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Coronavirus: 1 more Kenyan doctor admitted in ICU as COVID-19 cases escalate

- Over 250 health workers have contracted COVID-19 since the first case was confirmed in March - Health Director General Patrick Amoth said the government was doing all it could to protect frontline workers against the pandemic - Coronaviurs cases in Kenya rose to 9,726 after 278 more people tested positive for the disease on Saturday, July 11 One more Kenyan doctor has been admitted in intensive care unit (ICU) as COVID-19 cases continue to escalate in the country closing in on the 10,000 mark prompting health workers to raise concerns.

Dymond Goods - Age, Family, Bio

YouTube star and model known for her tutorial videos. Her videos focus on hair and makeup styles while her Instagram emphasizes her modeling. Before Fame She had an early interest in fashion and started by making videos that reviewed various products. Trivia She has an online store called The Goods. She has more than 300,000 YouTube subscribers. Since launching her YouTube channel in 2011, she has seen her videos on the platform earn over 15 million views.

Former 'X Factor NZ' Contestant Turns All Four Chairs on 'The Voice AU' With a Beautiful Stevie Wond

TALENTRECAP.COM Singing The Voice loading="lazy" Reading Time: 3 minutes The Voice AU has once again captured the hearts of viewers as an unforgettable Blind Audition left coaches and audiences alike in awe. In a jaw-dropping display of vocal prowess, Marley Sola, a twenty-seven-year-old New Zealand performer, stormed the stage with a rendition of Stevie Wonder’s timeless classic, “Ribbon In The Sky.” The performance was so extraordinary that all four superstar coaches – Jason Derulo, Rita Ora, Guy Sebastian, and Jessica Mauboy – hit their buttons in unison, turning their chairs and vying for the opportunity to have Marley join their teams.

How Eagle Scouts Have Left Their Mark on America

Arthur Eldred might have been a Wolf Scout if leaders of the Boy Scouts of America hadn’t changed their minds about the youth program’s top merit badge. They turned the wolf into an eagle, which seemed more American, according to Scouting magazine, and on this day, Sept. 2, in 1912, 17-year-old Eldred became the nation’s first Eagle Scout. The Long Island teen demonstrated a wide range of talents, specializing in “handicraft, poultry farming, painting, horsemanship, dairying, bicycling, cooking, chemistry, electricity, gardening, pathfinding, and swimming,” according to the 1912 announcement in the New York Times.