The Playshop Theatre at Allegheny College presents the rock musical “Head Over Heels,” with performances today, Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in the Vukovich
By Tony Callaio For Sunday Dispatch
Driscoll’s Home Center, 629 South Main Street, Old Forge, is now open. The Driscoll family held an grand opening on Thursday, July 15, at the former ACE Hardware store.
Tony Callaio | For Sunday Dispatch Listen to this
The shelves are stocked for Old Forge residents at Driscoll’s Home Center’s newest location on Main Street.
Tony Callaio | For Sunday Dispatch
Driscoll’s Home Center’s Madeline Chervenitski, right, takes care of another customer at the Old Forge location during the grand opening.
Tony Callaio | For Sunday Dispatch
Main principals of Driscoll’s Home Center, from left to right, Scott Sharrow, general manager, Liz Driscoll, Dennis Driscoll, and Mathew Driscoll.
Joe Mahr and Angie Leventis Lourgos
Chicago Tribune (TNS)
Marj Leopardo is 85. Her husband, Sam, is 88. They both have health issues. And their days are now consumed with one thing: the vaccine hunt.
The Crystal Lake couple are, on paper, just the kind of people the government wants at the front of the vaccine line. But they live in a country that’s struggled with the rollout, and in a state that’s struggled more than others.
So that has meant reaching out daily to doctors’ offices, pharmacies, hospitals, the local health department. It has meant their daughter stalks websites to hunt for an elusive open appointment. And they watch others, in other suburbs and other states, snap up shots.
Late planning, decentralized oversight, a ‘Hunger Games’ sign-up: How Illinois has struggled more than most states rolling out the COVID-19 vaccine
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Late planning, decentralized oversight, a ‘Hunger Games’ sign-up: How Illinois has struggled more than most states rolling out the COVID-19 vaccine
Joe Mahr and Angie Leventis Lourgos, Chicago Tribune
February 6, 2021, 3:30 AM·17 min read
Marj Leopardo is 85. Her husband, Sam, is 88. They both have health issues. And their days are now consumed with one thing: the vaccine hunt.
The Crystal Lake couple are, on paper, just the kind of people the government wants at the front of the vaccine line. But they live in a country that’s struggled with the rollout, and in a state that’s struggled more than others.