Everyone was scared : Georgian Court graduating nurse got hands-on COVID ER lessons
‘It s like a war.’ Hospital staff tell the story of COVID-19
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A 33-year-old woman arrived at the emergency room of Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune and promptly suffered cardiac arrest due to clots in her main pulmonary artery.
She was stabilized thanks to the quick actions by a team of people, including a patient care technician who performed CPR.
That technician was Ethan Carpenter, a nursing student at Georgian Court University in Lakewood. Today Carpenter becomes a nursing graduate along with a few dozen classmates who served on the front lines in hospitals during the pandemic.
Georgian Court Honors Lacey Woman, 27, Who Died Of Cancer
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2021 DII softball championship: Bracket, scores, schedule
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CATHERINE R. (BASSO) SZYMANSKI, 80 ×
CATHERINE R. (BASSO) SZYMANSKI passed away on May 9, 2021, at St. Peter’s University Hospital, New Brunswick, in the company of her loving family. She was 80 years old.
Catherine was born in Brooklyn, NY, but loved the Bronx Bombers and, most of all she loved No. 7- Mickey Mantle. At an early age, her family moved from NY to Point Pleasant Beach, where she grew up loving the Jersey Shore and boating. You could catch her water skiing and playing in the muddy water of the Metedeconk River near the “River Shack”. Later in life, Catherine shared her love of boating and the shore with her own children and husband. Even though she grew up at the shore, Catherine still maintained a love for Broadway Musicals and NYC.
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With a pandemic surging and graduation approaching last spring, Sara Benz sat in her home in Howell, watching employers cancel job interviews and freeze hiring.
Benz, a fashion and merchandising major at West Chester University in Pennsylvania, had a lifeline. Her mother, Stacey, had recently closed her Marlboro jewelry store, Sarafina. She goes, Why don t we start Sarafina online? Sara Benz, 22, said. I was like, Oh my God, yes.
College graduates who might have thought four years ago that they would march into a work force that included commutes into the city, collaborative work spaces and after-work happy hours are instead finding a real world that looks nothing like they imagined.