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Teen motorcyclist hurt in Montgomery Co crash with suspected intoxicated driver

Teen motorcyclist hurt in Montgomery Co crash with suspected intoxicated driver
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Junior Albers was a Contender

Local boxing legend Junior Albers puts up his dukes. Born in 1951, Wilfred Albers Jr. learned to fend for himself at the dinner table as one of nine children. Then, as a Yurok tribal member growing up in Eureka, he had to be tough and prove himself, sometimes with his fists. In high school in the 1960s there was a tradition where teenagers would come to a gathering for a fight to prove who was the toughest kid from the toughest school. Wilfred Junior Albers was a target. According to his little brother Ernie, Junior just wanted to take his frustrations out with gloves on in the boxing ring.

James Ross (Jim) Campbell

James Ross (Jim) Campbell Wednesday, December 30, 2020 On December 18, 2020, James Ross (Jim) Campbell, 74, went peacefully home to the Lord as a result of complications related to Frontotemporal Dementia. He had been a resident of Park Place Care Center of Georgetown for the past 10 months. He leaves his wife of 53 years, Deanna (Cathey) Campbell; their children, Sarah Morgan and family of Georgetown and Jason Campbell and family of Mesquite. He was blessed with 13 grandchildren. Jim is also survived by his five siblings: Freda Jones and family of Seminole, Gene Campbell and family of Abilene, Charles y of Jasper, Brenda Jones and Campbell and family of Jasper, Brenda Jones and family of San Antonio and Cynthia Bice and family of Olathe, Kansas. He was preceded in death by his parents, Ross and

KUOW - A historic, unforgettable year: 2020 in pictures

Coronavirus In Seattle A historic, unforgettable year: 2020 in pictures By T he first Covid-19 outbreak in the United States stopped Seattle in its tracks. Toilet paper, hand sanitizer and masks vanished from store shelves. Streets eerily empty. Spouses separated by panes of glass. Businesses boarded up — a canvas for the city’s muralists to offer some degree of hope. It was a surreal new reality with no end in sight. And then came May. Following the murder of George Floyd at the end of the month, thousands poured into Seattle’s streets to continue a fight that’s hundreds of years old. Demanding justice for Black Americans and an end to police brutality, protesters were met with tear gas and flash bang grenades on Capitol Hill. For months, every single day, throughout the region — people marched.

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