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Vězni z Břeclavi odstraňují následky tornáda
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Tornádo zničilo autobus: Zraněným přivolala pomoc Barbora, sama utrpěla zlomeniny
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Řidič autobusu Robert Kos zraněný při tornádu zůstává v nemocnici ve Vídni
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A year changed some of what we knew about COVID and who it affects most. But heartbreak was the constant. John Diedrich, Sophie Carson, Irene Chang, and Andrew Mollica © Courtesy of Carmen Gardner-Jackson Diane Butler, center, poses for a photo at her graduation in 2013 from Bryant & Stratton College with her daughter, Carmen Gardner-Jackson, and her son-in-law Kelly Jackson. Butler earned a degree in criminal justice. She died in 2020 from COVID.
A year ago, as deaths from the coronavirus soared in New York, Seattle and elsewhere, people in Wisconsin waited and wondered.
The first case of the virus had been confirmed in the state in late January 2020. It seemed just a matter of time before COVID claimed a life in Wisconsin. On March 19, it took three.
Email
A year changed some of what we knew about COVID and who it affects most. But heartbreak was the constant.
We re still learning about COVID-19, but an analysis of new local, state and national data provides a clearer picture.
John Diedrich, Sophie Carson, Irene Chang, and Andrew Mollica, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Published
5:01 pm UTC Mar. 12, 2021
A year ago, as deaths from the coronavirus soared in New York, Seattle and elsewhere, people in Wisconsin waited and wondered.
The first case of the virus had been confirmed in the state in late January 2020. It seemed just a matter of time before COVID claimed a life in Wisconsin. On March 19, it took three.