Latest news with #JoeFusco


New York Times
11-03-2025
- Health
- New York Times
The Searing Memories of the Pandemic's Early Days
Good morning. It's Tuesday. Today we'll look at the pandemic, five years after it exploded in New York. We'll also look at a contest to make a Manhattan, a cocktail with a history. Image From left, Elizabeth Fusco, Joe Fusco and Maria Reid, who lost five family members to Covid. Credit... Bryan Anselm for The New York Times We knew it was coming. Five years later, we are still trying to make sense of it. I remember spending almost a week in late January 2020 reporting a story that we published under the headline 'Coronavirus in N.Y.: Without Chinese Tourists, Business Sags.' This was before the first cases in New York had surfaced. The article said that demand for hotel rooms in tourist destinations like New York was already dropping. 'It's all stopped — zero,' said a travel agent in Flushing, Queens, who arranged tours of Manhattan, mainly for visitors from China. 'No Times Square, no Empire State Building, no Metropolitan Museum, no Wall Street, no United Nations.' The first confirmed case in New York City was reported on March 1. Then, in a prelude of what was to come, part of New Rochelle, N.Y., just north of the city, was sealed off as a 'containment zone.' A lawyer who lived there and worked in Manhattan had contracted the virus. The neighbor who had driven him to a hospital had come down with it. More than 100 people with whom he had come in contact at his synagogue were told to go into quarantine at home. The lawyer recovered. Many did not. In New Jersey, a family had dinner together, as they often did. Within days, four were dead, and an aunt died soon afterward. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. Already a subscriber? Log in. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
25-02-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
College Football HOF coach Joe Fusco, who won 4 NAIA titles at Westminster College, dies
NEW WILMINGTON, Pa. (AP) — College Football Hall of Fame coach Joe Fusco, who won four NAIA Division II national championships in 19 years at Westminster College, has died, the college announced Monday. Fusco died Saturday in Farrell, Pennsylvania, at 87 years old. The college was unable to provide a cause of death. Fusco coached Westminster from 1972-90 and won national titles in 1976, 1977, 1988 and 1989. The Titans won 21 of 22 games in the 1976-77 seasons and had the nation's longest winning streak with 27 consecutive victories over the 1988-89 seasons. Fusco had a 154-34-3 record at Westminster for a .814 winning percentage. In 2019 he was named one of ESPN's 150 greatest coaches in college football's 150-year history. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2001. The native of Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania, was a Westminster lineman from 1957-59. He was a high school coach before he joined Westminster's staff in 1968 as offensive line coach. ___ Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: and The Associated Press