
Investigators searching home connected to killer of California college student Kristin Smart
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP) — Authorities plan Thursday to enter the second day of their search of a home connected to the man convicted of killing 19-year-old college student Kristin Smart in 1996, according to law enforcement. The San Luis Obispo County Sheriff's Office served the warrant Wednesday in the ongoing investigation into Smart's disappearance. Her remains were never found and she was declared legally dead in 2002. Paul Flores was convicted in October 2022 and ultimately to 25 a...
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- Investigators searching home connected to killer of California college student Kristin Smart
- Nearly 500 homes damaged in Mississippi storms as multiple tornadoes reported
- Clarence Thomas becomes the second longest-serving justice in Supreme Court history
- A note a former cellmate says he found after Epsteins suspected suicide attempt is released
- After the Los Angeles wildfires, clergy crossed denominational lines and forged new bonds
Rubio makes fence-mending visit to the Vatican after Trumps broadsides against Pope Leo XIV
VATICAN CITY (AP) — U. S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio made a fence-mending visit to the Vatican on Thursday to underscore strong bilateral ties, after U. S. President Donald Trump’s broadsides against Pope Leo XIV for his opposition to the Iran war angered the Holy See and sparked ongoing sparring between them. The U. S. State Department said that the meetings with Leo and the Vatican’s top diplomat covered peace in the Middle East and “underscored the strong relationship between a...
Read MorePolitics
- Rubio makes fence-mending visit to the Vatican after Trumps broadsides against Pope Leo XIV
- FDAs new playbook: Lots of media announcements but not much rulemaking
- Clarence Thomas becomes the second longest-serving justice in Supreme Court history
- Trump wants to paint the Eisenhower office building white. Now a key federal agency considers it
- Republicans once saw Michigan as ripe for a takeover, but the mood is shifting
Planes and ships could run on kelp someday, but there are serious hurdles
WOODS HOLE, Mass. (AP) — Green cells whirl around a red-light chamber, propelled by a blade through bubbling water. These little seaweed cells, called gametophytes, will develop into a strain of fast-growing kelp — part of what was once a government-funded initiative to develop sustainable biofuels for American transport. Electricity from solar and wind energy can power cars, however ships and aircraft largely run on liquid fuels made with a large percentage of oil or gasoline. When those...
Read MoreScience News
- Planes and ships could run on kelp someday, but there are serious hurdles
- Astronomers believe theyve detected an atmosphere around a tiny, icy world beyond Pluto
- A bright moon may dim the Eta Aquarid meteor shower made up of Halleys comet debris
- Mexico City is sinking so quickly, it can be seen from space
- J. Craig Venter, who won the race to sequence the human genome, dies at 79

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