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The Public Record began publication in September 1999 as a semi-monthly, and changed to a weekly in April, 2000. The publisher of the Public Record was James Tayoun, Sr. who was a former City Councilman in Philadelphia and State Representative in Harrisburg who resigned from office after pleading guilty to racketeering, mail-fraud, tax- evasion and obstruction-of-justice.
Philadelphia Daily News: 1925 Daily South Philly Review: 1947 Weekly Northeast Times: 1934 Weekly Philadelphia Weekly: 1971 Weekly Philadelphia Gay News: 1976 Weekly AL DÍA: 1994 Weekly El Hispano: 1976 Weekly The Public Record: 1999 Weekly Philadelphia Metro: 2000 Daily Philadelphia Business Journal: 1982 Weekly The Hawk: 1929 Weekly The ...
The Public Record was a newspaper first published in Philadelphia on May 14, 1870; it was founded by William J. Swain, son of William Moseley Swain, who had founded the Public Ledger. [3] At the time it was published at Clark's Hall at 3rd and Chestnut Streets. [4]
The Public Record - Philadelphia; The Leader Vindicator - New Bethlehem; The Shippensburg News-Chronicle - Shippensburg; The Temple News - Philadelphia; Town and Country - Pennsburg [1] The Villager - Moscow; Wyoming County Examiner - Tunkhannock; Zajednicar - Pittsburgh
The five people killed in a mass shooting in the Kingsessing neighbourhood of Philadelphia have been identified.. Philadephia police issued a statement on Tuesday naming the victims as follows ...
Created in 1903 as the Division of Public Records in the State Library, it was combined in 1945 with the State Museum and the Pennsylvania Historical Commission to form the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission (PHMC). [2] It was officially designated as the Bureau of the Pennsylvania State Archives within the PHMC.
WPPT (channel 35) is a PBS member television station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. It is owned by Lehigh Valley Public Media alongside Allentown -licensed fellow PBS member WLVT-TV (channel 39).
The contract calls for Metro to pay $45,000 a month to SEPTA, which they stopped paying in March 2003, claiming SEPTA failed to live up to the terms of the contract. [2] Despite lawsuits and counter-suits, in 2004 TPI Metro PA and SEPTA signed a three-year contract which increased payments to $65,000 a month.