Virginia gets big effort from Savino, tops Tech, 6-1, to take weekend series
Published Sunday, May. 2, 2021, 11:52 pm
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Virginia won its third-straight ACC sroad series with a 6-1 victory in Sunday’s rubber match at Virginia Tech. The Cavaliers have now won five-consecutive series against their commonwealth foes.
In a matter of three pitches, Virginia (22-20, 13-17 ACC) turned a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 lead. After Virginia Tech (23-17, 16-14 ACC) plated a run in its half of the first, Devin Ortiz (Nutley, N.J.) led off the second inning with a game-tying solo homer and two pitches later Kyle Teel (Mahwah, N.J.) went deep for the second time in the series to put the Cavaliers up for good.
Photo: WINA/photo courtesy UVA Athletics
BLACKSBURG, Va. – Virginia (22-20, 13-17 ACC) won its third-straight ACC sroad series with a 6-1 victory in Sunday’s rubber match at Virginia Tech (23-17, 16-14 ACC). The Cavaliers have now won five-consecutive series against their commonwealth foes.
In a matter of three pitches, Virginia turned a 1-0 deficit into a 2-1 lead. After Virginia Tech plated a run in its half of the first,
Devin Ortiz (Nutley, N.J.) led off the second inning with a game-tying solo homer and two pitches later
Kyle Teel (Mahwah, N.J.) went deep for the second time in the series to put the Cavaliers up for good.
Children With Autism Miss Out as School Districts Make Their Own Rules
Two New Jersey towns, Rutherford and Secaucus, are five miles apart. Students with autism in Rutherford have gotten far more in-person instruction.
Eric Alarcon, 3, with his father, Reuben, and mother, Estafania, at home in Secaucus, N.J., where opportunities for classroom instruction have been rare.Credit.Bryan Anselm for The New York Times
April 28, 2021Updated 7:11 a.m. ET
Eric Alarcon, who will be 4 next month, has autism. He can say a few words and identify a variety of dinosaurs. He lives with his parents in Secaucus, N.J., a 10-mile drive from Midtown Manhattan.
Children with autism miss out as school districts make their own rules
By Tracey Tully New York Times,Updated April 28, 2021, 10:16 a.m.
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An empty classroom at a closed school in Manhattan in July 2020.Ashley Gilbertson/NYT
Eric Alarcon, who will be 4 next month, has autism. He can say a few words and identify a variety of dinosaurs. He lives with his parents in Secaucus, New Jersey, a 10-mile drive from midtown Manhattan.
Eric and his peers in a special-education class have had about 100 hours of in-person instruction in the first eight months of the school year.