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Nanticoke

Delaware hospitals implement more extensive visitation policies in response to rising COVID-19 infections

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Headlines August 20, 2021

Here are some of the top stories we’re following for Friday, August 20, 2021.

Damian Giletto, Wochit

In response to rising coronavirus case and hospitalization levels throughout the state, hospital systems in Delaware are implementing stricter visitation policies.

ChristianaCare, Delaware’s largest health system, is requiring visitors to show proof of vaccination or a negative test taken within 72 hours to enter its facilities as part of its new visitation guidelines.

The guidelines, which go into effect Monday, limit most patients to one daily visitor and require all visitors to pass a screening for COVID-19 symptoms to be admitted. All visitors must wear a mask.

In a statement, ChristianaCare Chief Operating Officer Sharon Kurfuerst said data and science guided their decision-making process and the spread of the delta variant among people who are unvaccinated has created “significant challenges.”

The delta variant, which is more transmissible than previous strains of the virus, has been the predominant strain in Delaware for several weeks. In the past month, Delaware’s daily case count has increased sixfold. For the first time since late April, Delaware on Thursday reported a seven-day average greater than 300 cases.

BOOSTER SHOTS: COVID-19 booster shots to start soon in Delaware. Here’s why the new shot is needed.

Hospitalizations related…

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Mohegan

Masks required for Harry Styles’ US tour alongside vaccinations and COVID tests

Organisers of Harry Styles‘ upcoming US tour have today (August 25) announced COVID safety protocols for fans attending the shows.

Styles’ ‘Love On Tour’, which was postponed from last year until this autumn due to the ongoing pandemic, will require attendees to wear masks at all venues. It will also be mandatory for ticketholders to either show proof of full coronavirus vaccination or a negative PCR test taken within 48 hours of entering one of the concerts.

The pop star’s shows at NYC’s Madison Square Garden and at California’s SAP Center in San Jose, however, will only accept full vaccination. No one will be permitted to enter the venues with a negative PCR test only.

A statement accompanying the announcement read: “Requiring testing, or proof of vaccination, is the best way to protect the health and safety of our crew and fans, and is quickly becoming the new standard for concerts around the US. There will be no exceptions to these policies.”

It added that venue staff at each show will need to follow the same protocols as attendees.

Harry Styles tourHarry Styles performs live, 2021. CREDIT: Getty

Styles confirmed the rescheduled US shows in July. Last December, he said that the UK and European leg of the tour is postponed “indefinitely”.

Harry Styles ‘Love On Tour’ US dates 2021:

SEPTEMBER
04 – Las Vegas, NV, MGM Grand Garden Arena
07 – Denver, CO, Ball Arena
09 – San Antonio, TX, AT&T Center
11 – Dallas, TX, American Airlines Center
13 – Houston, TX, Toyota Center
15 – St. Louis, MO, Enterprise Center
17 – Philadelphia, PA, Wells Fargo Center
18 – Washington, DC, Capital One Arena
20 –…

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Mohican

Flxible Bus Rally in Loudonville has a parade and time for the public to view buses

Staff Report  |  Ashland Times-Gazette

LOUDONVILLE – Flxible Owners International, a group that supports Flexible bus enthusiasts around the world, had a Flxible Bus Rally in Loudonville that included a bus rally on Saturday, part of a five-day event.  

Saturday’s bus parade included a disc jockey and announcer, public voting for bus awards, 50/50 raffle and a two-hour viewing of the Flxible buses in downtown Loudonville. The buses were parked in the middle of Main Street while the street was blocked off during this time.

More: Loudonville-Perrysville School Foundation receives $100,000 challenge from Ramser family

Flxible was founded by Hugo Young in Loudonville in 1912 as a manufacturer of motorcycle side cars, and closed in 1996. Bus manufacture started there in the 1920s. After the Flxible closure, the plant was used as a bus parts manufacturer and rehabilitation center by MCI Inc. until 2015.

Since 1990, the Flxible Bus Rally in Loudonville has usually taken place every two years. And since 1992, it was taken place at Mohican Adventures Campground.

The rally and parade were open to all Flxible bus conversions, RVs and campers. Owners weren’t required to allow the public to enter their buses during the time in downtown Loudonville on Saturday but were encouraged to let folks take a step inside their vehicles. And an announcer gave narratives of each bus in the parade.

A number of events besides the bus parade were scheduled for Flexible Owners International members during the six days of the event that started Wednesday and wrapped up Sunday, including a swap meet, panel discussion and live musical entertainment.

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Lenni Lenape

Vineland football preview, 2021: Fighting Clan could surprise some teams

Vineland Fighting Clan

Head coach: Dan Russo (ninth season at Vineland, 37-41)

Last year’s record: 2-4

2021 Starting SI rating: 66.12

Division: WJFL American

Division opponents: Lenape, Millville, St. Augustine, Shawnee, Williamstown

Key players: Anthony Arthur, RB/DB, Sr.; Billy Davis, TE/LB, Sr.; Daeshaun Winchester, WR/DB, Sr.; Braylon Blakely, RB/DB, Sr., Nasi Tatem, WR/LB, Sr.; Antwain Rivera, WR/DB, Sr.; Jamez Bullock, TE/DE, Jr.; James Hitchens, WR/DB, Jr.; Jameson Blanding, OL/DL, So.; Derek Ockimey, OL/DL, Jr.; Ryan Fennal, OT/DT, Sr.; Julio Garcia;, OL/DL, Jr. Dan Russo, QB/LB, Fr.; Jamher Bryson, RB/LB, Sr.

Outlook: Vineland head coach Dan Russo says his Fighting Clan are going to surprise some people.

After a 2-4 season, graduating some solid players and facing a challenging schedule, it might seem to be an uphill battle. But Russo likes his mix of incoming talent and returning veterans and feels the Fighting Clan will be a factor in a wide-open Group 5.

Vineland has some big boys on the front line including 6-5, 270-pound Jamez Bullock and 6-6, 265 Jameson Blanding. They also have a 6-3 receiver in James Hitchens with tremendous leaping ability who is receiving strong recruiting interest.

Dan Russo’s son, also Dan, will take over under center as a freshman and the coach expressed confidence, saying “he’s not going to hurt us.” The Fighting Clan last started a season with a freshman at QB with Isiah Pacheco in 2014 and that started a successful four-year run.

2021 schedule

  • Aug. 27: at Ocean City
  • Sept. 3: Clearview
  • Sept. 10: at Lenape
  • Sept. 17: at Hammonton
  • Sept. 24: Shawnee
  • Oct. 8: at Mainland
  • Oct. 15: St. Augustine
  • Oct. 22: Williamstown
  • Oct. 29: Egg Harbor
  • Nov. 25: at Millville

The N.J. High School Sports newsletter now appearing in mailboxes 5 days a week. Sign up now and be among the first to get all the boys and girls sports you care about, straight to your inbox each weekday. To add your name,…

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Nanticoke

How Northern Broome Cares program is giving back

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Mohegan

New England golf championships expected to move to Mohegan Sun this fall

Final details are being completed to bring the New England high school golf championship to the Mohegan Sun Golf Club on Nov. 1 in Sprague.

“All indications are we will be moving the tournament there, which is exciting for us,” said Donn Friedman, executive director of the Council of New England Secondary Schools Principals’ Association.

The event, sponsored by the CNESSPA, has been held at Bretwood Golf Course in Keene, N.H., the past 24 years. With the New England tournament moved to the fall and concerns about cold weather, a more temperate course was sought. The CIAC has split its boys golf into two seasons this school year, with 51 teams playing in the fall and nearly twice that many the in the spring.

The CIAC moved up the start of the Connecticut fall season to Aug. 30, 10 days before the other fall sports. Divisional competition will be held the week of Oct. 18. Spring golfers will not have a New England championship, while the autumn golfers will not have a state tournament.

The New England event was held in 1991 at Lyman Orchards in Middlefield before moving around to various states and settling at Bretwood.

“In talking with the golf people, moving spring to fall, frost became an issue,” Friedman said. “You’re also going to have less daylight if there…


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Unami

Iraq: Clock ticks on all-important elections, commitment to credibility needed

Briefing Council members in person for the first time in over a year, Ms. Hennis-Plasschaert, who is also the head of the Mission, also called claims that UNAMI is advocating for a postponement of the elections “frankly absurd”.

She urged everyone to “stick to the facts”, focus on their own roles and refrain from using the United Nations as a scapegoat.

“Truth, discipline and, yes, courage, are required at this critical juncture”, said the UN official

Misinformation ‘risky business’

If misinformation overtakes reality, “it is not only an enormous energy-drain for those working hard for the greater good of Iraq,” she cautioned.  “It is also risky business.” 

The UNAMI chief urged media outlets to provide accurate, reliable and timely information, instead of fuelling “false perceptions to suit their backers”.

Stressing that Iraq “leads and owns” the 10 October elections, she reminded that their credibility would prove essential for its future.

Elections at hand 

Detailing joint efforts, Ms. Hennis-Plasschaert said that the Independent High Electoral Commission has reached “several complex milestones” while noting that UNAMI has provided technical assistance wherever it can. 

She outlined that candidate lists have been finalized; a ballot lottery conducted for all 83 constituencies; ballot printing is ongoing; and all ballot papers expected in country by mid-September. 

Meanwhile, polling and results management systems are being reviewed by an independent audit firm.

In parallel, she said preparations for UN monitoring are moving rapidly, with most members of the preparatory team being deployed to Baghdad “as we speak” and regional teams due on the ground in early September.

The Special Representative emphasized that the October elections have “the potential to be different” from those in 2018, and noted that that five times as many UN personnel are currently engaged as were three years earlier.

To calls for…

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Mohican

The Last of the Fucked-Up Mohicans: On Gianfranco Calligarich’s “Last Summer in the City”

GIANFRANCO CALLIGARICH’S Last Summer in the City is a slim masterpiece about a young man who moves to Rome, fails at journalism, fails at love, and ultimately fails at life. Leo Gazzara counts among literature’s great losers, an unforgettable forgettable, and Last Summer is one of those delicious minor works, enmeshed in a particular place and a particular time, that only rarely escape the confines of a national literature and onto the commercial lists of varsity American publishers. FSG’s new edition, beautifully translated by Howard Curtis, is just one of a number of new translations of Calligarich currently in the works. This new rediscovery, bigger than any before, marks the writer’s definitive entrance onto the stage of world literature.

Despite its initial success upon publication (at Natalia Ginzburg’s insistence) in 1973, Calligarich’s novel has long traveled under the radar as a cult classic, and it’s easy to see why. It’s the opposite of a winner — in fact, the book is about a total loser, a near-perfect example of that Italian type, the sfigato. Leo, in that uncomfortable territory around his 30th year, moves from his native Milan down to Rome. There he works for a “medical-literary” paper until its aristocratic patron goes bankrupt, and Leo’s meetings with the old count lose their remaining veneer of professionalism and become roving conversations about the frivolous things — horses and romance and social hijinks — that still delight the titled gentry. Leo is himself a self-styled aristocrat, though born into the wrong class: when asked where he would like to have been born, he replies, “In Vienna before the end of the empire.” He turns down a new job writing copy for a pharmaceutical trade paper because it sounds like too much work. He decides to wait for something else, “[l]ike an aristocrat…

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Lenni Lenape

St. Augustine football preview, 2021: Hermits ready to challenge state elite again

St. Augustine Hermits

Head coach: Pete Lancetta (fifth season at St. Augustine, 23-16; 238-81-1 in 31 seasons overall)

Last year’s record: 4-3

2021 Starting SI rating: 81.20

Division: WJFL American

Division opponents: Lenape, Millville, Vineland, Shawnee, Williamstown

Key players: Nasir Hill, WR/DB, Sr.; Kenny Selby, WR/DB, Sr.; Kanye Udoh, RB/DB, Sr.; Dennis Jaquez, TE/DE, Sr.; Trey McLeer, QB/DB, Sr.; Bradley Pao, WR/DB, Sr.; Rob Adamson, RB/DB, Jr.; Gavin Kennedy, T/DT, Sr.; Brady Small, OL/DL, Sr.; Frankin Simms, RB/LB, Sr.

Outlook: Look at just about any position on the roster and you’ll find experienced seniors – part of a group that knocked off Seton Hall Prep and put a scare into No. 1 St. Peter’s Prep in the state Non-Public Group 4 tournament as sophomores two years ago.

This year, that group is back for its last hurrah – coming off a disappointing 4-3 season which still included wins over Williamstown and Lenape – and with playoffs back has the look of a team that can pick up some wins against the North Jersey elite.

The secondary – led by All-State pick and Princeton commit Nasir Hill – but also including Sacred Heart commit Kenny Selby, Bucknell commit Bradley Pao and Trey McLeer might be the best in the state. McLeer returns at quarterback after taking over the position last year.

The Hermits have an FBS running back in Kanye Udoh, who is complimented by a big back in Franklin Simms. And there’s plenty of size and talent on both sides of the line with the likes of Northwestern commit Denis Jaquez, Army commit Brady Small and Bucknell commit Gavin Kennedy.

Put it all together and nobody should surprised if it’s the Year of the Hermit.

2021 schedule

  • Aug. 27 at Archbishop Spaulding (Md.), 6:30
  • Sept. 3: Notre Dame, 6
  • Sept. 10: Williamstown, 6
  • Sept. 17: St. Joseph (Hamm.), 6
  • Sept. 24 at Millville, 7
  • Oct. 1: Lenape, 6
  • Oct….

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Nanticoke

Luzerne County Community College schedules 29th local history conference

Aug. 23—NANTICOKE — This year, it’s all about the gridiron

Luzerne County Community College announced the theme of its 29th “The history of Northeastern Pennsylvania” Conference, set for Oct. 1, from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m at the Nanticoke Campus’s Educational Conference Center. The theme this year: “Football in Northeast Pennsylvania.”

LCCC President Thomas Leary will begin the program at 9 a.m., followed with opening remarks from Associate History Professor William Kashatus and Luzerne County Historical Society Director Mary Walsh. The keynote session is titled “The Pottsville Maroons and the Stolen NFL Championship of 1925,” presented by Schuylkill County Historical Society director Diane Prosymchak and Vincent Genovese, author of a book with the same title. That presentation is set to run from 9:15 a.m. to about 10:15 a.m.

As the Roman numerals in this February’s Super Bowl (LV) suggest, in 1925 there was no Super Bowl, or any NFL championship game. The title went to the team with the best record, and the Pottsville Maroons claimed that distinction. But the league president disqualified the team and rescinded it’s NFL rights, giving the title to the Chicago Cardinals (later St. Louis, now Arizona Cardinals).

At 10:15 a.m., the conference will have author George Paulush present “Zeus and the Boys: Wilkes College Football, Coach Rollie Schmidt and Their Historic Winning Streak,” followed by John Zimich on “covering the High School Gridiron” at 11:30 a.m.

The afternoon involves a panel discussion dubbed “National Football League — Past and Present,” with panelists including Greg Skrepenak, Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders, Carolina Panthers: 1992-1997; Matt McGloin, Oakland Raiders, Houston Texans: 2013-2017; and Bill Bradley, Philadelphia Eagles, Minnesota Vikings, St. Louis Cardinals: 1969-1977.

Free and open to the public, the conference is sponsored by the LCCC social science/history department and the Luzerne County Historical Society. For more information Janis Wilson Seeley at LCCC at…

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