The Post awarded with two Gerald Loeb Awards We are thrilled to share that The Post won two awards, earned one honorable mention and had an additional three finalists in the 2024 Gerald Loeb Awards. 10/11/2024 - 8:08 am | View Link
Post falsely claims Jimmy Carter voted for Harris by Oct. 4 | Fact check Jimmy Carter would have been unable to cast his ballot on or before Oct. 4. Absentee ballots in Georgia were scheduled to go out Oct. 7. 10/8/2024 - 8:18 am | View Link
Create a sheet of nametags or address labels Go to Mailings > Labels. Select the label type and size in Options. If you don’t see your product number, select New Label and configure a custom label. Select New Document. Word opens a new document that contains a table with dimensions that match the label product. 10/11/2024 - 6:29 pm | View Website
Copy and paste using the Office Clipboard For example, you can copy text from an email message, data from a workbook or datasheet, and a graphic from a presentation, and then paste them all into a document. By using the Office Clipboard, you can arrange the copied items the way that you want in the document. 10/11/2024 - 3:15 pm | View Website
Create and print labels Learn how to make labels in Word. You can create and print a full page of address labels or nametags. Get started on how to print labels from Word. 10/11/2024 - 10:15 am | View Website
Print a document in Word Before you print, you can preview your document and specify which pages you want to print. Select File > Print. To preview each page, select the forward and backward arrows at the bottom of the page. If the text is too small to read, use the zoom slider at the bottom of the page to enlarge it. 10/11/2024 - 10:15 am | View Website
Create a document in Word Learn how to format text, add graphics, and more in Word documents. Create professional-looking documents with ease using our step-by-step guide. Try it now! 10/10/2024 - 11:31 pm | View Website
One of the top issues on the minds of Colorado voters this election is the cost of living, with about 15% in the ongoing Voter Voices survey by media outlets across the state saying they intend to focus first on the economy as they mark their ballots.
Coloradans are concerned about the price of housing, groceries, gas, utility bills and everything else it takes to keep households running.
Andy Cohen, a 41-year-old co-founder of a public affairs firm in Denver, is tired of the negativity about an economy that, by most metrics, is glowing — even as he noted a dip in his own business to close out 2023, and acknowledges that affordability remains a challenge in Colorado.
Steve Brewer, 64, who runs a small IT consulting firm out of Centennial, acknowledges that inflation has slowed since its peak last year, but worries “the damage is already done” when it comes to high prices.
For both, the economy and cost of living are one of — if not the — top issues as they fill out their ballots for the Nov.
Elections are supposed to be decided at the ballot box. But this year, Donald Trump’s campaign appears to be trying to win on a different field of battle. With dozens of lawsuits already filed across the country, the Republicans are using state and federal courts as a key pillar of their strategy to retake the White House.
As a child, Senegalese-born chef Pierre Thiam took trips from Dakar to the countryside to visit his grandparents. There, he often ate fonio, a locally grown seeded grass rarely found outside rural areas. After making a name for himself at New York restaurants decades later, Thiam’s thoughts returned to the ingredient.
As Donald Trump campaigns to be a dictator for one day, he’s asking: “Are you better off now than you were when I was president?” Great question! To help answer it, our Trump Files series is delving into consequential events from the 45th president’s time in office that Americans might have forgotten—or wish they had.
Six years on, families remain separated.
When Hurricane Milton rapidly intensified last week, exploding into a Category 5 storm, large parts of Florida were bracing for disaster. For Cruz Salucio, Milton wouldn’t be the first, or the worst, hurricane he’d endured. But it sparked anxiety all the same.
Salucio works for the Coalition of Immokalee Workers’ local radio station, Radio Conciencia.