Roy Exum: ‘Just Kick Him Hard’ Sunday, May 23, 2021 - by Roy Exum
There came a day, right around my seventeenth birthday, when my family superiors decided that I should transfer my brawn to my brain. I had made the innocent mistake at age 12 of asking Mother for a dollar so I could join my chums for a picture show at the old Martin Theatre and then a plate of burgers at the Krystal on 7th and Cherry. Instead, I was taken before my grandfather who extolled virtues of a working man and, from that point on, if I wasn’t in school I was working for $1.00 an hour.
May 18, 2021 at 12:09pm
Top (L-R) Ruth Sandate, Austin White, Kaymon Lange; Bottom (L-R) Turner Stark, Zakerrius Walker Courtesy: Angelo State University .
May 16, 2021 at 11:27pm
San Angelo, Texas This weekend was a special one for faculty staff and students at Angelo State University .
May 14, 2021 at 8:56am
Angelo State University ’s Department of History has been officially re-named the Arnoldo De León Department of History in honor .
May 11, 2021 at 3:21pm
…have a lot on their shoulders, and so we want to make sure that they’re prepared.” Author: Kami Simmons Published:.
May 11, 2021 at 1:00am
held a press s-a-i-s-d and angelo state university held a press conference this morning to announce an important .
Elleda Wilson: In One Ear: Keep looking ahead yahoo.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from yahoo.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
mmaroney@sungazette.com
A veteran Williamsport Bureau of Police lieutentant claims in a federal lawsuit that he was passed over for promotions because he filed complaints on behalf of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 29 against anti-union activity.
Lt. Steven Helm, supervisor of daywatch, this week asserted in the complaint in U.S. Middle District Court his rights to free speech were violated. The lawsuit identified Mayor Derek Slaughter, former Mayor Gabriel J. Campana and the City of Williamsport as defendants.
Slaughter, who returned a telephone call for comment, said any statements regarding the lawsuit would need to come from J. David Smith or Austin White, the city solicitors and firm of McCormick Law.
Special to the Sun-Gazette
TOM MURRAY/Special to the Sun-Gazette
An Easter Whip-poor-will sits on a branch. The coloring of an EWPW makes it difficult for people to see, but its call of its own name is quite distinctive.
There is an enigmatic bird in our region which likes to be heard but not seen. It chants its song into the darkness of spring and summer evenings then spends the daylight hours sitting motionless in the forest, camouflaged by the grays and browns of leaf litter and tree bark.
A member of the Nightjar family of birds, it is the Eastern Whip-poor-will (antrostomus vociferus), and I, perhaps like some of you, have heard but never seen one. It is a grayish-brown bird, medium-sized and a bit bigger than a robin with large, dark-brown to blackish eyes. The only other local bird in the same family is the common nighthawk, and the populations of both birds are in steep decline in Pennsylvania.