20.



Paul Wiese, La Crosse


‘The Remainders’ rock the stage





'The Remainders' rock the stage

“The Remainders 5” play at Moon Tunes on Aug. 18 in Riverside Park. For the last show of the year tonight, the 10th anniversary concert season performance finale will open at 5:30 p.m. with the UW-L Screaming Eagles Marching Band. The closing act is Cody and The Ghosts.



Steve Kiedrowski, La Crosse


Land of milk and honey?





Land of milk and honey?

A bumblebee hangs out in the milkweed of the perennial bed.



Jerry Davis, Barneveld


French Island dining





French Island dining

A Viceroy butterfly feeds on lantanas on French Island.



Mike and Rose Ann Shaver photo


Anything for a free meal





Anything for a free meal

A squirrel stretches out for a meal.



Ann Williamson, Winona


A babbling creek





A babbling creek

Water bubbles through Beaver Creek State Park near Houston, Minn.



Ann Williamson, Winona


Finches munch on cones





Finches munch on cones

Finches enjoy a cone flower meal on French Island. 

Want to submit your own photo for consideration for Photo of the Day? We’d love to see them. Upload your submission, along with a with caption that includes the time and place where the photo was taken and your contact information, to features@lacrossetribune.com.



Tex Kakuska photo


Subscribe to our Daily Headlines newsletter.

[ad_2]

Source link

Tagsbeautifulbeautycatdesigndogfamilyfashionfollowfunhealthlifelovemephotophotographyskystylesummersunsetworld
Previous Article

Mental health resources available for University of ...

Next Article

Shawnee State University Mathematical Science major looks ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • Travel & Lifestyle

    Sherman School’s new head of education is a former student

    September 4, 2022
    By admin1
  • Travel & Lifestyle

    Teachers Leaving the Classroom: An EdSurge Summer Reading List

    July 3, 2023
    By admin1
  • Fashion

    Save up to 70% at this massive fashion warehouse sale near Brampton

    August 24, 2022
    By admin1
  • Health & Beauty

    Merger of Atrium Health and Advocate Aurora Health Setbacks in Illinois

    September 13, 2022
    By admin1
  • All

    India is building a $200 billion B2B marketplace

    July 21, 2023
    By admin1
  • Health & Beauty

    California health officials call monkeypox ‘Mpox’ and ‘MPX’, urged to rename disease

    August 20, 2022
    By admin1

You may interested

  • Science & Tech

    How does philanthropy support science journalism?

  • Science & Tech

    Alum helps administer new legislation that puts US science and technology at the forefront

  • Science & Tech

    Proposed marijuana exemption acknowledges the truth of outspoken solicitation

Search

Categories

  • All (1,224)
  • Books & Novels (2)
  • Buying Guides (20)
  • Buying Guides (22)
  • Donation and Services (1)
  • Export Test (21)
  • Fashion (1,489)
  • Gift Guides (20)
  • Gift Guides (37)
  • Health & Beauty (1,384)
  • Health & Beauty (8)
  • Home&Living (55)
  • Mobility & Lifestyle (2)
  • Non classifié(e) (2)
  • Science & Tech (1,334)
  • Sports (12)
  • Technology (52)
  • Travel & Lifestyle (1,407)
  • Travel & Lifestyle (1)
logo

Goevry is not just another run-of-the-mill magazine; it's a transformative journey that transcends the boundaries of traditional fashion publications. Our team of passionate experts, seasoned fashionistas, and visionary writers collaborate to curate a diverse range of thought-provoking features that delve into the very essence of style, culture, and identity.

  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Meshki Cotton Dresses: The Ultimate in Comfort and Fashion

    By admin1
    November 29, 2024
  • FUNNYFUZZY Sofa Covers: Comfort, Style, and Waterproof Durability

    By admin1
    November 29, 2024
  • A Homecoming Story, An Original Documentary Featuring Giannis Antetokounmpo

    By admin1
    January 17, 2024
  • kids, fashion, entrepreneurs, t-shirts, clothing lines, new york fashion week

    By admin1
    September 24, 2022

Follow us

  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us
  • Contacts
©2024 Copyright Goevry | All Rights Reserved.
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkPrivacy policy