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Day: October 15, 2013 Archives


TuesdayOctober 15, 2013

Federal employees rally in Charleston

Urge Congress to end government shutdown

Tough win builds confidence for Herd

Marshall showed it can get the tough win on the road.

Supreme Court looks at FOIA case

State Police say information about internal investigations should remain private.

U.S. Supreme Court to look at EPA regulations

Arguments on regulations for greenhouse gas emissions will be held early next year.

Trial begins for accused Cabell County murderer

The victim was beaten with a baseball bat.

Trial date set for former Huntington Area Food Bank director

She's charged with taking thousands of dollars from the organization.

Fixing an offense that’s been ‘subpar at everything’

WVU's Holgorsen: Making routine plays can remedy low-scoring attack that ranks next to last in Big 12.

WVSSAC Rankings: Week 8

Huntington, Wayne and St. Marys are ranked No. 1 in the state.

High school students get a taste of cadet life

Program gives teens a head start toward a career in law enforcement.

Charleston mayor says charges should be refiled against lobbyist

Danny Jones says Phil Reale pulled at heartstrings of police officer and city attorney.

Charleston police say recent beating not random

Man attacked by group of people outside convenience store.

Rahall says there are ‘adults’ in the U.S. Senate

Both the U.S. Senate and U.S. House have different plans to reopen government and avert default by raising the debt ceiling.

Game with Louisville moved to 2016

The Cardinals won't come to Huntington for a couple more years.

Two dead in Wyoming County fire

Man and woman killed in Saturday morning blaze.

Officer shot at; search underway for motorist

Shots fired during Tuesday morning traffic stop.

The Blitz: Week 8

Garrett Cullen and Fred Persinger look at Morgantown's win over Wheeling Park from last week and go over some of the key games this week around the state.

Talks continue on Capitol Hill, but no agreement made

However, Senate leaders believe they are close to a deal

The cost of “clean coal”

When the EPA recently released its standards for carbon dioxide emissions from power plants that are built in the future, it hyped carbon capture and storage (CCS). “The standards will minimize carbon pollution by guaranteeing reliance on advanced technologies like efficient natural gas units and efficient coal units implementing partial carbon capture and storage,” reads