Marilyn Hall Pueppke

Marilyn Hall Pueppke, wife, educator, musician, and friend, passed away peacefully on September 22, 2025 at Methodist Fremont Health in Fremont following a sudden brain aneurysm. She was 70 years old. Born on February 2, 1955, in
YouTube to start reinstating accounts of creators banned for misinformation
YouTube will offer creators a way to rejoin the streaming platform if they were banned for violating COVID-19 and election misinformation policies that are no longer in effect.
U.S. intelligence leads to capture of alleged baby trafficking ringleader
The case underscores Washington’s intensified targeting of Mexican cartels and marks an expansion in the way U.S. counterterrorism policy is applied.
U.S. intelligence leads to capture of alleged baby trafficking ringleader
The case underscores Washington’s intensified targeting of Mexican cartels and marks an expansion in the way U.S. counterterrorism policy is applied.
Trump administration ending food insecurity report
The Trump administration’s Department of Agriculture is ending the Household Food Security Report, a decades-long effort to track food insecurity across the country. Craig Gundersen, professor of economics at Baylor University and a former USDA economist, joined
Sister Jean has retired from her duties at Loyola University
The Phoenix noted that Schmidt was not present as the Loyola Ramblers basketball team played in the NIT semifinals back in April.
How the NYPD is using drones to combat deadly subway surfing
The NYPD says it has saved more than 200 people with a program that uses drones to canvass moving trains for subway surfers.
Parents say son with autism was nonverbal until trying an off-label drug
The theory behind leucovorin’s use for autism postulates that some children have a blockage in the transport of folic acid into the brain that potentially contributes to neurological symptoms.
3 questions homebuyers need the answers to now, post-Fed rate cut
Mortgage interest rates recently hit a three-year low. Here are three important questions homebuyers should ask next.
The athletes and coaches running for Congress in 2026
A number of professional athletes and coaches may have retired from their sports, but they’re not done competing. Instead, they’re setting their sights on Capitol Hill and running for office.