Further evidence of the perils of US college reopenings
A recent article published in the science journalism web site
Students wear masks on campus at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, N.C., Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2020. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)
Science writer Betsy Ladyzhets found a 56 percent increase in COVID-19 cases during the three-week period of in-person instructions in comparison to the three weeks before, when the universities offered remote learning. The piece also found that in the same counties where universities offered remote learning, COVID-19 cases dropped by almost 18 percent. The author states, “With these kinds of risks, a college campus seems like one more dangerous place to spend time.”
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David E. ColemanSecurities Analyst and Quantitative Portfolio Strategist
At Argus Research, David covers various Airline, Tobacco and Materials companies and is also a quantitative portfolio strategist. He received his undergraduate degree from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, graduating magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and a minor in Psychology. Prior to joining Argus, David worked in a variety of industries, ranging from industrial engineering to commercial fishing. David is the great-grandson of Harold B. Dorsey, who founded Argus in 1934. He started his career at Argus in the Economics department.
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While the economy teeters, and capacity restrictions squeeze restaurateurs, you can t stop the new places from opening in and around the Erie area.
It appears there will be a new barbecue restaurant in the region to meet the warmer weather of spring.
Skinny Nate s BBQ, 10212 John Williams Ave., Albion, is in the works and a Feb. 11 Facebook post hinted at an opening in a couple of months, assuming they don t hit any major snags. Somebody there has a goofy sense of humor because their Facebook posts are pretty hilarious. If you need a smile, give them a look see at www.facebook.com/skinnynates.
Housing and Development Newsletter
Tickets to Frazier s talk are $10 for the general public, and free for UCSB students (registration required). For tickets and more information, call UCSB Arts & Lectures, 805-893-3535 or visit www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu.
Treating art as activism, Frazier’s body of work includes The Last Cruze, which documents the devastating effects of a GM plant closure in Lordstown, Ohio; a chronicle of the ongoing water crisis in Flint, Michigan, for Elle Magazine; and an aerial photography series depicting Memphis, Baltimore and Chicago in The Atlantic’s Martin Luther King issue.
For “Flint is Family,” “Frazier spent five months with a family encompassing three generations of women, chronicling daily life at the heart of a man-made ecological disaster. The project was a natural extension of her already well-established commitment to social justice,” The New York Times reported, noting Frazier donated the proceeds from her exhibition to help