News

Gary Swearingen: Why a Firm With a Weird Name Is Thriving The managing partner of $2.8-billion-asset SC3F Wealth Management Group on growing his business and guiding clients through the trade-war ...
1935-2025 PETERSBURG — Harry W. Swearingen, 89, of Petersburg, passed away on Tuesday, May 27, 2025, at Hospice House, Poland. He was born on July 11, 1935, in Wellsville, the son of the late Walter ...
September 30, 1931 — May 15, 2025 Gwenda Meyer passed away on May 15, 2025, in Layton, Utah, at the age of 93. Born in Ogden, Utah, on September 30, 1931, to Levi Ephraim and Maud Mathews Cragun ...
Vanessa Ann Swearingen was born December 10, 1933, in McLean, Ill., the daughter of John H. and Effie Reed Swearingen. She first married Patrick W. Holohan, May 2, 1954, at McLean, Ill.
I'm excited to share that Jake Swearingen has been promoted to Executive Editor, Enterprise.. Jake led the award-winning Warehouse Nation series. He edited our coverage in December of how ...
Tracy Swearingen, who graduated from Pueblo East High School in 1984, has been appointed the new head coach of the Bulldogs. Swearingen coached at Centennial from 1987-2002, then went on to coach ...
Thomas Rodney Swearingen made his transition into non-physical life on December 8, 2024. Rod will be remembered as Dad or Pops by his children and Popper by all of his grandchildren.
The night Gwenda Allgood told her husband she was considering running for local council, she slept in her son's bedroom. She refused to leave until her husband gave her his support.
Lucinda F. “Cindy” Swearingen, 71, of Erie, PA, died August 12, 2024, in UPMC Hamot. Surviving are three children Cheryl (Matthew) Swanson, Jason ...
Margaret Ann (Cissy) Swearingen passed away June 30, 2024 in Austin. She was born in Austin December 10, 1947 to R.O. Swearingen, MD and Margaret ...
In 1976, as the Dallas Cowboys were playing the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Super Bowl, a camera panned the sidelines, and a cheerleader called Gwenda Swearingen looked directly into it and winked.
In 1976, as the Dallas Cowboys were playing the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Super Bowl, a camera panned the sidelines, and a cheerleader called Gwenda Swearingen looked directly into it and winked.