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Dianna Ortiz, Survivor and Witness of the Guatemalan Genocide (1958-2021)
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Dianna Ortiz, sobreviviente y testigo del genocidio en Guatemala (1958-2021)
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Pedestrian struck by car in Hope Mills identified
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Frustrations, confusion for families persist in seeking the coronavirus vaccine The hospital s vaccine clinic is appointment only. (Source: Live 5 News) By Lillian Donahue | February 20, 2021 at 4:20 PM EST - Updated February 21 at 12:01 AM
CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) - Families in more rural areas say trying to get vaccine appointments for loved ones has become a daily challenge.
Kathy Ford said it took weeks to find an appointment for the first dose herself and her husband.
“Daily we’re looking and now I was able to obtain a vaccine appointment for my husband and I,” Ford said. “But that was only through word-of-mouth from a family member who happens to know somebody else who happened to say call DHEC.”
Dianna Ortiz, nun who told of brutal abduction by Guatemalan military, dies at 62
By Ryan Di Corpo The Washington Post,Updated February 20, 2021, 4:25 p.m.
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Dianna Ortiz, author of The Blindfold s Eyes: My Journey From Torture to Truth, has died of cancer at 62.Juana Arias/The Washington Post
Dianna Ortiz, a slight Catholic nun from New Mexico, arrived in Guatemala in 1987 against a backdrop of devastating violence: a decades-long civil war, pitting Marxist guerrillas against the U.S.-backed military, that would ultimately claim 200,000 lives.
But as a member of the Ursuline teaching order who came to the country s western highlands to help Mayan grade-school children learn to read and write and understand the Bible, she said, she felt relatively insulated from the killings and disappearances.