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  • Van Ree's Voice

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 30, 2013

    Most people have some sort of brain capacity to recall most events or things that they have to do in a given day. I am not one of those people. If you are like me you can walk from one room of your house to another and in those few short steps and have already forgotten why in the world you even got off the couch. Granted I also have just “brain farts” sometimes where I can be searching the house for a good five minutes before realizing that the cell phone that I am frantically looking for is in my hand. Sometimes I question my sanity at tim... Full story

  • Budget neded to get spending back on track

    Mike Johanns, U.S. Senator|Jan 29, 2013

    Freight trains carry 1.8 billion tons of cargo on more than 138,000 miles of track across the United States each year. It is amazing when you think about the amount of force railroad lines withstand to keep this massive industry on track. Without those parallel strips of steel, relatively small when compared to their burden, there would be nothing to guide the massive trains to their destination. The federal budget is a bit like those tracks. Without them, there is no guide for federal spending. They provide the direction needed to ensure...

  • Both House and Senate need to pass a budget

    Adrian Smith, U.S. Representative|Jan 29, 2013

    One of the most basic functions of government is to pass a budget – to decide how to use tax dollars based on the needs of the nation. The House of Representatives has passed a budget every year since Republicans won a majority, but the House cannot act alone. The Senate, which has not passed a budget in nearly four years, must also act to address our long-term deficit and debt. The budget serves as a policy outline establishing guidelines for appropriations and other spending and revenue bills through the rest of the year. Federal law r...

  • Going off the grid

    Peter McKay, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 26, 2013

    As I write this column, I am getting ready to cut the cord. In a day or so, I am gathering my courage, picking up the phone and telling my cable provider to go jump in a lake. We live in a hilly area where TV signals don’t get all that far, so without cable, we get one station and only once in a while. Three years ago, we upgraded to one of those package deals where the cable company provides all of our electronic entertainment needs for one low, low monthly price. Because it was such a low, low price, we signed up for a whole slew of movie c...

  • Bond's Broadcast

    Hank Bond, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 26, 2013

    Running a daily newspaper, or any newspaper for that matter, offers opportunities that make the job very enjoyable. It also enhances, or at least it has mine, the number of experiences I can count in my life. Thursday night here in Sidney I had the pleasure of attending the Cheyenne County Chamber of Commerce’s annual banquet. The rewards were many – as I was able to see the smiles, hugs and handshakes as guests arrived – and I was joined by four staff members here at the table and for the evening. I watched intently as the mc for the night... Full story

  • Does poverty still matter?

    Mona Charen, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 25, 2013

    The Republican Party is picking up the pieces. Speaking of the ticket’s loss for the first time since the election, Rep. Paul Ryan noted that many voters “don’t think or know that we have good ideas” on fighting poverty and “helping people move up the ladder of life.” It’s not surprising that Ryan, who got his start working for Jack Kemp and William Bennett at Empower America, sees the world this way. Though it’s a total secret to members of the press and the Democratic Party, conservative intellectuals have been grappling with the problems of...

  • Women in combat spells trouble

    Linda Chavez, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 25, 2013

    With little discussion or fanfare, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta lifted the ban on women in combat that has been in effect for as long as there has been a U.S. military. Feminists and some women serving in the military are applauding the move as a victory for equal rights. They claim that justice requires nothing short of opening all positions to females, regardless of the consequences to combat effectiveness, unit cohesion, or military readiness, factors whose importance they minimize in any event. What is perhaps most striking about...

  • Obama’s Inaugural Address: Progressive and Presidential

    Jim Hightower, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 24, 2013

    Skies were overcast, and the temperature was a chilly 40 degrees in Washington on Monday when President Barack Obama took the oath of office and began his inaugural address. Given his own cool reserve and his first-term penchant for pursuing a tepid, middle-right governing agenda, I didn’t expect to get much warmth from him this go ‘round. I was surprised. In these major speechifying moments, Obama’s rhetoric has always soared, but this time his agenda and political resolve did, for he seemed to have reached deep within himself and found an FD...

  • Hillary schools Congress and teaches girls

    Connie Schultz, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 24, 2013

    So many times during Hillary Clinton’s testimony this week before Congress, I wanted to place one hand on the shoulder of every teenage girl in America, point at the TV screen with the other hand and whisper: This. This is how it’s done. Secretary of State Clinton showed up to answer tough and sometimes ridiculous questions regarding the deadly September 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya. In the process, she offered a tutorial for today’s young women. Key points: 1) When a man asks you a question and then refus...

  • Obama’s Lincoln presumption

    Mona Charen, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 23, 2013

    He swore his oath of office on Abraham Lincoln’s Bible. He has asked to give the State of the Union address on Lincoln’s birthday. He rode to Washington in 2009 on a train route similar to Lincoln’s in 1861. He has compared his critics to Lincoln’s critics. He confides to admirers that he likes to read the handwritten Gettysburg Address that hangs in the Lincoln Bedroom. Barack Obama is inviting the world to compare him not just to good presidents but to the greatest in American history. There can be majesty in invoking past presidents and the...

  • Van Ree's Voice

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 23, 2013

    Distance. According to my iPhone — which is sitting on my office desk this morning — from my present location I am currently a car travel of 21 hours and 35 minutes from my previous home in Rochester, Wash. This calculates to an approximate distance of 1,360 miles. With technology these days, distance seems to be less of an obstacle when trying to communicate with the ones you care about. A letter delivered on horseback is now not the only way to receive messages from your loved ones. Heck, I’d love to see that one of these days. Instead we ha... Full story

  • Bond's Broadcast

    Hank Bond, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 22, 2013

    Sometimes you can’t help but wonder about the media – main stream, bloggers, radical – you take your pick. I can’t help but quit thinking about the overwhelming media coverage of a couple things in the past few weeks. I’d have to go back first to the media fumbling of the ball on the Newtown, Conn., shooting. From the very first reporters on the ground to the final piece filed from that death scene the media continuously fumbled the ball . . . and the facts. I was in my recliner when the first news scrolled across the bottom of the televisio... Full story

  • Together, we serve

    Mike Johanns, U.S. Senator|Jan 22, 2013

    When a rash of wildfires broke out across Nebraska last year, volunteer firefighters traveled as far as 350 miles to assist. Many of them left their families and businesses for days on end to fight blazes that blackened more than 300 thousand acres across the State. Crews went through vacation days and midnight oil in unimaginable conditions to protect nearby communities and valuable grassland now even more coveted by ranchers in search of feed for livestock. The display of selflessness was echoed by people in the local and neighboring communit...

  • Who’s behind ‘fix the debt?’

    Jim Hightower, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 19, 2013

    Look out, the “fixers” are coming. Top corporate chieftains and Wall Street gamblers want to tell Washington how to fix our national debt, so they’ve created a front group called “Fix the Debt” to push their agenda. Unfortunately, they’re using “fix” in the same way your veterinarian uses it — their core demand is for Washington to spay Social Security, castrate Medicare and geld Medicaid. Who’s behind this piece of crude surgery on the retirement and health programs that most Americans count on? Pete Peterson, for one. For years, this Wall St...

  • Highbrow or lowbrow, bro?

    Peter McKay, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 19, 2013

    This past Sunday night, we faced a bit of a dilemma in our house. The English drawing room, cucumber sandwich and Earl Grey tea sipping drama, “Downton Abbey,” was scheduled to return for its third season, while at the same time, on another channel, was the dirty, dumb hillbilly reality show, “Here Comes Honey Boo Boo!” Halloween special. My wife was torn. I did not have a dog in this hunt. My wife controls the remote, so for the most part we watch TV shows where women try on wedding dresses, couples go apartment shopping and housewi...

  • It's Mines

    Tina Mines, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 18, 2013

    The toughest thing to do is usually the best thing for a person. These are words I often refer to when I have a very hard decision to make, or am going through a tough time where it would be oh so easy to move backwards instead of forward. For example, I have now been smoke free for 6 weeks and 1 day, a very, very tough thing to accomplish, especially considering this is the second time I have put this much effort into quitting. I say that, knowing many reading this will say, ‘but you have children, didn’t you put that much effort into it when... Full story

  • A culture of life

    Adrian Smith, U.S. Representative|Jan 18, 2013

    The Supreme Court issued its controversial Roe v. Wade decision, which forced states to legalize abortion on January 22, 1973. Rather than ending the debate, the pro-life movement has continued and made some progress over the last 40 years. However, much work remains to protect the sanctity of innocent life, and I have worked with my colleagues in both parties to bring pro-life legislation to the floor and advance the rights of the unborn. Perhaps the best reflection of the growing pro-life movement is the success of the Annual March for Life...

  • Dogs

    William H Benson, Special for the Sun-Telegraph|Jan 17, 2013

    January is “National Train Your Dog Month,” an activity that can lead to a surprising outcome. In 2011 a writer named Susan Orleans published a book on Rin-Tin-Tin. In the book she tells of an American soldier fighting in France during World War I who adopted a German Shepherd pup, brought it back to California, trained it, and the dog appeared in 23 silent films for Warner Brothers, becoming the most famous dog in the world and the number one box office star. In the 1960’s another Rin-T...

  • Platitudes won’t stop the guns

    Connie Schultz, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 17, 2013

    A few days after 6-year-old Noah Pozner was gunned down at Newtown’s Sandy Hook School, his mother, Veronique, gave an interview of searing clarity. Journalist Naomi Zeveloff, in a column for The Jewish Daily Forward, described the hardest part of her interview with Pozner. I don’t often provide lengthy excerpts, but this defies paraphrasing: “(Veronique) felt that (Noah’s) body had suffered too many indignities already; she was adamant that he not be autopsied. She wanted him to be buried with a Jewish prayer shawl and with a clear stone w...

  • Van Ree's Voice

    Hannah Van Ree, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 16, 2013

    Words are powerful. Some people think that one can only understand the true power of words if they like to read or write. But words are not saved for bookworms or novelists - words are for everyone. Words are a part of everyday language. The way someone uses words, what words they use and how they say them can tell a story about them. Just by listening to someone speak one can infer things like where they are from, where they have been, sometimes their level of education and sometimes even the social cliques they associate themselves with. Hobb... Full story

  • Digital medical hubris

    Mona Charen, Syndicated Columnist|Jan 16, 2013

    Now the other shoes begin to drop. Voters knew in November that many of the promises Obama made in 2008 had been broken. The economy had not revived as he had promised it would (“or we’ll be talking about a one-term proposition”). He has not “changed the tone in Washington” – except for the worse. He didn’t prevent lobbyists from holding positions in his administration. He didn’t cut the deficit in half; he increased it radically. But voters apparently decided that the president deserved credit for good intentions. How long will that indul...

  • Unfinished business

    Adrian Smith, U.S. Representative|Jan 15, 2013

    The beginning of a new Congress is typically a time of great excitement and an opportunity for lawmakers to refocus their priorities as we look ahead to the next two years. I remain optimistic about what can be accomplished in the 113th Congress, which began on January 3rd, however much of our business from the previous Congress remains unfinished. Before we can move forward, Congress must pass a responsible, long-term Farm Bill; agree to real spending reductions and reforms to stop the out-of-control growth of government and debt; and enact...

  • Sowing the seed for fresh ag policy

    Mike Johanns, U.S. Senator|Jan 15, 2013

    Last year’s attempt at a new five-year farm bill to replace the expiring policy was uprooted when the clock ran out. While I was pleased with the Senate-passed legislation, it never made its way to the President’s desk. The result was a last-minute extension of the current policy enacted in 2008 for yet another year. While this development was far from ideal, the alternative—reverting to policy from the 1940s—was a much worse option for farmers, ranchers and consumers. The archaic policy would have been difficult for the Department of Agricul...

  • Bond's Broadcast

    Hank Bond, Sun-Telegraph|Jan 12, 2013

    Attention Doom-sayers – the newspaper industry is not dead. Kevin Slimp our guest editorialist to the right in today’s edition of the Sun-Telegraph goes to great lengths to point out that his personal experience and research affirm my claim. He got terribly upsent with a television news segment dedicated to spewing this opinionated rubbish on CBS’ 60 Minutes. Let’s take a look. When radio first emitted its first signal there came a speech from the mountain top that the newspaper industry would die out. There would be no more print: No more page...

  • 60 Minutes tackles Times-Picayune

    Kevin Slimp, Institute of Newspaper Technology|Jan 12, 2013

    My 13-year-old son received an iPod Touch for Christmas this year. I know my son. Probably as well as I’ve ever known anyone. And I knew, given time, he would lose his expensive gift. In an effort to soften the blow when the device did turn up missing, I had Zachary create a background screen with the words, “If you find this iPod, please email [email protected] to let my dad know you have it.” I had to tell you that story, so you would understand the reference to my son a little further down this column. Now for story number two. In the l...

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