NICHOLASVILLE — Construction won't start on a new city hall as quickly as elected officials had planned.
A builder whose unfinished house on Indian Mound Road in Lexington drew complaints last summer from neighbors has declared bankruptcy. Dudley Scott Baesler and his wife, Shelly, filed a Chapter 7 petition recently in U.S. Bankruptcy Court.
RICHMOND — Army officials detected a GB vapor leak Monday from an M55 rocket stored at the Blue Grass Army Depot in Madison County.
The University of Kentucky, which is aiming to extend its global reach, has more than doubled the number of international students on campus this year and experienced an especially sharp spike in foreign undergraduates.
Kentucky
On a wet and freezing Monday evening, Lillie McGlothen placed a wreath outside her mother's home.
Eastern Kentucky University is launching a new alternative-fuels research program in tandem with a San Diego energy firm that will look at producing diesel — and potentially jet fuel — from plant matter.
When he ran for mayor in 2006, Jim Newberry committed to hiring 150 police officers by 2010.
The miracle — that continues to allow 3,000 blind and print-disabled people to have the newspaper read to them every day — took three years, hundreds of hours, a slew of volunteers, tens of thousands of dollars and the grace and benevolence of a community suddenly awakened to the need.
The World Equestrian Games Foundation has decided to allow Tennessee walking horses to join in demonstrations at the 2010 World Games, not in spite of, but perhaps because of controversies that has surrounded the breed.
FRANKFORT — A more than $450 million hole in Kentucky's state budget is likely to fill much of the General Assembly's time when lawmakers convene in January.
Fayette County
The family of an 84-year-old resident of a Richmond nursing home hid a video camera in the woman's room after they discovered dozens of bruises all over her body and didn't get satisfactory answers from the staff.
She lives in perhaps the most glittering place on earth, but as a child she dreamed of a green countryside with horses — a place she caught glimpses of in children's fiction.
An atheists-rights group is suing the Kentucky Office of Homeland Security because state law requires the agency to stress "dependence on Almighty God as being vital to the security of the Commonwealth."
Imagine sitting in a dark room all day, evaluating CT scans and other medical images on a computer screen but never actually seeing real patients. That's life for many radiologists.