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September 26, 1998 (Pages 4777-4872)
Pennsylvania Bulletin Volume 28 (1998) Repository 9-26-1998 September 26, 1998 (Pages 4777-4872) Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/pabulletin_1998 Recommended Citation Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau, "September 26, 1998 (Pages 4777-4872)" (1998). Volume 28 (1998). 39. https://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/pabulletin_1998/39 This September is brought to you for free and open access by the Pennsylvania Bulletin Repository at Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Volume 28 (1998) by an authorized administrator of Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. PENNSYLVANIA BULLETIN Volume 28 Number 39 Saturday, September 26, 1998 • Harrisburg, Pa. Pages 4777—4872 See Part II page 4867 for the Part I Environmental Quality Board’s Agencies in this issue: Mobile Equipment Repair and Refinishing The Courts Department of Agriculture Department of Banking Department of Community and Economic Development Department of Environmental Protection Department of General Services Department of Health Department of Revenue Department of Transportation Environmental Hearing Board Environmental Quality Board Fish and Boat Commission Independent Regulatory Review Commission Insurance Department Pennsylvania Industrial Development Authority Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission State Horse Racing Commission Turnpike Commission Detailed list of contents appears inside. -
Mines, Mills and Malls: Regional Development in the Steel Valley
MINES, MILLS AND MALLS: REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE STEEL VALLEY by Allen J Dieterich-Ward A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History) in The University of Michigan 2006 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Matthew D Lassiter, Chair Professor J Mills Thornton III Associate Professor Matthew J Countryman Assistant Professor Scott D Campbell In memory of Kenneth Ward and James Lowry Witherow. In honor of Helen Ward and Dolores Witherow. ii Acknowledgements I would like to thank the History Department and the Horace H. Rackham Graduate School at the University of Michigan for generous financial support while researching and writing this dissertation. I began work on this project as part of my Senior Independent Study at the College of Wooster, which was supported in part by the Henry J. Copeland Fund. The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission’s Scholar-in-Residence program greatly facilitated my research at the Pennsylvania State Archives. During the final year of writing, I also received a timely and deeply appreciated fellowship from the Phi Alpha Theta History Honors Society. I owe a great debt to the many Steel Valley residents who generously agreed to be interviewed for this project, especially Don Myers, James Weaver, and Charles Steele. Being allowed entry into their present lives and their past memories was a wonderful gift and I have tried to explain their actions and those of their contemporaries in a balanced and meaningful way. The staff of the Ohio Historical Society, Pennsylvania State Archives, Archives of Industrial Society, Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania and the Bethany College Library provided generous assistance during my visits. -
The National Commission and National Board Now in Position To
PHILADELPHIA, JANUARY-3, 1914 HEARING OF PLAYERS The National Commission and National Board Now in Position to Thresh Out the Points Raised By the Base Ball Fraternity, as the Latter Will be Represented by Players as Well as Leader CINCINNATI, O., December 31. Then other clubs claim him, the waiver When the National Base Ball Commis request is withdrawn and he is kept on sion convenes in this city on January 5 the bench when some other club would be next, that body will be visited by a com glad to play him regularly. The National mittee from the Base Ball Players© Fra League tried a rule three years ago ternity. The information comes direct FORBIDDING THE WITHDRAWAL OF WAIVERS from Fultz, president of the Fraternity, but it lasted only one season, because to August Herrmann, chairman of the magnates did not like it. It is the fairea Commission, who did not say whether he rule for the player, however. The maj will he here or not in person, but agreed object of the waiver rule is to keep pi?) ers in the big show as long as they that a committee from the Fraternity stick there, and any rule which tenc should be on hand. Doubtless Fultz will attain this object is strictly for the be here himself and the members of the fit of the athlete. There are not National Commission hope that he will cases where players are railroaded to tJ be, but they were anxious to have a minors. Athletes who are sent back likj number of ball players present also in to claim that several clubs wanted them,1 order that the athletes themselves may but this is not usually the case. -
History of Port
Former Justice of the Peace, Mayor Rudolph Antoncic, is shown above being sworn in for another six-year term of office by Pennsylvania's late Supreme Court Justice Michael A. Musmanno. The ceremony took place in the Judge's Chambers in the City-County Building, Pittsburgh. Mayor Antoncic was married to the late Mary Kish and is the father of two sons, Richard F. at home, and Rudolph, Jr., presently enrolled at Duquesne University. The Mayor has been a resident of Port Vue for more than 57 years and for 42 of those years has served the residents of his community together with the citizens of the United States with loyalty and integrity in such capacities as Church trustee, area historian, Scout Commissioner, Counsellor and Lecturer on Citizenship. He was also a former Director of the Board of Health, and a former constable and deputy. He was appointed to the Office of Justice of the Peace in Port Vue in 1941 by the late Governor Arthur H. James and since then has been re-elected for five consecutive six-year terms. Mayor Antoncic was a former County Committeeman, served as Chairman of the American Red Cross drive, was past President of the Port Vue Lions Club, past chairman of the "Be Thankful You Can See" Campaign, participated in the March of Dimes, Polio and Muscular Dystrophy Drives and was honored as the "Man of the Year" for compiling the history of the Borough from colonial times to the present. - - GENERAL HISTORY OF THE AREA BEFORE 1P.92 History, the crystallization of past events, authenticates a narration of facts gathered from reliable sources, written in the simplest language. -
Metropolitan Organization: the Allegheny County Case (M-181)
Members of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (February 1992) Private Citizens Daniel J. Elazar, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert B. Hawkins, Jr., Chairman, San Francisco, California Mary Ellen Joyce, Arlington, Virginia Members of the U.S. Senate Daniel K. Akaka, Hawaii Dave Durenberger, Minnesota Charles S. Robb, Virginia Members of the U.S. House of Representatives Donald M. Payne, New Jersey Craig Thomas, Wyoming Ted Weiss, New York Officers of the Executive Branch, U.S. Government Debra Rae Anderson, Deputy Assistant to the President, Director of Intergovernmental Affairs Samuel K. Skinner, White House Chief of Staff Kvxncy Governors John Ashcroft, Missouri George A. Sinner, North Dakota Stan Stephens, Montana Vucancy Mayors Victor H. Ashe, Knoxville, Tennessee Robert M. Isaac, Colorado Springs, Colorado Joseph A. Leafe, Norfolk, Virginia Vucuncy Members of State Legislatures David E. Nething, North Dakota Senate Samuel B. Nunez, Jr., President, Louisiana Senate Ted L. Strickland, Colorado Senate Elected County Officials Ann Klinger, Merced County, California, Board of Supervisors D. Michael Stewart, Salt Lake County, Utah, County Commission Vucancy A Commission Report Metropolitan Organization: The Allegheny County Case ADVISORY COMMISSION ON INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS Washington, DC 20575 February 1992 M-181 U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations 800 K Street, NW Suite 450, South Building Washington, DC 20575 (202) 653-5640 FAX (202) 653-5429 ii US. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations Acknowledgments This report is the product of collaborative research, Many other public officials, private citizens, and under contract with the Commission, by Roger B. Parks, scholars in Allegheny County and elsewhere were kind Director of the Center for Policy and Public Management, enough to share their insights and, frequently, data and School of Environmental and Public Affairs, Indiana Uni- analyses bearing on the county, in the course of the re- versity, who was the principal investigator, and Ronald J. -
Regulated Child Care Programs in House District 1, Rep. Patrick Harkins (D-PA)
Regulated Child Care Programs in House District 1, Rep. Patrick Harkins (D-PA) Total Regulated Child Care Programs: 55 Total Pre‐K Counts: 4 Total Head Start Supplemental: 0 Star 4: 7 Star 3: 7 Star 2: 12 Star 1: 22 No Star Level: 7 Keystone Star Head Start Program Name Address City Zip Level Pre‐K Counts Supplemental Dr Gertrude A Barber Center‐Child Care 100 BARBER PL ERIE 16507 STAR 4 Yes No EARLY CONNECTIONS/HARBOR HOMES EARLY LRNG CTR 1841 E 18TH ST ERIE 16510 STAR 4 Yes No KINDERCARE LEARNING CENTER 1279 625 HOLLAND ST ERIE 16501 STAR 4 No No MERCYHURST CHILD LRNG CENTER INC 2703 ASH ST ERIE 16504 STAR 4 No No St Benedict Center 345 E 9TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 4 Yes No ST MARTIN EARLY LEARNING CENTER 1727 STATE ST ERIE 16501 STAR 4 No No ST VINCENT CHILD CARE CENTER 123 W 25TH ST ERIE 16502 STAR 4 No No ANNIES BUBBLE CARE 4023 RICE AVE ERIE 16510 STAR 3 No No DARLENE D COOLEY FAMILY CHILD CARE HOME 540 E 19TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 3 No No INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ERIE 517 E 26TH ST ERIE 16504 STAR 3 No No MONICA E ATKINSON FAMILY CHILD CARE HOME 1316 E 8TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 3 No No MULTICULTURAL COMMUNITY RESOURCE CENTER 554 E 10TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 3 No No WINNIE JACKSON GROUP DAY CARE 4110 PINE AVE ERIE 16504 STAR 3 No No WORLD OF CARE INC 1202 BUFFALO RD ERIE 16503 STAR 3 No No CUDDLE TIME DAY CARE 702 PARADE ST ERIE 16503 STAR 2 No No Darlene R Henderson 1121 E 25TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 2 No No DELLA HUBBARTS DAYCARE 2602 MYRTLE ST ERIE 16508 STAR 2 No No DONNA M ELLMAN FAMILY CHILD CARE HOME 1415 E 19TH ST ERIE 16503 STAR 2 No -
Homeward Bound Under Fire the City of Sanibei Is Under Fire from Some Islanders Who Think They Are Being Overregulated
ARTS, ENTERTAINMENT — SECTION B OUTDOOR ACTIVITIES — PAGES 19-21 - 1 '- BULK RATE 1 U.S. POSTAGE PAID SANIBEL,FL. 1 PERMIT #33 1 , t POSTAL PATRON Vol. 37, No. 10 Friday, March 13, 1998 Two Sections, 52 pages 75 Cents Homeward Bound Under Fire The City of Sanibei is under fire from some islanders who think they are being overregulated. ,.,...:.... Seepage 8A Vote Count Island residents overwhelm- ingly support using ad valorem taxes to pay for the sewer expansion. ;.....!... Seepage 3A Great Show, Great Cause J.T Smith will present Come Rain or Come Shine as a benefit for Eden Florida on Monday, March 16. See page 9A Music, Music! Frank Wagner reviews the opening of the Sanibei Music Festival. Seepage 7B I Arts 7B Business Services.. 25A Cartoon 17A Classifieds 22-25 Commentary 16-18 Crossword 23B Fishing.................. 21B Care and Rehabilitation of Wildlife veterinarian Chris Kreuder holds a young eaglet that was blown out of its nest and apparently Police Beat 7A survived on the ground for five days. Last Friday, the eaglet had recuperated from its trauma enough to be replaced in a new nest Remember When.... 5 A built by Mark "Bird" Westall. Photo/Anita Pinden 2A • Friday, March 13, 1998 • ISLANDER Sanibel Elementary School presents SEAHORSE FESTIVAL '98 Sunday, March 15 Noon til 4:00 p.m. rain or shine at Sanlhef Elementary School/Rec Center San-Cap Road, SanSbef Fun for the whole family! Children 2^un3'ei7Iree Children 3-14: $5 (includes unlimited admission to games) Adults: $1 FUN RUN Registration at 11:15 a.m. -
9Eturn of Private Foundationq
9eturn of Private FoundationQ OMB No 1545-0052 Form 990 -PF of Section 4947 (a)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust - Department of the Treasury Treated as a Private Foundation I--- 2012 In tarnni Pavoniin Snrvinw Note. The foundation may be able to use a coov of this return to satisfy state reoortlna reaulr For calendar year 2012 or tax year beginning FEB 1 2012 and ending JAN 31 2013 Name of foundation A Employer identification number WAT.-MART F(tTTMT)ATTr1N TNC 20-5639919 Number and street (or P 0 box number if mail is not delivered to street address) Room/suite B Telephone number 702 S . W . 8TH STREET DEPT 8687 , #0555 800-530-9925 City or town, state, and ZIP code C If exemption application is pending , check here BENTONVILLE AR 72716 G Check all that apply: 0 Initial return Initial return of a former public charity D 1. Foreign organizations, check here 0 Final return ® Amended return 2. Foreign organizations meeting the 85% test, 0 Address chang e Name change check here and attach computation H Check type of organization: ® Section 501(c)(3) exempt private foundation E If private foundation status was terminated El Section 4947 (a )( 1 ) nonexem pt charitable trust 0 Other taxable p rivate foundation under section 507(b)(1)(A), check here 0- I Fair market value of all assets at end of year J Accounting method: 0 Cash ® Accrual F If the foundation is in a 60-month termination (from Part ll, col (c), line 16) El Other (specify) under section 507(b)(1)(B), check here $ 19 997 027 (Part 1, column (d) must be on cash basis) Part I Analysis of Revenue and Expenses (a) Revenue and (b ) Net investment (c) Adjusted net (d) Disbursements (The total of amounts in columns (b) , (c), and (d) may not for charitable purposes necessarily equal the amounts in column (a)) exp enses per books income income (cash basis only) 1 Contributions, gifts, grants, etc., received 182 , 721 008 , 2 Check ► O If the foundation is not required to attach Sch B Interest on savings and temporary 3 cash investments 6 477 6477. -
Ohio Tiger Trap
The Professional Football Researchers Association Twilight 1919 By PFRA Research The Great War was history but not yet nostalgia. On warm, glad-to- land. The college game, autumn's respectable version in most of be-alive evenings, while midwestern spring spliced American the U.S. of A., had never generated widespread fan hysteria summer, men fled the languid, lengthening twilight of shops and around Canton and Akron, largely because the nearer colleges had mills and stores and fields to muster on front porches with good never fielded any national juggernauts. On the other hand, national cigars and pitchers of iced tea and there to consider the paramount professional football champions had called local gridirons their issues of the times. For the first spring in several, the European home for most of the past two decades. War was not uppermost in the learned discussions. Six months ago the fighting ended and the boys started coming home -- all those From Maine to California, both brands of football took bench seats who would ever come home. The War and its toll were still worth to baseball -- the National Pastime, particularly in spring and early talking about, but other subjects of import now shared and often summer when the thoughts of most young American males turned eclipsed Over There. lightly to fastballs and curveballs when not heavily occupied with fast cars and curvy girls. But in northeastern Ohio, the play-for-pay Instead of martial affairs, front porch conversation in many states grid game often crowded baseball for headlines on the sports might center on the new prohibition law set for July 1. -
Level Playing Fields: the Democratization of Amateur Sport in Pennsylvania
LEVEL PLAYING FIELDS: THE DEMOCRATIZATION OF AMATEUR SPORT IN PENNSYLVANIA by W. CURTIS MINER B.A., INDIANA UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, 1984 M.A., UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH, 1989 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of Arts and Sciences in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2006 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH ARTS AND SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by W. Curtis Miner It was defended on 11/20/2006 and approved by Kathleen M. Blee, Professor, Department of Sociology Laurence Glasco, Associate Professor, Department of History Van Beck Hall, Associate Professor, Department of History Dissertation Advisor: Edward K. Muller, Professor, Department of History ii Copyright © by W. Curtis Miner 2006 iii Level Playing Fields: The Democratization of Amateur Sport in Pennsylvania W. Curtis Miner, PhD University of Pittsburgh, 2006 This dissertation examines how amateur sports once dominated and controlled by Pennsylvania’s Leisure Class became accessible to non-elites over the course of the twentieth century. Rising standards of living and increased leisure time were pre-requisites for broader public participation. But this study argues that the democratization of amateur sport depended on the active intervention of the state and, to a lesser extent, the market, both of which broadened access to privately controlled playing fields. In hunting, state game management restored wild game populations, thus ensuring a bountiful supply of game for all Pennsylvanians, irrespective of social class. Likewise, the first municipally owned golf courses, often situated in public parks, offered the only alternative to the private courses which up to that point dominated the game and regulated participation. -
Svbordinate Lodges, I.O.O.F
DIRECTORY OF SVBORDINATE LODGES, I.O.O.F. Class HS5ia. Book . T^S Copyright N° COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF THOMAS WILDEY THE FOUNDER OF THE NDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS ON THE CONTINENT OF NORTH AMERICA PRICE, $1.SO NET ^5?is^-^^^ DIRECTORY Subordinate lodges OF THE INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS ON THE CONTINENT OF NORTH AMERICA COMPILED AND, PUBLISHED BY GEORGE H. FULLER. GRAND SECRETARY. OF MASSACHUSETTS. THE GRAND LODGe! I. O. O. FM S15 TREMONT STREET. BOSTON 1913 Copyright. 1913. by George H. Fuller THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Caustic-Claflin Company, Printers harvard Square Cambridge, Massachusetts ©CJ.A347588 It PREFACE THIS book contains the name, number and location of approximately 17,500 Subordinate Lodges of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows on the Conti- nent of North America, revised to March 20, 1913. The copy was furnished by the Grand Secretaries of the fifty- six Grand Lodges in the United States of America and Dominion of Canada. It is the purpose of the Directory to aid lodges in com- municating one with another. A message transmitted by mail as first-class matter, bearing the name, number and location of any lodge, will be delivered without additional address on the part of the writer. For example, a letter addressed to California Lodge, No. 1, I.O.O.F., San Fran- cisco, California, will be delivered to said lodge, the Post- master at San Francisco supplying the necessary informa- tion as to post-office box or street address of the lodge or Recording Secretary thereof. -
Asparagus Campbell, Last of Karpis Gangsters, Arrested
'AQBBIZTEEIC Ettniittg BnraUi V WEDNESDAY, MAY 6 .19B«. ATSBAOB DAU.T CUUmATIOM According to Secretary Harlowe The Women’s Mlsslonety socloty A delegation of Depot Square busi As on automobUs driven by Emil tm Ike Month ot AptO, ItM WllUa o f Center Church Men's will meet tomorrow afternoon at ness men went to ESIlngton this Among the local Democrata that THE WEATUn A B oq rrow N Plltard of 71 Lynesa street passed have been assigned places at the League, approximately 100 of the 2:80 at the Emanuel Lutheran afternoon to attend the funeral serv 28 Oak street late last night, a right Paroeaat of 0 . S. Woathar men of the church are expected at dinner to be given at the Hartford ;;T h * Red U m ’M Social club will church. Work wlU be on rolling ices for Max Lavitt president of the hand door swung open denting the Lowest: Contract Bartford the roast beef supper tonight at bandages and surgical dresalngs. All ConneerJeui Newstene Tobacco com Club thl' evening In honor of Post 5,846 - Id a tat-torather nlfht at the trunk, bending the left rear fender master General James A- Farley C U T R A T E S Hatater of tha Aa«t 6:80 in the parish hall. President women of the church will be wel pany of Apel place. and shattering the left rear window jb rooraa on Bimlnanl place 8at- are, T. J. Qutab, John G. Mahoney, Prices On Bnrean of Oreolnttona. Mostly etondy, wanner M a ; avenlaf ao that tha new atew- Arthur ming will preside at the come whether membera m the Mis of a car owned by Oliver t .