Hardin County High School receives Anne Dallas Dudley Gold Level Award
Hardin County High School received the Anne Dallas Dudley Gold Level Award for voter registration.
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Hardin County High School received the Anne Dallas Dudley Gold Level Award for voter registration.
The city of Bolivar reached 1,000 days without a homicide and celebrated the milestone with a community block party.
Residents are raising concerns about traffic congestion as a new Chick-fil-A is being built across the street from an existing location on Vann Drive.
More than a foot of rain caused record flooding in Rives last year. Here's what the town looks like now.
A new state bill is one signature away from taking effect and would ban children under the age of 14 from being in online videos that make a profit.
The Haywood County Sheriff's Office is searching for a missing person.
The U.S. fertility rate is at a record low. New Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics indicate about 3.6 million babies were born last year.
Grammy-nominated and platinum selling artist Hunter Hayes is coming to Carroll County.
Memphis Police responded to a shooting around 8:15 a.m. at the intersection of Ratliff and Lauderdale near an elementary school bus stop.
Eligible men in the U.S. will be automatically registered for the military draft starting in December.
For the 86th year, faculty and students at Freed-Hardeman University have selected eight seniors as nominees for the titles of Mr. and Miss FHU.
The Tennessee State University College of Agriculture (TSUAg) and the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture (UTIA) have launched a joint seed funding program to support collaborative research projects focused on some of agriculture’s most pressing challenges.
James Cherry joined our show to talk about the upcoming Jazz Appreciation Month concert.
A judge in Wyoming sentenced a man to 18 months of probation for hitting a wolf with a snowmobile before taping the wounded animal’s mouth shut, bringing the creature into a rural bar, then killing it.
Middle Tennessee State University is expanding its graduate offerings in media and entertainment with the launch of a new Master of Fine Arts in Film and Television, set to begin in Fall 2026.