Albert Gallatin and Friendship Hill
Friendship Hill is the preserved home of Albert Gallatin, the fourth Secretary of the Treasury.
Hours
April-September:
9AM-5PM Monday-Sunday
October-March
9AM-5PM Saturday-Sunday
223 New Geneva Road, Point Marion, PA 15474
(724) 725-9190
60 Acre Farm with 18th Century Stone Home - Grindstone, PA
Thursday, April 26th, 2018 at 5:00PM
Registration & Inspection Begin at 4:00PM
236 Jess King Rd. Grindstone, PA
60 Acre Farm with 18th Century Stone Farm House Sold to the Highest Bidder
4 Bedroom, 1.5 Bath
2,542+/- sqft
Built in 1750
FREE GAS
30 Acres of Tillable Land – Currently Being Farmed
Pond & Stream on Property
JOE R. PYLE COMPLETE AUCTION & REALTY SERVICE
Joe R. Pyle, Broker
(888) 875-1599
5546 Benedum Drive Shinnston West Virginia 26431
joerpyleauctions.com
Joe R Pyle PA AU001708
Fayette County Wednesday Walks: Perryopolis, Pennsylvania
Fourth walk for the 2014 season of the Fayette County Wednesday Walks held in Perryopolis, Pa.on Jully 2, 2014. The walks are sponsored by the Healthy Lifestyles Task Force.
Hays Woods Flyover - in Pittsburgh PA
A view of Hays Woods from a small plane.
Hays Woods is a 635+ acre woodland on a hilltop overlooking the Monongahela River. This is the largest undeveloped tract of land in the City of Pittsburgh. It is located between the community of Hays and Becks Run Road, within 3 miles of the downtown area. It is larger than Frick Park, the largest of the city parks. The site contains more than 250 acres of mature interior hardwood forest patches, which support diverse communities of plants, birds and wildlife. Hays Woods has served as a de-facto recreational green space for the residents of the surrounding communities for more than 40 years. A network of trails has developed to support hiking, bird watching, trail biking, cross country skiing, hunting and more.
The forest is privately owned by Pittsburgh Development Group II who propose to develop Hays Woods as a horse-race track, retail and residential complex. Prior to construction, the forest will be logged and the underlying coal seams will be removed using mountaintop removal coal mining methods. To level the site for development, the overburden from the mining will be used to fill in 3 wetlands and 5 of the six streams.
Is destruction of the forest the best use of Pittsburgh's valuable asset, Hays Woods? Once the forest is logged, strip mined and developed it will be lost forever.
Visithayswoods.org for more details.
Contest For New Guitarist & Base Guitarist
If your a base guitarist or guitarist from Point Marion PA, Uniontown PA, Morgantown WV, Masontown PA, Ronko PA, Smithfeild PA, Fairchance PA, or Any other other town with in half an hour away from Point Marion PA...And would like to be in a band contact us for more info....Check out our website ......Or E-Mail us at AngelsInTheShadows.OfficalBand@yahoo.com .....Or contact us at facebook or
Dunbar PA: Tour Dunbar Fayette County PA
Howard Hanna Myers Dunbar Fayette County PA, To learn more or for more information on Dunbar Fayette County PA
call 724-437-7740 Howard Hanna Myers Real Estate Services South Western Pennsylvania
Consultation on Conscience 2017: Plenary 4
On Monday, May 1, the Consultation on Conscience morning plenary called Act Justly, Love Mercy - A Conversation on Rights, Race and Justice featured NAACP President Rev. Cornell William Brooks, Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law President Michael Waldman, and Orange Is the New Black Author Piper Kerman.
Transcription coming soon.
Special Report: Ceremony To Mark 75th Anniversary Of D-Day In Normandy, France | NBC News Now
Watch live coverage as the 75th anniversary of D-Day is held at the Normandy American Cemetery in France. President Trump, along with French President Macron and other world leaders, will honor the Allied troops’ maneuver that led to the turning point of World War II.
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Special Report: Ceremony To Mark 75th Anniversary Of D-Day In Normandy, France | NBC News Now
Atona (Frank) Houtz Memorial Service
You can support Marry Lynn Houtz here:
0:00:00 - Blowing The Shofar
0:00:31 - Ken Rank Opens The Memorial Service
0:00:58 - Pastor Thomas Hall Opens With Prayer
0:02:26 - Ken Goes Over The Order Of Events
0:04:05 - Jezreel Houtz, and Kristin Kinman: Play 'Kol Nidrei' by Max Bruch on Cello and Piano
0:14:30 - Ken Rank
0:20:58 - Dan Thompson (Frank's Brother In Law) On Behalf Of Verlene Thompson (Frank's Sister)
0:32:31 - Barry Fraley
0:43:40 - Robin Dennert (Frank's Cousin)
0:51:38 - Robert Hyde
0:58:38 - Lindy Lovell Adopted Family Member
1:01:39 - Dirk Goodrich: Tells Frank Stories
1:17:12 - Daniel Botkin
1:22:04 - John Conrad
1:32:30 - Jerry Tomlinson
1:42:12 - Jerry Brown
1:57:10 - Tikvah Ott (Frank's Daughter)
2:06:28 - The Halverson Family: Sings 'The Blessed Hope' by John W. Peterson, and 'New Heaven - New Earth' by Charles Romer
2:14:20 - Joel Wilson
Chocolate City: A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation’s Capital
In their book, Chocolate City, professors Chris Myers Asch and George Derek Musgrove tell the tumultuous, four-century story of race and democracy in our nation's capital. Washington has often served as a national battleground for contentious issues, including slavery, segregation, civil rights, and the drug war. But, the city is also rich in history of local activism as the citizens struggle to make their voices heard in an undemocratic city where residents lack full political rights. A book signing follows the program.
The Bigfoot Stories You've Never Heard #WeirdDarkness
I KNOW THE MUSIC IS TOO LOUD. Unfortunately I had to learn that after I'd already posted this and it had been up for a while. My other videos do not have the same problem.
SOURCE: Cabinet of Curiosities by Troy Taylor:
Check out the HauntingStories channel!
This episode is a collaboration with my friends and Haunting Stories. I’ll be telling you about Bigfoot – and over at Haunting Stories they’ve posted another video, with me narrating a continuation of this regarding the Minnesota Iceman! Be sure to check out their video right after you watch this one! This is Weird Darkness – where you’ll find creepypastas, ghost stories, unsolved mysteries, crytptids like Bigfoot, and other stories of the strange and bizarre. Feel free to share your own creepy story at WeirdDarkness.com, I might use it in a future episode! Now.. sit back, turn down the lights, and come with me into the Weird Darkness!
It all started with a bunch of footprints at a construction site. Or at least the modern-day fascination with “Bigfoot” did. Stories of hairy giants in the woods and wandering “wild men” had been a part of American lore for nearly two centuries by the time the nickname “Bigfoot” was coined in the late 1950s. But it was then, with the advent of television and the modern media, that chasing down giants in the woods became a national craze.
It was the spring of 1957 and a road construction project was underway near Bluff Creek in northern California. The project was run by a contractor named Ray Wallace and his brother, Wilbur. They hired thirty men that summer to work on the project and by late in the season, Wilbur Wallace reported that something had been throwing around some metal oil drums at the work site. When winter arrived that year, cold weather brought the work to a halt, even though only ten miles of road had been completed.
In early spring 1958, some odd tracks were discovered near the Mad River close to Korbel, California. Some of the locals believed they were bear tracks. As it happened, this was close to another work site that was managed by the Wallace brothers.
Later on that spring, work started up again on the road near Bluff Creek. A number of new men were hired, including Jerry Crew, who drove more than two hours each weekend so he could be home with his family. Ten more miles of road were constructed, angling up across the face of a nearby mountain. On August 3, 1958, Wilbur Wallace stated that something threw a seven-hundred-pound spare tire to the bottom of a deep gully near the work site. This incident was reported later in the month, after the discovery of the footprints.
On August 27, Jerry Crew arrived for work early in the morning and found giant, manlike footprints pressed into the dirt all around his bulldozer. He was at first upset by the discovery, thinking that someone was playing a practical joke on him, but then he decided to report what he found to Wilbur Wallace. At this point, the footprints had not been made public. That occurred on September 21, when Mrs. Jess Bemis, the wife of one of the Bluff Creek work crew, wrote a letter to Andrew Genzoli, the editor of a local newspaper. Genzoli published her husband's Big Foot story and caught the attention of others in the area. One of these was Betty Allen, a newspaper reporter who suggested in a late September column that plaster casts should be made of the footprints. She had already talked to local Native Americans and interviewed residents about hairy giants in the area. She convinced Genzoli to run other stories and letters about Bigfoot. This would be the beginning of a story that would capture the imagination of America.
On October 1 and 2, Jerry Crew discovered more tracks, very similar to the first ones. In response to the new discovery, two workers quit and Wilbur Wallace allegedly introduced his brother Ray to the situation for the first time, bringing him out to show him the tracks. On the day after the last tracks were found, Jerry Crew made plaster casts of the footprints, with help from his friend Bob Titmus and reporter Betty Allen. He was irritated that people were making fun of him and wanted to offer the casts as evidence that he wasn’t making the whole thing up. On October 5, Andrew Genzoli published his now-famous story about Bigfoot. It was picked up worldwide by the wire services, and soon the term was being used in general conversation.
2019 Ohio State College of Optometry White Coat Ceremony
Where: The Ohio State University Ohio Union, 1739 N. High Street, Columbus, Ohio 43210
When: Saturday, May 11, 2019
Time: 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Room: Ohio Union Performance Hall
Celebration Brunch
The 2019 Academic Festival launches with the recognition of recipients of this year's Alumni Awards: Lisa Edstrom (Ed.D. '18), Bruce Ballard (Ed.D. ’94, Applied Linguistics), Fanshen Cox (M.A. ’97, TESOL), Denny Taylor (Ed.D. ’81, Family and Community Education), Tony Alleyne (M.A. ’10, Private School Leadership, The Klingenstein Center for Independent School Education), Kim Baranowski (Ph.D. ’14, Counseling Psychology), Hakim Mohandas Amani Williams (Ed.D. ’12, International Educational Development) and Joohee Son's (Ed.D. ’13, Instructional Technology and Media).
Responding to the Benedict Option
IRD hosted a robust conversation at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. on responding to the “Benedict Option”. Following the decline of nominal Christian culture in the United States, how ought American Christians engage in the public square with a culture that is ambivalent or hostile to their historic beliefs?
Speakers at the event include Bruce Ashford, Professor of Theology and Culture at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary; Joseph Capizzi of The Institute for Human Ecology and Professor of Moral Theology at the Catholic University of America; Cherie Harder, President of The Trinity Forum; Joseph Hartman, Attorney and Adjunct Assistant Professor at Georgetown University Department of Government; and Alison Howard is the Director of Alliance Relations at Alliance Defending Freedom.
Ohio: 200 Years
Ohio represents us all. In its dramatic history and astonishing diversity, Ohio closely replicates the vast, complicated, and turbulent place called America. The film offers a snapshot of the state's colorful history along with insights into the Ohio of today: a mix of odd, funny moments and life-changing events.
Matrix of Power How The World Has Been Controlled By Powerful People Without
Matrix of Power - How The World Has Been Controlled By Powerful People Without
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2014 WIU Honorary Doctorate Recipient Sandra Keiser Edwards
MACOMB, IL -- Sandra Keiser Edwards, deputy director of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, AR, received the Western Illinois University Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters at Western's Spring 2014 Commencement exercises Saturday, May 10.
The Honorary Doctorate is the highest award Western Illinois University can bestow upon an individual who has made significant contributions to his/her career and to Western Illinois University.
Keiser Edwards, a 1974 College Student Personnel master's degree graduate, has been a key member of the Crystal Bridges leadership team since 2007, overseeing the founding of the museum, as well as its construction and successful opening in November 2011. Since that time, the museum has welcomed more than 1.2 million visitors, with Keiser Edwards serving in the pivotal role of deputy director. Keiser Edwards continues to be a guiding force in establishing the institution, creating and growing connections to bring increased tourism to the area, as well as offering museum visitors unparalleled arts, cultural and educational experiences.
Previously, Keiser Edwards served as the associate vice chancellor for development at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville for nine years. She and her late husband, Clay Edwards, helped direct the university's groundbreaking Campaign for the Twenty-First Century, a significant initiative that raised more than $1 billion for academic programs, including the founding of an honors college and endowing the graduate school. In 2007, Keiser Edwards was made an honorary alumna of the university by the Arkansas Alumni Association.
She has also served as director of development (outreach and cooperative extension) and director of station development (public broadcasting) at The Pennsylvania State University, posts she held from 1988 to 1998. She created the first comprehensive advancement program in the field of continuing and distance education at a public university, and was part of the management team that created Penn State's World Campus, a virtual university for students at a distance from the physical location. As a result of these achievements, the university awarded Keiser Edwards the Outreach Pioneer Award.
Sandy's contributions to the arts, philanthropy, and higher education, as well as her support of Western Illinois University, are much-admired and appreciated. It is with great pride that we bestow upon Ms. Keiser Edwards an honorary doctorate from her alma mater, said WIU President Jack Thomas.
Keiser Edwards received Western's Alumni Achievement Award in 1993 and the WIU Distinguished Alumni Award in 2006. She currently serves as a member of the College of Fine Arts and Communication (COFAC) Advisory Board.
During her time at Western Illinois University, Keiser Edwards served as a graduate assistant in the Office of Student Activities. She later served in that office as a full-time staff member, overseeing major concert and film programs.
Keiser Edwards holds a bachelor's degree from Lenoir-Rhyne College in Hickory, NC., where she served on the board of trustees from 1978-1986.
Live Police Scanner Steubenville Ohio
Live Scanner Radio Police, Fire, EMS and all other agencies in Ohio. 30 second delay.
Jefferson County, Ohio
Steubenville, Ohio
Wintersville, Ohio
Mingo Junction, Ohio
Toronto, Ohio
OHIO RADIO CODES & SIGNALS:
OHIO STATE HIGHWAY PATROL SIGNALS
1 OUT OF SERVICE 34 FIRE MOTOR VEHICLE
2 IN SERVICE 36 FIRE OTHER THAN MV
3 OUT OF SVC, SUBJ TO CALL 37 DISABLED VEHICLE
4 OUT OF SVC, EQPT. FAILURE 38 EATING
5 RUSH 39 LOCATION
6 REF. PREVIOUS TRAFFIC 40 EMERGENCY
7 AT YOUR CONVENIENCE 41 IMMEDIATELY
8 UNABLE TO COPY (RE-LOCATE) 42 BE ON STATION
9 UNABLE TO ANSWER NOW 43 UNITS CALL YOUR POST
10 CALL GIVEN POINT BY PHONE 44 UNITS REPT. YOUR POST
11 CALL GHQ BY PHONE 45 RESUME REGULAR PATROL
12 CALL DHQ BY PHONE 46 FCC INSPECTOR ON STATION
13 CALL YOUR POST BY PHONE 47 TRAFFIC PREFERENCE
14 CALL RADIO BY PHONE 48 STAND-IN EXAMINEE
15 CALL HOME BY PHONE 49 FORCED LANDING
16 TECH PROBLEMS W/COMPUTER 50 UNIDENTIFIED PLANE
16A TECH PROBLEMS W/FUNCTIONAL 51 PLANE CRASH
PORTION OF LEADS 52 RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL
17 ACCIDENT REPORT NUMBER 53 HAZARDOUS LOAD
18 HAVE TRAFFIC-RELAY 54 WRECKED TRUCK W/EXPLOS.
19 RELAY BY PHONE 55 EXPLOSION
20 CONTACT IN PERSON 56 TRAIN ACCIDENT
21 CONTACT GHQ IN PERSON 57 BOMB SCARE
22 CONTACT DHQ IN PERSON 58 SUSP. CAN HEAR RADIO
23 CONTACT POST IN PERSON 59 PERMITS
24 CONTACT POST IN PERSON 60 CONVOY OR REF. CONVOY
25 CONTACT HOME IN PERSON 75 WANTED PERSON(S) AND/OR
26 DISPATCHER ALONE IN POST PROPERTY - FELONY
27 IMPROPER PROCEDURE 76 WANTED PERSON(S) AND/OR
28 POST SECURE PROPERTY - MISDEMEANOR
29 RELAY IN PERSON 77 WANTED & WARRANTS CHECK
30 ACCIDENT -- FATAL 78 NO CRIMINAL HISTORY NEED
31 ACCIDENT -- PROP. DAMAGE 79 MENTALLY DIST. PERSON
31A ACCIDENT -- INJURY 86 DRUG COURIER ALERT
32 TRAFFIC JAM ON ROAD BLOCK 87 BACKUP OFFICER NEEDED
33 DROWNING 88 OFFICER IN TROUBLE
99 STOLEN VEHICLE
# pertains to County in Ohio for Sheriff and Highway Patrol.
1 Adams
2 Allen
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4 Ashtabula
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36 Highland
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80 Union
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83 Warren
84 Washington
85 Wayne
86 Williams
87 Wood
88 Wyandot
Seattle City Council Select Committee on Homelessness & Housing Affordability 5/24/19
Agenda: Chair's Report; Public Comment; Results from Authorized Tiny House Villages in Seattle; Human Service Provider Input on Regional Coordination of Homeless Investments; Regional Governance on Homelessness Investments.
Advance to a specific part
Chair's Report - 1:13
Public Comment - 5:52
Results from Authorized Tiny House Villages in Seattle - 41:32
Human Service Provider Input on Regional Coordination of Homeless Investments - 2:05:00
Regional Governance on Homelessness Investments - 2:18:00
COMMON SENSE BY THOMAS PAINE FULL VIDEO BOOK
Throughout history, some books have changed the world. They have transformed the way we see ourselves—and each other. They have inspired debate, dissent, war and revolution. They have enlightened, outraged, provoked and comforted. They have enriched lives—and destroyed them.
Thomas Paine's Common Sense was a radical and impassioned call for America to free itself from British rule and set up an independent republican government. Savagely attacking hereditary kingship and aristocratic institutions, Paine urged a new beginning for his adopted country in which personal freedom and social equality would be upheld and economic and cultural progress encouraged. His pamphlet was the first to speak directly to a mass audience—it went through fifty-six editions within a year of publication—and its assertive and often caustic style both embodied the democratic spirit he advocated, and converted thousands of citizens to the cause of American independence.
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