Sunday, March 2, 1997
Columns in today's Enquirer
CHARLES BREWER, PLUGGED IN
If you want to be successful, my grandfather used to say, find something you love to do and learn to do it the best you can. The same could be said for personal Web sites.
COLUMN
PETER BRONSON, EDITORIAL PAGE
SOMEWHERE IN THE FUTURE - Genetic engineers did not introduce anterior cranial optic nerves until 2015, so those primitive, randomly assembled humans in the late 20th Century did not have the benefit of our superior hindsight. Still, even without eyes in the back of their heads, you'd think they would have seen that this cloning stuff was a big mistake for mankind.
COLUMN
LAURA PULFER, METRO
It's called a ''nimby.'' This means that something important, maybe even essential, should happen but ''Not In My Back Yard.'' It can be towers for cell phones or a dump, even gambling. The county needs a new juvenile lockup.
COLUMN
PAUL DAUGHERTY, SPORTS
Baseball is not a natural skill, unless you are Ken Griffey Jr. or Roy Hobbs. Ask Michael Jordan. Deion Sanders is 29, late to be learning to hit like a leadoff man. The Reds are working on him, and it's a strange notion. Deion Sanders: Project.
COLUMN
TIM SULLIVAN, SPORTS
Lenny Brown is Xavier's most contradictory basketball star. He leads the Musketeers in both scoring and selflessness. His ego problem is that he does not have enough of it.
COLUMN
JIM KNIPPENBERG, PSST
Lord have mercy, the things we do for readers. Like spending hours on the phone trying to find out what President Mr. Clinton's slumber parties are like.
COLUMN
ROB KAISER, KENTUCKY
Sometimes miracles are just being in the right place at the right time. You roll with the punches.
COLUMN
PATRICK CROWLEY, KENTUCKY
''My son doesn't want me to be a congressman," Rick Robinson quipped. ''He wants me to be a Jedi knight.''
COLUMN
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