
2 employees fatally shot in a bank robbery in Kentucky
BEREA, Ky. (AP) — Two bank employees were fatally shot during a robbery in Kentucky and a search was underway for the suspect, authorities said Thursday. A man wearing a gray-white hoodie, gloves and a mask entered a branch of U. S. Bank in Berea and shot a male and female employee, said Trooper Scottie Pennington, a spokesperson for the Kentucky State Police. “They're our people that work in our community, and they’re no longer with us,” Pennington told reporters. “At this time we a...
Read MoreNational News
- 2 employees fatally shot in a bank robbery in Kentucky
- Mormon Wives star Taylor Frankie Paul and ex-partner ordered to stay 100 feet apart
- Habitat for Humanity is developing a new Atlanta community with help from the Carters initiative
- Stabbing at Washington state high school wounds 6, including suspect, police say
- Louisiana congressional primaries are suspended as a result of the Supreme Courts ruling
Republicans say they will defer to Trump on Iran war despite arrival of 60-day deadline
WASHINGTON (AP) — Many Republicans who have been uneasy with President Donald Trump's war in Iran emphasized that there would be a May 1 deadline for Congress to intervene. But the date is now set to pass with no action from GOP lawmakers who continue to defer to the White House. Under the War Powers Resolution of 1973, Congress must declare war or authorize the use of force within 60 days — a deadline that falls on Friday — or within 90 days if the president asks for an extension. But a...
Read MorePolitics
- Republicans say they will defer to Trump on Iran war despite arrival of 60-day deadline
- Florida Republicans slice and dice congressional districts: How a new map could cost Democrats seats
- Trump administration says its war in Iran has been terminated before 60-day deadline
- Trump signs bill funding the Department of Homeland Security, ending record shutdown
- FEMA workers who sounded alarm over nations disaster preparedness reinstated after 8 months
J. Craig Venter, who won the race to sequence the human genome, dies at 79
J. Craig Venter, who mapped the first draft of the human genome and helped scientists understand how genes shape our lives, died Wednesday. He was 79. Venter’s death was announced by the J. Craig Venter Institute, a genomics research group with locations in La Jolla, California, and Rockville, Maryland. The institute said he died in San Diego after being hospitalized for side effects from a recent cancer treatment. In the 1990s Venter bet that he could use a different sequencing technique to...
Read MoreScience News
- J. Craig Venter, who won the race to sequence the human genome, dies at 79
- Wreckage of a US Coast Guard ship lost during WWI has been found off the coast of England
- One of Americas oldest weather observatories shows people the science behind our climate
- This years World Cup games could be sizzling. Heres whats being done to prepare for extreme heat
- Critically endangered antelopes return to Kenya from Czech zoo

Copyright © 1996 - 2026 CoreComm Internet Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved. | View our