Stay updated with breaking news from One year of covid. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Credit Phil Hearing / Unsplash Most of us have had some sort of bubble throughout the pandemic: a small group of people we limited ourselves to seeing while a novel virus spread among the masses. For some of us, that’s been the family members we already live with. For others it was a few, select friends we gathered with many of us call them our “pods.” So what happened over a year of being cut off from a larger, more interactive group of humans? Did families draw nearer? Did romantic relationships fall apart? Did pods or bubbles of friends become stale and show signs of fatigue? ....
College athletes face an uncertain future a year into the pandemic and last updated 2021-03-12 11:43:19-05 PHILADELPHIA, Pa. â Ivy League basketball star Tori Crawford knows what a player needs to win: hard work, determination, and love for her team. The University of Pennsylvania forward has dedicated every weekend, practically since she could walk, to hearing the sound of a ball and net colliding with perfect precision. âI was just head and shoulders above everybody,â said Crawford. âI was extremely tall, off the charts, so that s kind of how I got pushed to play basketball in second grade with my dad being my first coach, and then, by the time I was nine years old in fourth grade, I started playing competitively and never looked back. ....
It’s been one year since the first identified COVID-19 cases in Michigan. There have been more than 601,000 confirmed cases in the state over the past 12 ....
4:27 It’s been one year since the first COVID-19 cases were confirmed in Michigan. We asked you: how has your life changed over the past year? We took to the streets in Detroit and Grand Rapids to hear what folks had to say. March 10 marks one year since Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced the first confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Michigan. Following that announcement, executive orders were issued that temporarily closed schools and restaurants, and limited gatherings. Michiganders began planning to stay inside in order to “flatten the curve” for at least two weeks. But as the number of cases grew and hospitals became filled, it became clear that it would be a long while before things would feel like normal again. ....
It’s been one year since Governor Gretchen Whitmer announced the first cases of COVID-19 in Michigan. That spring, Michigan became a COVID hotspot. The ....