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Editorial (top) A vote for McCain The best for me and my country more...
A vote for change I have come to believe that Barack Obama should be the choice of those voting in the presidential race on Tuesday, Nov. 4, and I believe that Obama is, in fact, the person who can best lead this nation over the next four years. more...
We're standing with Davis As Kentuckians in the vast Fourth District go to the polls on Nov. 4, they will decide to send Republican Congressman Geoff Davis back to the Washington, D.C., or fill the seat with newcomer Democrat Dr. Michael Kelley. more...
Reelect Mitch McConnell Given the current state of our country -- two wars, an economy in shambles, a broken healthcare system, joblessness on the rise -- it is easy to understand voters' sentiment to "throw the bums out." more...
HealthPoint: Way to drop the ball The decision by HealthPoint Family Care to close its Bracken County office has left many county residents trying to figure out how, in a matter of minutes, they went from having a family doctor to having a list of questions that leaves them wondering where to turn next. more...
Headline: Forty years and counting For the past 40 years it has been the privilege of The Ledger Independent to cover the communities in our seven county area. more...
On with the show ... 10 years later Rosemary Clooney more...
A little pain, a whole lot of pleasure Wednesday marked the somewhat official start to what many of us around here have come to know as Clooney craziness in downtown Maysville. more...
Looks like the joke is on us It has become increasingly obvious -- there is no way for consumers to come out on top in the matter of the price of gas. more...
Sarah, may I make a suggestion? Let’s see now. more...
Refrigerator connection It seems almost every day among the complaints and comments called into the Comment Line, comes at least one with a request or inquiry. Those callers often leave their phone numbers, hoping to get a response from fellow readers on the where to get a sewing machine fixed or how to contact a carpet cleaner. more...
For the birds As the Barry Manilow songs goes, "Looks like we made it." And the best evidence of all can be found just across the Ohio River in Brown County. more...
No solution in sight for oil Gas prices have eased down a bit over the past few weeks but $4 or nearly that for a gallon of gas continues to put a crimp in most family budgets and has many of us crying uncle. more...
The more things change ... Bickering and back-stabbing have become the norm for Aberdeen Village Council over the past decade. more...
Entertaining for a cause Music lovers who want a chance to see an artist who has sold more than 53 million records, won multiple Grammy trophies for Best Male Vocalist and sold out arenas worldwide should move now to secure a ticket to the 10th Anniversary Rosemary Clooney Concert which will be held on Saturday, Sept. 27 in downtown Maysville. more...
OneCall we want to make Mason County Emergency Management Director Wayne Muse called it "one of the best things we've ever done." And if Muse thinks that's the case, we are inclined to agree. more...
No favoritism for Treasurer Mason County Treasurer Peggy Heflin is putting her pens and ledgers on the shelf and heading into well-deserved retirement. more...
Celebrating Dad As we take time Sunday to celebrate the No. 1 man in our lives, we offer these quotes, some thoughtful, others humorous, to honor dads everywhere: more...
Support Relay for Life The Mason County Relay For Life will be held tonight, and we encourage everyone to participate either by attending the event or contributing to this worthy cause. more...
Nothing we can stomach The release of Toni Barber from the Kentucky State Reformatory for Women after serving only six months of a seven-year prison sentence isn't setting well with some local residents. That includes us. more...
A needed improvement The decision by Maysville Utility Commission to require property owners to comply with EPA orders to separate sanitary and storm sewers was the right choice. more...
Mother's day and a bonus ... There is a leather covered white photo album somewhere in my parents home. In it are photographs of times which predate my brothers and sister, and me. more...
Things to think about on Mother's Day "There are only two lasting gifts that we can give to our children one is roots, the other wings." more...
Drafting a role model No matter what NBA team drafts Chris Lofton next month, it will be getting more than just an outstanding basketball player. The team will also be getting a role model -- something that is far too rare in today's world of sports superstars. more...
God Save the Queen.MAK Desk: Opinion Could this summer be the last for the majestic Delta Queen to ply the waters of the Ohio River and for those of us in this area to take pleasure in watching the historic boat paddle past our riverfront communities? more...
Our top priority "We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children." ~Native American Proverb more...
Dump the dump What's in a name? that which we call a rose more...
Measuring progress In a week filled with news stories, we need to take a minute to acknowledge a visit from the U.S. Secretary of Education and to salute the Mason County School system for a decade of remarkable progress. more...
Making a molehill out of mountaintop removal I hope the phone call Rep. Mike Denham took on Tuesday afternoon was an important one. more...
Remember to register On May 20, Kentucky Democrats will have what has become an increasingly rare opportunity -- a chance to have a real say in who will eventually be named the party's presidential candidate. more...
Local Columns (top) Reality Check Every once in a while, we all need reality checks to remind us of how blessed we are. more...
An ancient imported skill important to Kentucky Many centuries ago a Roman historian wrote that he believed barrels and casks first were made of wood in the Italian Alps. This supposition was made when Rome controlled and partly populated Britannia. Perhaps wooden barrels of wine were rolled off shipboard at docks such as those serving the Severn River Valley. Flowing hot springs nearby the Severn had attracted a considerable number of Roman settlements. Actual Roman built structures still exist at the town of Bath, England. more...
From 'Catch 22' to real class act A trip to the Bracken County Animal Shelter never ceases to leave me amazed at what Pat Taylor has accomplished at the facility. His operation is a true testament to a can-do attitude. more...
Thoughts generated by Mason County's Polecat Pike The roads traveled by pioneer Virginians, closely followed by Kentuckians, frequently were built in anticipation of charging the users for traveling over the roads. The payments were called tolls and a name for the toll roads was turnpikes. Frequently, when tolls no longer were charged, the designation pike was retained. Since many "pikes" were common in Kentucky nearly every one acquired another name to distinguish its identity. more...
Sauce on the side, please We don’t eat at many fine restaurants. more...
Kelley repsonds to Davis endorsement Recently the Editorial Board of The Ledger Independent endorsed my opponent, Geoff Davis, in the upcoming congressional election for Kentucky's Fourth District. The board seemed to view Davis as “most experienced.” I submit that Geoff Davis has the wrong kind of experience. Here are a few things the board seems to have overlooked when evaluating Congressman Davis’ record: more...
Where have the bells gone? It's been two weeks since I realized what has been missing from my life as a downtown resident. more...
Forty years? Seems like only yesterday Forty years ago. more...
A daily serving of your world I'm probably not the best person to write a column on the 40th anniversary of the combined newspaper known as The Ledger Independent. more...
Was glass ceiling made of ice? Little did the American public know that the breaker of the glass ceiling Hillary Clinton so often spoke of shattering may have been lurking in a land of icebergs. more...
On the wild side The Olympics may have been winding to a close in Beijing, but our critter 'lympics had just begun last Saturday. more...
Sending Out an S.O.S. I'm by no means a political guru and I'm happy to admit it. I realize everyday in the newsroom how little I know about the subject and I try to learn from my co-workers. I know, that's kind of ironic for someone in the news business, but I'm getting there. more...
The DNC: well worth the trip It was worth it. more...
Egg all over our faces The federal government is like Humpty-Dumpty. more...
WFTM Exhibit opens at KGMC The WFTM On The Air: 60 Years of Broadcasting exhibit opened Saturday, Aug. 9 at the Kentucky Gateway Museum Center and runs through Sunday, Sept. 28, 2008. more...
DTV converter flap going to hit the pocketbooks soon Call me psychic; call me a large medium ... either way, when Feb 17 rolls around in 2009 I predict one thing -- People will be P.O.ed about their television reception. more...
Wadjasay? I am all for educational and economic growth in foreign nations, but not at the expense of U.S. jobs … or sanity. more...
Where were you when the lights went out I don’t mind an occasional electrical outage, but lately every time a deer passes wind in the woods, the power on the Piqua grid goes off. more...
Close Encounters of the Cicada Kind It could have been a battle of wits, had I not lost mine early on. more...
Solutions for America's energy crisis Many of us remember the energy crisis in 1979-81, with gasoline rationing and crude oil prices soaring from $14 per barrel in 1978 to $37 per barrel in 1980. more...
Cicada mania taking over For the past few weeks, cicada watchers have been predicting the little buggers would be emerging from their 17-year-long nap sometime this month. It appears the awakening has begun. more...
Marking the anniversary of Lafayette's visit to Maysville May 21, next Wednesday, marks the 183rd anniversary of the visit to Maysville by the great Revolutionary War hero, the Marquis de Lafayette. He was the last surviving general of that war and a close associate of General George Washington. He was called “the Nation’s Guest” as he was on a 13-month tour of all the 24 states of our young country. A little known fact of his trip was the steamboat disaster he survived. It was reported by the Maysville Eagle of May 18, 1825 in this fashion: more...
A tasty retirement plan Alright, bunnies and Bambis, I’ll plant extra berries, you just leave the plants alone. more...
Cornered by gas prices My daughter Tara rode the bus to school Wednesday for the first time since the beginning of school. Her best friend, Sarah also rode the bus Wednesday. more...
A big responsibility I have often commented on life with horses, with humor and jest; I got my first horse when I was 8 years old and he was 18; I once told Rooster, if it meant just looking at them every day eating grass I will keep these two horses until they or I die. more...
Attack of the solar spiders. The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence and that is where Payday wants to be. more...
Global warming is being overplayed in the media Al Gore was on 60 Minutes not too long ago preaching the Book of Global Warming according to Prince Albert. more...
Spandex ballet There was a lot going on behind the scenes as your local reporters got ready for the "Leatherheads" premiere Monday. more...
Gillespie, Truman may have something in common It was 1948. more...
Boy, what a spring — or winter, I'm not sure which Ah, spring, the birds are chirping, the sun is shining --- and the snow is falling? more...
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