Print article Tim Gionet strolled through the U.S. Capitol like he was walking through a crowded fraternity party, shouts echoing off the marble floors. The hallways were jammed with people, young and old, men and women, wearing MAGA hats and holding signs, chanting and hollering about Trump and a stolen election. “Patriots are in control,” they chanted. “Traitors, traitors, traitors!” “Yooo!” Gionet called. “Let’s gooo!” At one point, a voice offscreen suggested that President Donald Trump might not be happy about his supporters’ forced entry and occupation of the building. “No, he’ll be happy!” Gionet countered. “What do you mean? We’re fighting for Trump.”
Bald eagle conservation reaches new milestone in Indiana
An eagle! Someone on the wooden dock shouted and then pointed. Everyone looked, spellbound.
It was a windy, autumn day at Patoka Lake in southern Indiana when the flapping wings crossed the sky and a dozen pairs of angler eyes turned away from the water and gazed upward.
One bird, one American bald eagle, its powerful wings propelling flight, appropriately in the tiny community of Birdseye, was simultaneously offering a bird’s-eye view the pull of its symbolism, history and majesty.
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Although this nest is at the Pine Grove Boat Ramp at Monroe Lake where eagles frequent, it is not an eagle nest but a much smaller nest than the eagles would build. Lew Freedman