Serving Hohenwald, Lewis County Tennessee Since 1898
Sorted by date Results 51 - 56 of 56
After storing carbon dioxide in frozen soil for millennia, the Arctic tundra is being transformed by frequent wildfires into an overall source of carbon to the atmosphere, which is already absorbing record levels of heat-trapping fossil fuel pollution. The transition of the Arctic from a carbon sink to a carbon source is one of the dramatic changes in the Arctic that are documented in NOAA's 2024 Arctic Report Card. Climatic shifts are forcing plants, wildlife and the people that depend on them...
Believed to be the biggest discovery in the United Kingdom, approximately 150 dinosaur footprints have been unearthed by British researchers. According to news out of the UK, teams from Birmingham and Oxford University were working a routine excavation at a Quarry in Oxfordshire, Central England, in June when a worker who was stripping clay back with a mechanical digger noticed unusual bumps. Those bumps turned out to be dinosaur tracks. “In terms of both size of the tracks and size of the track sites,” said U of B micropaleontologist Pro...
Sale at public auction will be on January 29, 2025 at 11:00AM local time, at the east door, Lewis County Courthouse, 240 West Gains Street, Lawrenceburg, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Randy Jackson, Jr., to Frank B. Denton, Trustee, as trustee for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Primelending, a Plainscapital Company on September 21, 2012 at Record Book 142, Page 103, Instrument No. 37048; conducted by LLG Trustee TN LLC, having been appointed Substitute or Successor Trustee, all of record in the...
Golfing among U.S. presidents is culturally embedded in the job—even if you come into the White House as a casual player. It's seen as a stress reliever for one of the toughest jobs in the world. One of the first presidents to take up a club was William Howard Taft, who served from 1909 to 1913. Taft loved golf, so much so that it garnered him detractors during his 1908 presidential campaign for playing a "rich man's game." But Taft isn't the only president with an ardent love for the game. Thro...