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Pennsylvania lawmaker to colleague: 'I'm heterosexual … keep your hands to yourself' DAUHPIN COUNTY, Pa. – A Pennsylvania lawmaker made it known that he was heterosexual and expressed displeasure after being touched on the arm by a colleague during a meeting. Rep. Daryl Metcalfe (R-Butler County), chairman of the State Government Committee, objected to being touched on ... 'I'm a Heterosexual': Pennsylvania Lawmaker Stops Meeting to Complain About Male Colleague ... - Governing
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| Mini-Casinos Planned for PA TOWANDA TOWNSHIP -- Pennsylvania is already a big gambling state and it will soon be bigger. The state is set to open ten mini-casinos. Governor Wolf signed the gambling expansion bill into law as a way to balance the state budget. If you like to gamble, you've probably been to one of ...
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| PA, States Sue EPA for Missing Ozone Deadline Pennsylvania is one of more than a dozen states suing the EPA for failing to enforce on an important air pollution regulation. In a federal lawsuit filed Monday, Pennsylvania and 13 other states, plus the District of Columbia, say the EPA blew by an October 1 deadline to designate which parts of the ...
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| Pennsylvania expands hemp program The state Department of Agriculture will increase the number of permits from 30 to 50, allow qualified farmers to plant up to 100 acres, up from 5; and ... State Sen. Judy Schwank, a Ruscombmanor Township Democrat, was one of the driving forces behind legislation that established Pennsylvania's hemp ...
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| Adams, Gregory, Farrell named first-team all-state Makayla Adams and Lynea Gregory from Lake-Lehman and Emily Farrell from Dallas were named first-team, all-state by the Pennsylvania State Field Hockey Coaches Association. Adams and Gregory were first-team Class A all-state. Teammate Alicia Galasso was a second-team choice while Katie ...
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| The Penn State Science Policy Society: Filling the Gap Between Science and Community While our Science on Tap events were successful, we still felt there was still a gnawing gap between Penn State science and our local community. The local news was filled with science-related issues in State College and the surrounding central Pennsylvania region, but it wasn't obvious how science ...
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