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From the News Edge: Firefighters from the East Golden Pond Fire Department were called out around 6:40am Tuesday to the report of a camper on fire at Wranglers Campground in LBL................................................................................................WAYS YOU CAN HELP THE PEOPLE OF MOORE, OKLAHOMA: RED CROSS - Text Red Cross to 90999 to send a $10 donation..........SALVATION ARMY - Donate by phone at 1-800-725-2769..........FEED THE CHILDREN - Donate by phone at 1-800-627-4556............................................................................................................................................From the Weather Edge: Staff Meteorologist David Bryant says the Storm Prediction center has placed the region under a slight risk of severe weather Tuesday and Tuesday night. Severe storms will be possible during that time period. Damaging winds will be the primary threat.
Posted: Wednesday, 27 February 2013 12:40AM

Land Owners Interested In Eclipse



Attendance at Tuesday night's 2017 Eclipse informational meeting was mainly dominated by Princeton Road land owners. Cheryl Cook with the Hopkinsville Christian County Convention and Visitors Bureau says with just 4 years until the 2017 total eclipse, Hopkinsville has a lot to prepare for.


  
While Cook says past events in Australia have brought in 50 thousand people, Jeff Smith General Manager of the Hampton Inn in Hopkinsville says it looks like it could be 4 to five times that size.


   
Billy Palmer, a recently retired firefighter mentioned some complications that could arise with large groups and late summer that should be considered when planning for an event like this.


   
While many of the land owners expressed an interest in benefiting from the visitors the eclipse will bring, others asked how they would keep trespassers out of their crops. Trish Richardson owns land on the Pembroke Road and says they aren't really sure what they're doing yet.


   
In August 2017 the northwest side of Hopkinsville will be the place where the first total solar eclipse to cross the US since 1918 can be viewed the longest. Officials are already calling the event the most exciting 2 minutes and 40 seconds in astronomy.

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