landis field: Live & Latest News Updates : Vimarsana.com
Coronavirus in Pennsylvania
A year of COVID-19 in central Pa.: Where we started, where we are and how we got here
Updated on Mar 04, 2021;
Published on Mar 04, 2021
Nathaniel Williams II collects a swab sample from Casey Stouffer of Steelton at the COVID-19 mobile testing unit. Hamilton Health Center offers free COVID-19 testing at a mobile location set up in Steelton, November 13, 2020.
Dan Gleiter | dgleiter@pennlive.com
The pandemic reached Pennsylvania on March 6, 2020.
That’s the day that the state announced that two people, one in Delaware County and one in Wayne County, had become the first in the Commonwealth to test positive for the novel coronavirus.
SicilyPennsylvaniaUnited-statesMiddletownDelaware-countyLebanonChinaYork-countySteeltonWayne-countyHollywoodCaliforniaChristopher Horner | Tribune-Review
Thomas Jefferson’s Preston Zandier celebrates after the Jaguars defeated Jersey Shore, 21-14, in the PIAA Class 4A state championship game Nov. 28, 2020.
Mike Darnay | Mon Valley Independent
McKeesport’s Jahmil Perryman closes in on Thomas Jefferson’s Preston Zandier on Oct. 23, 2020.
Previous
Next
Preston Zandier has joined an exclusive club as a senior member of the Thomas Jefferson football program.
A sturdy 6-foot-2, 200-pound wide receiver/linebacker and Youngstown State recruit, Zandier has been selected to participate in the 2021 Big 33 Football Classic.
He is one of two players labeled as “athletes” on the Pennsylvania squad, along with Central Valley’s Myles Walker, a wide receiver/defensive back and Akron recruit.
JerseyBrentwoodIndianaUnited-statesMarylandPennsylvaniaVirginiaYoungstownTodd-fedakRay-fisherMichael-reinhartCarnegie-mellon2020 in Pa.: The year in photos
Updated on Dec 28, 2020;
Published on Dec 28, 2020
Harrisburg Black Lives Matter Demonstration at the Capitol to protest the murder of George Floyd. A protestor is simultaneously sprayed with pepper spray and hit with a billy club as tensions ran high. May 30, 2020 Sean Simmers | ssimmers@pennlive.com
The past year has been both unfathomable and unforgettable.
In 2020, the coronavirus pandemic irrevocably altered life in Pennsylvania and around the globe. As the virus emerged in the spring, life changed in ways no one could have foreseen or even conceived a year ago.
Schools, businesses, sports and entertainment venues shut down. Doctors and nurses scrambled to treat patients suffering from an illness they were only beginning to understand. Shoppers endured shortages of staples such as disinfectants and toilet paper. Many had to work at home and simultaneously help their children navigate the concept of going to school virtually.
SicilyPennsylvaniaUnited-statesMechanicsburgPennsylvania-state-capitolSwataraHighspireWaynesboroLititzStoney-creekLebanonCumberland-county