Jan Harbold
I worked for Midwest Services, so we did the ushering (or usherette-ing!) and security and crowd control and such, not just for baseball games, but for concerts and Packer games, and the occasional odd jobs like responding to post-All Star Game program requests as well. When I first started working at County Stadium, there couldn’t have been more than 10 of us girls working security, and over 300 guys. The girls told me that the older guys would be really nice to me, but that the younger guys wouldn’t give me the time of day. It was true that the older guys took me under their wing, showed me pictures of their grandkids, taught me all the little, “Do you know what that is for?” around County Stadium, and taught me so much more about baseball than I ever knew before.
Contributing Writer Despite not being able to perform in person this year or have full in-person rehearsals, the Saranac Lake High School is still putting on its annual spring musical March 19 and 20. Of course, this year will be much different the show has no visuals, just prerecorded dialogue and musical numbers. Director Bonnie Brewer called it a “audio theatrical experience.” This year’s show, which was picked before the pandemic even struck last March, is “Oklahoma!” and features about 40 high school students. Brewer and Drew Benware, the show’s musical director, met with groups of students over Zoom to practice dialogue and rehearse the show. Benware was able to meet with the students one-on-one in his classroom at the high school to rehearse and record the musical numbers.
Contributing Writer Saranac Lake High School last staged âOklahoma!â in 2006, seen here. From left are Matthew Wagner as Ali Hackim, Caroline Couture as Ado Annie and Josh Preston as Will Parker. The school is again putting on the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, but this time in a prerecorded online audio version, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Enterprise photo â Brittany Proulx) From left, Raegan Fritts as Little Red Riding Hood, Jayce Clement as the Baker and Stephanie Fortune as the Bakerâs Wife rehearse last March for âInto the Woods,â a musical the Red and Black Players of Tupper Lake Middle-High School never got to perform since it was canceled due to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Historic U.S. vaccine campaign begins with first shipments delivering hope to millions
Although the federal government is coordinating distribution efforts, states have the final say over who gets the first shots. The federal government is sending the first shipments to more than 600 locations, as millions wait for the vaccine and a return to life free from the fear of the deadly illness.
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Lisa Baertlein / Reuters | 1:19 pm, Dec. 13, 2020 ×
A vial of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is seen ahead of being administered at the Royal Victoria Hospital, on the first day of the largest immunization program in the British history, in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Dec. 8. Liam McBurney/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
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US COVID-19 vaccine campaign launches with first shipments delivering hope to millions
A convoy of trucks leaves the Pfizer Global Supply manufacturing plant, amid the COVID-19 outbreak, in Portage, Michigan on Dec 13, 2020. (Photo: Reuters/Rebecca Cook)
14 Dec 2020 03:58PM (Updated:
14 Dec 2020 04:02PM) Share this content
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WASHINGTON: Cargo planes and trucks with the first US shipments of coronavirus vaccine fanned out from FedEx and UPS hubs in Tennessee and Kentucky on Sunday (Dec 13) en route to distribution points around the country, launching an immunisation project of unprecedented scope and complexity.