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Howard Okusko Sr Passes | Standardbred Canada

Longtime horseman Howard Okusko Sr., who not only was part of the construction team that built Vernon Downs in the early 1950s but also trained his stable of horses at the New York harness racetrack since it opened in 1954, passed away Thursday afternoon, May 20, in St. Elizabeth Medical Center in Utica, N.Y. after a brief illness. He was 86. Mr. Okusko was born in Utica, N.Y. on Jan. 9, 1935. He attended St. Francis De Sales School and resided in the area his entire life. “My dad never left Vernon Downs, when he always could have,” said Mr. Okusko’s son, Howard Jr., also one of Vernon Downs’ leading trainers and drivers through the years. “He always stayed at Vernon.”

Shelby priest keeps faith facing fatal diagnosis

As dusk fell, nurses rolled Father Michael Kottar outside in a wheelchair where 27 young men studying to become priests stood preparing to say goodbye

Pill that treats COVID-19 shows promise in early testing

Pill that treats COVID-19 shows promise in early testing Published: March 8, 2021 6:18 PM EST Updated: March 9, 2021 10:06 AM EST Recommended More than a year into the pandemic, doctors and patients still have few treatment options. It’s like looking for a needle in a haystack. “You have cells in a dish that are infected with a virus. And then you have lots and lots and lots and lots of dishes. And all of them are exposed to different drugs. And you just look to see which drugs can stop the virus from replicating and which ones don’t. And usually, that ends up you could start with hundreds of 1000s of drugs, and you end up with like, 10,” said Dr. Timothy Sheahan with the Department of Epidemiology at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Doctors know more about COVID-19 treatment, but Florida recording highest case numbers

Doctors know more about COVID-19 treatment, but Florida recording highest case numbers Published: January 8, 2021 5:53 PM EST Updated: January 11, 2021 10:20 AM EST Recommended When doctors first began to respond to the coronavirus, they had a hard time identifying it, let alone treating people who had contracted COVID-19. “We saw so many hospitals that were absolutely packed and couldn’t even keep up with the number of COVID patients that were coming in,” said Liz Chandler, the pharmacy and clinical specialist for infectious diseases at Lee Health. The unknowns in the beginning left health care providers with an uncertain path forward, with high hospitalizations and death rates.

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