News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
WKU Athletics announces 2025 baseball and softball broadcast schedule

SUMMARY: WKU Baseball and Softball have revealed their home broadcasting schedules for the 2025 season, continuing to feature ESPN+ for the second consecutive year. Fans can stream at least 10 home baseball and softball games, including key matchups against teams like Sam Houston, Kentucky, and Louisiana Tech. Baseball will have games streamed as part of the Conference USA television agreement, while softball will include regular season games against Ole Miss and Louisville, as well as the C-USA Tournament. All games will also be broadcasted on The Varsity Network radio. The complete broadcast schedule is available.
The post WKU Athletics announces 2025 baseball and softball broadcast schedule appeared first on www.wnky.com
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Get the Facts: Is ICE partnering with Kentucky agencies to help with deportations?

SUMMARY: ICE is collaborating with several Kentucky counties to identify and arrest undocumented immigrants as part of the Trump administration’s immigration agenda. While Jefferson County does not partner with ICE, counties like Bullitt, Davis, Grayson, and Oldham are involved in a program that allows local officers to serve warrants for potential illegal immigrants in jails. These counties receive compensation for housing federal detainees, and ICE conducts regular inspections. Concerns about aggressive tactics and community fear are voiced by activists, particularly regarding the impact on local Hispanic populations. Some sheriffs acknowledge community worries while maintaining support for their partnerships with ICE.

Get the Facts: Is ICE partnering with Kentucky agencies to help with deportations?
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News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
Legendary ESPN Broadcaster Lee Corso to work his final College GameDay show on August 30

SUMMARY: Lee Corso, the iconic ESPN broadcaster and former coach, will make his final headgear pick on College GameDay on August 30, 2025, coinciding with the start of the season. Corso, who turns 90 in August, has been with the program since its inception in 1987, making 430 picks with a record of 286-144. He expressed gratitude for nearly 40 years at ESPN, filled with friendships and memories. The three-hour show will celebrate his legendary career and preview significant games, as noted by ESPN Chairman Jimmy Pitaro, emphasizing Corso’s influence on college football fans across generations.
The post Legendary ESPN Broadcaster Lee Corso to work his final College GameDay show on August 30 appeared first on www.wtvq.com
News from the South - Kentucky News Feed
This military mom in KY is suing Trump’s Pentagon to defend her kids’ ‘right to learn’

by Sarah Ladd, Kentucky Lantern
April 16, 2025
Jessica Henninger wants to protect her children from the political climate that briefly closed their school library at Fort Campbell and led to books being removed from the shelves.
“There’s a very fine line between having your children be aware of what’s going on in the world around them, and not burdening them with adult things,” Henninger said. “But … when (Black History Month) projects are canceled after you’ve completed them … they notice that stuff.”
Citing her husband’s military service and their joint devotion to the U.S. Constitution, Henninger has joined a federal lawsuit on behalf of her children, citing First Amendment concerns and asking the courts to block President Donald Trump’s anti-DEI executive orders in schools operated by the Department of Defense Education Activity (DODEA). Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is a defendant.
Book purges at Fort Campbell, other schools run by Defense Department challenged as unconstitutional
Henninger has five children: two have graduated from DODEA schools and three are still students, named in the lawsuit that the American Civil Liberties Union filed Tuesday. That suit challenges U.S. Department of Defense policies that led to schools at Fort Campbell and other military bases removing books about slavery and civil rights.
Henninger, whose husband is in the military and is stationed at Fort Campbell, has lived in Kentucky since October.
Before that, in all their travels, “I can’t recall a time in our years at DODEA where my children’s curriculum was affected by anything that was going on in the presidency,” Henninger told a small group of reporters over Zoom on Wednesday.
“We owe our children to be honest,” she said. “I’m very fearful that these actions (are) trying to take away my children’s opportunities to learn about integral parts of our history, our American history … and different cultures. That’s what makes education — and life — rich. It’s all of those differences. My younger children … they deserve the right to learn about that stuff.”
The lawsuit: ‘Books shouldn’t be banned’
Via executive order Trump directed schools receiving federal funding to not teach “ideology that treats individuals as members of preferred or disfavored groups, rather than as individuals;” he also told the Armed Forces to dissolve DEI offices and directed all federal agencies to recognize only cisgender male and female identities.
In February, Clarksville Now, a news outlet in Clarksville, Tennessee, reported Fort Campbell librarians were busy “scrubbing for books that contain references to slavery, the civil rights movement and anything else related to diversity, equity and inclusion” in compliance with Trump’s orders.
Fort Campbell is an Army base that spans the Kentucky-Tennessee border between Hopkinsville and Clarksville.
Fort Campbell schools also had to remove “bulletin boards that reference Black History Month and Black leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr., Harriet Tubman and Rosa Parks,” according to Clarksville Now.
Corey Shapiro, legal director for the ACLU of Kentucky, said Wednesday he hopes for a preliminary injunction to “get some relief sooner rather than later from the court.”
“We’re still evaluating exactly the timing on next steps and building that out,” he said.
He also wants to see more transparency around which books are removed from shelves, and where those books go.
But, he asserted: “none of these books should be taken out.”
“To some extent, it doesn’t really matter whether we have a list or sort of engage in a debate on which individual book is the appropriate thing,” Shapiro said. “The issue here is that books shouldn’t be banned from school libraries. Kids should have an opportunity to have access to all the books in the school library without fear that somebody in the Department of Defense is going to determine that it shouldn’t be there based on an executive order regarding a ban on certain types of viewpoints.”
‘I could not abide’
Soon after the executive orders, Henninger “started getting emails from the kids’ teachers, basically that just made me think that there was something going on.”
She got “notifications that assignments were being canceled, then that the library just unexpectedly closed down.”
She immediately started investigating, contacted the ACLU to help and ultimately joined the multi-state federal lawsuit in an attempt to block the Trump administration from carrying out the anti-DEI orders.
“I have a very strong belief that children should have access to books,” said Henninger, who is herself a “voracious reader.”
“When I was a child, I read. That’s how I learned about the world around me. It’s how I learned about other people and life experiences outside of my own,” she said. “And I feel like that is an important part of being able to understand other people. And to have those options taken away from my children was something that I have never experienced before.”
All her children, too, love books, she said.
“We’ve never had an administration come in and interfere in this way with our children’s education,” she said. “My husband fights for our constitutional rights and our freedoms in this country, and to see those rights being taken away from my children was just absolutely something that I could not abide.”
After the lawsuit was filed, Michael O’Day, a spokesperson for the Department of Defense Education Activity, said he couldn’t comment on an active lawsuit but offered praise for the agency’s “dedication to providing an exceptional educational experience for every student.” More than 67,000 students worldwide are enrolled in schools run by the DODEA.
“Our curriculum, rigorously aligned with DoDEA’s proven standards, has earned us the distinction of being the top-ranked school system in the United States for four consecutive years, based on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), the Nation’s Report Card,” O’Day said in a statement. “These standards promote academic excellence, critical thinking, and a learning environment that empowers all military-connected students to excel.”
Henninger attributes the success in part to the diversity of the student body.
“I think part of this strength is our diversity — the diversity of people that come together and we learn from each other, and that’s part of our strength,” she said. “And so to see that potentially being taken away from my younger children? That’s harmful.”
She believes the executive orders are politically motivated and cited the Trump administration’s deportations of immigrants, saying his presidential campaign was “propped on” immigration issues.
“And then when you see them coming into the libraries and removing those items … common sense would dictate that two plus two equals four. That’s definitely politically motivated,” she said.
‘We can’t whitewash’ history
For military families like Henninger’s, DODEA schools are often the only option, though that can vary based on where a soldier is stationed. Private education is expensive. Henninger’s best path was to fight back within the DODEA system, she said.
Other plaintiffs represented by the ACLU are enrolled in Defense Department schools in Virginia, Italy and Japan.
“We don’t have a lot of the same recourses that that families have in the public education system. We can’t just go to our school board and and say, ‘This is unacceptable.’ We very much have to worry about retaliation and retribution. And so there’s a lot of stress and anxiety around that for a lot of people, which is understandable,” Henninger said.
She and her husband talked about the risks of joining such a lawsuit and ultimately decided she had to.
“Basically what it boiled down to (for my husband) was: ‘I joined the military to defend the Constitution, and if I can’t defend our children’s constitutional rights, then what am I doing as a soldier?’”
Her children “have their First Amendment rights just like everybody else. It’s not fair to them just because their father is a soldier that they shouldn’t be able to have the same rights as everybody else.”
She wants her children to learn about the full history of their country, including the “not so pretty parts: the Trail of Tears and slavery and the fight for civil rights.”
“It is our true history,” she said. “And we can’t whitewash that away.”
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Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.
The post This military mom in KY is suing Trump’s Pentagon to defend her kids’ ‘right to learn’ appeared first on kentuckylantern.com
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