Exciting finds in the food and drink world: Sri Lankan tea, flavored coffee, soup for Shabbat, mustard, protein bars, frozen yogurt, and fresh produce baskets from farmers - delicious winter feast!
Worsening matters, Dr. James Schneider of the Cohen Children s Medical Center in New York said, is the fact that years of Covid lockdowns and restrictions have robbed youngsters of vital exposure to germs.
By ELIZA GOREN, SHEFALI S. KULKARNI AND KANYAKRIT VONGKIATKAJORN | The Washington Post | Published: December 18, 2020
Stars and Stripes is making stories on the coronavirus pandemic available free of charge. See other free reports here. Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. Please support our journalism with a subscription. A global pandemic. A racial reckoning. A presidential impeachment. A monumental election. We all know 2020 was a year like no other. But is it possible to sum it up in one word or phrase? The Washington Post asked readers to do just that and offer their reasoning, hoping that all together we might discover some collective wisdom. To look forward, we also asked them what they were hopeful for going into 2021.