The BulleTin • Sunday, May 23, 2021 A7 COVID-19 in the U.S. New cases plummet to lowest levels in a year Pick up Thursday’s Bulletin for weekly event coverage and calendars ATTENTION: BY STEPHEN GROVES Associated Press New coronavirus cases across the United States have tumbled to rates not seen in more than 11 months, spark- ing optimism that vaccination campaigns are stemming both severe COVID-19 cases and the spread of the virus. As cases, hospitalizations and deaths steadily dropped over the past week, pre-pan- demic life in America has largely resumed. Hugs and un- masked crowds returned to the White House, a Mardi Gras- style parade marched through Alabama’s port city of Mobile, and even states that have stuck to pandemic-related restric- tions readied to drop them. However, health experts also cautioned that not enough Americans have been vacci- nated to completely extinguish the virus, leaving the potential for new variants that could ex- tend the pandemic. As the seven-day average for new cases dropped below 30,000 per day over the week, Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Con- trol and Prevention, pointed out cases have not been this low since June 18. The average number of deaths over the last seven days also dropped to 552 — a rate not seen since July last year. It’s a dramatic drop since Central Oregon’s source for events, arts & entertainment Oriental Rug Owners Don’t send your valuable rugs out of town! Shop Local! With more than 60 years of experience, we specialize in the cleaning of fi ne Oriental rugs. “Service You Can Depend On!” Eli Hartman/Odessa American The 2021 graduating class of Odessa Career & Technical Early College High School listens as the salutatorian speaks during their graduation ceremony at Odessa College Sports Center in Odessa, Texas, on Friday. the pandemic hit a devastating crescendo in January. “As each week passes and as we continue to see progress, these data give me hope,” Wal- ensky said Friday at a news conference. Health experts credit an effi- cient rollout of vaccines for the turnaround. More than 60% of people over 18 have received at least one shot, and almost half are fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. But demand for vaccines has dropped across much of the country. Presi- dent Joe Biden’s administra- tion is trying to convince other Americans to sign up for shots, using an upbeat message that vaccines offer a return to nor- mal life. White House health officials on Friday even waded into of- fering dating advice. They are teaming up with dating apps to offer a new reason to “swipe right” by featuring vaccination badges on profiles and in-app bonuses for people who have gotten their shots. Ohio, New York, Oregon and other states are entic- ing people to get vaccinated through lottery prizes of up to $5 million. patio world FREE Pickup & Delivery 541-382-9498 www.cleaningclinicinc.com Licensed • Bonded • Insured where quality matters Virgin Galactic rocket ship ascends from New Mexico BY MORGAN LEE Associated Press SANTA FE, N.M. — Vir- gin Galactic on Saturday made its first rocket-powered flight from New Mexico to the fringe of space in a manned shuttle, as the company forges toward offering tourist flights to the edge of the Earth’s atmosphere. High above the desert in a cloudless sky, VSS Unity ignited its rocket to hurtle the ship and two pilots toward space. A live feed by NASASpaceFlight.com showed the ship accelerating upward and confirmed a land- ing later via radar. Virgin Galactic announced that its VSS Unity shuttle achieved a speed equal to three times the speed of sound and an altitude of just over 55 miles above sea level before making its gliding return through the atmosphere. British billionaire and Vir- gin Galactic founder Sir Rich- ard Branson says the flight and landing bring the roughly 15-year-old venture tanta- lizingly close to commercial flights for tourists. Virgin Ga- lactic says those flights could begin next year. Virgin Galactic’s VSS Unity departs Mojave Air & Space Port in California in February for the final time as Virgin Galactic shifts its SpaceFlight operations to New Mexico. Live Life Outdoors Matt Hartman/AP file “Today was just an incredi- ble step in the right direction,” Branson told The Associated Press shortly after the flight landings. “It tested a lot of new systems that the teams have been building and they all worked.” Virgin Galactic CEO Mi- chael Colglazier said at least two more undated test flights lie ahead — the next with four mission specialist passengers in the cabin. Pending trials also includes a flight that will take Branson to the edge of space. “The flight today was ele- gant, beautiful,” Colglazier said. Virgin Galactic said the flight provided an assessment of upgrades to a horizontal sta- bilizer, other flight controls and a suite of cabin cameras de- signed to provide live images of flight to people on the ground. 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