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Reporting for duty: Attica hostage shares harrowing account of riot
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Arts Glances: MDI Heroes, celebrating birds, the Maine that never was
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Feb 6, 2021
Mary Louise Cope, 89, of Wheeling, WV passed away very peacefully at Continuous Care Center (Wheeling Hospital) on February 3 rd surrounded by love and her six children.
Mary Lou was born on March 28 th, 1931, the oldest daughter of Frank J. and Catharine Taylor Slatterick. Mary Lou was a 1949 Graduate of St. John Central High School and a 1952 graduate of the Wheeling Hospital School of Nursing. Mary Lou was a retired nurse with 40 years of service to Wheeling Hospital. She started her career and worked for 20 years on the OB/GYN Floor including Labor/Delivery Room and the Nursery. She worked for 20 years as a Nurse Manager at Wheeling Hospital Continuous Care Center, where she loved working with the elderly before retiring in 1995.
Amrit Baveja. MUST CREDIT: Photo for The Washington Post by Ronnie Cohen
They felt anxious, depressed, lonely and lost in their devices. Amrit Baveja, 17, listened as other high school students talked last spring in a Zoom room about fallout from the pandemic and remote learning.
The students seemed so desperate to return to school IRL (in real life) that Amrit trusted they would resist their teenage tendencies and follow social-distancing rules and restrictions if they could just attend in-person classes.
Based on that faith, Amrit, a big data and machine learning enthusiast, teamed up with a programming partner, Beck Lorsch, 17, who has released six iOS apps. They spent the summer building an app intended to help their private high schools in Marin County, Calif., contain the spread of covid-19.
Marin students COVID-19 tracing app for school raises flak
Ronnie Cohen, The Washington Post
Dec. 20, 2020
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2of3Beck Lorsch.Photo for The Washington Post by Ronnie CohenShow MoreShow Less
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They felt anxious, depressed, lonely and lost in their devices. Amrit Baveja, 17, listened as other high school students talked last spring in a Zoom room about fallout from the pandemic and remote learning.
The students seemed so desperate to return to school IRL (in real life) that Amrit trusted they would resist their teenage tendencies and follow social-distancing rules and restrictions if they could just attend in-person classes.
Based on that faith, Amrit, a big data and machine learning enthusiast, teamed up with a programming partner, Beck Lorsch, 17, who has released six iOS apps. They spent the summer building an app intended to help their private high schools in Marin County, Calif., contain the spread of covid-19.
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