Coronavirus, Recession, Skijoring
Here are the week’s top stories, and a look ahead. |
| Al Drago for The New York Times |
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1. One in four Americans is being asked to stay home in an effort to curb the coronavirus pandemic. |
The governors of California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinois told their residents to stay indoors as much as possible, issuing far-reaching demands that all nonessential workers must remain at home. |
The White House signaled that American companies were increasing efforts to restock hospitals with crucial supplies during the pandemic, but it again stopped short of more assertive steps that some state and local leaders have demanded. Above, temperature checks are required in the White House briefing room. |
From charities that support children to organizations that feed families, there is no shortage of ways to get involved. Here’s how to help. |
| Nadia Shira Cohen for The New York Times |
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| Grant Hindsley for The New York Times |
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Epidemic experts predict an explosion in the number of critically ill patients, and federal grant programs are revisiting what are essentially rationing plans for hospitals, states and the Veterans Health Administration in a severe pandemic. Dr. Laura Evans, above, helps leads the response to the outbreak at the University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. |
The coronavirus rampaged through a suburban nursing home in Washington State: Two-thirds of its residents and 47 of its workers fell ill; 35 people died. We investigated what went wrong. |
| Joshua Lott for The New York Times |
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This week’s initial jobless claims jumped 30 percent over the previous week, to 281,000. But that number pales in comparison to what Goldman Sachs foresees in the next weekly report: 2.25 million. |
| Philip Fong/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
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U.S.A. Swimming and U.S.A. Track & Field called for a postponement. Olympic committees in Norway and Brazil have endorsed postponing the Games until 2021. But the president of the International Olympic Committee has not wavered. |
The pandemic is compounding financial concerns about women’s sports in particular. Paychecks and sponsor deals were already much smaller for female athletes; now postponements and cancellations have added further uncertainty about their wages. |
| Chang W. Lee/The New York Times |
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6. And the Democratic primary race continues. |
Our politics team looked at how Senator Bernie Sanders and important members of his inner circle made a string of fateful decisions that left him ill-positioned to win over skeptical Democrats. |
While Mr. Sanders has not ended his presidential bid, he fell far behind former Vice President Joe Biden in the delegate count last week. |
| Saul Martinez for The New York Times |
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7. No sports. No exercise classes. No birthday parties. No nothing. No fun? |
The spread of the virus has cut Americans off from one another, but some are using the opportunity to enjoy more simple pleasures, like a drive-in theater in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., above, last week. |
Here are some other ways to keep you (and yours) entertained: |
| Craig Lee for The New York Times |
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8. It’s a boom time for the bean industry. |
| Matthew Defeo for The New York Times |
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9. And now for something completely unrelated: skijoring. |
Derived from a Norwegian term meaning “ski driving,” skijoring is believed to have originated hundreds of years ago in what is now Scandinavia among indigenous people who were pulled on skis behind a reindeer. Today, skiers navigate a series of jumps and dangling rings as a horse pulls them as fast as 40 miles per hour. |
This week we take a look at the African-American art shaping the 21st century, the unlikely face of Houston’s diverse dining scene, the latest installment of “Diary of a Song” and more. |
For more ideas on what to read, watch and listen to, may we suggest these nine new books our editors liked, a glance at the latest small-screen recommendations from Watching and our music critics’ latest playlist. |
It’s the first official weekend of spring! Hope you find some levity this week. |
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