and last updated 2021-07-29 19:18:54-04
SANDIA, Texas â A summer camp excursion resulted in 72 people contracting COVID-19 at Camp Zephyr located in Sandia.
According to Emilie Prot, regional medical director for Public Health Region 11, the outbreak happened at the camp, located about 50 miles northwest of Corpus Christi.
Prot said of the 72 people exposed, 18 were camp staff members at the camp, 40 were campers, and 14 others had secondary exposure, which means a camper or staff member went home and exposed their direct family member.
Of the infected total at the camp, three people were fully vaccinated. One was a camp counselor, and two others were camp attendees.
72 people contract COVID-19 at Camp Zephyr in Sandia kristv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kristv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
She went to stay with her grandmother at a council-run Traveller camp in Ayrshire.
Her father Gordon later turned his back on the Traveller lifestyle.
“I’m a housie now,” he said.
“I get called a bug because I stay in a house. But I’d rather have a power shower than wash myself in a bucket.”
Mr Johnstone, admitted he and Annalise had parted “on bad terms” but insisted he still loved her.
Annalise Johnstone
The trial heard father and daughter became distant after Annalise confided to her family she was gay.
“I never cut her off,” said Mr Johnstone. “I just didn’t approve.
By Jill Pickett, Arnold Engineering Development Complex Public Affairs / Published March 16, 2021
Jay Caldwell, a commercial machinist, works on venturis mounted inside the scavenging scoop in the 16-foot supersonic wind tunnel, Nov. 3, 2020, at Arnold Air Force Base, Tenn. The scoop was modified to allow for the calibration of a large-scale mass flow assembly. (U.S. Air Force photo by Jill Pickett)
Nathan Payne, Flight Systems Test Branch, Test Division propulsion subject matter expert and Josh Webb, Analysis Flight commander, Flight Systems Test Branch, watch data as it is collected during a test run in the 16-foot supersonic wind tunnel, or 16S, to calibrate a mass flow assembly, Nov. 19, 2020, at Arnold Air Force Base, Tenn. Calibration of large-scale MFAs is a new capability in 16S. (U.S. Air Force photo by Jill Pickett)