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Ada, Oklahoma's police department uses a dummy dubbed "Waldo" to cut down on speeders. KFOR's Chellie Mills reports that Waldo is so popular with locals, he even has his own named snowcone.
A Florida deputy kills a man who charged at him with a samurai sword. SNN's Grant Boxleitner reports.
A strange formation at the bottom of a Utah irrigation pond baffles farmers and scientists. KSL's John Hollenhorst reports.
Mohammad Farrah, director of advocacy group "Ka-Joong," tells NBC's Ron Allen that the vast majority of Somali's are law-abiding citizens, but that it's a few bad apples, who give the Somali community a bad name.
Five people who claimed that they were brutalized by police during the recent protests in Ferguson, Mo., file $40 million lawsuit. KSDK's Mike Rush reports.
What did your grandparents do for a living? What did your grandparents teach you about work? How did your grandparents work lives shape who you are today?These are the questions asked by a new website launched in honor of Labor Day by Jobs With Justice called The Way They Worked. And rather than providing readers with the answers, the site asks Americans to tell their stories and honor their grandparents and the lives they lived and the jobs they worked.
The missionaries' 21-day health monitoring periods ended at different times depending on when each had last been in contact with Ebola patients.