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Objetivo: evitar la bomba nuclear de Hitler
Segunda guerra mundial
Los nazis estuvieron lejos de lograr la mortífera arma pero en gran parte fue por las misiones de sabotaje de los aliados
¿Pudieron disponer los nazis de la bomba nuclear? Aunque se quedaron lejos de lograrlo, los aliados evitaron cualquier intento de avance serio
Science & Society Picture Librar / Getty
Actualizado a 10/07/2021 06:49
La posibilidad de que el Tercer Reich dispusiera de la bomba nuclear no fue ni mucho menos remota. La historia nos dice que no estuvo tan cerca como creyeron los aliados durante el transcurso de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, pero también que fue la suma de muchos factores, entre ellos las misiones de sabotaje de los aliados, lo que evitó que finalmente Hitler no dispusiera a tiempo de la mortífera arma.
Staff Writer
T-L Photo/ROBERT A. DEFRANK
Belmont County Deputy Health Commissioner Robert Sproul reports on COVID-19 cases and vaccinations. The work of contact-tracing those who may have been in contact with infected people will soon be taken over by the state.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE The Belmont County Health Department is receiving some state aid in contact tracing, which should free up staff for other duties.
Belmont County Deputy Health Commissioner Robert Sproul said Tuesday he had spoken with the state health department on details of contact tracing going forward. Residents who have been in contact with a person who has tested positive for COVID-19 will now be notified by a communications company. Public Consulting Group is contracting with the Ohio Department of Health to do contact tracing, Sproul said in a text message.
Times Leader Staff Writer
ST. CLAIRSVILLE With demand for COVID-19 vaccination declining in Belmont County, the health department’s weekly shot clinic at the Ohio Valley Mall is expected to end May 20.
After that, Belmont County Deputy Health Commissioner Robert Sproul said, health department staff likely will continue to set up clinics around Belmont County by request.
“We’re going to try and go around the community,” Sproul said. “We’re going to try to reach out to different communities and different locations, so that way we can be in the community with the shot, so they wouldn’t have to drive to our place. If Bethesda wanted, we would find some place in Bethesda to sit down and give the shots and come back in 28 days and do the second shot.”
From Staff Reports
Three of the Northern Panhandle’s four counties found themselves in the safest category Monday on the state’s COVID-19 alert map.
Hancock, Brooke and Ohio counties all were green on the Department of Health and Human Resources alert map. Meanwhile, Marshall County was orange, the second-highest-risk category.
Hancock County had an infection rate of 13.39 cases per 100,000 residents and a percent positivity of 2.99. Brooke County had an infection rate of 14.33 cases per 100,000 residents and a percent positivity of 2.90.
Ohio County had an infection rate of 17.25 cases per 100,000 residents and a percent positivity of 2.63. Marshall County had an infection rate of 25.27 cases per 100,000 residents and a percent positivity of 5.06.