Lexington council adds $3.2 million for 10 new positions, infrastructure fund The Lexington council added 10 new employees, $2 million for an infrastructure fund for developers and money for a pilot Central Kentucky Veterans Center to Mayor Linda Gorton’s proposed $538.1 ... 05/28/2024 - 5:00 pm | View Link
Loveland announces new climate action task force The city of Loveland is creating a formal plan to address climate change, and is seeking input from residents. Applications are now open for a climate action task force that will work with city ... 05/21/2024 - 2:46 pm | View Link
San Ramon council to select applicants for new climate task force The San Ramon City Council is set to interview applicants for the city's newly formed Climate Action Plan Citizens' Task Force. 05/20/2024 - 6:50 pm | View Link
Philadelphia City Council seeks volunteers for its reparations task force The Philadelphia City Council released new details about the city's reparations task force Friday, calling on Black residents to apply to join the effort.The task force will "study and develop ... 11/17/2023 - 11:00 am | View Link
Shirley Serban performs a parody of Robert Palmer's Simply Irresistible. And by the way, Ms Serban lives in New Zealand, once again showing that Trump is simultaneously hated and a laughingstock all over the world. It's not just us.
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A fugitive known as the “Bad Breath Rapist” who had been on the run for more than a decade was caught in California on Tuesday, authorities said.
Tuen Kit Lee was taken into custody Tuesday, the U. S. Marshals Service said in a press release. Lee was found guilty for the 2005 kidnapping and raping of a young woman in Quincy, Mass., but fled during his September 2007 trial, according to the press release.
New York — Josh Gibson became Major League Baseball’s career leader with a .372 batting average, surpassing Ty Cobb’s .367, when Negro Leagues records for more than 2,300 players were incorporated Tuesday after a three-year research project.
Gibson’s .466 average for the 1943 Homestead Grays became the season standard, followed by Charlie “Chino” Smith’s .451 for the 1929 New York Lincoln Giants.
Des Moines, Iowa — More than 4 million chickens in Iowa will have to be killed after a case of the highly pathogenic bird flu was detected at a large egg farm, the state announced Tuesday.
Crews are in the process of killing 4.2 million chickens after the disease was found at a farm in Sioux County, Iowa, making it the latest in a yearslong outbreak that now is affecting dairy cattle as well.
Introducing peanut butters, soups and other products made from peanuts into your child’s diet early on may help prevent them from developing an allergy later in adolescence, a new study found.
Published in NEJM Evidence on Tuesday, the study found that feeding kids peanut products regularly from infancy to the age of five reduced the rate of peanut allergy in adolescence by 71%.
Newark, Ohio—Ohio’s historical society is one step away from gaining control of ancient ceremonial and burial earthworks maintained by a country club where members golf alongside the mounds.
A trial was slated to begin Tuesday to determine how much the historical society must pay for the site, which is among eight ancient areas in the Hopewell Earthworks system named a World Heritage Site last year.
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Built between 2,000 and 1,600 years ago by people from the Hopewell Culture, the earthworks were host to ceremonies that drew people from across the continent, based on archeological discoveries of raw materials from as far west as the Rocky Mountains.
The Ohio History Connection, which owns the 2,000-year-old Octagon Earthworks in Newark in central Ohio, won a state Supreme Court decision a year and a half ago allowing it to reclaim a lease held by the Moundbuilders Country Club so that it can turn the site into a public park.
The historical society has put the value of the site at about $2 million while the country club is seeking a much higher return.
Native Americans constructed the earthworks, including eight long earthen walls, that correspond to lunar movements and align with points where the moon rises and sets over the 18.6-year lunar cycle.
The Ohio History Connection calls them “part cathedral, part cemetery and part astronomical observatory.”
Numerous tribes, some with historical ties to Ohio, want the earthworks preserved as examples of Indigenous peoples’ accomplishments.
In 1892, voters in surrounding Licking County enacted a tax increase to preserve what was left of the earthworks.