Fast Forward
200 in Chester County lose jobs
CHESTER -- Chester County officials liked what they'd heard recently.
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FROM THE HERALD ARCHIVES: CSX Ga. center wins over skeptical neighbors
FAIRBURN, Ga. ( July 18, 2004) Driving around the perimeter of a rail-truck shipping yard in south Fulton County, Ga., it's hard to discern the activity inside.
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From the Herald archives: Unbreakable spirit
The sweater is purple for the Furman her daddy loves. The Crocs shoes are orange for the Clemson her momma loves.
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Publisher & Department Heads | Administrative | Advertising | Circulation | Editorial/Newsroom | Production & Information Systems | Marketing & Interactive Media | Human Resources | Finance/Accounting Publisher & Department Heads ...
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Sept. 19, 2001: Firefighters share the dedication, risk of saving lives
They belong to a singular brotherhood, their lives dedicated to saving the lives of others even if it means risking their own.
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Sept. 16, 2001: Duke Energy prepares for unthinkable at Catawba plant
LAKE WYLIE When terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners and demolished the World Trade Center and part of the Pentagon, they forced York County to think the unthinkable.
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Sept. 13, 2001: Pilots, flight attendants waiting to return home
Margaret Childs had just returned from the grocery store when she received a frantic call from her mother-in-law.
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Sept. 13: Councilman caught up in D.C. disaster
York County Councilman Rick Lee had just flown in to Reagan Washington National Airport on business Tuesday when he heard the news of the terrorist attack in New York City.
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Sept. 13. 2001: Local officials answer national call for help
Cotton Howell, York County's emergency management director, was whisked off to New York on a chartered Lear jet around midnight Tuesday.
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Sept. 13, 2001: Locals of Arab descent receive threatening phone calls
Local people with ties to the Middle East have received threats after Tuesday's terrorists attacks in New York and Washington.
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Sept. 12, 2001: Area shocked by nightmare that unfolded
Rock Hill native Jeff Dodge stood in his office six blocks from the World Trade Center and saw the two World Trade Center towers burning. As he ran to a phone to try to call a friend who worked there, he heard the huge explosion and crash, then turned around and the skyscraper wasn't even there.


