2 critically injured in 'major' northwest Austin collision

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

2 critically injured in 'major' northwest Austin collision AUSTIN (KXAN) – Austin-Travis County Emergency Medical Services responded to a major collision between two vehicles in northwest Austin Saturday morning just after 8 a.m., ATCEMS said on X. The collision happened at 10100 Decker Ln and caused one person to eject from a vehicle, ATCEMS said. ATCEMS transported one adult patient to Dell Medical Center and one teenager patient to Dell Children’s Medical Center both with critical and life-threatening injuries.

SpaceX launched its giant new rocket but explosions end the second test flight

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

SpaceX launched its giant new rocket but explosions end the second test flight SpaceX launched its mega rocket Starship but lost both the booster and the spacecraft in a pair of explosions minutes into Saturday’s test flight. The rocketship reached space following liftoff from South Texas before communication suddenly was lost. SpaceX officials said it appears the ship’s self-destruct system blew it up over the Gulf of Mexico. Minutes earlier, the separated booster had exploded over the gulf. By then, though, its job was done. Saturday’s demo lasted eight or so minutes, about twice as long as the first test in April, which also ended in an explosion. The latest flight came to an end as the ship’s engines were almost done firing to put it on an around-the-world path.At nearly 400 feet (121 meters), Starship is the biggest and most powerful rocket ever built, with the goal of ferrying people to the moon and Mars.“The real topping on the cake today, that successful liftoff,” said SpaceX commentator John Insprucker, noting that all 33 booster engines fired as desi...

Highs near the normal this afternoon

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

Highs near the normal this afternoon AUSTIN (KXAN) -- The dry cold front that moved through Central Texas Friday has made it to the lower valley. North winds left behind will lead to cooler temperatures today and tomorrow. There won't be any highs in the 80s today as there were Friday.The day dawned overcast with most lows in the middle and upper 50s to low 60s. The low at Camp Mabry was 60°. The airport's minimum temperature this morning was 61°.Today's normal high is 71°Highs will be warming tomorrow and Monday before the next front arrives.The next cold front provides a chill for Thanksgiving DayThe overcast sky this morning will clear in the afternoon to a partly cloudy sky. Look for a partly cloudy evening followed by increasing cloudiness overnight. Much of Sunday will be gray with very little clearing. There were also be a very low chance of a few isolated areas of rain.An upper-level low this morning is moving towards the California coast north of San Francisco. It will move into the northern half of the plains...

These are the 10 fastest-declining Texas cities, analysis shows

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

These are the 10 fastest-declining Texas cities, analysis shows (NEXSTAR) — What does it mean for a city to be declining?A recent analysis by data outlet FinanceBuzz aimed to track the growth (or decline) of several U.S. metros from 2019 through the end of 2022. To do this, FinanceBuzz analysts looked at cities that had populations of 200,000 or more as of 2019 and then weighed a variety of factors, including population growth/decline, unemployment, income, percentage of vacant homes, and number of residents with collections debt. Wild hogs still going wild in Texas — what can be done? All-in-all, 117 U.S. cities were ranked on a 100-point scale, with "high" scores meaning a greater scale of decline. These are the top 10 fastest-declining in Texas.Fastest declining citiesCorpus Christi — Population change: -3.17%. The seaside city received an overall Decline Score of 64.9, with an unemployment change of -0.60%, home value growth rate of -32.4% and 46% of residents with debt in collections.Laredo — Population change: -2.40%. Decline Score: 62.2...

St. Paul library book checked out more than 100 years ago finally returned

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

St. Paul library book checked out more than 100 years ago finally returned A 1902 edition of “Famous Composers Vol. 2” by Nathan Haskell Dole last checked out in 1919 was recently returned to the St. Paul Public Library, according to a Facebook post by the library Friday, Nov. 17, 2023. (Courtesy of the St. Paul Public Library)A library book about famous composers believed to have been checked out in 1919 was turned into the St. Paul Public Library this week.The 1902 edition of “Famous Composers Vol. 2” by Nathan Haskell Dole was found by a person in Hennepin County who was sorting through their mother’s belongings, library officials said on their Facebook page.St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said in a tongue-in-cheek post on X that the late fees would have been very hefty if the library sought them.“At the 1919 rate of a penny per day, that would have been a $36k fine… but #SaintPaul is a #FineFreeLibrary system so no charge!” Carter tweeted.Library officials did some sleuthing and believe that the book most likely also survived a fir...

U of M police seek help finding missing man

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

U of M police seek help finding missing man Police are asking for the public’s help in finding Steven Skinaway, 33, who was last seen early Saturday leaving M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Medical Center on the 500 block of Harvard Street southeast in Minneapolis.Steven Skinaway (Courtesy of the Minnesota BCA)The University of Minnesota Police Department said Skinaway was last seen at 2 a.m. wearing a dark colored Minnesota Vikings pullover with yellow sleeves, dark colored jeans and carrying a plastic bag.Skinaway is described as 6 feet tall and 160 pounds with black hair and brown eyes.They ask anyone who has seen him or knows of his whereabouts to call 911 or the University of Minnesota police department at 612-624-2677.Related ArticlesCrime & Public Safety | Cottage Grove selects deputy chief as new fire chief Crime & Public Safety | Pedestrian struck, trapped under light rail train on University Avenue in St. Paul Crime & Public Safety | Man charged i...

Get outside this winter and catch some trout

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

Get outside this winter and catch some trout ST. LOUIS -- The weather may be turning colder, but the trout are still going to be biting this winter season, thanks to the Missouri Department of Conservation.“The winter trout program has been here in St. Louis since about 1989. We stock nine area lakes with about thirty to thirty-five thousand trout annually,” says John Schulte, a Fisheries Management Biologist with the Missouri Department of Conservation.  Trout are raised at cold-water hatcheries across the state, including Montauk hatchery near Salem. Lakes are stocked from November through February. The goal is to provide angling opportunities closer to home. “As we get into those winter months, folks tend to be more sedentary. Maybe not get out and move as much, not get as much sun exposure,” says Schulte. “So, getting out to one of these lakes and going fishing is a great opportunity to get some sunlight and get that Vitamin D production up.” You may ask why fish are stocked in the winter inst...

Where refugees in Missouri are arriving from

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

Where refugees in Missouri are arriving from Robsonphoto // ShutterstockWhere refugees in Missouri are arriving fromDuring the past five decades, the U.S. has resettled over 3 million refugees, making it one of the leading countries for finding new homes for people fleeing violence, persecution, and war.In 2021, then-President Donald Trump lowered the annual cap of refugees that could be admitted into the country to 15,000. Even as the Biden administration has raised the ceiling to 125,000, the annual number of refugees arriving in the U.S. didn't immediately bounce back to pre-Trump administration levels. The numbers are increasing though, with over 25,000 refugees arriving in the U.S. in the 2022 fiscal year, twice the 2021 total.Refugee arrivals during the 2023 fiscal year dramatically outpaced the prior two years, reaching over 60,000 from October 2022 to September 2023.In October 2023, the greatest number of refugees admitted by the U.S. came from Congo, Syria, and Afghanistan. Each nation faces a unique set of circumstan...

Kickin’ It with Kiz: He’s Prime, but Deion Sanders can’t carry Mike MacIntyre’s whistle as a football coach

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

Kickin’ It with Kiz: He’s Prime, but Deion Sanders can’t carry Mike MacIntyre’s whistle as a football coach Colorado’s 1-11 record the season before coach Deion Sanders arrived was an aberration. Is the fact the Buffs have won at least four games every other year since 2015 still under the radar? Rhetorical question: Who’s comin’? Props to Prime for creating buzz and energy. Hopefully, the success of CU’s program trends upward.Ron, fact-checkerKiz; There’s no denying the ability of Prime to attract attention, money and recruits. Bravo to all that. But can we dispense with this nonsense that Sanders is some kind of miracle worker as a football coach? Here’s the truth: In 2013, Mike MacIntyre took over a CU team that not only went 1-11 under Jon Embree, but embarrassed itself by surrendering more than 50 points in five games, including a 70-burger to Oregon. Without the benefit of bringing in his superstar son to play quarterback, MacIntyre quadrupled the Buffs’ win total during his first season in Boulder. Prime might prove to be pure magic. But, s...

Pro-Palestine protesters interrupt Colorado lawmakers as special session restarts

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 06:08:43 GMT

Pro-Palestine protesters interrupt Colorado lawmakers as special session restarts Updated at 9:46 a.m.: A group of pro-Palestine protestors briefly interrupted the Colorado House of Representatives on Saturday morning, shouting from the balcony overlooking the House floor and calling for lawmakers to support a ceasefire in Gaza.Lawmakers had just reconvened for the morning when a small group of protesters unfurled Palestinian flags and a banner calling for an end to Israel’s occupation while one man shouted for lawmakers to condemn Israel’s campaign in Gaza.Troopers from the Colorado State Patrol, who oversee security in the Capitol, shepherded the dozen or so protesters out of the balcony area. They then began to chant from the building’s interior, watched by law enforcement.A group of Democratic lawmakers — Reps. Iman Jodeh, Tim Hernandez, Jen Bacon and Javier Mabrey — spoke with the group, and one of the House’s sergeants — the chamber’s quasi-security force — told the protesters they could go down to a bas...