Sunday, December 19, 2021
The National Christmas Center is designed as Columbia, Pa. in the 1940s
Saturday, December 18, 2021
'A significant gift': Local woman's collection of warped plants from around TMI headed to Smithsonian
Friday, December 17, 2021
3 COLUMBIA CEMETERIES WILL HAVE WREATHS ACROSS AMERICA CEREMONIES THIS WEEKEND
Mount Bethel Cemetery, 700 Locust St., Columbia, will host a Wreaths Across America event at noon Saturday, Dec. 18, to honor veterans, living and deceased, from all branches of the military.
Community members are invited to participate by laying wreaths on graves of veterans throughout the ceremony. There are more than 600 veterans buried at Mount Bethel Cemetery.
Retired Army Sgt. Major Spike Gaylord Grant will emcee the program. Several retired veterans will lay wreaths, as well: Harold Thomas, Coast Guard; Sandra Duncan, Air Force; LuAnn Grant, Army; Harry Knighton, Navy; Jason Price II, Marines; George Biagio, Merchant Marines; and Albert Storm, representing POW/MIA.
Jerry Breneisen will play taps, and Vet21 will provide the 21-gun salute. There will also be a color guard.
To support Mount Bethel Cemetery, visit wreathsacrossamerica.org/PA0358P
Zion Hill Cemetery's ceremony will be at 1 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 19, at the cemetery, 553 N. 5th St., Columbia.
Zion Hill is a restored historic cemetery that is dedicated to the 18 African American residents of Columbia who served in the Union Army during the Civil War. The ceremony will feature a color guard from the Lancaster Fencibles; a 21-gun salute by the 30th Pennsylvania Volunteers; speakers Mark Stivers, Columbia borough manager, and Sharon Lintner, of Columbia Borough Council; and two members of the Columbia Historic Preservation Society, historian Christopher Vera and Tony Williams, reading the names of the interred.
The Wreaths Across America ceremony at Laurel Hill Memorial Gardens, 845 Laurel Hill Road, Columbia, will be at 2 p.m. Sunday, December 19.
Pennsylvania asks FEMA for help with COVID surge | AP News
Pennsylvania asked the federal government on Wednesday to send health care workers to hospitals and nursing homes that are increasingly under stress from persistent staffing shortages and the latest COVID-19 surge.
The Wolf administration requested Federal Emergency Management Agency "strike teams" for hospitals, skilled nursing facilities and ambulance companies in the hardest-hit areas of the state. Pennsylvania also asked FEMA for 1 million rapid at-home coronavirus tests and for an increase in the state's allocation of monoclonal antibody treatments, to be targeted to "rural areas, regions with higher social vulnerability, and lower vaccinations rates."
Threatening TikTok challenge alarms Lancaster County school officials
The threat, specific to Friday, does not describe a specific act or name a certain school or school district, instead warning "every school in the USA, even elementary," school officials said. What started as an excuse to skip school, officials said, quickly morphed into a dangerous social media movement.