The Greensburg Police Department has a new member.
Patrol officer Shelby Hubert was sworn in via Zoom this week during a virtual city council meeting.
Hubert previously worked part time at the Frazer Township Police Department, according to Greensburg Capt. Shawn Denning. Her salary will be $52,000 a year.
Hubert’s hiring is part of an ongoing roster shuffle at the department to replace two recent vacancies.
Former police Chief Chad Zucco retired last year, and Sgt. John Swank died in September after a cardiac event caused by a rare disease. Former Capt. Robert Stafford was promoted to chief, with former Lt. Shawn Denning becoming the new captain.
من رمل أو طين: حمد الجاسر ورسائل النسب في الجزيرة العربية alquds.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from alquds.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Teaching a child the importance of telling the truth is a value many of us share. When a child has done something that causes shame, a caring adult can only help if they understand what was actually done. The value of truth-telling extends to adulthood. For example, if one is in a doctor’s office, it is important to convey the truth of what one is feeling. It is not helpful to say “Doc, I’m feeling fine,” when in reality you’re having trouble breathing and can’t taste anything. The physician can only be helpful if they know the truth of how a person is feeling.
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Two Greensburg police officers are up for promotions as the city continues to fill gaps left by the resignation of Chief Chad Zucco last year.
City council will vote next week on promotions for Sgt. Donald Cole to lieutenant, and patrolman Reginald Harbarger Jr. to sergeant.
The department has had an empty lieutenant position since September, when Lt. Shawn Denning was promoted to captain. Denning replaced Robert Stafford, who in July was promoted to chief.
Denning said Cole and Harbarger are both hard-working officers who are well-suited to leadership roles.
OXFORD â When Corinth native Curtis Wilkie left Mississippi for the East Coast in 1969, he did it with a promise that he would never return.
Half a century later, the University of Mississippi journalism professor and 1958 Corinth High School graduate is putting a period on his career in the same place where it began: Oxford.
The Ole Miss alumnus (BA 63) reported on and wrote about a range of characters from racists and murderers to United States presidents and Middle Eastern revolutionaries. Yet through a career that led him from the Mississippi Delta to the White House, Wilkie never failed to seek out the humanity in each of his sources.