Live Breaking News & Updates on தி இழந்தது ஆண்டு|Page 2
Stay updated with breaking news from தி இழந்தது ஆண்டு. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
They’re giving it more than the old college try. College students throughout the country have in many ways been robbed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Many students returned home and avoided campus, either taking a gap year or continuing their degree from home. Students who remained on campus had to be rather isolated. All students missed the one-on-one instruction with professors and the feeling of finding a new friend in class. And for the time being, bar nights are rare, and dancing in crowded, sweaty basements, along with other kinds of larger gatherings, is a fantasy from yesteryear. Researchers have found that COVID-19 has increased the depression rate among college students. That’s not to mention the physical health threat of the coronavirus. According to Connecticut College’s COVID-19 dashboard, a website that tracks coronavirus statistics at the college, 48,753 tests were performed on students and employees between Aug. 17, 2020, and Jan. 31 of this year. There we ....
When East Lyme High School sophomore Tolby Regan is learning remotely, she finds it harder to stay motivated and focused, even though she knows how important schoolwork is to accomplish her goals in life. She said she s very social and misses talking to people at school but worries that if she is around other people she could spread the virus to her family or people who are more at risk. I may be going through a hard time, but so is everybody else so as long as I keep up with the assignments that the teachers are assigning and doing all the work that I can right now, I ll be at the same level as everybody else, said Regan, who is following the high school s hybrid learning model. ....
In this week s edition of The Storyline, Day staff members came together to remember special people from throughout the region who died during the ....
Gwen Smith of Pawcatuck always had dogs, so last March when she was ready to adopt several months after her two beloved dogs had died, she didn’t expect to be slammed by the COVID-19 pandemic pet rush. “It took us months and months to put in an application,” Smith recalled. “As soon as we put it in, the dog we were looking at was gone, and we had to start all over again.” Smith and her husband, Tom Ahlgren, heard similar stories at the Westerly dog park. People wanting to adopt pets during the COVID-19 pandemic were running into the dual problem of low supply and high demand. ....
At times the isolation has been terrible. Families unable to visit parents and grandparents in nursing homes. Traditions set aside or conducted virtually. ....