Explore More It really was a commute from hell.
December 7 will mark the 20th anniversary of the day crazed gunman Colin Ferguson went on a murderous rampage aboard the Long Island Rail Road, pulling out a 9 mm pistol and opening fire, killing six people and wounding 19 others.
As the 5:33 p.m. train to Hicksville approached the Merillon Avenue Station in Garden City, Ferguson walked down the aisle of the third car and took aim.
“We’ve had nine runners. Sometimes keys are left hanging on the door,” said Jack Paladino, owner of the Cashtown Inn in Cashtown, Pa.
A “runner” is a guest who flees in the dead of night frightened by ghostly encounters. During the battle of Gettysburg, the inn was the headquarters of Confederate Gen. A.P. Hill and later served as a makeshift battlefield hospital.
Apparently, some of those Confederates never checked out of the hotel.
Susan Jacks, a popular pop singer and songwriter, has died, according to family and friends.
On Monday morning, the long-time musician died of kidney failure on April 25.
She was 73 years old at the time.
Susan Pesklevits, one of eight children, was born in Saskatoon in 1948 and rose to international renown as part of the Poppy Family with her then-husband Terry Jacks.
“Which Way You Goin’ Billy,” her first single, sold three million copies worldwide and reached #1 in Canada and #2 on Billboard in the United States.
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The great Kurt Suzuki homered, doubled, drove in four runs and, behind the plate, aided pitcher Max Scherzer through 89 worrisome back-from-injury pitches at Nationals Park on Wednesday night.
The “great” Kurt Suzuki? Well, sort of.
Suzuki, a modest, diligent, studious vet who only became a threat as a hitter three seasons ago, may be baseball’s least appreciated half-time star. In a sport more reliant on youth than ever, he is a true late bloomer.