In case anyone hasn't guessed, I've always liked writing research papers. Thus somewhere along the line I started approaching my Letters From the Editors like research projects. I would think of a topic, look it up on the Internet, go to the library and find some books about it, then read more articles, until finally I'd try to knit everything together into an essay, which generally had a couple of news stories and a book review or two stitched in. But this is the 21st century. Readers don't have time for that. And I don't have time for it, either.
Of course, in the old days, I would have written about that: "Why does it always seem like nobody has time for anything any more?"
And in that pursuit, I would have looked stuff up, and no doubt realized that other people have written tons about just that --starting way back with the Greeks, Romans and Egyptians. And since this is Colorado Central, I would feel obligated to tie old thoughts, new thoughts, national thoughts and international thoughts with ideas expressed in local newspapers, histories, radio shows, and conversations.
Hence my New Year's resolution: Be brief. (Though brevity may not actually be the soul of wit, it's quicker). Therefore, this month I thought I would write a Letter From the Editors that addresses what such letters usually do: the current issue.
Our lead article this month concerns the Over the River (OTR) project proposed by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude. In September, we carried an OTR piece by Doris Dembosky, who is clearly a fan of the proposed project, and later we ran a press release from an OTR support group. This month we feature an article by a member of ROAR (for Rags Over the Arkansas River), an opposition group, and an essay by Deric Pamp, who favors the idea, but with some reservations.