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Business Beat: Retro Row's Casa de Luxe gets new name, owners – Press Telegram

Business Beat: Retro Row's Casa de Luxe gets new name, owners – Press Telegram
presstelegram.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from presstelegram.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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'A lonely sorrow': 450 Americans are still dying of Covid-19 every day

'A lonely sorrow': 450 Americans are still dying of Covid-19 every day
advisory.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from advisory.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Even as pandemic eases, for some U.S. families, worst has just begun

Copy shortlink: After more than a year of pandemic restrictions, many Americans are leaving their masks behind, making summer travel plans and joyously reuniting with family and friends. As more are vaccinated and new infections plummet, there is a sense that the worst of the pandemic is over in the United States. But for people like Michele Preissler, 60, the worst has just begun. Preissler lost her husband to COVID-19 in May, just as many restrictions were being lifted and life, for many, was starting to look more like normal. Customers were going without masks last week at the Walmart near her home in Pasadena, Maryland, where she was shopping for items for her husband s funeral.

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The pandemic in the US has vastly improved. For these families, the worst has just begun

  Sarah Mervosh, The New York Times  Published: 01 Jun 2021 04:45 PM BdST Updated: 01 Jun 2021 04:45 PM BdST Shelves at the home of Hollie Rivers filled with items commemorating her husband Antwone, who died of COVID-19, in Lincoln Park, Mich., May 28, 2021. COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths in the US are lower than they have been in many months and vaccination rates continue to slowly climb. But there are still about 450 deaths reported each day, and that has left hundreds of families dealing with a new kind of pandemic grief. (Brittany Greeson/The New York Times) A man kneels at a viewing for Darryl Preissler, who died of COVID-19, at a funeral home in Pasadena, Md., May 26, 2021. COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths in the US are lower than they have been in many months and vaccination rates continue to slowly climb. But there are still about 450 deaths reported each day, and that has left hundreds of families dealing with a new kind of pandemic grief. (Alyssa Schuk

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Many Americans are celebrating a return to normal life, while others are mourning loved ones lost recently to COVID-19

Families losing a loved one to the coronavirus now described a surreal, lonely kind of grief, as the threat from the pandemic lessens in the United States.

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