Officials at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg campus have set the stage for more in-person classes.
Beginning Monday, the official risk status at the Hempfield campus will be lowered from elevated to guarded, Pitt Greensburg President Robert Gregerson announced. The change means professors will have the option of returning to campus to teach classes that are currently being offered online. Students will still have the option of taking all classes online or returning to the classroom, if that is available.
The decision to begin reopening the campus follows state Department of Health reports tracking covid-19 rates at their lowest levels since October and finding a 50% reduction in new cases over the last month.
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Totes and backpacks filled with supplies like blankets, socks, hats and more fill a classroom at Wendover Middle School.
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Students fill a hallway at Wendover Middle School, filling totes and backpacks with supplies for cancer patients.
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Students fill a hallway at Wendover Middle School, filling totes and backpacks with supplies for cancer patients.
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Totes and backpacks filled with supplies like blankets, socks, hats and more fill a classroom at Wendover Middle School.
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Submitted by Holly Hallman
Students fill a hallway at Wendover Middle School, filling totes and backpacks with supplies for cancer patients.
Nate Smallwood | Tribune-Review
Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank Employee, Jason Panella, helps load boxes of food into Duquesne Light employees’ vehicles to be distributed at the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank in Duquesne.
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Like so many other activities and events over the past 10 months, the covid pandemic has impacted volunteer opportunities Monday on the National Day of Service, which is Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Colleges and universities in the region that might have volunteer opportunities for students and staff on National Day of Service are not in session. Universities starting online this month or resuming classes in February are holding their volunteer initiatives next month.
Fun-loving trio who died in Dauphin County crash had been longtime pals
Updated Jan 11, 2021;
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WEST HANOVER TOWNSHIP A horrific crash scene Saturday night has now turned into a memorial, filled with flowers, candles and golf clubs.
It’s a memorial for three young men and judging by the growing size of the memorial and the flow of mourners, kneeling and comforting each other, the trio was beloved by many.
Mackenzie P. Mulroy, Zachary J. Kijowski and Michael E. Shovlin, all 24, were pronounced dead at the scene of a crash Saturday night on the 7000 block of Jonestown Road.