Michelle Davies | The Journal Gazette
Students at Purdue University Fort Wayne attend an inauguration watch party Wednesday in the Walb Classic Ballroom. Previous Next
Thursday, January 21, 2021 1:00 am
Students mark history at PFW watch event
ASHLEY SLOBODA | The Journal Gazette
Purdue University Fort Wayne student Brooklyn Prosser kept her emotions at bay Wednesday as she and a few classmates quietly watched Kamala Harris become the country s vice president.
“I almost started sobbing,” Prosser said. “We made it. We made it through four years.”
Attending the inauguration watch party was natural for Prosser, a senior studying psychology who made a point since freshman year to participate in similar events for other political moments, such as the State of the Union address.
Thu December 31, 2020 - Northeast Edition #1
Craig Mongeau - CEG Editor in Chief
Eagle Power & Equipment announced that Jim Lutz has been appointed new sales manager effective January 2021.
Eagle Power & Equipment announced that Jim Lutz has been appointed new sales manager effective January 2021.
Lutz, who will be taking over for the recently retired Dean Leonetti Sr., began his career at Eagle Power in October 2007 as a sales representative. He was hired by Dean Leonetti to replace Don Walsh and to cover the sales territory of Montgomery and western Bucks counties in Pa. Until his recent promotion, he had remained in that position for the past 13-plus years.
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Calgary drivers have to do better to prevent even more carnage on city streets, a judge urged Thursday after fining a motorist in connection with a fatal collision.
Provincial court Judge Josh Hawkes said the papers are far too often filled with articles about pedestrians killed because of inattentive driers.
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“We have all become too familiar with these headlines that we read in the city of Calgary every day about pedestrians being killed,” Hawkes said, in fining Wesley Kevin Harder $1,500.
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The coronavirus-triggered delay in a historical murder suspect’s trial did not create a breach of his right to a speedy trial, a judge ruled Tuesday in denying an application to throw out the case.
Justice Richard Neufeld said the pandemic, which shut jury trials down for several months, was an exceptional circumstance the Supreme Court contemplated when it said some delays won’t result in a Charter breach.
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