I attended Wildcat Championship Wrestling for the first time about a month ago.
Might as well been four years ago.
Forget British period dramas with swooning orchestral soundtracks.
Forget Grey’s Anatomy.
Try following the soap operatic dramas of amateur wrestling.
You miss one Saturday of Lawrenceburg wrestling, you’ve missed pages of plot.
Amateur wrestling flits from storyline to storyline, with the motivations of characters with names like TJ Lightning and Black Rain constantly changing.
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A philosophical debate is shaping up as class action lawsuits against public libraries continue to spread across Kentucky.
The overarching question is fairly simple, and goes something like this: Should taxpayers, with an assist from fiscal courts, have the power to control library tax rates, or should that be left to those smart enough to actually understand how important libraries actually are?
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“Teddy Roosevelt is my favorite president,” I said to the soon-to-be college graduate sitting across from me. “I visited his house once.”
Teddy Roosevelt’s home on Long Island, NY, is stuffed with books as well as a frightening grizzly bear looming in frozen growl over small elementary student visitors.
The museum was both terrifying and fascinating to a fourth grader with career aspirations of becoming a pioneer and creating her own head cheese.
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Column as I see ’em …
I’ve never been happier to be wrong in my life.
I screwed up royally several weeks go when I wrote an article about potential health department tax increases.
I wasn’t alone in thinking health department taxes are governed under the convoluted “compensating rate” system; even the county attorney wasn’t aware of an old statute that actually covers health taxes.
She is now, and I’m absolutely thrilled.
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Today I’m going to use print to talk about social media.
Counterproductive?
Perhaps, especially since you cannot hover your computer cursor on the phrase “click here,” taking you straight to online coverage of last Friday’s industrial park fire in Lawrenceburg.
Don’t worry. The technology is coming. I can feel it.
You probably snapped a photo — taken from your porch, from your driver’s seat or from your backyard — of the smoke plume over Lawrenceburg as it twisted lazily into the air.
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When the Commons 4 Kids charity delivers its second million baseball cards this year, Jerry Milburn knows exactly which baseball card he’ll choose to mark the occasion.
A 1989 Upper Deck Ken Griffey, Jr., rookie card.
The baseball card that sparked decades of collecting.
The good-luck charm Milburn’s mother brought to Bingo nights.
The card that inspired the beginnings of Milburn’s trading card charity, Commons 4 Kids.
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Column as I see ’em …
Just when I start to think the city council is ready to bury the hatchet with county government, it steps up and reaffirms just how wide the chasm between the two really is.
The city’s decision to move forward with a splash park is the latest indicator of how unwilling it is to join forces with county government for the benefit of this community.
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Stepping off the plane in Haiti, David Montgomery first smelled the trash.
“I’d been through some poor countries before, but when I hit Haiti, just the smell, the trash was everywhere, just like a tour of the landfill out here,” Montgomery said.
The Anderson County magistrate’s memories of all he’s done, seen and heard on the Caribbean island run together.
After 12 trips to Haiti in 14 years, it can be difficult to keep his timeline straight.
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Bending paperclips calms me.
Fragile metal contorted into shepherd’s hooks or misshapen cranes lay inert beneath computer paper shrouds.
Their broken limbs of snapped, twisted metal litter my desk.
They are the leftovers of trying to wield control in an uncontrollable world.
Destroying something that can’t ever be made whole again relieves stress.
It always has.
When I was a child, usually sitting in the left outfield wearing my baseball mitt as a hat, my fingers happily found grass to destroy.
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The Anderson Public library’s board of trustees will apparently wait until a court orders it to comply with the statute that governs how it’s supposed to set tax rates before doing so on its own.
And that’s a shame because by doing so the board is missing out on a great chance to reinvent its image and survive what will otherwise be a devastating financial blow.
The order to lower its tax rate has already come for a library in northern Kentucky and, trust me on this, a similar order will eventually be issued here.
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