-
Register news service Moments after Auld Tom Watson clanked an 8- foot putt on the 18th at Turnberry on Sunday, the Grim Reaper himself appeared on the green.
I know Scotland is a spiritual place, but man, they don't fool around when you goof up on one of their precious golf courses.
-
We still need the postal service
Re: "Seeking life after email," July 29 editorial:
-
By Jim Bransfield Journal Register News Service
MIDDLETOWN -- Question: After going 13-0, winning the state Class LL football championship and finishing No. 1 in the final Register Top 10 poll in 2010, what will the Xavier Falcons do for an encore?
-
ONTARIO - A spokesman for Prime Healthcare Services said the company is unaware of any federal investigation or review of its operations following a published report that the FBI has contacted former employees.
An FBI spokeswoman on Tuesday declined to confirm or deny any investigation of Prime after news service California Watch reported that FBI agents have interviewed former Prime employees about the Ontario company's Medicare billing practices.
-
By JIM FULLER Journal Register News Service
HARTFORD -- Not long after the ball went up, it was evident this was not going to be just another coronation for the UConn women's basketball team.
-
After complaints, The Forest Service hosted the first of two public meetings concerning dogs on local trails.
By Josh Rhoten
-
Phone service was restored by about 7:30 p.m. Monday after a fire on a telephone pole that morning burned through the cables and severed the main phon...
-
Authorities in Indiana and Ohio have launched investigations into suspected serial killings after a Scripps Howard News Service study of FBI computer files found clusters of unsolved homicides of women.
Also, police in Nevada confirm for the first time that they are hunting a likely serial killer who has targeted up to seven women, mostly prostitutes, and has scattered their partial remains across three states.
-
Metro Bus service in Erie and Niagara counties faces drastic reductions after transit officials voted Thursday to scrap plans for a fare increase and instead trim almost 22 percent of system miles.
In a unanimous vote, commissioners of the Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority killed the fare increase in favor of shedding money-losing routes and scaling back the frequency of bus service and possibly subway service. The move will save $7 million. Those savings, when combined with "efficiencies" including 50 layoffs and closing one bus garage, plug this year's budget gap of $14.7 million.
-
NORWAY -- More than 60 years after dying in service to the U.S. Air Force, a Norway World War II veteran is coming home.
His remains spent years in a swamp in the Philippines, and decades at a Midwestern cemetery. They were even shipped to Hawaii before finally being identified as those of 2nd Lt. Robert S. Emerson of Norway.