The Washington Post - USA (2020-09-14

(Antfer) #1

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14 , 2020. THE WASHINGTON POST EZ M2 B3


Results from Sept. 13

DISTRICT
Day/DC-3: 4-8-5
DC-4: 8-0-8-8
DC-5: 2-1-7-0-3
Night/DC-3 (Sat.): 7-8-8
DC-3 (Sun.): 3-0-5
DC-4 (Sat.): 6-6-2-4
DC-4 (Sun.): 0-5-4-4
DC-5 (Sat.): 1-4-2-9-1
DC-5 (Sun.): 1-9-4-6-8

MARYLAND
Mid-Day Pick 3: 3-6-1
Mid-Day Pick 4: 2-0-1-2
Night/Pick 3 (Sat.): 8-5-9
Pick 3 (Sun.): 4-6-1
Pick 4 (Sat.): 0-4-1-6
Pick 4 (Sun.): 0-7-0-3
Match 5 (Sat.): 15-16-17-19-32 *18
Match 5 (Sun.): 9-14-25-28-29 *15
5 Card Cash: 6H-KC-10D-4H-5D

VIRGINIA
Day/Pick-3: 1-1-7
Pick-4: 3-3-8-2
Cash-5: 14-15-18-26-34
Night/Pick-3 (Sat.): 1-2-3
Pick-3 (Sun.): 1-9-1
Pick-4 (Sat.): 2-8-1-1
Pick-4 (Sun.): 6-0-7-5
Cash-5 (Sat.): 3-8-11-13-15
Cash-5 (Sun.): 2-12-17-20-28
Bank a Million: 12-13-20-24-29-39 * 19

MULTI-STATE GAMES
Powerball: 16-17-20-53-67 **4
Power Play: 2
Cash 4 Life:1-19-27-44-46 ¶1

*Bonus Ball **Powerball ¶ Cash Ball

For late drawings and other results, check
washingtonpost.com/local/lottery

LOTTERIES

Police: Man slain
in Anne Arundel

A man was killed Saturday
night in Anne Arundel County
in what police said appeared to
be a homicide.
Fillmore James Burris, 27, of
Glen Burnie, was apparently
shot fatally about 10:45 p.m. in
the 500 block of Delaware
Avenue, the county police said.
An investigation indicated
that he had been in a dispute
with relatives, police said in a
statement on Sunday. As the
family members f ought, the
police said, three people
approached and Burris was
shot. The three “took off
running,” police said.
No arrests were reported.
Police said an investigation is
underway.
— Martin Weil

VIRGINIA

Teenager leads police
on high-speed chase

A 14-year-old boy driving a
Dodge minivan — and going
114 mph — led police on a high-
speed chase in Virginia’s
Tidewater area early Sunday
before hitting a trooper’s
vehicle and spinning out, state
police said.
O ne trooper suffered
injuries that weren’t life-
threatening.
The vehicle, a 2016 Dodge
Caravan reported stolen from a
home in the Norfolk area, was
carrying five other juveniles.
The teen was charged with
reckless driving, felony
eluding, felony possession of a
stolen vehicle and three
counts of felony assault on a
law enforcement officer. The
other juveniles were released
to their parents.
— Ian Shapira

MARYLAND

1 killed, 1 injured in
Pr. George’s collision

One person was killed and
another injured late Sunday in a
fiery collision on Interstate 95 in
Prince George’s County,
authorities said.
The crash occurred about
11:10 p.m. near Baltimore Avenue
in College Park on the inner loop,
according to the fire department.
One person died at the scene and
another was hospitalized with
serious injuries.
— Martin Weil

Swimmer saved from
river near Great Falls

A teenage swimmer was
rescued from the Potomac River
near Great Falls on Sunday
evening after attempting to swim
across from Virginia to Maryland,
according to the Montgomery
County Fire Department.
The 17-year-old was about
halfway across when he
experienced distress and began
to struggle and go under, said
Pete Piringer, a fire department
spokesman.
Friends from the Virginia side
went into the water to help him.
He was also reached from the
Maryland side by lifeguards in
the area by chance, Piringer said.
The area is near Sandy
Landing, Piringer said. Currents
below Great Falls are swift and
treacherous, and swimming is
prohibited, he said.
Authorities were notified about
6:15 p.m., and the teenager was
conscious and breathing when
taken to a hospital, Piringer said.
He said the lifeguards may have
administered rescue breathing.
Maps indicate that the river is
about 200 yards across in the
area of the incident.
— Martin Weil

LOCAL DIGEST

John
Kelly's
Washington

He is away. His column will resume
when he returns.

much a community effort to slow
the spread and protect everyone
in the community.”
Hardiman decided to move
onto campus, though she is tak-
ing a medicine that suppresses
her immune system. She has
three roommates, friends who
understand her health condition
and have agreed to follow the
rules to keep everyone safe.
“It’s definitely hard going
through college without some
sort of relief or way to connect
with other people,” she said. “If I
had stayed home, I definitely
would have been missing that.”
The community she’s built
through the support group has
helped Hardiman and the other
women settle into the new school
year. The weekly Zoom calls are a
place to unwind, vent and ask for
advice.
“I’m in pain all the time,” Lynch
told the group. “I live in a small
flat, so I can’t really do at-home
workouts.”
Paiz recommended anti-in-
flammatory foods, yoga and tur-
meric supplements.
“We’ve had to fight our medical
problems since Day 1, and not
many people have had to do that,”
Paiz said in an interview. The
support group “has been really
helpful, in terms of having people
thinking similarly to me, in terms
of covid and being an immuno-
compromised person.”
[email protected]

isolation beds, suspended in-per-
son classes for the rest of the
month.
Schools promised to enforce
policies to keep students masked
and distant, but it’s proved diffi-
cult to consistently monitor thou-
sands of young adults. Students
don’t just come to campus to take
classes and use the library. They
also want to interact.
Hardiman, from Fairfax, said
she doesn’t blame people her age
for wanting to be social — many
of them have spent months away
from one another and in their
homes away from their friends.
But she wishes they’d consider
people like her, who are more
likely to have serious complica-
tions with the virus.
“What’s frustrating, more than
anything, is the disregard for
other people,” Hardiman said in
an interview. “I think this is very

to make every course available
online.
“Our greatest concern is the
lack of equitable learning solu-
tions for this high-risk popula-
tion,” the letter said. “Without
remote learning options for all
their classes, hundreds of immu-
nocompromised students are be-
ing forced to either risk their
health and attend in-person
classes or make last-minute
changes to their carefully de-
signed schedules to switch to a
limited variety of online courses.
Students shouldn’t be forced to
make such a choice.”
The University of Virginia is
offering remote options for cours-
es being taught face-to-face.
Many other schools in the state
are not.
The women who joined a re-
cent support group meeting dis-
cussed their schedules and la-
mented over seeing their friends
post party pictures on social me-
dia.
“The saddest part is that
they’re not even ashamed of it,”
said Price, who’s taking classes
from her parents’ home in Fair-
fax, Va. “These are people that are
supposed to be our friends.”
Hannah Hardiman, who’s in
her fourth year at U-Va., agreed.
“It just kills me,” she said. Her
university has reported more
than 280 cases of the coronavirus
among students and employees
since Aug. 17.
Coronavirus cases have surged
on campuses such as Temple Uni-
versity and Indiana University,
where nearly 800 students living
in communal housing — includ-
ing Greek life housing — have
tested positive. Officials at James
Madison University, worried
about an increase in positive cas-
es and a potential shortage of

It’s a lonely feeling, she said.
Until she found other women like
her — all college-aged and much
less willing than their peers to
flout public health guidelines be-
cause of their preexisting health
conditions. They meet weekly on
Zoom, provide updates through
group messages and help one
another navigate the pandemic,
the school year and friends who
don’t always understand why
they can’t party or eat at a restau-
rant.
“I already felt disposable, in a
sense, by society. And now it’s just
even more reiterated,” Hess said
during a support-group meeting.
“It’s so refreshing to talk to people
who get it.”
Casandra Paiz, a 22-year-old
senior at Bryn Mawr College, is
taking her classes remotely from
her family’s home outside of Chi-
cago. She has asthma and fibro-
myalgia.
Paiz said the support group
gives her a chance to vent. “We
can rant for like two hours
straight,” she said in an interview.
Bryn Mawr, in suburban Phila-
delphia, has administered 1,042
coronavirus tests since Aug. 26
and one came back positive, data
show.
The rants range from frustra-
tion with friends to complaints
about the ways their schools have
reopened. Cameron Lynch, a Wil-
liam & Mary sophomore who
started the support group, got the
idea after posting a letter on
Instagram that outlined her frus-
trations. The sociology major has
Type 1 diabetes, celiac disease and
a form of muscular dystrophy.
Dozens of students took notice
— they commented on Lynch’s
post and reached out to share
their own stories. So the 19-year-
old created a digital space for
them to connect. Samantha Price,
a junior at the University of Mary
Washington with Type 1 diabetes,
helps coordinate the meetings.
Lynch dialed into a recent sup-
port group meeting from her
parents’ flat in London. She was
knitting a sweater.
“I finally found an internship,”
Lynch said. The ladies cheered.
“My school is not doing all-online
classes, so I’ve had to drop like
half of my classes.” She’s intern-
ing, remotely, at Disability Rights
UK, a British advocacy organiza-
tion.
“A normal cold will kind of
knock me out for a couple of
weeks, so I can’t imagine what
covid would do to me,” Lynch said
in an interview. She decided to
take her classes, also remotely,
from London.
Lynch said she’s had to drop
classes that won’t meet online, a
common experience for students
who are hesitant to return to the
classroom. She and Price this
summer wrote a letter to college
leaders in Virginia, asking them


SUPPORT FROM B1


Zoom group o≠ers comfort to vulnerable students


SAMANTHA PRICE
TOP: William & Mary sophomore Cameron Lynch, top left, began a support group for
immunocompromised college students to connect and vent about navigating college during a pandemic.
BELOW: “It’s so refreshing to talk to people who get it,” Madisyn Hess said of the online community.

TOMMY WOZNY

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