
Sarah Linn
Editor at The Tribune (Seymour, IN)
@SLOTribune entertainment editor, @KCETArtbound writer and movie buff.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
history-computer.com | Sarah Linn
The mobile app sector is propelling the smartphone revolution that has taken the world by surprise. Your smartphone is truly “smart” because it has access to a wide variety of useful applications. Undoubtedly, mobile applications are used for anything from entertainment to money and time management to education, video streaming, chatting, fitness tracking, and anything else you can think of.
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2 weeks ago |
sacbee.com | Sarah Linn
Looking for a new place to live? Nine of the 10 least affordable cities in the nation to buy a home are in California, according to a new WalletHub study. The personal finance website recently ranked the most affordable cities for homebuyers in the United States in 2025, comparing 300 locations based on metrics ranging from housing costs to taxes and vacancy rates.
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3 weeks ago |
sacbee.com | Sarah Linn
The California Highway Patrol will be on the lookout for drunk drivers in the Sacramento area. Officers with the CHP’s East Sacramento office will conduct a sobriety checkpoint in an “unincorporated area” of Sacramento County on Saturday, May 17, the agency said in a news release. The office’s jurisdiction in the eastern section of the county includes Rancho Cordova, Folsom and the area along Jackson Road near Rancho Murieta.
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3 weeks ago |
sacbee.com | Sarah Linn
Despite widespread reports of people moving out California, some parts of the Golden State are getting more crowded. A total of eight metropolitan areas in California saw significant population growth between 2023 and 2024, according to new data from the U.S. Census Bureau. “Increasingly, population growth in metro areas is being shaped by international migration,” Kristie Wilder, a demographer with the U.S. Census Bureau’s Population Division, said in a news release.
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4 weeks ago |
sacbee.com | Sarah Linn
With communities across Northern California expected to see rising temperatures, you may be tempted to take a dip in a local river, lake or stream. Resist that urge, experts say. Local waterways are seeing chilly, fast-flowing water due to spring snowmelt, according to the National Weather Service and other agencies.
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