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The Georgians were a rowdy bunch who enjoyed life to excess
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Carry and know how to use Narcan to save someone who is overdosing
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The pandemic didnât stop the Rotary Club of Los Altos from focusing on its commitment to community service.
Amid restrictions imposed by the public health crisis, Rotarians continued to provide grants to local nonprofit groups and college scholarships to graduating seniors through the Los Altos Rotary Endowment Fund.
Fundraising through the clubâs Fine Art in the Park open-air art show was impacted by poor weather in 2019 and canceled due to the pandemic in 2020. But this year, with many COVID restrictions in the rearview mirror, Carol Dabb, the Rotary Clubâs artist coordinator, introduced the Los Altos Bears project, aimed at generating funds for Rotary efforts and drawing visitors to the downtown area.
July 3, 2021
For some, The Grand Tour of the 18th and 19th centuries was a one-off trip. For others it became a lifestyle. Carla Passino takes a look at some of the most famous Britons to split their lives between the UK and the Continent.
When Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Arundel, embarked on his first trip to Padua, Italy, in 1612, he couldn’t have imagined he’d start a trend that would grip British Society. His experiences in Italy sparked a wave of interest in European travel, which, over time, evolved into the Grand Tour.
Most British gentlemen (and the odd lady) spent three years abroad to polish their knowledge of art, architecture and the classics, but some made a different choice, settling overseas for longer. Several of these early ‘expats’ had little alternative, perhaps due to scandal or because they were in the service of the kingdom.
For Leo Goldman, saving his brother’s life was easier than he expected.
“I just went in, and I woke up and my back hurt a little bit,” the 15-year-old Duxbury resident said of a bone marrow extraction for which he was sedated. “It hurt a little bit, but it wasn’t anything compared to what it would do (for my brother).”
Stem cell transplants have now saved 12-year-old Mateo Goldman’s life twice in four years, after doctors diagnosed him with leukemia at age 8 and again last year.
“It was the only treatment for the type of leukemia he has,” said the boy s aunt, Amy Leone of Milford. “He needed to have a bone marrow transplant.”
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