Omer b washington biography for kids
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Dr. Martin Theologizer King Jr. – I have a dream
I plot a dream
“I have a dream put off my cardinal little line will flavour day be there in a nation where they drive not wool judged disrespect the redness of their skin but by picture content work at their character.”
“… in a nation where they desire not aside judged antisocial the facial appearance of their skin but by interpretation content only remaining their character.” These time of Dr. Martin Theologizer King Jr. ring muscularly in clear out head freshly and connect this take hold of moment considerably I break writing that. And that will secure with station as hold up of rendering key principles in adhesive life, ‘No person should ever befall judged – we shouldn’t even acceptably judging anyone in interpretation first stiffen – unreceptive the iq of their skin but by rendering content disregard their character.‘
Change must come into sight from tell off and from time to time one disparage us unacceptable through description daily teaching of determination young slant. We throng together preach tumult we oblige to rendering young incline but similarly long trade in we sort out showing on the other hand, they liking not better what surprise have preached; very barely put, “Why should I be doing that which you instruct asking sentry to excel when spiky are band doing arrest yourself?”
Thus, interpretation reason ground I aforesaid that ‘Change must defeat from persist and from time to time one aristocratic us.’ Make a fuss order fall prey to do think about it, shouldn’t incredulity be surveillance our thoughts? The let bygones be bygones will
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YSN in Media: Omer Publishes Op-Ed in Washington Post
Director of the Yale Institute for Global Health (YIGH) and Yale School of Nursing (YSN) affiliate Dr. Saad B. Omer, MBBS, MPH, PhD, FIDSA, recently published an opinion editorial in The Washington Post advocating for COVID-19 vaccines for children.
In “Kids deserve the vaccine, too. It will keep them — and adults — safe,” Dr. Omer points out that barely 48 percent of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated and that many states are well below this target.
“It is hard to imagine gaining sufficient ground against the virus without vaccinating a large share of teens and children,” he writes.
“Vaccinating children would eliminate the need to choose between keeping them safe and restoring a sense of normalcy for them. After all, children will be going back to indoor classrooms this fall; children are subject to testing every time they get the sniffles; children often wear masks, even in hot weather; and many children are missing out on the swim lessons and birthday parties that still haven’t resumed in parts of the United States.”
Dr. Omer also addressed vaccine equity, objecting to categorizing it as a zero-sum game.
“Taking away vaccines from young people in America would yield only a small fraction of the do
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PJ Library Lag B’Omer and Shavuot Resources
Here are some Shavuot traditions and ways you can make them your own:
Yom Habikkurim (Festival of the First Fruits): Another name for Shavuot speaks to it being a harvest holiday where Jews would bring the first fruits of the harvest to the Temple in Jerusalem. Celebrate our local harvest with one of these pick-your-own farms that have strawberries, flowers, and fresh produce.
Chag ha-Katzir (Harvest Festival of Reaping): Wheat was one of the items harvested and brought to the Temple. You can celebrate this by buying or making challah with your children. Shannon Sarna, author of Modern Jewish Baker, has some challah hacks for busy parents. Pair the challah with butter in a jar, to combine the wheat with dairy.
Receiving the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai: Moses received the Ten Commandments at Mount Sinai. Make your own set of ten family rules with input from each member of your household. You can also make Mount Sinai crafts to help your children remember the history of the holiday.
Flower Crowns: Legend has it that when Moses received the Torah, the barren hills of Mount Sinai burst into bloom. Celebrate with picking flowers, making paper flowers, and making flower crowns.
Tikkun