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Cheers & Jeers

4 min read
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Cheers: As the nation celebrates Independence Day, a local festival will mark the city of UniontownĢƵ birthday. The Founding Day Festival, slated for this weekend, offers a number of family-friendly activities. On Saturday, the ĢƵ has organized a free art and car show to be held between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. in downtown Uniontown. Net proceeds raised through those activities will support revitalization efforts at Marshall Park in Uniontown. The hope is that the local park, named after Uniontown native Gen. George C. Marshall, can become another centerpiece for city activities. The festival continues on Sunday at dusk with the annual Fireworks Over Fayette, a dazzling display brought to the area by the Fayette Chamber of Commerce. And on Monday at 9 a.m., the city of Uniontown will hold its Firecracker 5K Run/Walk. We hope many of you will come out to support revitalization efforts at the park and celebrate UniontownĢƵ founding during whatĢƵ sure to be a fun-filled weekend.

Cheers: June 23, 1972, was an extremely eventful day in the presidency of Richard Nixon. On the minus side, that was the day the infamous “smoking gun” tape was recorded that led to NixonĢƵ ejection from the White House two years later. On the plus side, that was the day Nixon signed Title IX into law. Designed broadly to increase educational opportunities for women by prohibiting gender-based discrimination at educational institutions that receive federal funding, it has helped boost the participation of girls and women in sports and academia. When Title IX received NixonĢƵ signature, only about 300,000 girls participated in high school sports. Today, that number stands at more than 3 million. Also, a half-century ago, women received just 10% of all doctoral degrees. Today, 54% of those receiving doctorates are women. Title IX was meant to open doors and break down barriers, and it has done its job extraordinarily well.

Jeers: Amid all the news about the U.S. Supreme CourtĢƵ abortion decision, the findings of the Jan. 6 committee, the ongoing war in Ukraine and rising prices, COVID-19 has moved to the inside pages of newspapers. But itĢƵ still out there in the world, causing about 400 deaths every week across the United States. ItĢƵ likely we’ll be visited by another outbreak in the fall once colder weather arrives and school resumes. ItĢƵ also likely there will be more cases due to waning immunity and variants that continue to evolve. But the groundwork is being laid for updated booster shots tailored to fight the variants that are dominating the COVID landscape right now. This week, a committee of experts recommended to the Food and Drug Administration that a booster be made available that would combat omicron variants. The hope is that it will boost overall immune response. But will people get the revamped booster? As of the end of June, just 47% of American adults who have been fully vaccinated have received a booster shot. In Pennsylvania, itĢƵ 43% of fully vaccinated adults. The number of people getting boosters needs to improve so that we can avoid more sickness and more death in the months ahead.

Jeers: A U.S. senator should have a lot on his or her mind right now, but Texas U.S. Sen. Ted Criuz can always seem to find a minute to pick on “Sesame Street.” Last year, Cruz was in high dudgeon because – horrors! – Big Bird received a coronavirus vaccine on the childrenĢƵ program. This week, Cruz was angry over the fact that Elmo received a vaccine and that the puppet, according to a tweet from Cruz, was “aggressively” advocating that children younger than 5 receive the vaccine. And whatĢƵ wrong with that? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that young children be vaccinated. Would Cruz be happier if thereĢƵ a “Sesame Street” episode where Elmo gets the virus and spreads it to his family and friends? The Cookie Monster, Bert, Ernie and Grover had better watch out – they could be the objects of CruzĢƵ ire pretty soon. We assume he’ll spare his kindred spirit, Oscar the Grouch.

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