A 63-year-old man died from injuries he sustained in a four-vehicle crash in Racine County on Wednesday, according to a news release from the Caledonia Police Department.
Caledonia police and fire units responded to State Highway 32 and Botting Road at about 12:17 p.m. for a motor vehicle accident with injuries.
A silver Chevrolet Colorado, driven by a 33-year-old Milwaukee man, was traveling south on State Highway 32 and crossed into the northbound lanes into oncoming traffic, the news release said.
A Jeep Cherokee traveling north on 32 swerved into a guardrail to avoid colliding with the Chevrolet Colorado.
The next vehicle traveling north on 32, a Toyota Tacoma driven by a 63-year-old Caledonia man, was struck head-on by the Chevrolet Colorado, the news release said.
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Almost 400 appointments were booked for teachers and staff members at Racine County public and private schools to receive their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccination Saturday at Ascension All
RACINE â âFifty seconds,â said Christine Emmons, teacher at Horlick High School, as she counted down to zero on her phoneâs timer in the waiting area of the vaccination clinic at Ascension All Saints Hospital.
Teachers sit socially distanced in the clinic after receiving their vaccinations at Ascension All Saints Hospital on Saturday. There is a 15-minute observation period after patients get their vaccine, said Margaret Hennessy, pediatrics physician at All Saints. Hennessy said it is to make sure patients don t have any serious reactions or need help after getting treated. Diana Panuncial
She and her husband, Chad Emmons, who also teaches at Horlick, had been waiting for nearly 15 minutes â the allotted observation time after getting their vaccines for physicians to monitor them for any significant adverse reactions, which remain rare.
Ascension Health â one of the largest Catholic and largest nonprofit health systems in the U.S. which operates Racine Countyâs largest hospital, Ascension All Saints â will still provide the one-shot COVID-19 vaccine produced by Janssen/Johnson & Johnson even though some Christian groups and a small number of American Catholic bishops are vocally opposed to it.
The reason for that opposition is because aborted fetus cells were used in production of the vaccine. As such, the vaccine itself (the fluid injected into peopleâs arms) contains no part of an aborted fetus, but it was tested and developed using cells developed from a fetus aborted more than 30 years ago in the Netherlands, according to the company.