1/24/05
Put your driving skills to the test in the January Safety Solution's Driving Quiz.
1/24/05
A grocery store theft over the weekend could result in an attempted capital murder charge.
1/24/05
Television legend Johnny Carson died this weekend losing a long battle with emphysema at the age of 79. He took over the Late Night host position in 1962. During the 30 years of putting America to bed at night, he managed to escape Hollywood once and head to Lubbock.
1/24/05
Area harvest is wrapping up but the ginning and classing process is far from complete.
1/24/05
Investigators estimate $15,000 in damages.
1/24/05
A major fire broke out Sunday just before 3 o'clock at the Citizens Co-Op Gin, near Smyer.
1/24/05
49-year-old woman critically injured in weekend rollover in South Lubbock.
1/24/05
Pablo Flores, Jr. is accused of stealing hundreds of dollars from various vending machines across Lubbock.
1/24/05
7-year-old Cade Standlee and his sister are selling necklaces to benefit the "From Lubbock With Love" campaign.
1/24/05
Students, parents and staff from Preston Smith Elementary collected $2,300 to give to the American Red Cross Monday.
1/24/05
The NTSB says information about what caused Thursday's fatal plane crash near Abernathy, may already be available this week.
1/24/05
The Texas Senate will conduct a sweeping review of the state's troubled crime labs.
1/24/05
Lubbock police are investigating a Saturday morning convenience store robbery.
1/24/05
A Lubbock woman is recovering from a gunshot wound this weekend, not in a hospital bed, but in a bunk at the Lubbock County Jail.
1/24/05
Lubbock's two newest county commissioners are just about a month on the job. And so far, their days are filled with phone calls and learning the ropes.
1/24/05
If you're the typical patient, you're probably going to ask your doctor for an antibiotic when you're miserable with a cold or the flu. The problem is those are viruses and antibiotics don't work when it's a virus.
1/24/05
A study of nearly 9,000 people shows that risk factors like diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol and even smoking increased the chances of dementia later in life by 20% to 40%.