
Drivers wonder if they should go electric as the war spikes gas prices
When Kevin Ketels bought an electric 2026 Chevrolet Blazer last year, he wasn't thinking about the cost of gas. He just thought EVs were better and “wanted to be part of the future. ” Now that the Iran war is spiking prices at the pump, the Detroit man is happy he is no longer filling up his 11-year-old gas-powered SUV. “Electricity can go up, but it won’t go up nearly as much as gas will and it won’t go up nearly as fast, either,” said Ketels, 55, an assistant professor of global...
Read MoreNational News
- Drivers wonder if they should go electric as the war spikes gas prices
- State lawmakers rush to set rounding rules for when there are no pennies
- Utahs anti-gambling tradition meets Kalshi and Polymarket in a new legal fight
- Trump visa changes squeeze rural schools relying on international teachers
- Tornadoes kill 2 in northwestern Indiana and raze buildings in Kankakee, Illinois
Utahs anti-gambling tradition meets Kalshi and Polymarket in a new legal fight
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — For more than a century, Utah has kept gambling almost entirely out of the state. There are no casinos, no lotteries and no racetracks that allow bets, a prohibition rooted in the conservative ideals of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which views gambling as a vice that leads to selfishness and addiction. But now, the state is fighting a new, more challenging battle to keep gambling outside its borders. It's on the verge of enacting a law intended to a...
Read MorePolitics
- Utahs anti-gambling tradition meets Kalshi and Polymarket in a new legal fight
- Trump visa changes squeeze rural schools relying on international teachers
- Outdated intel likely led US to carry out deadly strike on Iranian elementary school, AP sources say
- Trump touts cutting drug prices, slams fellow Republican Rep. Massie during stops in Ohio, Kentucky
- Lawmakers vent frustration over DHS shutdown as lines grow at nation's airports
Old NASA science satellite plunges back to Earth
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — An old NASA science satellite plunged uncontrolled from orbit and reentered over the Pacific on Wednesday. The U. S. Space Force said the Van Allen Probe A came in west of the Galapagos Islands. NASA expected some of the 1,323-pound (600-kilogram) spacecraft to survive entry, with most of it burning up in the atmosphere. The space agency put the risk of bodily harm at 1-in-4,200. Its twin, the Van Allen Probe B, is still orbiting Earth, but no longer functioning...
Read MoreScience News
- Old NASA science satellite plunges back to Earth
- King penguins are the rare species benefiting from a warming world. But that could change
- Japan marks 15 years since tsunami disaster as Takaichi pushes more nuclear energy use
- Towering lava fountains of Hawaii's Kilauea volcano trigger park and highway closures
- FDA finds little evidence that a drug touted by Trump can help people with autism

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