
Paula Grubbs
Reporter at Butler Eagle
I am a Butler native and 1979 Butler High grad. I worked at the Cranberry Eagle for 17 years before moving to the Butler Eagle in Sept. 2017.
Articles
Ho, ho, hold the gift sets and lottery tickets when gift giving, instead seek gifts from local shops
Dec 5, 2024 |
butlereagle.com | Paula Grubbs |Rob McGraw
Some gift-givers wrack their brains trying to come up with an idea for Grandpa or Aunt Susan during the holiday shopping season. Others feel no pressure to find the perfect gift and just want something — anything — to hand over on Christmas Day. Both of those demographics would do well to heed the advice of vendors who peddled their unique, fun, attractive and practical wares at the Holiday Market held at Butler Catholic School in November.
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Dec 5, 2024 |
butlereagle.com | Paula Grubbs
Chuck Veasey heard about the national Wreaths Across America program several years ago while visiting Arlington National Cemetery in Washington, D.C. In the program, patriotic citizens across the country take it upon themselves to organize the laying of Christmas wreaths on the graves of veterans in a cemetery or cemeteries in their area.
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Dec 2, 2024 |
butlereagle.com | Paula Grubbs
Anyone within a 15-mile radius of Callery can help collect data Dec. 29 for a scientific midwinter survey of birds in the Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania’s 13th annual South Butler Christmas Bird Count. Chris Kubiak, education director at the Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania, said the South Butler count joins 4,300 other counts across North America. He said interested parties need no expertise in birding to volunteer, which can be done in one of two ways.
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Nov 26, 2024 |
butlereagle.com | Paula Grubbs
Delightful diva Young women of 14 might be shy and retiring, preferring to remain in the background in life — unless they happen to be opera singers. McKenna Jones, a Knoch High School freshman, recently performed in her fourth opera, Pittsburgh Opera’s “Cavalleria Rusticana/Pagliacci,” with none other than Knoch alumna Marianne Cornetti.
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Nov 25, 2024 |
butlereagle.com | Paula Grubbs
When Caterina Potts, of Jefferson Township, was 25 weeks pregnant with her twin sons, she developed intense abdominal pain while at work in her then-home of Jacksonville, Fla. Doctors soon discovered twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome, in which amniotic fluid is shared. Both fetuses were in cardiac arrest when Potts was flown by helicopter to Miami, where specialists were waiting to attempt to save the boys.
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Out with the new and in with the old! County voters will mark paper ballots beginning in the November election, to prevent hacking. See my article in the Wed. Butler Eagle.

Nice of her to save us some... https://t.co/6m3sPCxFmU

Ten Knoch High students made PMEA District 5 Jazz Band. Front, from left: Kevin Golden, Noah Kane, Mihkayla Perkins, Evan Weston, Ethan Wymer Back, from left: Josh Rohland, Braydon Sloan, Brenden Smith, Ira Mercer, and Nix Pawlowski https://t.co/sx9Y2ZqwaL