2008-07-10.Page01 |
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5KN OF THE TIMES PAGESD.12 New signs are in place to mark the path of the area's first survey in the1780s. THE REVEREND ' PAGE 5 Nancy (halfant-Walker is now paster of a St Stephen's Church in V/ilkinsburg. BASEBALL PACE 25 Sewiddc/s Legion team is picking up valuable experience against the county's top teams. Sewickley herald ALEPPO! BELLACRES1 EDGEWORTH I GLENFIELDI GLEN OSBORNE I HAYSVILLE1LEETILEETSDALEI SEWICKLEY I SEWICKLEY HEIGHTS I SEWICKLEY HILLS THURSDAY JULY10,2008 TRIB TOTAL MEDIA vm,mv pennysaver 50 CENTS INSIDE HISTORY Richard Smith's mural inside Sewickley Heights History Center is complete. See Page 15. SPORTS Former Q.V. coach Gene Klein's Pittsburgh Riverhounds earned their first win last weekend. See Page 27. INDEX Opinion........................6 Tempo ...................:...15 Obituaries....................24 • Sports.......................25 Real Estate................. 29 Crossword.....................32 A Tradition Since 1903 VOLUME 105, ISSUE 28 . A Gateway Newspaper AN EDITION OF TRIB TOTAL MEDIA www.yoursewickley.com 412-324-1403 6 3,2,1, LIFTOFF MATT BRUNNER, employee at the Fern Hollow Nature Center, helps Morgan Schuldt, 9, of Bell Acres,' launch a rocket he made during a ■summer camp last week. This is the first camp of its kind at the nature center. Brunner is also a teacher at Shady Side Academy. PHOTO/KRISTINA SERAFINI Small increase in funding comes from new state budget By Bobby Cherry | STAFF WRITER r j , With little fanfare, state leg-islators approved a 2008-09 budget that boosts education funding for all 501 public school districts, including Quaker Valley Lawmakers approved I adding $274 million to educa- QUAKER VALLEY tion, bringing the total to $5.2 billion for the fiscal year. While that might seem like a good deal for public education statewide, locally the increased funding from Harrisbprg means very little, said John Sheline, director of finances for Quaker Valley Quaker Valley received an overall increase of a little more than $33,000, or $17 per student, Sheline said. It’s a 3 percent increase from last year, which is the state’s minimum. “The state looks at us as a wealthy district,” Sheline said. “That’s why taxpayers have to foot more of the bill here.” In Western Pennsylvania, Chartiers Valley received the highest percentage increase, gaining 11.1 percent, or $433,000. The exact amount each , school receives is based on a formula with a base cost per student of $8,355. Various factors including poverty, popula- CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 Student Tickets .just$12! CLOCcsbaret S?, >-• t 412-456-6666 Croups 412-325-15821 647397534406
Object Description
Title | Sewickley Herald |
Subject | Sewickley (Pa.)--Newspapers |
Description | A weekly community newspaper in Sewickley, Pennsylvania. Coverage includes September 1903-Most recently available. |
Creator | Trib Total Media, Inc |
Publisher | Trib Total Media, Inc |
Date | 07-10-2008 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Allegheny County; Sewickley |
Type | text |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Source | Microfilm |
Language | English |
Rights | Licensor grants a royalty-free, non-exclusive, nontransferable and non-sublicensable license to digitize, reproduce, perform, display, transmit and distribute soley to end users. |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Sewickley Public Library, Attn: Reference Department, 500 Thorn St. Sewickley PA 15143. Phone: 412-741-6920. Email: sewickley@einetwork.net |
Contributing Institution | Sewickley Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | 2008-07-10.Page01 |
Creator | Trib Total Media, Inc |
Date | 07-10-2008 |
Type | text |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the Sewickley Public Library, Attn: Reference Department, 500 Thorn St. Sewickley PA 15143. Phone: 412-741-6920. Email: sewickley@einetwork.net |
Contributing Institution | Sewickley Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | 5KN OF THE TIMES PAGESD.12 New signs are in place to mark the path of the area's first survey in the1780s. THE REVEREND ' PAGE 5 Nancy (halfant-Walker is now paster of a St Stephen's Church in V/ilkinsburg. BASEBALL PACE 25 Sewiddc/s Legion team is picking up valuable experience against the county's top teams. Sewickley herald ALEPPO! BELLACRES1 EDGEWORTH I GLENFIELDI GLEN OSBORNE I HAYSVILLE1LEETILEETSDALEI SEWICKLEY I SEWICKLEY HEIGHTS I SEWICKLEY HILLS THURSDAY JULY10,2008 TRIB TOTAL MEDIA vm,mv pennysaver 50 CENTS INSIDE HISTORY Richard Smith's mural inside Sewickley Heights History Center is complete. See Page 15. SPORTS Former Q.V. coach Gene Klein's Pittsburgh Riverhounds earned their first win last weekend. See Page 27. INDEX Opinion........................6 Tempo ...................:...15 Obituaries....................24 • Sports.......................25 Real Estate................. 29 Crossword.....................32 A Tradition Since 1903 VOLUME 105, ISSUE 28 . A Gateway Newspaper AN EDITION OF TRIB TOTAL MEDIA www.yoursewickley.com 412-324-1403 6 3,2,1, LIFTOFF MATT BRUNNER, employee at the Fern Hollow Nature Center, helps Morgan Schuldt, 9, of Bell Acres,' launch a rocket he made during a ■summer camp last week. This is the first camp of its kind at the nature center. Brunner is also a teacher at Shady Side Academy. PHOTO/KRISTINA SERAFINI Small increase in funding comes from new state budget By Bobby Cherry | STAFF WRITER r j , With little fanfare, state leg-islators approved a 2008-09 budget that boosts education funding for all 501 public school districts, including Quaker Valley Lawmakers approved I adding $274 million to educa- QUAKER VALLEY tion, bringing the total to $5.2 billion for the fiscal year. While that might seem like a good deal for public education statewide, locally the increased funding from Harrisbprg means very little, said John Sheline, director of finances for Quaker Valley Quaker Valley received an overall increase of a little more than $33,000, or $17 per student, Sheline said. It’s a 3 percent increase from last year, which is the state’s minimum. “The state looks at us as a wealthy district,” Sheline said. “That’s why taxpayers have to foot more of the bill here.” In Western Pennsylvania, Chartiers Valley received the highest percentage increase, gaining 11.1 percent, or $433,000. The exact amount each , school receives is based on a formula with a base cost per student of $8,355. Various factors including poverty, popula- CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 Student Tickets .just$12! CLOCcsbaret S?, >-• t 412-456-6666 Croups 412-325-15821 647397534406 |
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