Pittsburgh Crepes Food Truck to be A Lincoln Park’s American in Paris Performances

(Midland, Pa.)  PGH Crepes Food Truck is going to be at the Lincoln Park Performing Arts Center two hours before each performance of An American in Paris beginning Opening Night tomorrow evening!  They will be offering food not just for show patrons, but also to any member of the community who would like to stop by and get something to eat.   Here is their schedule:

  • Friday, April 28 – 5:30 to 7:30pm
  • Saturday, April 29 – 5:30 to 7:30pm
  • Sunday, April 30 – 12:00 to 2:00pm
  • Friday, May 5 – 5:30 to 7:30pm
  • Saturday, May 6 – 5:30 to 7:30pm
  • Sunday, May 7 – 12:00 to 2:00pm

Residents disgruntled over new name of new library park in Beaver Falls

The image above shows the “March Parklet” plaque on the wall of the Carnegie Library of Beaver Falls.
Story by Curtis Walsh – Beaver County Radio News Director. Published April 27, 2023 12:28 P.M.    

(Beaver Falls, PA) Beaver Falls residents have voiced their opinions in regards to the name of a revamped park in Beaver Falls.  A recent post made on the Beaver Falls Community page on Facebook calls on residents to vote on a new name for the park next to the Carnegie Library of Beaver Falls.  The city has been working on the park making major improvements including a waterfall feature and new lighting, and it is set to be complete in the near future.  Names up for voting are “The Falls”, “City Park”, “Beaver Falls Central Park”, and “13th Street Park”. There is one name that wasn’t included on the list, “March Park”.  The park has historically been named “March Parklet”, dedicated to James H. March Sr., for his efforts and community service for Beaver Falls, according to a plaque that remains in place on the wall of the library. Some say that the March family donated the land for the park, although Beaver County Radio has not yet confirmed this. Hundreds of residents have taken to the post comment section to cast their write-in vote for “March Park”, with many saying they believe naming the park anything else would be rewriting history.
Photos and the Facebook posts can be found below:
The park:

Library Park sign in place at the park:
Beaver falls Community Facebook post:

Former Pirates great Dick Groat, a 2-sport star, dies at 92

FILE – Former Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Dick Groat is shown during pregame ceremonies honoring his lifetime of service to the Pirates organization, before a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals in Pittsburgh, Monday, April 1, 2019. Groat, a two-sport star who went from All-American guard in basketball to a brief stint in the NBA to ultimately an All-Star shortstop and the 1960 National League MVP while playing baseball for his hometown Pittsburgh Pirates, has died. He was 92. Groat’s family said in a statement that Groat died early Thursday morning, April 27, 2023, at UMPC Presbyterian Hospital due to complications from a stroke. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Dick Groat, a two-sport star who went from All-American guard in basketball to a brief stint in the NBA to ultimately an All-Star shortstop and the 1960 National League MVP while playing baseball for his hometown Pittsburgh Pirates, has died. He was 92. Groat’s family says in a statement that he died Thursday at UMPC Presbyterian Hospital due to complications from a stroke. Groat was an All-American in both basketball and baseball at Duke. He was drafted by the NBA’s Fort Wayne Pistons in 1952 before focusing on baseball full-time after a stint in the Army. Groat played 14 seasons in the majors, most of them with Pittsburgh.

Stock market today: Surge for Meta powers Wall Street rally

FILE – An NYSE sign is seen on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, Wednesday, June 15, 2022. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street is rising after Meta Platforms became the latest Big Tech company to blow past profit expectations and reports painted a mixed picture of the economy. The S&P 500 was 1.1% higher Thursday. Facebook’s parent company was doing some of the heaviest lifting and jumped 14%. Expectations were broadly low coming into this earnings reporting season, in part because of a slowing economy. A report on Thursday suggested the economy slowed even more than expected. But it also showed strength underneath the surface, and Treasury yields rose on expectations the Federal Reserve will see it as resilient enough to hike interest rates next week.

Jerry Springer, politician-turned-TV ringmaster, dies at 79

FILE – Talk show host Jerry Springer speaks in New York on April 15, 2010. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

CINCINNATI (AP) — Jerry Springer, the former Cincinnati mayor and news anchor whose namesake TV show unleashed strippers, homewreckers and skinheads to brawl and spew obscenities on weekday afternoons, has died. He was 79. A family spokesperson says he died Thursday at home in suburban Chicago. At its peak, “The Jerry Springer Show” was a ratings powerhouse and a U.S. cultural pariah. The show known for chair-throwing and bleep-filled arguments was a favorite American guilty pleasure, at one point topping Oprah Winfrey’s show. It ran for 27 years, ending in 2018. The Jewish immigrants’ son who was born in an underground bomb shelter was active in politics most of his adult life.

Route 65 Bridge Inspections Next Week in Allegheny County

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing inspection activities Route 65 bridges in Bellevue, Avalon, and Ben Avon boroughs, Allegheny County will occur Monday through Friday, May 1-5 weather permitting.

Single-lane and shoulder restrictions will occur in each direction for four bridge inspections on Route 65 located between Millerton Road in the City of Pittsburgh and Dickson Avenue in Ben Avon. Restrictions will occur weekdays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. through Friday, May 5.

PennDOT crews will conduct the routine inspection activities.

Motorists should be prepared for changing traffic patterns. Please use caution when driving through the area.  Work zone safety is everyone’s responsibility.

Deluzio Statement on Passage of Republican’s Dangerous ‘Default on America Act’

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Chris Deluzio voted NO on the Republicans’ dangerous debt limit bill that threatens veterans, seniors, and families in Western Pennsylvania and across the country. Ahead of the vote, Congressman Deluzio joined fellow veterans and advocates at an event exposing Republicans’ massive cuts to veterans and their care. However, House Republicans nonetheless passed the bill without a single Democratic vote and with several Republican defections.

Following the passage of the bill, Rep. Deluzio released the following statement:

“Republicans’ 22% cuts to the VA means millions of veterans are going to suffer. If this becomes law, they’re going to get worse medical care on everything from cancer screenings to mental health services, and would have to wait longer to have their claims for disability resolved.

“It would risk funding for the Veterans’ Crisis Hotline and would result in an estimated 30 million fewer veteran outpatient visits and 81,000 jobs lost across the Veterans Health Administration, according to White House estimates. It means fewer doctors, fewer nurses, and less care for those who served.

“America owes a sacred debt to those willing to lay it all on the line. This Republican budget plan betrays that promise, and I am furious. I took to the House Floor today to tell the world just what this dangerous Republican plan would mean for veterans and the VA.

“Not only that, these 22% cuts would take away nutrition services, like Meals on Wheels, from more than a million seniors – and would make rail more dangerous and put communities like ours at risk. Republican cuts would result in 7,000 fewer rail safety inspection days and 30,000 fewer miles of tracks inspected each year.

“I came to Washington to put the Common Good first. These budget cuts that my Republican colleagues forced through the House today endanger our community, harm our seniors, and betray my fellow veterans. I hope that this plan is dead on arrival in the Senate, but I will do everything I can to stand up for veterans, for the people, and fight back against this lousy plan.”

Feds wrote $128M in duplicate checks to docs, report finds

FILE – This June 21, 2013, file photo, shows the seal affixed to the front of the Department of Veterans Affairs building in Washington. The federal government wrote duplicate checks to doctors who provided care for veterans, costing taxpayers $128 million in extra payments over the last five years, according to a new watchdog report out this week. In nearly 300,000 cases, private doctors were paid twice – once by the Veterans Health Administration and another time by Medicare – for the same care provided to veterans from 2017 to 2021, the Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General found in its report. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The federal government wrote duplicate checks to doctors who provided care for veterans, costing taxpayers as much as $128 million in extra payments, according to a new watchdog report out this week. In nearly 300,000 cases, private doctors were paid twice — once by the Veterans Health Administration and another time by Medicare — for the same care provided to veterans from 2017 to 2021, the Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General found in its report. There’s been a spike in those duplicate payments since 2020, when the program that allows veterans to seek care from private doctors was expanded.

Why the US evacuation from Sudan left Americans behind

FILE – Smoke is seen in Khartoum, Sudan, Wednesday, April 19, 2023. Warring factions trying to seize control of the east African nation of Sudan have plunged the country into chaos, and thousands are fleeing the capital of Khartoum and nearby battle zones. Some countries, including the U.S., have shuttered their embassies and many are coordinating daring evacuations of their staffs and other residents in an array of convoys, flights and frantic getaway drives. (AP Photo/Marwan Ali, File)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The effort to get private citizens out of Sudan by countries around the globe continues, by military airlift, ship and over land. But thousands of Americans remain as violence escalates between Sudan’s two warring factions. While the U.S. has said it won’t conduct a large-scale military evacuation for Americans still in Sudan, it is considering how Navy ships or establishing an increased State Department presence at a key Sudanese sea port or across the sea in Saudi Arabia could help get people out. The State Department has advised U.S. citizens for years not to travel to Sudan and continues to advise them to shelter in place.

Tucker Carlson emerges on Twitter, doesn’t mention Fox News

FILE – Tucker Carlson, host of “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” poses for photos in a Fox News Channel studio on March 2, 2017, in New York. Fox News says it has agreed to part ways with Tucker Carlson, less than a week after settling a lawsuit over the network’s 2020 election reporting. The network said in a press release Monday that the popular and controversial prime-time host’s last program aired on Friday. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

NEW YORK (AP) — Tucker Carlson has emerged publicly two days after Fox News fired him. He posted a two-minute monologue on Twitter Wednesday night that did not address why he suddenly became unemployed. He said one thing you notice “when you step away from the noise for a few days” is how stupid some of the debates on television are. He said corporate media and political parties work to prevent discussion of big issues. He said “as long as you can hear the words, there is hope. See you soon.” Fox fired its most popular personality on Monday with no explanation, a week after settling a lawsuit concerning the spread of lies about the 2020 election.