Clint Black
No Time to Kill
State of Mind
Tuckered Out
After an acrimonious legal battle with his former manager and an ill-advised move toward adult-contemporary pop threatened to sink his career, Clint Black has righted himself on the delightful No Time To Kill. This outing .
more »returns Black to the modern Texas honky- tonk that made 1989 s Killin Time one of the best debut albums of that decade. Stuart Duncan s fiddle and Paul Franklin s pedal steel are pushed forward in the mix; a skipping swing beat is injected and Black sounds like he s back in the Houston saloons where he started his career, singing about heartaches and stubborn pride with one of the state s strongest, most flexible tenor voices. Geoffrey Himes
February TFWC Meeting Is Postponed Tuesday, February 16, 2021
Due to inclement weather, the Tennessee Fish and Wildlife Commission meeting scheduled for Feb. 18 and 19 will be rescheduled to a later time.
The TFWC will have a special called meeting via zoom on Wednesday at 9 a.m. CST to discuss continuances on the three rules that were scheduled for rulemaking hearings.
The live stream of the virtual meetings will be available at https://www.youtube.com/user/tennesseewildcast or through their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/tnwildlife.
April 9, 2021
April 9, 2021
April 6, 2021
GNTC’s Spring Plant Sale Continues April 7-8
The deadline is approaching to submit comments for the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency’s 2022 fishing regulations. The comment period concerning fishing regulations is open until April 19. . (click for more)
Grayscale version of \adv-2012wheelingobitsrgbStroud, James.tif
James C. Stroud, Jr., 84, of Avella; Jefferson Township, passed away on Wednesday February 10, 2021 in the Washington Hospital.
He was born on October 14, 1936 in Hanlin Station a son of the late James C., Sr. and Mary Urban Stroud.
A 1955 graduate of the Union High School in Burgettstown, he served honorably in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard from 1960-1963 and retired in 1999 from Weirton Steel where he worked in the Tin Mill.
Mr. Stroud was a lifelong and active member of the Eldersville United Methodist Church where he served as a Trustee and on many committees. He also served on the Church and the Bethel Cemetery Boards, and the Jefferson Township Historical Society.
Grayscale version of \adv-2012wheelingobitsrgbStroud, James.tif
James C. Stroud, Jr., 84, of Avella; Jefferson Township, passed away on Wednesday February 10, 2021 in the Washington Hospital.
He was born on October 14, 1936 in Hanlin Station a son of the late James C., Sr. and Mary Urban Stroud.
A 1955 graduate of the Union High School in Burgettstown, he served honorably in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard from 1960-1963 and retired in 1999 from Weirton Steel where he worked in the Tin Mill.
Mr. Stroud was a lifelong and active member of the Eldersville United Methodist Church where he served as a Trustee and on many committees. He also served on the Church and the Bethel Cemetery Boards, and the Jefferson Township Historical Society.
“We are both humbled and in gratitude to be recognized for what TITLE 9 has become by what we have strived to accomplish,” added Michel. “Carmen and I are very excited to enter our next chapter with the incredible TITLE 9 roster of artists and visionaries, and to continue to create the highest quality of content and music that change lives with ongoing growth and success in all areas of entertainment.”
The current roster of Title 9 whose clients scored a total of seven Grammy nominations this year includes singer-songwriter and rapper Derrick Milano (“Savage” remix by Megan Thee Stallion feat. Beyonce), songwriter-producer Andre “Dre” Harris (Burna Boy’s