Severe weather is expected to impact parts of western Kentucky and Tennessee – as well as southern Illinois – beginning Friday evening and into Saturday.
- News Briefs
- UT Martin breaks ground on new TEST Hub facility
- Remains of WWII soldier from Central City accounted for over 80 years after his death
- Ky. bill to make water fluoridation optional passes state House
- Murray State offers credits to students displaced after extended power outage
- Winter storm followed by dangerous wind chills expected to impact region
- Murray State University selects finalists in hunt for school’s 15th president
NPR Top Stories
The rare speech at the Justice Department comes as the Trump administration has spent the last several weeks trying to reconfigure the agency, including demoting attorneys who worked on cases related to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, and firing officials who investigated the president himself.
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March 19 court hearing set in Louisville
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A veteran-owned business in Jeffersontown had all of its federal contracts with Veterans Affairs abruptly canceled, but three were restored last week.
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The bill passed earlier in the week with a late amendment to ban the sale of all hemp-derived beverages in Kentucky, but lawmakers dropped that provision on the Senate floor.
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Tennessee may become the first state to legally define gas as “renewable energy.”
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At least 20 employees at Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky are feeling the effects of sweeping federal job cuts put in place by the Trump administration at national parks across the country.
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Paducah Symphony Orchestra will host a ribbon cutting ceremony and concert on Saturday to officially open its new Symphony Hall, an auditorium that can hold nearly 700 people with permanent and temporary seating.
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Simple activities to help you better appreciate the birds, bees and flowers — and spend more time outside.
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If you've been paying attention to international politics, you'll get at least three — yes, THREE! — questions right this week!
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Business leaders are trying to engage in a delicate diplomacy with the White House — even as their companies brace for the impact of market volatility and tariffs.
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This week, President Trump continued to threaten tariffs as DOGE continued its cuts of the federal workforce. It was another consequential and news-packed week in Trump's presidency.
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The president's contention that birthright citizenship is unconstitutional is considered a fringe view because the Supreme Court ruled to the contrary 127 years ago.
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In North Dakota, many farmers are still recovering from the 2018 trade war and are now bracing for more losses as President Trump levies sweeping tariffs on everything from soybeans to pork.