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The Reporter initially covered local government, social events, and schools. After Jones died in 1967, his daughter ran it briefly. It was then sold to Typecraft Press. In the 1971, Roberta Smith joined as a freelancer. By 1978, she bought the paper for $1, renaming it The South Pittsburgh Reporter. [2] It was still called The Reporter for short.
Observer Publishing Company is a newspaper publishing company headquartered in Washington, Pennsylvania.The company publishes The Observer–Reporter, a daily newspaper covering Washington County, Greene County, and the Mon Valley in Pennsylvania, with some overlap into the South Hills of Pittsburgh in Allegheny County.
Pittsburgh Commercial; Pittsburgh Dispatch; Pittsburgh Leader; Pittsburgh Mercury; Pittsburgh Press (1884–1992) [252] Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph (1927–1960) [253] The Pittsburg Times; Pittsburgh Tribune-Review (print edition 1992–2016) Polish American Journal (Scranton) (1948–1972) [254] Potter County journal (Coudersport) (1880–1969) [255]
May 6—Two Pittsburgh men who police say were high-ranking members of a street gang that sold drugs in Pittsburgh's South Side have been sentenced in federal court to long prison terms ...
The Observer–Reporter is a daily newspaper covering Washington County, Greene County, and the Mon Valley in Pennsylvania, with some overlap into the South Hills of Pittsburgh in. The newspaper was published by the Observer Publishing Company in the city of Washington, Pennsylvania. [2]
The South Side was once composed of a number of smaller communities. These included Birmingham and East Birmingham, both named for the English Midlands industrial center, Birmingham; Ormsby, originally a part of East Birmingham, incorporated as a borough in 1866; South Pittsburgh, the area immediately adjacent to the Smithfield Street Bridge, and Monongahela, named for the adjacent Monongahela ...
Trump's first visit came in the waning days of the 2020 election cycle, to a place a few miles south near the Butler Country Club, where the stone fireplace my great-grandfather built still stands.
The storied cookware company has been fashioning affordable cast-iron pans in their South Pittsburg Tennessee factory pretty much continuously since it was founded — by Joseph Lodge, in 1896.