vimarsana.com

Page 13 - டானியா மேக்ஸ்வெல் லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Essential Arts: What the CDC mask guidelines mean for L A

8 to 3: As California slowly opens up, parents weigh the risks of social interaction

“I don’t feel good.” Advertisement The moment I touched him, I knew he had a fever. Soon, he was vomiting. And while such symptoms have been familiar to me since his first weeks in infant day care, we hadn’t felt a fever or made a bed of towels by the toilet since the start of quarantine. Now, these ordinary childhood ailments were suffused with new terror. We were fortunate to get a phone appointment with his doctor that morning, and a nasal swab by the afternoon. But for the 24 hours until his PCR test came back, I found myself obsessively reviewing almost every interaction he’d had in the last two weeks. Could he have shared snacks at his masked play date? Or a water bottle at backyard soccer? What happened at the birthday party his father had chaperoned?

Coronavirus Today: Pomp and a bad circumstance

Last month, Cal State L.A. announced plans for a graduation ceremony at the Rose Bowl. It was going to have all the classics for the classes of 2020 and 2021: speeches, music and jumbotron close-ups. This week, the school clarified the fine print: no guests, no names read aloud, no walking on the stage. Advertisement While planning much-anticipated commencement ceremonies, many colleges are trying to Students who are the first in their families to graduate from college were hoping to share the experience with relatives. Caps and gowns were ordered, and calendars were marked. One Cal State L.A. student wrote on Instagram that her mother was planning to fly from Nicaragua for the event.

Will California women bounce back from COVID unemployment?

Print Alejandra Siciliano was terrified of catching COVID-19 while working as a hotel housekeeper. Laid off in March, now she prays for any job to pay the bills. Jamie Eagen has been home-schooling her 8-year-old throughout the pandemic. The single mother and former office manager needs to work, but then who would care for her daughter? Janae Franklin, a corporate manager who turned to food stamps after being laid off, has gained a new perspective on work. The pandemic made her “do some soul-searching,” Franklin said, and even though loved ones urge her to seize any available job, she’s decided to give entrepreneurship a try.

COVID-19 chased millions of women out of the workforce Will they return?

COVID-19 chased millions of women out of the workforce. Will they return? Margot Roosevelt © Provided by The LA Times Alejandra Siciliano, left, stands with her daughter and granddaughter in front of the Four Points by Sheraton hotel at Los Angeles International Airport where she worked as a housekeeper for 14 years. She was laid off in February 2021 when the hotel shuttered. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times) Alejandra Siciliano was terrified of catching COVID-19 while working as a hotel housekeeper. Laid off in March, now she prays for any job to pay the bills. Popular Searches Jamie Eagen has been home-schooling her 8-year-old throughout the pandemic. The single mother and former office manager needs to work, but then who would care for her daughter?

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.