Clark County nonprofits celebrate record-breaking fundraiser

On Tuesday, February 17, Clark County non­prof­its gath­ered at Leeds Center for the Arts to learn more about the Clark County Community Foundation (CCCF) and to cel­e­brate the incred­i­ble suc­cess of Bluegrass Gives 2025. CCCF — not to be con­fused with the Greater Clark Foundation — is a fund man­aged by Bluegrass Community Foundation (BGCF) and direct­ed by a local board... 
Will Glasscock

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Legacy Grove sign marking the entrance to the innovative park on Lexington, Ave. in Winchester.
News,  People,  Places

Legacy Grove Park recognizes women in science

Legacy Grove Park’s walk­ing paths now dou­ble as an open-air trib­ute to women in sci­ence. The International Women and Girls in Science Walking Tour fea­tures 16 out­door pan­els spot­light­ing glob­al female sci­en­tists and runs through mid-March in hon­or of the United Nations’ obser­vance on February 11. Anna Campomanes, who coor­di­nates pro­gram­ming at the 30-acre park, cre­at­ed the exhib­it as part of the venue’s “walk­ing exhibits” series. These self-guid­ed instal­la­tions deliv­er edu­ca­tion­al con­tent to casu­al visitors—especially...
Photo credit: Whiskey & Wiles/Jon Paul Martin
Happenings,  News

Local students making a difference

Students and staff at Baker Intermediate raised more than $9,000 in just 10 days dur­ing their annu­al DanceBlue Mini Marathon to sup­port the fight against pedi­atric can­cer. The fundrais­ing effort con­clud­ed with an all-day marathon event where stu­dents and fac­ul­ty par­tic­i­pat­ed in orga­nized dances led by the school’s DanceBlue team. The event com­bined cel­e­bra­tion and pur­pose, as par­tic­i­pants danced in hon­or of chil­dren and fam­i­lies impact­ed by cancer. 
Album cover: American Stars ’n Bars (Neil Young)
Music

Jeff’s Playlist: American Stars ‘n Bars

This album fea­tures Neil and his usu­al char­ac­ters record­ed from 1974 through 1977. All of these songs were new to me, and many of them I will nev­er for­get. Give it a lis­ten; I think you will like much of this album. 
Illustration of world religions
Commentary

The geography of religion

I have seen many sto­ries recent­ly about folks leav­ing orga­nized reli­gion and choos­ing a dif­fer­ent spir­i­tu­al path due to what I call “reli­gious trau­ma.” These sto­ries are impor­tant and need to be told, but I want­ed to add a slight­ly dif­fer­ent nar­ra­tive to the mix. 

Editorial picks

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When grief has two shadows

There are loss­es that walk straight toward you, clean and heavy and unmis­tak­able. And then there are the oth­er ones — the ones that slip side­ways through your life, car­ry­ing a kind of ache that doesn’t announce itself so much as unrav­el you thread by thread. When my moth­er passed a year ago, February 2025, the grief came in two forms: the grief for the moth­er I had, and the grief for the moth­er I nev­er got to have. Both were real. Both were sharp. And both asked me to set down things I had car­ried my whole life. 
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The Seven Sisters

On the night of February 23, 2026, a small clus­ter of shim­mer­ing blue stars called the Pleiades will appear very close to the moon, cre­at­ing an occul­ta­tion-like pas­sage where the Moon sweeps past these glit­ter­ing stars as Earth rotates.  The Pleiades are some­times called the Seven Sisters. Long ago, when the sky was still being arranged and the con­stel­la­tions had not yet agreed upon their places, there were sev­en sis­ters born to Atlas and Pleione: Maia, Electra, Taygete, Alcyone, Celaeno, Sterope, and Merope. 

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