Rocky road and shaky status is ruining cars on Carlow-Wexford border
Thursday, March 11, 2021
“It’s an accident waiting to happen” says one resident along the Kilbranish to Crann road on the Carlow Wexford border
LOCALS who live along a pothole-laden stretch of road on the Carlow/Wexford border say they are struggling to keep their cars from being damaged.
A woman contacted
The Nationalist about the small stretch of road she lives on that connects Kilbranish in Carlow to Crann in Co Wexford.
“We can’t maintain our vehicles on this road anymore. When we drive around a bend, we have to drive on the other side of it. It’s an accident waiting to happen,” she said. “It’s just really bad … holes everywhere.”
A.J. Croce –
By Request (Compass): “Over the past three decades, A.J. Croce has established his rep as a piano man and serious vocal stylist who pulls from a host of American traditions and anti-heroes it’s part New Orleans, part juke joint, part soul. While his last album, JUST LIKE MEDICINE, paired him with soul legend Dan Penn and an all-star cast of players, his new album was born of memories of favorite artists and shows, but mostly, of late-night gatherings with groups of friends, many of them fellow musicians, with Croce at the piano taking requests. Croce revisits these musical evenings with BY REQUEST, 12 personally curated covers that traverse decades and genres, propelled by his spirited, loose-and-easy piano mastery and emotive vocals. It’s a tribute to Croce the music fan as well as Croce the musician that both the variety from pop to RnR to soul and execution is inspired, aided by a full band and horns. BY REQUEST is the first album Croce has released
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Tippecanoe County Prosecutor preparing for backlog of jury trials
The Indiana Supreme Court suspended trials until March due to COVID-19.
Posted: Dec 31, 2020 4:31 PM
Posted By: Joseph Paul
TIPPECANOE COUNTY, Ind. (WLFI) - The local criminal justice system is preparing for a backlog of jury trials next year.
That comes after the Indiana Supreme Court suspended trials until March due to COVID-19. Twelve to 16 hour days probably will be in store for the entire staff, says Tippecanoe County Prosecutor Pat Harrington. Instead of having two jury trials a month in a courtroom, we may have three or four.
Harrington says that will add pressure on his deputy prosecutors and staff who are already stretched thin.