Auteur Sujet: ease Rep. Cori Bush, The Squad member, loses primary reelection bid  (Lu 3 fois)

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 WEST ALLIS, Wis. 鈥?A 74-year-old Waukesha woman died Monday after being seriously injured in a deadly crash near National and Lincoln on Friday, Sept. 9, police say.A 24-year-old West Allis man died from his injuries at the hospital on the night of the crash. The West Allis Police Department said a 68-year-old Waukesha man remains hospitalized.                        TMJ4                Crash near Lincoln and National in West Allis on Friday, Sept. 9    Police received 911 calls s stanley us hortly before 10 p.m. regarding a serious crash at the intersection. Upon arrival, officers found a crash involving two vehicles.According to police, a Buick, driven by the 24-yea stanley taza r-old man, was driving eastbound on National when he drove through t stanley website he intersection, jumped the median, and struck a GMC traveling westbound on National.The 24-year-old man was the sole occupant of the Buick. The GMC was driven by the 68-year-old man and the passenger was the 74-year-old woman.                        TMJ4                Crash near Lincoln and National in West Allis on Friday, Sept. 9    West Allis police say all three were transported to the hospital with serious injuries following the crash.The initial investigation indicated speed was a contributing factor to the crash.Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip Nosy 28 lakes and streams to be renamed in Wisconsin due to derogatory word against Native American women
 Child care centers across the country have suffered devastating financial losses this year. As scientists continue to look at how COVID-1 stanley mugs 9 affects children, a new Yale University study offers insight into how the virus spreads at day cares. The notion of telling people for several months that COVID-19 is scary, that they have to stay at home in order  stanley cup to avoid it, and then telling child care providers to all of a sudden go back to work without knowing anything about th stanley cup e risks or, even worse, without even bothering to find out what the risk was,  said Dr. Walter Gilliam, a child psychiatry and psychology professor at Yale University.Dr. Gilliam helped lead the recent study, which compared transmission rates at more than 57,000 day cares throughout the United States, with transmission rates Johns Hopkins University tracked in those day cares  communities. The study focused on adults only, since they are more likely to be tested and show symptoms. What we found in the end was that child care providers were no more likely to get COVID-19 or hospitalized for COVID-19 if they were open and attending the child care program, versus if they were closed or not. And what that tells us, that at least within the context of the first three months of the pandemic and within the context of all the things that child care programs were doing to keep children safe, transmission rates werent primarily being driven by child care programs,  said Dr. Gilliam.Dr. Gilliam says child care facilities na