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Del s Celebrates 75 Years with 75 Cent Lemonade in Cranston

Del’s Lemonade will be rolling back the price of a mini Lemonade at their headquarters in Cranston in honor of their 75 years of serving up frozen lemonade.

65% of Ohio unvaccinated or overdue for COVID booster as omicron surge shifts

7 Unique Foods You Can Only Find In Rhode Island

I often find myself pining for Rhode Island’s gastronomic eccentricities. The solution? Frequent trips back home, where I load up on favorites like these.

Del s Frozen Lemonade opening in Arlington this spring

Del s Frozen Lemonade opening in Arlington this spring Del’s Frozen Lemonade, a staple of Rhode Island, will be coming to Arlington.  Del s Lemonade Boston has submitted an application to the town to open up at 1050 Massachusetts Avenue in Arlington Heights.  The location will operate similar to an ice cream stand, with service being done exclusively via a window that looks out onto the sidewalk. Del’s will sell their trademark frozen lemonade, as well as ice cream, pretzels, hot dogs, popcorn and other fair-style food and sweets.  Angelo DeLucia founded the company in 1948 in Cranston, Rhode Island, using a push cart that contained a machine that could produce the frozen lemonade made using a recipe that DeLucia’s father, Franco, had brought over from Italy. The company has dozens of locations, mostly located in Rhode Island, with a few locations in southeastern Massachusetts. 

OH Really? Checks COVID Vaccine Efficacy and Answers Questions About Travel

MetroHealth MetroHealth s Dr. Amy Ray and NEOMED virologist Dr. Angelo DeLucia, answer this week s questions. As Ohio maps out who’s next-in-line for the COVID-19 vaccine, you’ve got questions on how effective the vaccine is and who needs to get it. In this edition of “OH Really?,” we’ll find out. The COVID vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna are said to be at least 90 percent effective. Gary from Wayne County wants to know if that means around 90 percent of the people being vaccinated will form an immunity. I spoke with Angelo DeLucia, a professor of molecular virology at NEOMED. He says the number derives from clinical testing.

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