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Look for additional vacation travel photos here on Kentucky.com. We'll add a new set of vacation photographs to the Web site every two weeks.
  • A wave of change

    CUMBERLAND ISLAND, Ga. — John Fry mashes the brakes and curses under his breath as wild hogs scurry across the narrow dirt road, where spiky palmetto fronds claw at the sides of his National Park Service pickup truck.


COLUMNISTS
  • Equus Run wine surprises Time writer

    When Time magazine writer Joel Stein learned that all 50 states make wine, he set out to "see if good wine can really be made anywhere." He looked for bottles that cost $15 to $20, and he rated each wine: excellent, good, bad or undrinkable.


Merlene Davis

Medicine
  • UK to offer music therapy study planned

    The University of Kentucky's new Chandler Medical Center will offer state-of-the-art medical treatments — including musical therapy to foster healing.

  • A pie in the hand

    An old-fashioned treat

    Fried dried-apple pies aren't on many people's lists of things to make with apples, but they are one of the very best.
  • Memorial to honor the unborn

    Ron Shields of Louisville wants everyone to know it's not only mothers who sometimes regret their decisions to have an abortion. Shields wears a gold dog tag inscribed with the name "Ronald Paul Shields Jr.," a name that, later in life, he gave the son he and his then-girlfriend aborted when he was18.

  • May I have this dance?

    In canine freestyle, dogs, owners bust some moves

    In the same way it has never occurred to you that your cat can run the vacuum, it probably has never occurred to you that your dog can dance — dance with you, in fact.

  • Sky-high school class

    Frankfort students learn about aviation, can work toward pilot's licenses

    Call it love at first flight. On a clear October day last year, high school student Cameron Russell flew with his mom and a pilot instructor over the city of Frankfort in a Sky Hawk 172 Cessna. While it was about 70 degrees on the ground, flying above felt like a balmy 58 degrees.
  • 25% of girls 13-17 get vaccine for cervical cancer, study finds

    ATLANTA — One in four teen girls has rolled up her sleeves for the relatively new vaccine against cervical cancer, federal health officials said Thursday. The figures represent the government's first substantial study of vaccination rates for the Gardasil vaccine — Merck & Co.'s heavily advertised, three-shot series that targets the sexually transmitted human papillomavirus, or HPV.
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