Softball
Chargers break through for first SAC win vs Hot Dogs
The process for North Montgomery softball might be beginning to be working. Tuesday the Chargers hosted SAC rival Frankfort in …
LINDEN - Southmont softball has been the team to beat in Montgomery county for nearly a decade. Saturday featured the first county softball matchup of the season when those Mounties traveled …
SALEM, Ore. (AP) Normally quiet streets around U.S. state capitol buildings have looked more like battlegrounds recently, putting those who live and work there on edge.
More than most people, these Americans will have front-row seats on whether the change of leadership Wednesday in the White House will lead to a lessening of tension that has been afflicting the nation. They ll be watching what the next chapter brings from storefronts and the porches and stoops of their own homes.
Their sense of foreboding was lightened, just a little, by Wednesday’s inauguration. As President Joe Biden was sworn into office, demonstrations at state capitols were scant, with only a few protesters showing up, and in some cities, none at all.
Americans who live, work near capitols see peace, new hope
By ANDREW SELSKY Associated Press,Updated January 20, 2021, 6:26 p.m.
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Epilogue Kitchen & Cocktails owner Jonathan Jones speaks with customers while serving free meals in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, on Monday, Jan. 18, in Salem, Ore. Jones front-row seat to what happens next is his restaurant that is decorated with Black Lives Matter signs and art near the Oregon State Capitol.Noah Berger/Associated Press
SALEM, Ore. (AP) â Normally quiet streets around US state capitol buildings have looked more like battlegrounds recently, putting those who live and work there on edge.